Home Blog Page 753

Another milestone checked off for Penn State: first Big Ten unbeaten streak

Penn State coach Guy Gadowsky says his players know they’ve been improving, but getting the results to show it is nice (photo: Omar Phillips).

Never underestimate the power of two consecutive games, unbeaten.

When Penn State tied Michigan State 2-2 on Valentine’s Day, the Nittany Lions put together their first two-game unbeaten streak in Big Ten conference play. The Saturday before on home ice, Penn State had defeated Michigan 4-0 for the program’s first conference win, so the atmosphere at Pegula Ice Arena after that Friday night tie was heady, in spite of the shootout loss.

“I think they loved it,” said Penn State coach Guy Gadowsky, who has been vocal about the newly minted PSU hockey faithful. “I can’t say enough about how great the fans are. They’ve been great all year. It has been a lot of fun. All the fans know that we are working hard here.”

The Nittany Lions are still in their proverbial hockey honeymoon, a second-year program playing a full Division I schedule for the first time in 2013-14.

Sitting in last place in the Big Ten with a 1-10-1 conference record, Penn State is unlikely to move beyond the cellar between now and the conference championship on the third weekend in March. Fifteen points separate Penn State from Michigan State, the No. 5 team in the standings.

That’s OK, though. The Nittany Lions are enjoying the journey and learning that progress isn’t always measured in terms of wins and losses.

That win against Michigan “really was tremendous,” said Gadowsky. “Honest, I think we’ve been playing fairly well for a while. It was deserved that night, but we may have deserved it on other nights, too, and didn’t get there.”

So that little two-game unbeaten streak was a nice nod to forward motion. “The players do know that they’ve been improving quite a bit, but to get tangible results is nice,” said Gadowsky.

That streak came to a halt last Saturday afternoon in a 2-1 loss, a game in which the Nittany Lions led for 30 minutes. Penn State isn’t a team that is accustomed to playing with a lead — yet.

“That’s something that I think a lot of teams have to learn to do,” said Gadowsky. “One as young as us, we’re still learning a lot. I felt like we did have a fairly good performance. The Spartans are a tough team to play. They don’t give up much.”

The player that seems to have exhibited the shortest learning curve on the Penn State team is sophomore goaltender Matthew Skoff. His numbers are unremarkable — 3.02 GAA, .901 save percentage — but Skoff is solid, unshakable and gaining respect.

“He’s an excellent athlete,” said Gadowsky. “He’s tall, 6-[foot-]2, he’s lanky. He’s got a great work ethic off the ice. He’s very good that way.

“What makes Matt Skoff, though, is that he loves to challenge shooters. He makes it fun. He makes the guys want to stay on the ice. Because of that, the guys practice harder and they want to play in front of him.”

Michigan coach Red Berenson had praise for Skoff after the sophomore earned his first shutout of the season against the Wolverines on Feb. 8. “Their goalie played well,” said Berenson. “This Skoff kid — they didn’t know what he’d be when he first arrived, but he gives them a chance to compete.”

This weekend, the Nittany Lions and the Wolverines are meeting in Ann Arbor for a rematch of the series that gave Penn State its first league win just two weeks ago.

Gadowsky, who coached Alaska for five seasons in the CCHA, is looking forward to it. “You’re always excited,” he said. “I’m excited to get back to Yost Arena. It’s a great place to play.”

Michigan’s Steve Racine earned the starting role for last week’s series at Minnesota (photo: Omar Phillips).

The lonely road

Michigan traveled to Minneapolis last weekend and returned home with nothing to show for it. Now the Wolverines enter their weekend at home against the Nittany Lions with a three-game losing streak, having been outscored 13-4 in that span.

“The first game Friday we came out flat and they didn’t,” said Berenson. “The first 10 minutes was like a clinic and then the penalties came in, and we got three penalties in the last six minutes [of the period]. It’s one of those periods when one team started on time and the other was back on their heels. The score was only 1-0 at the end of it and Racine kept us in the period.”

Racine is Steve Racine, the sophomore goaltender who was injured in the first half of the season and then seemingly lost the starting job to freshman Zach Nagelvoort. Racine replaced Nagelvoort early in the 4-0 loss to Penn State the weekend before, and Berenson said the sophomore earned the starting spot against Minnesota in practice last week.

“My philosophy on goalies is that if they’re fighting the puck, you have to get them out of there,” Berenson said. “Zach was fighting the puck that game against Penn State. He’s played well for us all season. I don’t know who will start this weekend and won’t know until the weekend.”

Berenson said that he thought his team played well against Minnesota for nearly the whole weekend but that the Wolverines “didn’t capitalize” on chances — which, he said, were few.

“And any time we made a mistake, they were quick to capitalize on it, whether they put it in the back of our net or forced Racine to make a save,” Berenson said.

“The one thing I felt coming out of that weekend is that we could play with that team, but we have to play better if we’re going to beat them.”

The Wolverines are 6-6-1 on the road.

Another team suffering when playing away is Wisconsin — but you wouldn’t know it by talking to coach Mike Eaves. The Badgers are 2-7-1 on the road after picking up a 4-2 win in Columbus last Saturday after losing to Ohio State 2-1 on Valentine’s Day.

“That’s the difference between what you [the media] do in the business and what we do,” said Eaves, laughing. “I just don’t pay attention to that. I see the series as they are. We go into Boston and it’s just a bad weekend. We go into Miami and we play well and take one and then last weekend.”

The Badgers dropped games against Boston College and Boston University on Oct. 18 and 19 and split with the Miami RedHawks Nov. 15 and 16.

“I haven’t really been bummed out,” said Eaves. “We’ve played really good hockey on the road with the exception of that one weekend. I’m not too concerned about it. I think coming down the stretch here, we’ve gained experience.”

Of Wisconsin’s split last weekend against Ohio State, Eaves said, “There are six periods involved in the weekend and we were good for five of them.”

Eaves said the energy in the Schottenstein Center was low Friday night as the stands were emptier with an attendance of 4,540. “It took us a while to get going and we fell behind,” he said.

Saturday’s game was better, though. “It was up and down, the crowd was into it, it was physical,” said Eaves. “They made some mistakes and we capitalized on them.”

When I asked him the significance of that second road win, Eaves said, “I was shocked that our record was like that. Honestly.

“In coaching, what you need to do is take a step back and take a look at the big picture. Then you need to look at the day-to-day stuff.”

That road record? “That really doesn’t matter,” said Eaves.

A sense of urgency

With seven points separating first-place Minnesota from second-place Wisconsin, and five points separating Wisconsin from third-place Michigan — and every game worth three points — Big Ten play is picking up a sense of urgency.

In fact, the second half of the season has felt intense, Gadowsky said.

“Right from the get-go, from the start of conference play, it’s felt like playoff hockey,” he said. “I think it’s a couple things. I do believe very strongly in a balanced schedule. When I went from the CCHA to the ECAC, I noticed the difference in a balanced schedule.”

By “balanced schedule,” Gadowsky means playing the same number of games against each team in your own conference. That wasn’t an option for years at a time in the CCHA.

Another reason for the half-year sense of urgency is the limited number of conference games, just 20 per team. “Game No. 1 in the Big Ten season, you’re jockeying for playoff position,” said Gadowsky. “The fact that you have a perfectly balanced schedule, too, means that you know exactly where you stand against each team, all the time.”

Berenson said that even though the Wolverines played Michigan State and Ohio State season after season in the CCHA, the Big Ten affiliation intensifies things — and now the finite number of games remaining factors into it.

“We’re in the heart of the Big Ten conference schedule,” said Berenson. “We have eight games left and we have to make them count. Everyone’s trying to get a bye.”

All six Big Ten teams go straight to the conference championship tournament and the top two teams get byes to the semifinals.

Berenson knows that the Wolverines did themselves no favors in their last three games. “We took ourselves right out of the first place race,” he said. “Mathematically there might be a chance, but a lot of things that would have to happen. Realistically, we needed to split with Minnesota.”

Like Berenson, Eaves has noticed some heightened awareness from the Big Ten affiliation.

“I think our people here in Madison have enjoyed it,” Eaves said. “Our attendance has spiked. I’m speculating, but our students and fans are recognizing Michigan, Michigan State, even Pen State and it has piqued their interest, even people who don’t know much about college hockey.”

Eaves is especially keen to earn one of the top two spots in the league.

“Last year, we won three games in three nights, but it doesn’t happen very often,” he said. The Badgers finished in sixth place in the WCHA in 2012-13, then at the Final Five beat Minnesota State and St. Cloud State before defeating Colorado College in the league’s title game.

“It’s not a path I’d care to repeat,” said Eaves.

Michigan suspensions

Two Wolverines players will sit out Friday’s game against Penn State because of supplemental discipline handed out by the Big Ten following Michigan’s series against Minnesota.

Freshman defenseman Michael Downing and junior forward Andrew Sinelli will sit for infractions in the 4-1 loss to the Golden Gophers last Saturday night.

At 5:35 in the third period, Downing’s elbow found a Minnesota player’s head and Downing received a major penalty for contact to the head and a game misconduct.

At 14:37 in the third, Sinelli cross-checked a Golden Gophers player and made contact to the head as well. He received a minor penalty at the time.

“I think the league, like any other league, is conscious of high hits and targeting the head,” said Berenson. “I don’t think either of our players meant to target the head. Downing is considerably taller than the kid he hit. His elbow definitely hit the kid in the head as well as the body.

“Sinelli overreacted. He had bumped one of their players and put his stick up [in anticipation of retaliation] and hit the kid in the head, which is unacceptable.

“They deserved it. They’ll sit out.”

Players of the week

The goalies continue to shine.

First star — Minnesota sophomore goaltender Adam Wilcox: Wilcox, the second star last week, stopped 63 of 67 in two wins over Michigan, with a .940 save percentage for the series. He stopped 35 pucks in the 5-3 win Friday and leads all Big Ten goalies and ranks second nationally with 20 wins this season, five wins shy of his total from his freshman season.

Second star — Minnesota freshman forward Hudson Fasching: Fasching had a goal in each win over Michigan and added an assist on Saturday, earning him his second weekly award of the season. Fasching is third among Gophers players in scoring (11-14–25) and his goal on Valentine’s Day broke a three-game goal-scoring drought. He’s tied for goal scoring among Big Ten freshmen (11).

Third star — Michigan State sophomore goaltender Jake Hildebrand: Hildebrand had 53 saves against the Nittany Lions as the Spartans took five of six points from Penn State; his save percentage for the weekend was .946. After making 25 saves in regulation and overtime Friday, he stopped all seven skaters he faced in the shootout. This is his fourth weekly award this season. Hildebrand’s .942 save percentage tops all Big Ten goalies in conference play.

My ballot

1. Boston College
2. Minnesota
3. St. Cloud State
4. Ferris State
5. Quinnipiac
6. Union
7. Massachusetts-Lowell
8. Wisconsin
9. Cornell
10. Providence
11. Michigan
12. Northeastern
13. Yale
14. North Dakota
15. Minnesota State
16. Minnesota-Duluth
17. Maine
18. Denver
19. Colgate
20. Ohio State

Tweet us

Just a reminder to follow Drew Claussen and me on Twitter.

Wednesday Women: Wrap it up

Clarkson captain Carly Mercer (Omar Phillips)
Carly Mercer and Clarkson will try to surpass Cornell for the ECAC crown (Omar Phillips).

Arlan: We’re down to one week in the regular season, and there is still plenty to be decided on the ice. The top spot in ECAC Hockey remains unclaimed, three teams in that league are alive for the final playoff spot, and some shuffling of the standings could occur in all four leagues that will determine playoff pairings. Beyond the conference races, the national picture remains a jumble as teams like Boston University, Robert Morris, and North Dakota that entered 2014 in great shape have slid and are now in far more precarious positions. Meanwhile, Boston College and Mercyhurst have moved up the ladder and now look destined to continue their runs of NCAA appearances.

In the ECAC, Cornell is best positioned for the title, but the Big Red haven’t exactly looked untouchable in recent weeks. They were the biggest benefactors of Clarkson’s 2-1 defeat of Harvard on Friday, which allowed them to jump over Harvard and gain first place by a point, leaving the other two squads in a second-place tie. Cornell nearly gave that advantage away the next day at Rensselaer when Ali Svoboda scored an extra-attacker goal for the Engineers to force overtime. Freshman Hanna Bunton scored the game-winner 1:19 into OT, but it can’t be that comforting to Doug Derraugh that his team needed six goals and bonus time to subdue an RPI team whose last win came a month ago and ranks in the bottom half in scoring.

Does this remind you of what we saw in the postseason from Cornell last year, when it seemed like the Big Red always wound up playing a nail-biter?

Candace: Sort of, but Cornell has been like that a lot this season. There was the Princeton game in November, the tie with St. Lawrence, and the OT game against Colgate two weeks ago. Cornell has not been the dominant Big Red team of recent years and looks more vulnerable entering the playoffs than they have in recent years.

You mentioned the lower standings having room for movement. RPI has the last spot and a one-point lead over Dartmouth, but faces Clarkson and St. Lawrence this weekend while Dartmouth has Brown and Yale. Can the Big Green get the last spot from RPI?

Arlan: It isn’t even as simple as being either Dartmouth or RPI, because Colgate kept itself alive by sweeping RPI and Union last weekend. The Raiders are one point behind Dartmouth and two behind RPI, and they finish with tough games as well, but at least they are at home against Princeton and Quinnipiac. Yale was able to clinch a playoff spot by taking three points from that duo on the road. The odds don’t favor the Raiders, but they have been playing better over the last three weeks, with their only losses coming versus Cornell, and one of those was in overtime.

If none of the three teams can gain any points, then it will go to the Engineers, but they’ve been stuck in neutral with only one point via a tie with Yale in their last eight games. Goaltending was an issue for them when they missed the playoffs two years ago, and it has been iffy during the recent struggle. The Engineers didn’t come that close to winning versus St. Lawrence and Clarkson on home ice three weeks ago, so it doesn’t look likely that they will make much headway in the North Country.

Due to Colgate’s disadvantage in the standings and Rensselaer’s slump and tough schedule, Dartmouth would appear to be the most likely choice, but the Big Green have lost their last five. Granted, those were all to playoff teams. Dartmouth took three points from the Yale and Brown pair in early January, but that was in Hanover, and the win over Yale came on a goal in the last minute. Lindsay Allen has 13 goals in her 26 games, but beyond her, Dartmouth has to patch together offense from many different sources. So the Big Green may have trouble scraping together goals against Aubree Moore in her final weekend for Brown. Yale has posed problems for many teams this season, so we have to view this differently than we would have in past years where Brown and Yale meant four points for Dartmouth. If any of the three teams can get to 16 points, then I like its chances. Even 15 points could prove to be enough. I don’t think RPI can back in with just 14.

Quinnipiac also plays Cornell this weekend. That’s obviously vital for Cornell as it attempts to wrap up the ECAC, but it is critical for the Bobcats as well. They are a game up on St. Lawrence for the final home-ice spot. Do you think the Bobcats hold off the Saints?

Candace: I don’t think so. I haven’t worked out all the permutations though. If the Bobcats don’t get points against Cornell Friday, they have Colgate as the final game of the year, which they should win. St. Lawrence did shutout the Bobcats a few weeks ago, so coupled with the tie in November, the Saints have the tiebreak. If St. Lawrence sweeps Union and RPI this weekend, which I give even odds on, Quinnipiac goes on the road. Regardless, given their record against the Saints, I would be nervous about that first-round matchup if I was the Bobcats.

Let’s look at the CHA. Just a few weeks ago, we thought Robert Morris would get its first league title. Now the Colonials are struggling to stay in NCAA contention. They were helped significantly by Minnesota State’s sweep of North Dakota, but the Colonials at this point might not even make the CHA tournament final, judging by their play against RIT. Can Robert Morris turn it around?

Arlan: We don’t know if it is just a mental thing where the Colonials aren’t playing as well for some reason, or if there is also a physical issue such as someone trying to play through a significant injury. If it is the former, then perhaps a series against Penn State at home, presumably followed by a bye for the CHA quarterfinal round, could help Robert Morris to regroup and get settled for a postseason push. Of late, the offense has started to decline. Consider the total goals scored by RMU for the six series in 2014: St. Lawrence, seven; Quinnipiac, six; Mercyhurst, six; Lindenwood, eight; Syracuse, four; RIT, two. Maybe everyone is starting to feel the pressure. I think the Colonials need to relax, take a few deep breaths, and go back to having fun and doing the things they know how to do.

At this point, we don’t know who the Colonials would play in a CHA semifinal. Unless the two bottom seeds advance, it will either be Syracuse or RIT, but both have posed problems for the Colonials over the last couple of seasons and last couple of weeks. The Orange and Tigers play a home-and-home series to determine the third seed, with each team having taken an earlier game at home and Syracuse holding a one-point edge. So yes, they could be bounced from the CHA playoffs in the semifinals. Mathematically, the Colonials could still make the NCAA tournament despite not reaching the league final, although I would think that would be very unlikely. Conversely, Robert Morris could sweep Penn State, win a pair of games to take the CHA tournament, but be on the outside looking in when the NCAA field is announced. Such is life in the CHA without an automatic bid.

Mercyhurst has been able to make the league work for itself for years. After shaking off back-to-back losses to Cornell and RMU, the Lakers have made it look easy with seven straight wins. Might Mercyhurst be able to not only win another CHA tournament and reach the NCAA tournament again, but be a factor in the national tournament, as they were a year ago?

Candace: Not unless the results of the NCAA-bound teams over the next few weeks push Mercyhurst over Boston College and/or Harvard. Yes, the Lakers have won seven in a row since losing to Robert Morris, but look at who those games have been against compared to where the top teams are. Mercyhurst swept Syracuse, but both those games were by won by a goal, then beat up on RIT at home and Penn State on the road. RIT doesn’t do well on the road, and Penn State isn’t ready for prime time. The Lakers have gotten better, but it was just a month ago that they tied and lost to Cornell while giving up a lot of goals. If Mercyhurst can play Cornell or Clarkson in the NCAAs, then I could see them moving to the Frozen Four, or at least giving the opponents fits. If Mercyhurst travels to Madison or Minneapolis, it’s game over. Wisconsin has a defense and goaltender that can smother the Lakers’ best strikers, and Minnesota can win either a defensive battle or an offensive shootout against the Lakers.

This isn’t really a knock on the Lakers. I’d say that about any team heading to the WCHA rinks in the quarters of the NCAA tournament. Most of the eastern teams have holes that Minnesota and Wisconsin just don’t. Cornell has struggled to shut down opponents defensively and at other times has gone on offensive walkabout. Harvard has one of the best goaltenders in the country in Emerance Maschmeyer, but the Crimson lean on her too much, and they don’t have established goal-scorers they can count on. Clarkson has looked good of late, except for the ties against Yale, Quinnipiac and Princeton, which puzzle me. I actually slightly favor Clarkson in the ECAC tournament, and think the Golden Knights might be the most complete team in the east, but I wonder whether they will adjust to the smothering Wisconsin defense or Minnesota’s ability to randomly break games wide open. Boston College has gotten better defensively, and I liked how they rebounded from losing to Connecticut to beat a very hot Northeastern squad in the Beanpot final and followed that up with a sweep of Maine to claim Hockey East, but the Eagles also sometimes go on offensive walkabout. For BC, I think everything comes down to Haley Skarupa. If she’s healthy, the Eagles have that X-factor that they can depend on. If she’s hurt, she may not be able dominate the way she needs to.

Right now, I really have a hard time seeing anything but Minnesota vs. Wisconsin for all the marbles in the NCAA final. Do you think I’m overestimating the Badgers and Gophers, or underestimating the eastern teams?

Arlan: I understand why you feel that way. Wisconsin has been so consistent over the course of the season. It hasn’t had the type of results that most other teams have had that leave one wondering, “Where did that come from?” Defense is less likely to slump than offense is, especially because the Badgers are set in net. But I think that some of the voters in the polls are getting a little impatient with Wisconsin’s offensive production against Minnesota and are starting to look elsewhere for a No. 2 team. Lesser teams have produced three-goal games against the Gophers; why have the Badgers only managed three goals in four games? I think it’s because Minnesota always knows when it is Wisconsin on the other bench, and the Badgers will always get the best effort.

In my opinion, Wisconsin’s offense is much improved from a year ago. They have more people that a defense has to watch. The Badgers will be a bad matchup for teams that commit a lot of penalties like Mercyhurst, Robert Morris, or Cornell, because they have a dangerous power play. Wisconsin is built to take a 2-1 lead after a couple of periods and close the game out. From that respect, Clarkson might be the team from the East most likely to cause the problems for the Badgers, because I think the Golden Knights are equally comfortable winning a 2-1 game.

A team like Cornell might cause problems for Minnesota, because its top line is more dynamic than anything that the Gophers have seen this year. The two blue lines likely cancel out. Minnesota has a slight edge with the second line, and an even bigger advantage in a comparison of the third lines. But until Cornell gets its goaltending situation stabilized, it won’t be a threat to handle any of the elite teams.

You mentioned Skarupa’s health, and judging by her hat trick versus Maine, she must be close to 100 percent. Minnesota has a big question mark in that regard after Hannah Brandt left the Wisconsin game with an injury. Ironically, it was at the same point of the season that Amanda Kessel was injured last year, missing a few games and not being a dominant force again until the championship. North Dakota has dropped in both the PairWise Rankings and the human polls while Olympians have been gone. Does any team outside of BC stand out to you as one where player availability could play a big factor in its success going forward?

Candace: Oh sure, I think all the teams have a few players that they can’t afford to have hurt. Think about Harvard all of a sudden losing Maschmeyer. Backup Brianna Laing has only played five games this year, and one of those games was in relief of Maschmeyer against Northeastern. She just doesn’t have the experience yet. If Maschmeyer gets hurt, I don’t see Harvard going anywhere, especially given that Harvard doesn’t have the team defense that enables goalies to be successful, like Wisconsin, which clamped down defensively when Alex Rigsby went out such that Ann-Renée Desbiens was equally successful. The Crimson allow 30 shots per game against; that may hurt them anywhere, but if Maschmeyer isn’t in net, I think they are in trouble.

Cornell can’t afford to lose Jillian Saulnier; she’s too much of a key cog in the Big Red’s offense, and while Emily Fulton is having a career year, Saulnier still leads the way. I think Clarkson would be in danger if either Jamie Lee Rattray or Erica Howe went down. Both are seniors, and beyond what they contribute in the stats column, the loss of their on-ice leadership would be a bad blow to the Golden Knights’ playoff hopes. The same could be said for Mercyhurst senior Christine Bestland, an offensive force who also brings senior leadership to the Lakers.

You mentioned North Dakota. That team suffered a shocking sweep at the hands of Minnesota State last weekend. Meghan Dufault has been healthy, but with Michelle Karvinen, Susanna Tapani, and Tanja Eisenschmid off at Sochi, North Dakota has been in disarray. They just weren’t able to score last weekend, and that also plagued them in the previous weekend’s tie/shootout loss to Minnesota-Duluth. Unfortunately for North Dakota, they may be in even bigger trouble, as they travel to Columbus to face a pretty hot Ohio State team this weekend. While North Dakota gets its players back from the Olympics next week, for them to make the NCAA tournament again, I think they have to sweep the Buckeyes, and that might be a tall order the way things are right now. North Dakota is currently sitting in the ninth spot in the PairWise, although it’s not too far behind Robert Morris, which is also struggling. Do you think North Dakota can still get in?

Arlan: Yes, North Dakota can, but the likelihood of that occurring did take a significant hit in the last week. Based on head-to-head results during the season, the rudimentary probability of UND defeating Wisconsin and Minnesota back-to-back is around 10 percent. That is likely too low given UND was missing people for its last series with Minnesota. There is a possibility that either of those teams is upset before meeting UND on the ice, but then the same possibility exists for UND itself in a quarterfinal series. So let’s just guess and say that North Dakota has a 15 percent chance of winning the automatic bid, which is generous in a historical perspective, as it would be the first No. 3 seed to do so in the WCHA. It also needs to be better defensively than it has of late for any of these presumed North Dakota wins to become reality.

UND could also get an at-large berth. Its prospects of doing so increase greatly if it can sweep at Columbus to close out the regular season. Should UND do so, it may wind up hosting Ohio State in the WCHA quarterfinals, if Bemidji State can take four points from St. Cloud State; otherwise, UND’s opponent will be the Beavers. Theoretically, it could also be Minnesota State, but that would require the Mavericks sweeping Wisconsin. UND’s games versus Ohio State carry extra weight in the PairWise, because the Buckeyes are a Common Opponent of both Mercyhurst and Robert Morris, two teams it trails. I’m going to guess that if North Dakota wins its next four games before losing a WCHA semifinal to Wisconsin, it will pass one of the CHA teams. I’m confident that five straight wins, including a win over Wisconsin, would boost UND into the top eight. The problem is that the No. 8 spot could still be bumped by a lower team winning an automatic bid, most likely in Hockey East. Estimating all of this in my head, it would seem that UND’s chances of reaching the NCAA tournament is roughly 50-50 at best. That’s not bad; the odds would be a lot worse if teams like Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, and Boston University had enjoyed more success of late.

This is the time of year where each bubble team becomes a big fan of the favorites in the conferences outside of its own. If you had to guess, would you say that the seeds will hold up and the autobids will all be won by teams currently in the top six: Minnesota, Wisconsin, Cornell, Clarkson, Harvard, and Boston College?

Candace: I’d say with virtual certainty that either Minnesota or Wisconsin wins the WCHA tournament. You list three ECAC teams, and while Quinnnipiac has been good, beating two of Cornell, Clarkson or Harvard back-to-back seems like too tall an order, and that applies to anyone else in the ECAC tournament. One of those three teams should win the ECAC.

That leaves Hockey East, and I hedge my bets on Boston College. The Eagles have played very well in the second half, but sometimes in the past few years against Boston University they’ve just choked. BC won the first two games of the year against the Terriers, including the Beanpot matchup, and the two close the regular season with a home-and-home this weekend. I’d bet that the two will face each other in the Hockey East tournament final as well, especially since BU seems to have righted the ship, but I could also see Northeastern in that final against BC, a matchup in which I would also favor the Eagles, with the possibility of an upset.

The question then becomes whether BC has enough to still win an at-large bid, and I think the Eagles do. I don’t see BU sweeping the home-and-home this weekend, though a split is possible, but a single loss to BU in the regular season shouldn’t drop them far enough down to lose an at-large bid.

Upsets are always possible. One happened in the Olympics when Sweden beat Finland last week. Former Gophers standout Noora Räty hinted at retirement after that game if she can’t find a league to play in, even raising the possibility of playing in a men’s league. The women’s professional leagues in North America don’t pay the skaters enough to make it a living, so it’s always a question for women skaters in their senior year of college as to what happens after graduation, something I’m sure a lot of very talented women are pondering in this last month of the season.

Arlan: There aren’t many avenues that make it easy for elite players to continue in the sport once they’ve exhausted their college eligibility. Several, such as Julie Chu and Caroline Ouellette, have turned to coaching as a way to remain involved in the game and earn an income at the same time. The problem is that they still need game competition to remain sharp and continue to develop, and that often introduces schedule conflicts. That problem isn’t unique to women’s hockey, as it is faced by athletes in most sports that we consider to be nonrevenue. There aren’t a lot of professional options for weightlifters or biathletes, but it is likely easier in some sports to attract corporate sponsorship. It is tough in a sport like hockey where there are considerable costs for equipment, facilities, and travel; plus, opponents are needed for competition.

It may not be obvious at the moment, but I do see signs that the situation is improving. The game in Madison on Saturday, with an NCAA record crowd of 13,573, was the third time in a month that Minnesota played in front of a crowd of more than 5,000 people. There have been seasons where no game drew that well. So I do think interest in the game is growing, and the Olympics can only help. Hopefully, we get a couple of classic games for the Olympic medals.

Speaking of which, my guess before the Olympic tournament was that Canada would take gold. Even though the Americans had a more dominant performance on Monday, the preliminary game went to the Canadians, so I’ll stick with my prediction. Have you seen anything that has convinced you that the top prize is headed to the United States?

Candace: Not convinced per se, but I do see signs for optimism if you are hoping for a U.S. win. I saw the third period of the preliminary round, and the I’m still on the fence as to whether that second goal should have counted or not, or whether the whistle blew before it crossed the line; it did appear that way to me. There were also at least two too-many-players on the ice penalties that were not called against Canada. Despite that, the U.S. was outplayed in the third, and seemed to panic after Canada tied it, but the rivalry has been so even over the last few years that I think you could flip a coin and do better than actually predicting the outcome. Evidently after the loss to Canada, Team U.S.A. had a long film session looking at video of the loss and where they went wrong, focusing especially on defensive-zone and neutral-zone play.

The U.S. will especially want to make sure it holds Meghan Agosta-Marciano in check. She was the MVP in Vancouver four years ago, and she came up big again by tying the game last Wednesday to spark the Canadian rally, then scoring the insurance goal on a breakaway.

The U.S. has seemed to be a more dynamic offensive team in this tournament, so if it can get a couple of early goals, I think the outcome might be different in this round.

Dartmouth making a late-season run with a short-handed roster

Tyler Sikura returned to the Dartmouth lineup last weekend for the first time since Dec. 30, but the Big Green are still without a number of key players (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

It has been a struggle for Dartmouth this season, but the Big Green’s first sweep of the year came at an opportune time.

In a weekend of splits and ties throughout the league, Dartmouth was the only team to get four points, going on the road and scoring three unanswered goals in a 3-1 win over St. Lawrence on Friday before beating Clarkson 6-1 on Saturday.

“It was tough for the kids; they’ve played really hard and not gotten the results,” Dartmouth coach Bob Gaudet said. “They played hard this weekend and got some points. It’s just really key in terms of confidence going down the stretch here.”

The win against the Golden Knights marked the first time that the Big Green had scored a goal at Cheel Arena since November 2010, while Friday’s game was the program’s seventh straight win at St. Lawrence.

The sweep also leaves the Big Green with the possibility of hosting a playoff series in the first round, which would be an impressive accomplishment given that they started the year with eight straight losses and hadn’t been able to get on track before last weekend.

Dartmouth hosts Yale and Brown this weekend, with plenty of playoff seedings at stake. The Bulldogs are among four teams looking for the final first-round bye position, while the Bears presently hold the final home-ice spot.

See the ECAC Hockey standings here

While center Tyler Sikura returned to the lineup for the first time since Dec. 30, the Big Green will be without several key players for the rest of the season.

Gaudet said forward/defenseman Brett Patterson, who hasn’t played since January, is out for the rest of the season, while defender Ryan Bullock is out indefinitely. Those players join forward Eric Robinson, who was lost for the year after just two games, on the injured list.

Gaudet hopes that freshman center Troy Crema, who scored two goals in a 4-1 win at Yale on Dec. 6, is back this weekend.

With all the injuries, Dartmouth has been forced to play defensemen at forward. Senior Nick Lovejoy centered the fourth line last weekend and has played all three spots up front. Freshman Brandon Kirk also has seen time at forward, although he’ll likely slide back to defense with Bullock out.

“He’s a big, strong kid,” Gaudet said of Lovejoy. “There was a void there in the middle and he filled it. I’m really pleased with how he’s done. He’s a real leader; he’s says the right things on the bench. He really goes under the radar; he’s not going to be a guy that scores a boatload goals but he’s created good scoring chances.”

Despite a depleted lineup, Dartmouth was able to hold St. Lawrence’s top-ranked power play to one goal in five chances last Saturday, including a five-on-three situation at the start of the third period.

“Guys made good reads and were aggressive to force them to pass before they wanted to,” Gaudet said.

Sophomore Charles Grant was solid in goal both nights, and made 17 saves in the final period against the Saints.

“It wasn’t like we were sitting on it. There were a number of shots from a distance but Chuck made some really good saves,” Gaudet said. “They were kind of bang-bang plays. They came on hard and we needed him to come up big.”

Dartmouth will need to continue to string together wins and hope for some help if it wants to host a playoff game, but last weekend’s sweep at least gives it an opportunity.

“The team has really stuck together and come along, regardless of who is playing,” Gaudet said. “That resiliency is something that I really admire and respect in our guys.”

Jesse Root scored one of three short-handed goals by Yale in last Saturday’s win over Princeton (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

Special teams showcase

It was an odd night for both Yale’s and Princeton’s special teams last Saturday at Ingalls Rink.

The Bulldogs avoided a weekend sweep by winning 7-5 in the league’s highest-scoring game this season. Yale won despite going 0-for-4 on the power play while giving up two goals to the Tigers on the man advantage. The reason? Three short-handed goals, the most in program history.

Jesse Root, Ryan Obuchowski and Kenny Agostino each scored with the Bulldogs down a man. Agostino’s goal came on a late Princeton power play with goalie Sean Bonar pulled.

“Once we got the first short-handed goal, I thought we started cheating a little bit,” Root told YaleBulldogs.com. “The moral of that story is we need to play solid defensively. You can’t cheat the offense, especially on a penalty kill. You have to kill the penalty first and make sure the puck gets out of the zone, but when we did get opportunities it was good that we capitalized on them.”

While the Tigers are virtually locked into last place, Yale is among four teams looking for the final top-four spot. (Colleague Brian Sullivan broke down the standings on Monday.) There’s also a useful site for figuring out playoff possibilities here.

Around the league

• Two weeks ago, the focus was on Cornell’s balanced offense, which had been helping the Big Red put together some key wins entering February. That’s quickly disappeared, though, as Cornell has lost three in a row, scoring one goal in each of those games. Last weekend’s sweep came without top forwards Dustin Mowrey and Christian Hilbrich, who were out with injuries. Cornell’s power play started the year on a roll, but the Big Red are on an 0-for-25 skid with the man advantage.

• Quinnipiac likely will remember Providence fondly as the location of the program’s first NCAA tournament win last spring, but not so much for the recent regular season games it has played there. The Bobcats lost to Brown 4-2 last Saturday, dropping the program’s record at Meehan Auditorium to 2-4-3 all-time. Quinnipiac hasn’t won at Brown since Jan. 31, 2009. The league’s other top team, Union, hasn’t won there since Dec. 3, 2010. The Dutchmen end the regular season at Meehan on March 1.

• Former Rensselaer goalie Mathias Lange turned in a strong showing for Austria in the Olympics. Lange, who played at RPI from 2005 to 2009, stopped 49 of 50 shots in a pair of wins before making 31 saves in a 4-0 loss to Slovakia on Tuesday that knocked Austria from the tournament.

Near-perfect: Boston College gets 49 first-place nods, stays atop D-I men’s rankings

It was almost unanimous, but Boston College retained its spot at the top of the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll this week with 49 of a possible first-place votes and 999 total voting points out of a possible 1,000.

The Eagles started the week winning the Beanpot over Northeastern and then swept Vermont. BC also leads the country with 24 wins on the season.

Minnesota swept Michigan to stay at No. 2 and also received the other first-place vote.

Union beat Cornell and tied Colgate to stay third, St. Cloud State swept Minnesota-Duluth to jump two spots to No. 4 and Quinnipiac falls one place after defeating Yale and losing to Brown.

After splitting with Bemidji State, Ferris State is down two to No. 6, Massachusetts-Lowell beat Massachusetts to remain seventh, Wisconsin split with Ohio State and is again at No. 8, Northeastern lost to BC in the Beanpot final and then beat UMass to rise three notches to No. 9 and Michigan stays at No. 10 despite the sweep at the hands of Minnesota.

North Dakota swept Miami and leaps six spots to No. 11, Providence lost to Connecticut and then tied and won against Notre Dame to drop three places to No. 12, Cornell falls from No. 11 to No. 13 after losing to both Union and Rensselaer, Yale lost to Quinnipiac and beat Princeton, but falls one to No. 14 and Notre Dame runs up five notches to No. 15 after tying and defeating Providence.

At No. 16, Vermont is down one after its sweep to BC, Maine enters the rankings at No. 17 after sweeping Merrimack, Denver split with Nebraska-Omaha to stay 18th, Colgate tied RPI and Union to keep its handle on No. 19 and after its two losses to SCSU, Minnesota-Duluth falls four to No. 20 this week.

The USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll consists of 50 voters, including 28 coaches from the Division I conferences and 22 beat writers and sports professionals from across the country.

Wisconsin-River Falls ‘pleased with the way things have played out’ in WIAC play

Jon Schreiner has captained Wisconsin-River Falls to a solid WIAC season in 2013-14 (photo: Kathy M Helgeson/UW-River Falls Communications).

Life in the WIAC is tough and yet, Wisconsin-River Falls has managed to navigate its way to the top of the standings and put destiny in its grasp.

The No. 10 Falcons are 7-3 in the conference after a weekend sweep of Wisconsin-Stout and now, only games against Wisconsin-Stevens Point and Wisconsin-Eau Claire remain on the schedule.

Both opponents are nationally-ranked — the Pointers are third and the Blugolds are sixth — but the Falcons split against both teams earlier in the season.

Nothing will come easy against either team this weekend, but the Falcons are right where they want to be at this point in the season.

“We are very pleased with the way things have played out,” River Falls coach Steve Freeman said. “We’ve kept ourselves in the hunt for the top spot, but we have two tough games left and we have to play our best in them.”

The Falcons were at their best over the weekend as a pair of players came through with hat tricks. In Friday’s 9-3 win over the Blue Devils, Alec Hagaman scored three goals and dished out two assists. He entered the game with only eight points.

Christian George delivered his hat trick in Saturday’s 3-2 overtime win against Stout. George scored the OT game-winner and pushed his goal total to six on the season.

“You don’t see a lot of hat tricks in college hockey, but those guys were at the right place at the right time,” Freeman said. “The interesting thing is they both play on the same line.”

For the Falcons, consistency has been a huge part of their success, especially late as they have won four times in their last six games.

“The important thing for us is that we have been consistent at what we do,” Freeman said. “We play a lot of freshmen, but those guys are playing like veterans now. We have had a lot of guys step up and we play very well as a team.”

The Falcons, who are 14-6-3 on the season, have also been battle-tested in tight games and while they are just 2-4-3 in nine OT games this year, the experience could pay off in the long run.

“We’ve only lost two games in regulation this year,” Freeman said. “Our team plays hard and we battle the entire game.”

Willie Hess leads the Falcons in goals with 10 and has also dished out seven assists. Blake Huppert has come through with nine goals and 11 assists and Ryan Doner has tallied six goals and 10 assists. George has racked up six goals and 13 assists, Mitch Kortny has tallied eight goals and five assists, Hagaman has rung up six goals and eight assists and Jeff Burke has racked up three goals and nine assists.

Scott Lewan has played in 14 games in goal and has a 2.24 goals-against average. He has made 385 saves. Tanner Milliron has played in nine games and has a 2.16 goals-against average. He has racked up 232 saves.

The Falcons certainly have the talent to win the conference title this week, but they know it will take a great effort to get the job done.

“We are playing two of the best teams in the country and we know we have to play at a high level to be successful,” Freeman said. “But we aren’t going to change anything. We’ll stick to our approach to each game and just play our style of hockey. Weŕe looking forward to the challenge this week.”

Statement Series: Stevens Point swept both games of a weekend series against the Blugolds, winning 6-1 and 2-1 to remain in second place in the standings with a 6-3-1 record. The Pointers are 18-3-2 overall and ranked third in the nation.

The Pointers have won five of six games and completed the sweep of the defending national champs in thrilling fashion as Garrett Ladd scored in OT to give the Pointers a 2-1 win on Saturday night.

The goal was the 18th of the year for Ladd as helped the Pointers win 18 games for the first time since the 2001-02 campaign.

Kyle Sharkey also scored for Stevens Point and Brandon Jaeger racked up 30 saves.

MIAC champs St. Thomas the epitome of an all-around team effort

St. Thomas has clinched the MIAC regular-season championship and has been consistent the whole year with a supposed lack of star power (photo: Caleb Williams/d3photography.com).

St. Thomas coach Jeff Boeser will be the first to tell you his team doesn’t have a star.

Yet, even without star power, the Tommies keep getting it done on the ice.

It’s why St. Thomas enters the final week of the regular season with the MIAC championship in its possession.

“If you look at our stats, we don’t have that one guy who stands out,” Boeser said. ¨We just have guys who play hard and work hard to be a successful team.”

The Tommies have now won or shared the last three league titles and while it’s an honor to be a champion, Boeser said his players aren’t about to shift gears to cruise control this week.

“We are very humbled to win a championship and we are excited about the accomplishment,” Boeser said. “But the season isn’t over yet. Our focus is on the two games with St. John’s this week. They are a very good hockey team and we have to be ready to play.”

The Tommies secured their championship on Saturday as they completed a series sweep of second-place Gustavus Adolphus with a 4-1 victory on the road. The win pushed St. Thomas to 18-3-2 overall and to 12-0-2 in the conference.

No one for St. Thomas has more than nine goals. Alex Altenbernd leads the Tommies in scoring with nine goals and 12 assists.

Nick Nielsen has tallied six goals and 15 assists, while Tyler Gubb has come through with seven goals and eight assists. Jordan Lovick has racked up four goals and 11 assists.

Ten other players have scored at least two goals, while Drew Fielding is having a sensational season in goal. Fielding has a 1.43 goals-against average and has made 473 saves.

Boeser said a lot of the Tommies’ success has to do with the leadership provided by Gubb, Bryce Walker and Alex Niestrom, the three seniors on the roster.

“Leadership has been very big for us,” Boeser said. ¨Those guys push everyone else in practice. They have the respect of their teammates and they do a great job of leading by example.¨

Since a 2-0 loss to defending national champion Wisconsin-Eau Claire on Jan. 18, the Tommies have been on a roll, winning eight consecutive games.

And while their focus is only on the Johnnies at the moment as they look to wrap up the regular season in style, Boeser did talk about the keys to success come tournament time.

St. Thomas will be the top seed in the MIAC tournament and will be looking to win the title and earn the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.

“At this time of the year, you just want to keep getting better every week,” Boeser said. “You have to stay focused on the next game and just be ready to play smart and play hard. Our team isn’t satisfied. We still have a lot of work to do.”

Playoff Berths: In addition to St. Thomas, Gustavus, St. Olaf and St. John’s have all clinched berths in the MIAC tournament. The Johnnies are the defending tournament champions as St. John’s edged Gustavus 3-2 in the title game last season.

Waiting Game: Concordia (Minn.) is in wait-and-see mode in terms of the postseason. The Cobbers wrapped up the regular season on Saturday with a 5-2 loss to St. Mary’s. Concordia won the opener of the series 5-4 in overtime.

Concordia, which is 12-8-5 overall and 6-6-4 in the MIAC, needs St. Olaf to beat, tie or take Augsburg in one of their two games this coming weekend. The Auggies would take the playoff spot from Concordia if it can win both games against the Oles in regulation.

Concordia has 23 points on the season, while Augsburg has 18. The Auggies are 12-8-3 overall and 5-6-3 in the MIAC.

Minnesota retains No. 1 spot in D-I women’s poll

Minnesota again earned all 15 first-place votes in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll.

Wisconsin stayed No. 2, as did Cornell at No. 3.

Clarkson moved up one notch to No. 4, while Boston College and Harvard tied for fifth this week. BC jumps up up two spots and Harvard one.

North Dakota tumbles four places to No. 7 and Mercyhurst stays eighth.

Quinnipiac and Robert Morris tied at No. 9 this week as QU moved up one from No. 10 and RMU held steady in the ninth spot.

The USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll is compiled weekly and consists of 15 voters, including 14 coaches of Division I programs and one women’s hockey writer.

NCHC suspends Colorado College’s Hansen additional game for stick-swinging penalty

The NCHC has issued a one-game suspension to Colorado College freshman forward Matt Hansen.

The suspension is in addition to the automatic one-game suspension for a game disqualification penalty he received at the end of the Tigers’ game against Western Michigan on Feb. 15.

Hansen was assessed the extra game after a review of the play in which Hansen swung his stick and made contact to the head and neck area of Western Michigan player Thomas Nitsche. Hansen was assessed a five-minute high-sticking major and a game disqualification penalty, while Nitsche was given a two-minute minor for roughing and a five-minute cross checking major.

All penalties occurred at the 20-minute mark of the third period.

Hansen will serve the two-game suspension during Colorado College’s next series against Denver from Feb. 21-22 and is eligible to return for the Tigers’ game at Nebraska-Omaha on Feb. 28.

Maine’s Lomberg gets one-game suspension from Hockey East for elbowing incident

Hockey East has suspended Maine sophomore forward Ryan Lomberg for one game after an elbowing infraction in the game against Merrimack on Feb. 15.

Lomberg will be eligible to return on Saturday, Feb. 22, against Northeastern.

TMQ: Some NCHC teams facing unfamiliar NCAA tournament outlooks

Enrico Blasi and Miami are in danger of missing the NCAA tournament for the first time in nine years (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

Tuesday Morning Quarterback looks at the big events and big issues in Division I men’s college hockey.

Jim: This week, we have one of our NCHC columnists, Matthew Semisch, pinch hitting for Todd Milewski. So this seems like a perfect time to bring up what has been a pressing question on my mind about the NCHC: What is the mentality of the NCHC teams as we get closer to the NCAA tournament selection?

These are all teams used to being in contention for an NCAA bid. Right now, just St. Cloud State and North Dakota would be in the tournament. And while Minnesota-Duluth and Denver are both near the bubble, the rest of the teams are in a position where it is win your conference tournament or hit the golf course early. That has to strike some of these teams as a little abnormal.

Matthew: I think it certainly would have hit all eight teams that way when the season started, but I wonder if maybe that’s the case less and less now as reality and the home stretch of the regular season have crept up on us.

Candace Horgan (our other NCHC columnist) and I asked coaches around the league in the fall for our league season preview what they thought the nature of this beast was going to be, and the consensus opinion was that all eight teams were going to beat up on each other all season and then do the same all over again in the NCHC playoffs. They’ve been right about that, although it’s heartening to see that the league would have two teams in the NCAA tournament now instead of just the one in St. Cloud State, and that looked to be the case even only a couple months ago.

You talked about Minnesota-Duluth, which fell down a couple places this week in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll, but I’m excited to see how things continue to shake out, not least because I could still see one of Minnesota-Duluth, Denver, Western Michigan or even Nebraska-Omaha making a push to get into the NCAAs. I’m curious as to the league’s perception from the outside, though, Jim. Looking at the league from out east, what has been your take on how the first NCHC season is unfolding?

Jim: I agree that I had a concern that the league members would beat up on one another, something that proves true to this point. I have been surprised, though, to see that aside from St. Cloud State, every team has had some inconsistencies, not just in league play but overall.

The fact that Miami is dead last has been shocking. Denver has been streaky. North Dakota started slow but seems to be clicking now. Up and down, I’m just a little surprised that no team besides St. Cloud has put forward anything to write home about.

Let’s move out east, where our first league champion has been crowned in Boston College. The Hockey East regular season does end a week earlier this year but still I really have to think WAY back to remember a league champion crowned by the midpoint of February. Maybe Maine in 1992-93? Regardless, these Eagles continue to impress with a three-win week. I feel like we’re asking this question week in and week out, but this BC team seems unstoppable, doesn’t it?

Brendan Silk (9) and Boston College are unbeaten in their last 17 games (photo: Melissa Wade).

Matthew: “Seems to be” or “is”? It’s unbelievable to think BC hasn’t lost — and has won everything apart from picking up one tie — since right after Thanksgiving when the Eagles lost at home in that high-scoring but close game against Holy Cross on Nov. 29.

What makes the Eagles’ run all the more impressive is they’ve been beating some pretty good teams during this streak they’re on. Three of them (Notre Dame, Maine and Vermont) would be in the NCAA tournament if the season ended right now, but they’ve also won a grueling edition of the Beanpot and beaten Boston University twice. Although BU isn’t having its best season, the cliche about having to throw out teams’ records in big rivalry games does hold up there to a degree.

My concern for BC, though, is that maybe a loss before the postseason begins could be a good thing — you often learn more about yourself from a loss than you do from a win. To that end, is there any concern in your mind about BC possibly peaking a bit too early?

Jim: If it was any team besides BC, I might say yes to that question. For the Eagles, and particularly coach Jerry York, winning streaks are second nature. This team has put together a number of impressive streaks over the last 15 years, and knowing that a good number of players on this team already won a national title in 2012 makes me believe that with or without a loss between now and NCAA tourney time, this team should be OK.

That said, this weekend will be an excellent test for the Eagles facing Massachusetts-Lowell in a home-and-home series beginning Friday night in Boston. If that loss is to come, maybe this is the weekend?

Another team that is pretty close to clinching a title is Minnesota in the Big Ten. It could happen Feb. 28 or March 1 when the Gophers host Penn State, depending on what Wisconsin and Michigan do this weekend. That said, I’m excited to watch the Big Ten tournament given how unpredictable results have been in the league in recent weeks. Do you agree this could be a wide-open field?

Matthew: Absolutely, and there’s plenty of evidence to back that idea up. Just looking at the PairWise Rankings, half of the Big Ten would get into the NCAA tournament right now, and that’s impressive when you consider it’s a smaller league like the NCHC where everyone beats the tar out of one another every week.

Penn State would have to go on a huge tear to make any hay in the playoffs, but teams one through five in that league have every chance to keep going after the Big Ten tournament ends. I’ll be interested to see what Minnesota’s able to do in the Big Ten tourney, though, partly because I think the Gophers will still have fresh in their minds the fact they didn’t really show up in their one WCHA Final Five game last year. They bowed out right away against Colorado College, albeit thanks in large part to a red-hot Tigers goalie in Joe Howe that had put CC on his back over an improbable run.

Moving to ECAC Hockey, though, what do you make of Union and Quinnipiac as possible contenders for the national title? Cornell would be in the NCAAs right now, too, and Yale still has a chance of defending its title if it catches up a bit. But it’s good to see the ECAC somewhat quietly being a big force to be reckoned with once again.

Jim: I haven’t seen Union play this season but there is no reason to believe based on results this season that they can’t return to the Frozen Four. Same goes for Quinnipiac. I was very impressed by that team every time I have seen them play and the one concern I had about the Bobcats entering the season — goaltending — might be their strongest position as Michael Garteig is near the top of the nation in all of the goaltending categories.

Let’s look ahead at this weekend as the regular season winds down. Out east, we’ve already mentioned the Lowell-BC series in Hockey East. Maine and Northeastern will also square off in two at Matthews Arena, with both battling for home ice in the quarterfinals.

Cornell heads to Quinnipiac on Friday in the ECAC, while Clarkson needs to right the ship and will have two tough games against Union and Rensselaer.

In Atlantic Hockey, Mercyhurst plays a home-and-home series with rival Niagara beginning on Friday in Erie, Pa., knowing that, if things fall right, the Lakers could clinch the regular season title this weekend. (They could also fall out of first place, which shows how close things are in the AHA.)

How about out west? What are the key games to watch?

Matthew: Nothing in the Big Ten this weekend really stands out to me so much because Michigan should sweep Penn State at home and Wisconsin will surely take points off of Michigan State in Madison.

In the WCHA, though, Alaska-Anchorage going to Ferris State is a very intriguing series. Ferris State has been great all season, but UAA has had a fabulous turnaround this season under first-year coach Matt Thomas. I wrote a feature on him right after the Seawolves hired him, and it’s good to see him doing so well right away, so much so that he ought to be in the race for national coach of the year honors.

Maybe the biggest remaining regular-season series in the NCHC is actually next weekend when North Dakota goes to St. Cloud State, but I’m excited to see what happens this weekend when UND goes to Minnesota-Duluth. Duluth has been much improved in the second half of this season and it could go a long way toward locking up a top-half finish in the NCHC. The problem for UND there, though, would be that anything less than a split against Duluth could lead to SCSU opening up its three-point lead at the top of the league standings even further.

Big Ten suspends Michigan’s Downing, Sinelli one game apiece

The Big Ten announced Monday that Michigan freshman defenseman Michael Downing and junior forward Andrew Sinelli have each been suspended for one game as a result of separate incidents that occurred in the game against Minnesota on Feb. 15.

The actions were taken by the conference after a review of the incidents that occurred in the third period.

At the 5:35 mark, Downing received a major penalty for contact to the head and a game misconduct.

Then at the 14:37 mark, Sinelli received a minor penalty for cross-checking.

Downing and Sinelli are ineligible to play in Michigan’s game against Penn State on Feb. 21.

Crowning a champ, 20 wins and the Irish on the move

Last Monday night, Boston College won its fifth straight Beanpot. But that wasn’t the only trophy the Eagles received last week. That leads off the three things I learned this week:

1. Boston College clinches regular-season title

So it seems a little bit early in the calendar, but the Hockey East regular season trophy is already decided. Boston College put together such an impressive regular season run in league play, just a single loss to date, that the Eagles are on pace for a record-setting Hockey East season. Should the Eagles win the remainder of its games, it will tie Maine’s campaign from 1992-93 for the least losses in league play. That Maine team went 22-1-1 in league play. BC is on pace to be able to post an 18-1-1 mark this season.

2. River Hawks reach 20 for third straight season

Plenty has been made of what Massachusetts-Lowell head coach Norm Bazin has done to turn around the River Hawks program. Last Friday, his team reached another significant milestone, beating Massachusetts to earn the team’s 20th victory of the season. It’s the first time in the school’s program history that the club has put forth 20 wins in three straight seasons, definitely deserving of a tip of the cap.

And by the way, if you missed how Lowell earned that victory over the Minutemen, it is worth it to take a second and watch the dramatic ending. You can do so by clicking here.

3. Three-point weekend brings Notre Dame into the thick of things

All season, folks have been waiting for Notre Dame to make some sort of move up the Hockey East standings. Well, three points on the road at Providence did just that as the Irish are now in the thick of the key Hockey East playoff races. Notre Dame still sits in seventh place with 14 points. But they are just two points behind sixth-place Providence and four points in back of fifth-place New Hampshire, one of the enviable places in the standings as the top five teams will avoid a first-round play-in game. It’s still an uphill climb for the Irish with only three games remaining (Providence has a game-in-hand on Notre Dame, a distinct advantage). If anything, Notre Dame’s successful weekend has put the team in solid position to remain at home in the opening round, now sitting three points ahead of ninth place Massachusetts.

Clarity, one game at a time

Playing for position

Time to fire up the seeding machine and see what we’re looking at with two weeks left. Suffice to say, there are a lot of fantastic races shaping up in ECAC Hockey.

Union has a four-point lead on Quinnipiac for first; the Dutchmen cannot finish lower than third, thereby clinching a first-round bye.

Quinnipiac can finish anywhere between first and sixth; the Bobcats will not open on the road.

Colgate has also avoided a first-round road trip, as they cannot fall beyond eighth place.

Cornell and Clarkson are tied with 20 points, and are out of the running for the Cleary Cup. Both have a basement of 10th place and a ceiling of second.

• Neither Yale nor Rensselaer can finish higher than second; nor can they finish lower than 11th.

Brown, alone in eighth for the moment, can finish anywhere between third place and dead last.

Harvard and St. Lawrence are a point behind Brown for the last home-series spot. They could finish as high as fourth if all the pieces fall in the right place; they could also finish last.

Dartmouth is officially out of the running for a bye. The Big Green are playing for home-ice in the first round, but even that is an uphill climb: Dartmouth’s ceiling is seventh place.

Princeton is locked into a first-round road trip, but could improve their draw. Currently last, the Tigers could climb as high as ninth.

Big winners

Union put some distance between itself and Quinnipiac, earning three out of four points at Cornell and Colgate. When QU stumbled at Brown in Saturday’s lone afternoon game, the Dutchmen knew they had a massive opportunity to put the top seed all but out of reach… that evening’s tie at Colgate wasn’t all that Union could have hoped for, but the four-point lead is significant.

Harvard was one of the other three-point winners, edging Clarkson 1-0 in OT and tying St. Lawrence in Canton. The points elevated the Crimson to within a whisper of eighth-place Brown.

Dartmouth was ECAC Hockey’s only four-point squad last weekend, sweeping the North Country by a 9-2 aggregate. The Big Green are paying for their season-long inconsistency (to put it mildly), but the sweep removes them from the basement and gives the team a legitimate shot at a first-round home series.

Hoped for better

Clarkson took a big goose-egg this week, dropping decisions to Harvard and Dartmouth. Flying high a month ago, the Knights are 2-6 in their last eight and are engaged in a four-team dogfight for the final first-round bye.

Cornell suffered a major setback, dropping both of this week’s games at Lynah and failing to put any space at all between itself the rest of the fourth-place pack. In the same boat as Clarkson, the Big Red are grappling with the Knights, Yale and Rensselaer for one prized spot in the standings.

Colgate hosted twice this week, but only mustered two draws against RPI and Union. The Raiders are all but out of the hunt for the Cleary Cup, and are within one week’s work of the fourth-place pack.

St. Lawrence could be in the middle third right now, but instead took a single point out of two home games and are fighting to stay off the road in the first round.

What I think I learned this Valentine’s Day weekend in the WCHA

Here are the three things I think I learned about the WCHA this Valentine’s Day weekend with three weekends now remaining in the regular season.

The road to the WCHA Final Five will go through Big Rapids and Mankato

Ok, so I don’t think this one, I can safely say I know it for a fact.

First-round, best-of-three WCHA playoff series March 14-15 in Big Rapids, Mich., and Mankato, Minn., are no longer just an assumption, they are indeed a fact after both Ferris State and Minnesota State clinched home ice over the weekend thanks to Lake Superior State splitting with Northern Michigan and Alaska sweeping Michigan Tech.

The Mavericks and Bulldogs are tied for first in the WCHA with 34 points, which is the maximum number of points third-place Alaska-Anchorage can accumulate after taking three of four points at home against Bowling Green. NMU, which sits in eighth, can max out at 33 points while four other teams — Alaska, Tech, BGSU and LSSU — can only total 32 points tops the rest of the season.

The lowest either FSU or MSU can finish is in a tie with UAA for second place, or potentially a three-way tie for first in the league, which would leave the Mavericks first, Bulldogs second and Seawolves third based on number of league wins.

Ferris State and Minnesota State have been two of the best teams in the country on their home ice this year. Just in league play, FSU is 9-0-1 while the Mavericks are 11-1-0.

Anchorage is the last place almost anyone in the WCHA wants to play in the first round

The Bulldogs and Mavericks may be nigh unbeatable at home, but a trip to Mankato doesn’t involve hopping on planes and hanging out in airport terminals like a trip to Anchorage does.

While not as dominant as Ferris or MSU, the third-place Seawolves haven’t been half bad themselves at home, going 9-3-2 in league play and 11-3-2 overall at Sullivan Arena. The only team in the league that may welcome a trip to Anchorage is the Alaska Nanooks, who along with NMU and LSSU are one of three teams to get a win at Sullivan Arena.

To clinch home ice and return to Anchorage for the playoffs, UAA will have to win at Ferris State and at Alaska over the next three weeks. UAA is 3-7-2 overall this season on the road and 2-6-2 in league play away from Anchorage.

Along with the Nanooks, the WCHA would also probably be pleased with a fifth, sixth and if necessary seventh game between the Seawolves and Nanooks. If you remember a ways back, the league originally planned to have Alaska and UAA meet in the postseason every year to cut down on travel costs. It could still get its wish.

The WCHA standings will only get tighter

Last week, LSSU head coach Jim Roque said he felt like a broken record talking about how tight the league standings are each and every week.

Well, Roque’s record player isn’t getting fixed anytime soon. It’s probably going to get worse.

Roque’s Lakers and Wildcats solved little by splitting this weekend in Marquette, Bemidji State kept pace with an upset Saturday of league-leading Ferris State, and Michigan Tech was reeled back into the middle of the pack by Alaska, which joined the logjam with 7-3 and 7-2 wins in Houghton.

Bemidji, LSSU and Northern all have series coming up against last-place Alabama-Huntsville, meaning they are a weekend away from jumping from the bottom half of the standings to the top half, assuming they don’t slip up against the Chargers.

The Lakers and Wildcats also have two games in hand on everyone in front of them battling for home ice and a playoff spot, so the ‘Cats and Lakers can both make up some ground with a split while teams take their last bye.

What this all means is, if things continue the way they have been, someone may be missing the WCHA playoffs not because they lost a first or second tiebreaker, but because a third or fourth tiebreaker didn’t go their way.

Let’s hope it doesn’t come down to a flip of the coin, which would be dumb to rule out at this point considering how tight and unpredictable these past few weeks have been.

For WCHA tie breaking procedures, visit the league’s standings page here and scroll to the bottom of the page.

Champions getting crowned

Salve Regina captain John Scorcia scored twice with an assist in the Seahawks’ win over Becker last Wednesday (photo: Andrea Hansen).

The rundown from an exciting past weekend…

ECAC East

The Norwich Cadets captured their 16th straigh ECAC East crown with victories over Babson and Massachusetts-Boston. They defeated Babson 1-0 on Friday night with the goal coming from Dean Niezgoda in the first period and Chris Czarnota stopping all 10 shots. Saturday night, Norwich defeated UMass-Boston 5-3. Stephen Buco had two goals and Travis Jenke had a goal and a helper in the victory.
Both Babson and UMass-Boston tied St. Michael’s over the weekend. UMass-Boston earned 4-4 tie Friday and the Beavers earned a 1-1 tie on Saturday night.

ECAC Northeast

League-leading Nichols’ lone game over the week was on Tuesday with a 5-3 win over surging second-place Wentworth. The Bison jumped out to a 4-0 lead with goals from Mike Weaver, Seth Swanson, Sean Fleming and Mike Schwartz. Wentworth responded with goals from Jordan Bourgonje, Kevin Crowe and Andrew Yarber. Greg Strootman added the empty-netter.
Wentworth defeated Becker 5-3 on Saturday.
Third-place Salve Regina picked up a 6-1 win over Becker on Wednesday. John Scorcia had two goals and an assist in the victory. Alec Butler potted a goal and two assists.
Johnson and Wales picked up a 6-3 win over Western New England Saturday. Fran Mackin had a hat trick and Alan Martin had a pair of his own.

ECAC West

Elmira earned three points over Manhattanville and is in a first-place tie with Utica. The two teams skated to a 1-1 tie on Friday night. Luc Van Natter scored for Manhattanville, while Saturday night was an offensive showdown with Elmira winning 7-4. Jordan Robertson had two goals for Elmira. Jake Mooney had a goal and assist.
Utica picked up a 5-2 victory over Nazareth. Jon Gaffney had a goal and two assists to lead Utica. Nick Therrien had 27 saves.

MASCAC

Salem State continues to be on the top of the MASCAC standings with a 5-2 win over Massachusetts-Dartmouth Saturday night. Mark Macdonald had a hat trick, while Jacob Strzalkowski and Ian Canty also scored for the Vikings. Shaun Walters had both goals for UMass-Dartmouth.
Both Framingham State and Westfield State are two points behind Salem State. Westfield State had a 4-0 win over Fitchurg State. Taylor Murphy had a goal and assist, while Eddie Davey stopped 29 shots for the shutout. Framingham State doubled up Worcester State 4-2. Brandon McCarron potted two goals in the victory.

MIAC

The top two teams in the MIAC met this weekend for two games. St Thomas swept Gustavus Adolphus 4-2 and 4-1 on the weekend. Alex Niestrom had two goals and Tyler Gubb had two assists. Jordan Lovick and Connor McBride also scored. Corey Leivermann scored twice for Gustavus Adolphus. On Saturday, Bryce Walker had a goal and assist for St. Thomas, while Leivermann picked up Gustavus Adolphus’ lone goal.
Third-place St. Olaf had the weekend off.

NCHA

First-place St. Nobert had no problem with Northland this weekend with back-to-back shutouts on Friday and Saturday. On Friday, St. Nobert defeated Northland 10-0 and 7-0 on Saturday. Michael Hill had four goals on Friday and Brandon Hoogenboom had a hat track Saturday.
St. Norbert clinched its 14th Peters Cup (NCHA regular-season championship) in the last 18 seasons in the 7-0 victory.
Second-place Adrian swept Lake Forest with a 4-2 victory on Friday and a 6-5 overtime thriller on Saturday. Ryan Lowe, Zach Wilson, Jeremy Olinyk and Duston Hebebrand tallied on Friday for Adrian. Kevin Balas potted a hat trick, including the overtime goal. Zach Wilson, John Ranalli and Hebebrand also lit the lamp in Saturday’s action.

NESCAC

Top team in the NESCAC, Trinity, took out the two Maine schools in Bowdoin and Colby. On Friday, they needed overtime to defeat Bowdoin 5-4. Ryan Cole had two goals and assisted on the OT goal that was scored by John Hawkrigg, who also had three assists in the game. On Saturday, Trinity doubled up Colby 4-2 with Hawkrigg notching two goals.
Amerst, the second-place team in the NESCAC,. earned two 1-1 ties last weekend. On Friday, they faced Connecticut College where Topher Flanagan scored the lone goal for Amherst. Jake Turrin scored on Sunday in the game against Tufts.

SUNYAC

Geneseo, the top team in the SUNYAC, picked up two 3-2 victories over the weekend. On Friday, Geneseo defeated Oswego as Zachary Vit had a goal and assist, Ryan Stanimir and David Ripple also scored, while Chris Waterstreet and Matt Galati scored for Oswego. On Saturday, they defeated Cortland where Vit had another goal and assist. Tyler Brickler and Jack Ceglarski scored.
Second-place Plattsburgh had the holiday weekend off.

WIAC

Wisconsin-River Falls has a one-point lead over Wisconsin-Stevens Point for the top spot in the conference. River Falls defeated Wisconsin-Stout over the weekend. They defeated Stout 9-3 on Friday where Blake Huppert had two goals and four assists. On Saturday, they needed overtime in the 3-2 win. Christian George had the hat trick.
Stevens Point swept Wisconsin-Eau Claire over the weekend. Friday night, they lit the lamp six times in the 6-1 win. Joe Kalisz had two goals, while Brandon Jaeger made 25 saves. On Saturday, Eau Claire sent Stevens Point into overtime where Stevens Point came way with 2-1 win. Kyle Sharkey and Garrett Ladd scored.

Women’s D-I wrap: Feb. 17

Three of four regular-season titles decided
Heading into the final week of play, the season championship has been mathematically clinched in three of the four leagues, and in each case the decisive win came on the road. By virtue of its victory at Wisconsin on Friday night, Minnesota claimed the WCHA crown. Mercyhurst captured another CHA trophy when it won on Sunday at Penn State. Boston College earned its first Hockey East season title with a win over Maine on Sunday.

Three teams remain in contention for the top rung in ECAC Hockey. Cornell holds the inside track, leading both Clarkson and Harvard by a point, thanks in large part to the Golden Knights’ win over the Crimson on Friday. Maintaining the lead in the ECAC in recent weeks has often proven precarious, so it remains to be seen whether the Big Red can close the deal when they host Quinnipiac and Princeton.

Back from the dead
At certain points of the season, No. 8 Mercyhurst’s hope off adding to its string of consecutive CHA titles looked to be fading, but the Lakers made it a dozen straight years atop the CHA. They took care of business at Penn State by scores of 4-0 and 4-1 to eliminate Robert Morris.

Amanda Makela earned both wins, including her sixth shutout. In the first game, Christie Cicero, Kaleigh Chippy, Emily Janiga, and Christine Bestland each had a goal and an assist. Bestland repeated that feat on Sunday, joined this time by Jenna Dingeldein and Molly Byrne, while Janiga contributed three helpers.

With each passing week, a possible Mercyhurst return to the NCAA tournament for a 10th straight year appears more probable as well. Lakers … Lazarus. I think there’s a similarity there if you say it fast enough.

Double the fun
The Hockey East title may have been a first for No. 7 Boston College, but it wasn’t its first championship of the week. BC claimed the Beanpot Tuesday with a 3-0 blanking of Northeastern. Corinne Boyles registered 25 saves while Taylor Wasylk, Meagan Mangene, and Melissa Bizzari lit the lamp.

BC posted twin 4-1 wins at Orono over the weekend. Haley Skarupa was one of four Eagles to score in the first game, and then she exploded for a hat trick in the third period on Sunday.

Spoiling all the fun
No. 1 Minnesota defended its WCHA title, as it took the league for the eighth time, and in the process put a damper on the festivities in Madison. The No. 2 Badgers paid honor to their senior class before Friday night’s game, and drew first blood on a power-play goal by Brittany Ammerman. That proved to be their only lead of the weekend. Dani Cameranesi ultimately scored the game-winning goal in the third period in Friday’s 3-2 Minnesota win.

On Saturday, Wisconsin was energized by an NCAA record crowd of 13,573 fans in the Kohl Center, but Amanda Leveille stopped all 24 shots by the Badgers to subdue the partisans. Kelly Terry scored the first goal and assisted on another to help the Gophers to a 4-0 triumph. The one concern for Minnesota was the loss of Hannah Brandt to injury in the final period.

Are the Olympics almost over?
For the fourth straight week, No. 4 North Dakota was unable to record a sweep while missing players due to the Olympics. This result was the most painful, as UND was swept on home ice by Minnesota State, 4-2 and 2-1. North Dakota struck first in each contest and Meghan Dufault scored in both games for the hosts, but Danielle Butters made 45 stops in the first game and another 40 in the second as the Mavericks rallied. Lauren Barnes led the charge in the opener with a goal and two assists, as Katie Johnson, Shelby Moteyunas, and Nicole Germain also tallied. Outside of Butters, the Mavericks didn’t wake until the third period on Sunday. Once they did, Kari Lundberg one-timed a pass from Barnes on a power play to tie the game. With 3:30 remaining, Nicole Germain cleaned up a rebound after Tracy McCann drove the net and depleted the defenses to stun North Dakota.

Phoebe who?
Yale did a better job of coping this weekend in the absence of Swiss Olympian Phoebe Staenz. The Bulldogs went on the road and claimed three points. Versus No. 10 Quinnipiac, Krista Yip-Chuck, Kate Martini, and Hanna Åström scored in response to earlier tallies by Bobcats Shiann Darkangelo and Nicole Connery. Quinnipiac needed a goal from Kelly Babstock with 65 seconds to play to salvage the 3-3 tie.

Princeton wasn’t as fortunate. After taking a 3-1 lead on a goal by Hilary Lloyd and two by Fiona McKenna, the Tigers had a great view of the Jackie Raines show. Raines scored four times for Yale, and Yip-Chuck added another and assisted twice as Yale won, 5-3.

The haves and the have-nots
Some separation occurred in Hockey East as the top four teams enjoyed sweeps over those in the bottom half. In addition to BC over Maine, Boston University swept Providence, Northeastern did the same to Connecticut, and Vermont took a pair from New Hampshire.

How the rest of the top 10 fared
The struggles of No. 9 Robert Morris continued. Rebecca Vint scored short-handed in the third period on Friday to give the Colonials a 2-1 win at RIT, but Ali Binnington made 22 saves to shut them out on Saturday. Celeste Brown scored the game’s only goal on a first-period power play.

No. 5 Clarkson swept on the road at No. 6 Harvard, 2-1, and Dartmouth, 6-1. Erin Ambrose scored with just over five minutes left to defeat the Crimson. Genevieve Bannon led the way with two goals and two assists in the thumping of the Big Green.

Despite the setback at the hands of the Golden Knights, Harvard enjoyed a winning week. Samantha Reber scored with 10 seconds left in overtime to defeat BU in the Beanpot consolation game, 3-2. Reber had three points to key a 5-2 win over St. Lawrence.

No. 3 Cornell survived more than it flourished in defeating Union, 2-0, and Rensselaer, 6-5. Jessica Campbell and Jillian Saulnier scored unassisted goals against the Dutchwomen in support of Paula Voorheis’ 18-save shutout. Saulnier and Hanna Bunton netted a pair apiece on Saturday. Bunton’s second tally came in overtime after Ali Svoboda scored for the Engineers with 25 seconds remaining in regulation to extend the game.

Women’s D-III wrap: Feb. 17

A number of conference races are yet to be resolved, as recent action left questions unanswered.

ECAC West
No significant movement transpired at the top of the conference, as No. 1 Plattsburgh and No.3 Elmira kept pace. The Cardinals overwhelmed Chatham 12-1 and 5-2 in a weekend series, while the Soaring Eagles took a pair of road wins over host Cortland (1-12-1). Oswego, on the strength of a six-game win streak, has advanced to third place with a 10-3-1 conference record. Backed by a solid performance from goalie Bridget Smith, the Lakers topped visiting Utica by identical 2-1 scores over the weekend. Oswego entered the weekend one point ahead of the Pioneers in the ECAC West standings, but currently enjoys a five-point cushion over Utica (8-6-0), which has fallen to fifth place. Potsdam (7-4-3) remains in fourth.

ECAC East
Norwich (No.3) put the finishing touches on a successful weekend, taking down New England College (4-0) and Castleton (4-0) in the process. In Rhode Island, Salve Regina continues to make its presence felt following 3-0, home victories over Manhattanville and Nichols. The Seahawks, 3-1-1 in the month of February, have secured a second seed for the upcoming playoffs, edging out third-place Castleton by one point.

NESCAC
Williams gave unbeaten No.2 Middlebury all it could handle in a crucial weekend home-and-home series. Friday night in Vermont, the Ephs’ Hanna Beattie connected on a power-play goal at 3:54 of the third period, evening the contest at 2-2. The Panthers however, used a holding call by the Ephs at 16:46 as a springboard to collect the game-winner with 2:45 remaining in regulation. Jennifer Krakower beat Williams goalie Chloe Billadeau for the decisive tally. With Billadeau pulled, sophomore forward Michaela Levine’s game-tying bid, with a near open net with 42 ticks left was turned aside by a quickly recovering Panthers goalie Annabelle Jones. Saturday at the Lansing Chapman Rink, Jones and Billadeau were front and center again in a 1-1 tie. Jones (12-0-4) finished with 22 saves and Billadeau had 24 in a tightly played defensive contest. Cristina Bravi’s unassisted score late in the first held up for the home team until the Panthers’ Pam Schulman evened the festivities up at 17:26 in the third with helpers from Katie Mandigo and Madeline Joyce. Williams remains a point behind second-place Amherst in the conference with two games remaining in the regular season.

MIAC
The status quo at the top of the MIAC standings remained as St. Thomas and Gustavus Aldolphus battled to a weekend split in a home-and-home set. Following a 3-1 loss on Saturday, Gustavus fell to 13-3-0 in the MIAC, while the Tommies, who lost by a 3-1 final the previous night, upped their record 12-2-2 in league play.  St. Thomas will engage in their final regular season series with a home-and-home series with St. Benedict, while the Gusties take on Bethel.

Climbing Tigers

This has been a tough year for the Colorado College Tigers, who after beating Minnesota-Duluth in their season opener didn’t get another win until December. And while CC has still struggled in the second half, there have been moments that point to a squad that is getting better and could be dangerous come playoff time. Some second-half highlights have included a tie with then No. 7 Providence, a convincing win over Miami, and a tie with Minnesota-Duluth in Duluth.

This past weekend, Western Michigan, one of the hottest teams in the country in the second half, traveled to Colorado Springs for a key NCHC series, and CC accomplished something it had only done once before in this season, back in early December when Nebraska-Omaha came to town, in getting points in both games.

After Friday’s contest, CC could have been forgiven for thinking it would not be their weekend. The Tigers opened up a 3-0 lead by midway through the second period, but starting with just under three minutes left in the second, Western Michigan rallied with four goals in an eight-minute span to take a 4-3 lead. The Tigers tied it back up less than two minutes later, and after a scoreless overtime, lost the shootout.

“It feels like a loss,” said a disappointed Scott Owens after Friday’s game.

Commenting on the fact that the Tigers had finally scored a few goals, only to suffer some defensive breakdowns, Owens said, “It’s like most guys’ golf games. When the putting’s good, they can’t drive well, and when the drives are good, they can’t hit the green. It’s been like that all year; it’s been like this for four months. It was nice to see some pucks go in, but we had some lapses defensively.”

However, CC regrouped the next night, and while the game was scoreless entering the third, the Tigers had outshot the Broncos in both periods. In the third, CC struck twice early, with Charlie Taft netting the first goal at the 21-second mark and Luc Gerdes getting one at 3:26.

CC then clamped down defensively, preventing the Broncos from staging a rally, and Sam Rothstein scored a power-play goal at 16:53 to seal it.

“We hung in there and it was just kind of a chess game for awhile,” said Owens. “When you score on the opening faceoff on a play like that, it kind of gets the building going and your bench going. That’s a huge deal.”

Next weekend, CC plays a home-and-home with arch-rival Denver. On the line is the Gold Pan, awarded to the winner of the season series. Since Denver claimed the Gold Pan last year, CC would have to outright win it to get it back, meaning the Tigers would have to take both games this weekend.

There is an asterisk though. Denver tied CC in the first game between the two this year, and won the shootout. The Pioneers then won the next night at home. Owens and Denver coach Jim Montgomery still haven’t made a decision about how the shootout affects things, but both seemed to believe the first game counts as a tie, so Denver is 1-0-1 in the series so far.

“Jim and I had a talk right before it last time, and we haven’t finalized it,” said Owens. “I think we’re going to leave it just as the way the points were. They have a three-point to one lead, even though they won the shootout. I’ll talk to Jim about it this week.”

Huskies gain key sweep
Entering a series against in-state rival Minnesota-Duluth that could have further jumbled the NCHC standings, St. Cloud had been struggling in the second half to string together consistent performances, especially defensively. The Bulldogs had been a hot team in the second half, and while they hadn’t won in St. Cloud since 2004, there was reason for optimism.

Instead, St. Cloud swept the weekend by 5-3 and 4-3 scores, staying three points ahead of North Dakota, which also swept the weekend, and opening a six-point lead on third place Nebraska-Omaha.

On Friday, St. Cloud opened up a four-goal lead in the first period and, after the Bulldogs had scored two in the second to make it close, Jimmy Murray scored his second of the game just 21 seconds into the third to give the Huskies some breathing room. Austin Farley scored for Duluth at 17:01, but that was as close as the Bulldogs got.

On Saturday, St. Cloud took a 3-1 lead on two goals early in the second, but Duluth rallied. Dominic Toninato scored at 10:41 of the second to pull within one, and Alex Iafallo scored a five-on-three power-play goal at 4:56 of the third to tie it.

However, St. Cloud’s Jonny Brodzinski came up big with the game-winner at 18:11 of the third.

“We needed a game like that; we needed to find a way to win a tight one,” said Huskies coach Bob Motzko after Saturday’s game. “We were kind of enjoying it. We were talking between each period that it was just a great game. We had nothing to say, keep playing. We were our worst enemy. We were our best friend for a lot of it and then the turnover on the second goal, getting beat one-on-one, and then two bad penalties. We were doing a lot of good things, but we also kept stubbing our toe.”

White flag for Miami?
Have the Miami RedHawks given up on the year? While Colorado College has fought to improve, the RedHawks, who started the year full of promise, continue to have a dreadful second half in which they have only won one game.

Saturday night may have been the RedHawks’ nadir. On Friday in the first game against North Dakota, Miami fell behind 3-0, but a late goal by Sean Kuraly pulled Miami within one with under a minute left. However, they couldn’t pull any closer.

Having scored the last two goals of Friday’s game, you would have thought Miami might have some momentum for Saturday. Instead, Miami suffered its worst loss since 1997, a 9-2 drubbing. Rocco Grimaldi had four points for North Dakota, which scored four goals by the 12:58 mark of the first, despite having two goals waved off.

North Dakota added another four goals in the second, and poured salt on the wound by answering Riley Barber’s goal at 17:19 of the third with a power-play goal at 19:01 of the third.

Miami coach Enrico Blasi made no excuses.

“There were a lot of things that didn’t go our way tonight. They deserved to win from the moment the puck dropped and they didn’t let off the gas.”

Miami is now in last place in the NCHC, four points behind seventh-place Colorado College. It doesn’t get easier for the RedHawks, who host first-place St. Cloud State this weekend and then Minnesota-Duluth the following weekend before ending the season with a series in Denver.

Rankings roundup: How ranked teams fared, Feb. 10-16

Wisconsin’s Joseph LaBate gets off a shot as Ohio State’s Justin DaSilva defends in the Buckeyes’ win on Friday (photo: Rachel Lewis).

Here’s how the 20 teams in the Feb. 10, 2014, USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll did from Feb. 10 to Feb. 16:

No. 1 Boston College (24-4-3) beat No. 12 Northeastern 4-1 (Beanpot) on Monday, won at No. 15 Vermont 4-3 on Friday, won at No. 15 Vermont 5-3 on Saturday. This week: vs. Massachusetts-Lowell, Friday; at Massachusetts-Lowell, Saturday.

No. 2 Minnesota (21-4-5) beat No. 10 Michigan 5-3 on Friday, beat No. 10 Michigan 4-1 on Saturday. This week: Off.

No. 3 Union (20-6-4) won at No. 11 Cornell 4-1 on Friday, tied at No. 19 Colgate 4-4 on Saturday. This week: vs. Clarkson, Friday; vs. St. Lawrence, Saturday.

No. 4 Ferris State (21-7-3) won at Bemidji State 4-1 on Friday, lost at Bemidji State 2-1 on Saturday. This week: vs. Alaska-Anchorage, Friday-Saturday.

No. 4 Quinnipiac (21-6-5) won at No. 13 Yale 4-0 on Friday, lost at Brown 4-2 on Saturday. This week: vs. Cornell, Friday; vs. Colgate, Saturday.

No. 6 St. Cloud State (17-6-5) beat No. 16 Minnesota-Duluth 5-3 on Friday, beat No. 16 Minnesota-Duluth 4-3 on Saturday. This week: at Miami, Friday-Saturday.

No. 7 Massachusetts-Lowell (20-7-3) beat Massachusetts 3-2 on Friday. This week: at Boston College, Friday; vs. Boston College, Saturday.

No. 8 Wisconsin (17-9-2) lost at Ohio State 2-1 on Friday, won at Ohio State 4-2 on Saturday. This week: vs. Michigan State, Friday-Saturday.

No. 9 Providence (15-9-6) tied No. 20 Notre Dame 2-2 on Friday, lost to No. 20 Notre Dame 3-0 on Saturday. This week: vs. Massachusetts, Friday; at Massachusetts, Saturday.

No. 10 Michigan (14-9-3) lost at No. 2 Minnesota 5-3 on Friday, lost at No. 2 Minnesota 4-1 on Saturday. This week: vs. Penn State, Friday-Saturday.

No. 11 Cornell (12-7-5) lost to No. 3 Union 4-1 on Friday, lost to Rensselaer 3-1 on Saturday. This week: at Quinnipiac, Friday; at Princeton, Saturday.

No. 12 Northeastern (17-10-3) lost to No. 1 Boston College 4-1 on Monday (Beanpot), won at Massachusetts 5-4 on Saturday. This week: vs. Maine, Friday-Saturday.

No. 13 Yale (13-8-4) lost to No. 4 Quinnipiac 4-0 on Friday, beat Princeton 7-5 on Saturday. This week: at Harvard, Friday; at Dartmouth, Saturday.

No. 14 Clarkson (17-13-2) lost to Harvard 1-0 in overtime Friday, lost to Dartmouth 6-1 on Saturday. This week: at Union, Friday; at Rensselaer, Saturday.

No. 15 Vermont (15-11-3) lost to No. 1 Boston College 4-3 on Friday, lost to No. 1 Boston College 5-3 on Saturday. This week: at Merrimack, Friday-Saturday.

No. 16 Minnesota-Duluth (13-11-4) lost at No. 6 St. Cloud State 5-3 on Friday, lost at No. 6 St. Cloud State 4-3 on Saturday. This week: vs. North Dakota, Friday-Saturday.

No. 17 North Dakota (16-9-3) beat Miami 3-2 on Friday, beat Miami 9-2 on Saturday. This week: at Minnesota-Duluth, Friday-Saturday.

No. 18 Denver (14-10-6) lost at Nebraska-Omaha 4-2 on Friday, won at Nebraska-Omaha 4-1 on Saturday. This week: vs. Colorado College, Friday; at Colorado College, Saturday.

No. 19 Colgate (14-11-5) tied Rensselaer 1-1 on Friday, tied No. 3 Union 1-1 on Saturday. This week: at Princeton, Friday; at Quinnipiac, Saturday.

No. 20 Notre Dame (17-12-2) tied at No. 9 Providence 2-2 on Friday, won at No. 9 Providence 3-0 on Saturday. This week: vs. Boston University, Friday-Saturday.

Gallery: Mercyhurst at RIT

Here are photos from Mercyhurst’s 6-2 win over Rochester Institute of Technology on Saturday:

[photoshelter-gallery g_id=”G0000vqc4nE_niSA” g_name=”20140215-Mercyhurst-RIT-Phillips” f_show_caption=”t” f_show_slidenum=”t” img_title=”casc” pho_credit=”iptc” f_link=”t” f_bbar=”t” fsvis=”f” width=”500″ height=”375″ bgcolor=”#AAAAAA” bgtrans=”t” btype=”old” bcolor=”#CCCCCC” crop=”f” trans=”xfade” tbs=”4000″ f_ap=”t” linkdest=”c” f_fullscreen=”f” f_constrain=”f” twoup=”f” f_topbar=”f” f_bbarbig=”” f_htmllinks=”f” f_enable_embed_btn=”f” f_show_watermark=”f” f_send_to_friend_btn=”f” f_smooth=”f” f_mtrx=”f” f_up=”f” target=”_self” wmds=”llQ6QNgpeC.p1Ucz7U.Y67z1g4ypvB689AqXnrAIQjNzue2RPruTnBYq4t6qeF1v4u1WWg–” ]

Latest Stories from around USCHO