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Robert Morris wants to make 2013 a distant memory, move forward with clean slate

Robert Morris’ Greg Gibson scored a pair of goals in last Saturday’s win over American International, which pulled the Colonials back to .500 in league play (photo: Rachel Lewis).

Last year, the Three Rivers Classic was the jump start to a stretch run where Robert Morris was a bubble team on the cusp of the PairWise Rankings.

It was something of a turning point for Pittsburgh as a college hockey city, as nearly 12,000 fans watched the Colonials smash Penn State. The next day, close to 11,000 watched RMU win the inaugural tournament over Miami.

This year, the tournament once again served as a crossroads for the Colonials season, but it stood for completely different reasons. Robert Morris lost a pair of one-goal games to go from first to worst, finishing fourth to Bowling Green while Boston College defeated rival Penn State in the title game.

It was the fifth and sixth times RMU lost by a single goal, accounting for half of their 12 losses to that point.

“We really struggled in those one-goal games,” said coach Derek Schooley, “and things really came to a head in the Three Rivers Classic. In the week leading up to the next games at Sacred Heart, we sat down as a team and said, ‘Let’s forget about 2013. Let’s forget about our failures, and let’s start to look forward.'”

At that point, the 2-12-2 Colonials stood dead last in Atlantic Hockey. But the change in mind-set soon became evident, and since losing 10 games by one or two goals, RMU is 4-1-1 and has climbed to .500 in league play at 6-6-3.

“We made up our mind to focus on an 18-game schedule in 2014,” said Schooley. “We reset our record in our mind to 0-0-0 and decided to not look back at what had happened. But at the same time, we decided to not look forward, either, and take it one game at a time with whoever we were playing.”

It started with the games against the Pioneers and a four-point weekend featuring (what else?) a pair of one-goal wins. They followed that up with a split at Connecticut and a three-point weekend at home against American International.

That breakout has them well out of the AHA basement and into a sixth-place tie with Rochester Institute of Technology. The Colonials, one of the hottest teams in the league, are four points back of fourth-place Connecticut for the last first-round bye.

“I think it really started with our mind-set,” said Schooley. “We had success last year with so many young kids that we had to realize that it wasn’t just going to happen [for us]. Since the start of ’14, our work ethic has really been great, and with each game, we started to gain more confidence.

“This past weekend, we trailed AIC [on Friday, by scores of 2-0, 3-2 and 4-3] and tied the game in the third. We outshot them 3-0 in overtime and you could see that we were working to do what we needed to [to win the game].”

The mind-set change has come with staggering results up front. Since the Three Rivers Classic losses, Robert Morris has scored 20 goals while allowing only 14. Leading the way is its top line of left wing Matt Cope, center Greg Gibson and right wing Brandon Denham. They accounted for three goals and seven points last weekend.

“We’ve put them back together [lately],” said Schooley, “and you can really see the results. They bring a great line of energy and that sense of urgency each time they’re out on the ice.”

Robert Morris is in the middle of a six-game home stretch. The Colonials will face arguably their toughest test of the second half of the year when they entertain Air Force this weekend, then host Army next week.

Ready, aim, FIRE!

If the American International Yellow Jackets are at home in the first round of the playoffs, their entire team should pool money and buy the goaltending crew dinner at a Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse.

The Yellow Jackets have allowed an average of 40.2 shots on goal per game while averaging 23.2 shots per game for themselves. They’ve allowed 40 shots or more 13 times, and four of those times were over 50. They’ve allowed 59 shots twice against Hockey East opponents.

Yet despite being outscored this year by nearly a two-to-one margin, the Yellow Jackets are 5-9-1 in conference play. While that has them in 10th place, they’re only one point out of ninth and two points behind eighth-place Niagara as intradivisional play gets set to resume.

With six games left against three teams joining them in the bottom four, AIC stands poised to potentially control its destiny for a run at a home series. Despite finishing in ninth last season, AIC has never hosted a first-round series, having finished higher than last place only twice.

What’s even more amazing is that the Yellow Jackets are picking up wins against some of the better teams in the AHA. They have a win over Bentley, a split with Air Force and a split with Niagara. They led Robert Morris but had to settle for a tie.

A team capable of beating any opponent, AIC is shaping up like a team we all need to at least keep an eye on as the year winds down.

AIC plays a home-and-home series with Connecticut this week.

Chris Bodo and Mercyhurst are atop the Atlantic Hockey standings (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Partying like it’s 2011

In 2011, Atlantic Hockey experimented with a playoff format based on divisional alignments. The top two teams in each division received automatic byes into the quarterfinal round, leaving the rest of the AHA to play off in single-elimination games. The winners then reseeded with the teams that received a bye.

It was somewhat controversial because Niagara didn’t receive a bye despite finishing fourth overall. Neither did Robert Morris, which finished fifth. But Connecticut passed through to the round of eight by finishing as the second place eastern team despite being in sixth place overall.

Both Niagara and Robert Morris were eliminated in the first round, putting UConn at home in the second round when the teams reseeded. It also left the Huskies as the fourth-best team in the second round despite not playing a first-round game. The next year, the league went to a traditional 12-team format which remains through to today.

If the playoffs started today, however, the standings would end with the best two western teams occupying the first and third seeds (Mercyhurst and Air Force), while the east would occupy the second and fourth (Bentley and UConn). The four eastern schools would cross over and head to the four remaining western schools because of the way the standings lined up.

So for what it’s worth, we’d have the 2011 playoffs with divisional leaders getting byes. It would just have a new wrinkle where it would result with a perfect first-round crossover of east heading west for the first round.

One more weird number

Air Force is the top-ranked AHA team in the PairWise Rankings, tied for 28th with Ohio State. But Air Force is in third place in the AHA standings and it has gone 0-2-1 against the two teams in front of it.

The Falcons lost to Mercyhurst earlier in the year, and they lost and tied Bentley. But the Lakers and Falcons are 37th and 39th, respectively, in the PWR.

Air Force beat Northeastern earlier this year while going 5-3-1 in nonconference play. Mercyhurst went 2-8-1 and Bentley went 2-5.

Once again, welcome to Atlantic Hockey.

USCHO weekly awards

I’ll highlight a total sweep by RIT this week. The league chose Air Force’s Cole Gunnar as its top offensive player, but I’ll dissent there. Otherwise, I agree with the choices uptown.

Player of the week — RIT’s Michael Colavecchia: Colavecchia is my choice for player of the week because of three goals, including two game-winners in different styles. He had the game-winner on Friday early in the first period, then scored his second late in the third period. RIT picked up four points over Army and broke a four-game losing streak.

Goalie of the week — RIT’s Jordan Ruby: Ruby amassed a .960 save percentage in the weekend sweep of Army, including his first collegiate shutout as the Tigers swept the Black Knights. He stopped 72 of 75 shots and is starting to put his hold on the top goalie slot for a team that appeared reeling after its recent losses.

Rookie of the Week — RIT’s Danny Smith: Smith scored three points and was plus-3 in the Tigers’ 6-0 win on Friday, including a highlight-reel assist on a goal scored in the first period. He nearly doubled his season point total from four to seven with his output, and he and Alexander Kuqali traded goals and assists. It was a breakout performance for the Edmonton, Alberta, native, who’s appeared in every game for the Tigers this season.

At Ohio State, it has taken a village to fill out the goaltending corps this season

Matt Tomkins’ injury in November made Ohio State scramble for goaltenders (photo: Rachel Lewis).

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The last two months between the pipes for Ohio State has been a whirlwind. As coach Steve Rohlik put it, there is not a page in the coaching manual for this situation.

The Buckeyes have had six goaltenders this season, four of whom have seen playing time. At the end of the day, Rohlik said he has a group of goalies he feels confident in and more importantly, knows that can win games.

Getting to that point hasn’t been easy.

Going into the season, NHL-drafted goalies Collin Olson and Matt Tomkins were battling for the starting job, with walk-on Logan Davis serving as a third-stringer.

A month into this season, Olson left school to get more playing time in the USHL. The move left the Buckeyes with two goalies, and Tomkins won the starting job.

“Just when you think you have seen everything, you haven’t. It has been a great learning experience. I think our guys have been better for it.”

— Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik

Having a go-to NHL prospect between the pipes gave Rohlik no reason to panic. Tomkins is a prototypical professional goalie, standing 6-foot-3.

Tomkins won five of his first eight games as a freshman and things appeared to be going well for the young goalie.

Less than a week after Olson left Ohio State, however, a freak injury changed everything.

Minutes after the puck dropped on Nov. 9 versus Niagara, Tomkins went to play the puck behind his net — a routine play goalies make thousands of times in a season. But this time was different.

“It was really weird,” Tomkins said. “I was just skating out of the net and caught an edge and just tweaked my ankle a little bit. No one knew what happened. I didn’t really know what happened. Just caught a rut in the ice and next thing I knew, I couldn’t put weight on it.”

At the next timeout, Tomkins skated on one leg to the bench. Rohlik was thinking his goalie needed help with a strap. It was not an ordinary visit to the bench.

“When he skated by [equipment manager] Timmy [Adams] and skated to where [athletic trainer] Jeff Deits was, I thought that is the wrong guy to go to right now,” Rohlik said. “Literally, I didn’t know and he skated off and there is no time to discuss anything because he went off. So I turned to Logan and I said, ‘you’re out.'”

For a time, Tomkins was unsure how serious the injury was before figuring out the ankle tweak was severe but not a career-threatening injury.

“It was scary especially not knowing what it is,” he said. “I was obviously glad to have the staff that we have here that took care of it. I had the best care available. … It was pretty scary, especially with our goalie situation at the time. It added a little scare as to how long I was going to be out.”

With Tomkins heading to the locker room, Davis skated to the crease on the east side of the arena not knowing what to expect after making a huge jump from the junior AAA level to Division I hockey. As it turned out, his defense made it as easy as possible.

The final 16 minutes of the first period, he saw only one shot.

“It was uneasy. All I wanted to do was get a shot and I couldn’t get one because the D was blocking so many,” Davis said. “I don’t think I got a shot the first 15 minutes. It was wild but they made it as easy it could have been on me.”

Rallying around walk-on

That uneasiness was felt on the bench as well. However, rather than giving up on the game, the Buckeyes rallied around their teenage walk-on.

“It was the only option. He was there and you’re in the net and the team went, wait a minute here,” Rohlik said. “It was almost like, we have to play as a team. It was not a panic, just a sense of urgency.

“That sense of urgency is the thing that we’re learning that if we play like that every night with whoever in the net, we’re a pretty good team.”

Logan Davis became Ohio State’s starter after Collin Olson left the program and Matt Tomkins got injured (photo: Rachel Lewis).

Davis, a native of Upper Arlington, Ohio — just blocks from Ohio State’s campus — said he was happy to be in the third-string role. But he was even happier three weeks after taking the starting job to play in the first Big Ten hockey game in Yost Ice Arena.

Despite Ohio State losing its conference opener in overtime versus Michigan on Big Ten Network, Davis showed the college hockey world he is capable of doing more than sit on the bench. He made a number of impressive saves that kept his squad in the game.

“It was crazy, their fans, everything about the atmosphere was amazing,” Davis said. “I think I liked being booed more than I would have ever guessed.”

Davis’ father, Mike Davis, has been on television in Columbus longer than Logan has been alive. The elder Davis has been a television meteorologist since 1987 on Columbus’ CBS affiliate WBNS. After the Michigan game, it was the younger Davis who was recognized in public.

“At a restaurant, someone recognized me before they recognized my dad,” Davis said. “I never thought I would see that day come. I think he was a little bit like, ‘What happened?’ because he is so used to it.”

Going to the bullpen

Though Davis was playing well, with Tomkins’ status uncertain, Rohlik knew he had to look at other options.

“Just when you think you have seen everything, you haven’t,” Rohlik said. “It has been a great learning experience. I think our guys have been better for it.”

To plug the gap, Rohlik added a pair of walk-ons in November. He called upon Ohio State club hockey goalie Aaron Kahn and baseball catcher Aaron Gretz. The two dressed but did not play in the Buckeyes’ first two Big Ten contests versus Michigan.

Gretz has since rejoined the baseball team but Kahn will stick around and compete for playing time with Ohio State’s other goalies. Before being plucked from the club level, Kahn had a team-best 4-0 record with a 2.25 GAA.

Kahn, a native of Berkley, Calif., played for the AAA San Jose Sharks junior squad. Though AAA hockey is not a direct pipeline for Division I talent, it was a good springboard for Davis and Kahn.

Kahn is embracing the opportunity, even if it means not getting to play in as many games as he did at the club level.

“When you grow up, you dream of playing Division I hockey,” Kahn said. “I was excited to help any way I could. There was a point it was down to just me and Logan on the ice. You would be facing every shot in practice.”

Calling in reinforcement

Knowing that Gretz was not a long-term solution as a backup and not wanting to take any chances, Rohlik and his staff went back to the recruiting trail. Instead of recruiting goalies and skaters for 2016 and 2017, the Buckeyes coaching staff went looking for a goalie to finish 2013.

Rohlik turned to goaltending coach Joe Exter to see who might be available. They quickly found USHL goalie Christian Frey, who was off to a good start in his final junior season at Dubuque.

Frey had been in contact with a few colleges but he said there were not any offers he wanted to jump at. And then Ohio State called.

“It was an untraditional route I took to get here,” Frey said. “I was playing juniors, waiting for a college commitment. When Ohio State contacted me saying they had a goalie spot open, it was tough to leave in the middle of the year but it was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up.”

Frey played his final game for Dubuque on Dec. 13 and then joined the Buckeyes over Christmas break.

“We obviously needed a goalie and we had a couple of weeks to find the right kid, find the right culture kid, find the kid with the academics,” Rohlik said. “And to do that and then to have to deal with a junior coach in Dubuque, that is not an easy situation, either. I think there was a lot of people affected by it, not just us.”

After three practices with the Buckeyes, Rohlik opted to start Frey two weeks before he took his first class at Ohio State.

Frey won both games in a home series against Mercyhurst on Dec. 28-29, then took the loss at Minnesota last Saturday.

“It was insane, honestly,” Frey said. “The team has been unbelievable to me and really accepted me. It is funny how we’re on the ice all battling for each other and I didn’t even know half their first names that first game.”

With Tomkins back in the lineup (he won his first game back over Michigan State on Jan. 10), Rohlik said he hopes his goaltending situation has stabilized. But he knows he has multiple goaltenders worthy of playing at the Division I level.

From a camera on referee Brian Thul’s helmet, Ohio State goalie Matt Tomkins makes a save during the Hockey City Classic against Minnesota (photo: Jim Rosvold).

TMQ: Taking notice of Minnesota State while Union keeps rolling along

Jean-Paul Lafontaine leads Minnesota State with 13 goals and 25 points (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Here’s our weekly look at big events and big issues around Division I men’s college hockey.

Jim: Todd, we’re coming off an interesting weekend as a few top teams made a statement, a few struggled mightily and a couple of teams made us stand up and take notice.

Minnesota and Boston College both had solid weekends, with the Gophers sweeping Ohio State and BC picking up wins over Boston University and Maine. At the same time, No. 3 St. Cloud State tied and lost to Western Michigan. And probably the biggest shocker was upstart Minnesota State sweeping No. 2 Ferris State.

I hadn’t given a lot of notice to the Mavericks this season, but after that sweep I looked to see they have a decent 14-10 record and sit in second place, two points behind Ferris State in the WCHA standings.

Todd: After last season’s success, Minnesota State was expected to be the team to beat in the new-look WCHA, but Ferris State stole that thunder in the first half of this season. The Mavericks started to wrestle a little of that back last weekend — and I use wrestle intentionally there, because the teams combined for 216 penalty minutes in Saturday’s 4-3 Minnesota State win.

That includes three fighting majors and 11 game misconducts, one of them to Bulldogs goalie CJ Motte. We knew new rivalries would form with the changed conference landscape, and I think Minnesota State and Ferris State started forming a good one last weekend.

[youtube_sc url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFl3FRf6yEE&hd=1]

Another team making a big statement last weekend in my eyes was Union. The Dutchmen swept New Hampshire on the road, improving to 15-4-3 on the season and joining Quinnipiac in the top four of the PairWise Rankings. Minnesota and Boston College may be establishing themselves as the top two teams in the country, but it wouldn’t be wise to keep Union too far out of that picture.

Jim: Union certainly was another team that made me take notice, but the Dutchmen have been doing so all season. With just one loss in its last 14 games, Union is in great position to take control of the ECAC Hockey regular season race. The Dutchmen are 9-2 in league play and a point behind Quinnipiac with two games in hand. Aside from a nonleague game against Rensselaer at the Times Union Center in Albany, N.Y., on Saturday, it’s all ECAC hockey for Union from here on out.

Two other aforementioned teams took major steps toward their conference regular season titles last weekend in Minnesota and Boston College. The Gophers have a 10-point lead over second-place Wisconsin in the Big Ten, though the Badgers do have two games in hand. Boston College has a six-point lead over second-place Northeastern with just eight games remaining for both.

For the Eagles, the offense is clicking at unprecedented rates, averaging nearly five-and-a-half goals per game since returning from break. It’s still early to say, but Minnesota and BC seem to be two early front runners to be in Philly come the Frozen Four.

Todd: I was thinking about the potential of those teams being at the Frozen Four this year and wondering how much Minnesota wants to make amends for the poor showing it had in the national semifinal against BC two years ago in Tampa. Now, the Eagles were a tremendous team that year and a deserving champion, but I know the Gophers and their fans would like a do-over for that semifinal game that ended up 6-1 for the Eagles. Maybe it’ll happen.

You mentioned the 10-point lead Minnesota holds over Wisconsin, but that of course is on a three-point system and with the Badgers hosting two games against the Gophers on Feb. 6 and 7. Wisconsin could cut that lead to four points with a regulation sweep of Ohio State this weekend while Minnesota is playing in the inaugural North Star College Cup against St. Cloud State and either Minnesota State or Minnesota-Duluth. As we saw in the CCHA in past years, the standings seem to get shaken up quickly when games are worth three points.

Jim: I’m intrigued by the North Star College Cup tournament. It feels very similar to what we have in Boston with the Beanpot. If there is strong support for this event, I would hope that it would take off similar to the Beanpot. I always thought the Midwest needed such a tournament. The Great Lakes Invitational comes close, but without the same four teams, I think it’s difficult to develop the passion for the event among the fan base.

Todd: The GLI also has what some would say is a disadvantage in that it’s right after Christmas, when college hockey is just getting back into the swing of things. A Minnesota tournament at this point in the season has greater potential but we’ll have to see what kind of traction it gets.

There’s also the quirk of rotating Minnesota’s five Division I men’s teams through the four spots over the years, which could add some confusion that you don’t get with the Beanpot. (Minnesota is the permanent host so will be part of it every year.) I don’t think anyone’s going to touch the Beanpot in terms of its place in the college hockey community, but having a western equivalent is overdue.

Jim: I agree that it is difficult to replicate the Beanpot, particularly in this day and age where coaches are less likely to lock themselves into two automatics in their nonleague schedule.

And speaking of schedules, let’s look ahead to this week. Out east there are a couple of big series as No. 8 Massachusetts-Lowell will play a home-and-home against No. 7 Providence, a series that a year ago determined first place in Hockey East on the final weekend of the season.

You also have second-place and 11th-ranked Northeastern traveling to No. 15 Notre Dame for two as the Irish look to climb up the Hockey East standings. In the ECAC, No. 13 Clarkson will have a big road test as it heads to Colgate and No. 12 Cornell. How about out west?

Todd: The North Star College Cup gives us a top-five matchup in No. 1 Minnesota vs. No. 5 St. Cloud State on Friday. In the NCHC, there’s a meeting of teams looking to work their way into NCAA tournament contention when No. 16 Denver hosts No. 18 North Dakota.

And in the WCHA, No. 6 Ferris State will have to go back on the road to shake off its sweep at Minnesota State, traveling to Michigan Tech.

Rankings

Minnesota a unanimous No. 1 – again – in D-I women’s poll

With all 15 first-place votes this week, Minnesota retains the top spot in the USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll.

Wisconsin is again No. 2, according to the voters.

North Dakota is up one from No. 3, trading places with Cornell.

The same thing happens at No. 5 and 6 as Harvard sits fifth this week, followed by Clarkson.

Boston College stays seventh, as does Robert Morris at No. 8.

Quinnipiac jumps one to No. 9, leap-frogging Boston University, which now occupies No. 10 in this week’s poll.

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.

Jan. 21 USCHO Live! features Union’s Bennett, Hockey Humanitarian Award

Our scheduled guests on the Jan. 21 episode of USCHO Live! are Union coach Rick Bennett, whose Dutchmen are No. 3 in this week’s USCHO.com poll, and Hockey Humanitarian Award media relations director Paul Shaheen.

Join us for the conversation and information, Tuesday, Jan. 21, from 8 to 9 p.m. ET at blogtalkradio.com/uscholive. If you can’t listen live, check out the podcast of USCHO Live! available on the player at the right (click through if you’re reading this via RSS.)

Be part of the conversation! Call (646) 200-4305, send your tweets to @USCHO, or your emails to [email protected].

Each episode of USCHO Live! features a look at news around NCAA hockey, a look ahead at upcoming games and events, and conversation with people who coach, administer and play college hockey, and journalists who cover the sport.

About the hosts

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

Ed Trefzger has been part of USCHO since 1999 and now serves as a senior writer and director of technology. He has been a part of the radio broadcasts of Rochester Institute of Technology hockey since their inception — serving as a producer, studio host, color commentator and as RIT’s play-by-play voice for seven seasons. Ed is VP and general manager of CBS Sports Radio affiliates 1310 and 1590 The Team in Rochester, N.Y.

ECAC suspends Dartmouth forward Neiley two games

The ECAC announced Monday that Dartmouth junior forward Eric Neiley has been handed a two-game suspension as the result of his actions in the Cornell at Dartmouth game last Saturday (Jan. 18).

The league action was taken after the review of an incident that occurred after the final horn of the overtime period where Neiley was assessed a five-minute major for charging and a game disqualification.

Neiley is not eligible to compete in Dartmouth’s next two contests – Friday, Jan. 24, at Rensselaer and Friday, Jan. 31, at home versus Quinnipiac.

Wild and wooly weekend

St. John’s has been led all season by goaltender Saxton Soley and that was the case last weekend as the Johnnies swept Concordia (Minn.) (photo: Caleb Williams/d3photography.com).

It was an interesting weekend in the Division III hockey world.
Wisconsin-Eau Claire, the defending national champion, won its fifth consecutive game in shutout fashion.
Elmira ended a nine-game losing streak to Oswego and also picked up its third win of the season over a nationally-ranked team in the process.
Adrian and St. Scholastica hooked up in a thrilling weekend series in which both games went to overtime. One ended in a tie. The other ended with a win by Adrian.
Williams also pulled off an upset as it took down Plattsburgh in a battle of nationally-ranked opponents.
For a look at those games and more, keep reading.

ECAC East

Fifth-ranked Norwich has dominated Middlebury lately and the trend continued Saturday as the Cadets nailed down a 5-2 win over the Panthers.
Five players scored goals for Norwich, which defeated its in-state rival for the 10th time in their last 14 meetings. Norwich is 10-2-2 during that stretch, but Middlebury still leads the all time series 80-59-8.
Shane Gorman scored a goal and dished out an assist for the Cadets, while Erik Lyrvall, William Pelletier, Dean Niezgoda and Chris Duszynski all scored goals as well.
Norwich outshot Middlebury 17-1 in the opening period and held a 36-20 advantage overall as it continued its quest for a 16th consecutive regular-season league title.
Max Franklin came through with the game-winning goal in seventh-ranked Babson’s 4-3 win over St. Anselm on Saturday.
Franklin scored at the 15:54 mark of the third period as the Beavers won their third consecutive game, improving to 14-3 overall and to 8-2 in the conference.
Mike Driscoll scored twice for Babson and Jamie Murray was stellar in goal as he tallied 40 saves.

ECAC Northeast

Several Fredonia players reached new heights on Saturday in a 4-0 win over Curry.
Frankie Hart and Zach White scored their first collegiate goals for the Blue Devils and Jeff Flagler earned his first shutout as Fredonia improved to 4-8-3 on the season.
Taylor Bourne also scored a goal, his first of the season, and Matt Owczarczak tallied his second goal of the year.
Flagler made 30 saves in the win and is the first Fredonia goalie to get a shutout this season. He is 1-3 on the year. The win finished off a week where the Blue Devils fashioned a 2-0-1 record.
Franklin Pierce used a furious finish to knock off Suffolk 4-3 on Saturday.
The Ravens scored four goals in the final 27 minutes of the game to earn the win and improve to 3-11-1 on the season.
Tim Sullivan scored two goals to record the first multi-goal game of his career and now has six goals on the year.
Aaron Baker scored his second goal of the year. He also dished out an assist. Baker didn’t get a point in the eight games he played during the first half of the year, but has four points in the last five games.
Ted Walsh tallied the other goal for the Ravens. It was his first game-winning goal and his fifth goal overall on the season.
Kyle Moran made 25 saves as he made his first start since Nov. 30.

ECAC West

Elmira ended a nine-game losing streak to 10th-ranked Oswego and earned its third win over a ranked team this season as it took down the Lakers 3-2 on Saturday.
The Soaring Eagles pushed their win streak to three games and ended the Lakers’ 10-game unbeaten streak.
Elmira scored first, something no other team has done against Oswego this year, as Carter Shinkaruk put the Soaring Eagles in front 1-0 just 28 seconds into the game.
Dylan Herold and Nick Angelo also scored goals for Elmira, which improved to 8-6 on the year.
Sal Magliocco did his part in goal as he tied his career-high in saves with 42. The Soaring Eagles were out-shot 44-26. It’s the biggest difference in shots this season for Elmira.
Nazareth ended a two-game losing streak on Saturday as it pushed past Cortland 4-2. It was just the second win for the Golden Flyers since Nov. 5.
The Golden Flyers are now 3-12-1 overall and won behind goals from Julius Tamasy, Tom Seravalli, David Seward and Mark Zavorin. The goals by Tamasy and Seravalli were shorthanded. Prior to Saturday, Nazareth had scored only one shorthanded goal in its two-year history.
Nazareth held a 38-29 edge in shots and avenged its 5-1 loss to the Red Dragons on Dec. 12. However, Nazareth did lose Tamasy for the rest of the season as he fractured his leg after crashing into the boards in the third period.

MASCAC

Alex Dewitz came through with a hat trick as he led Worcester State to a 5-3 win over Fitchburg State on Saturday.
Andrew Bates and Richard Bohan also scored goals for the Lancers, who improved to 6-6-1 overall and to 2-5-1 in the conference. Bates now has a team-best five goals on the year.
Worcester State held a 39-32 advantage in shots, but went 0-for-5 on the power play. Salvatorre Tecci came through with 29 saves and is 4-4-1 on the year.

MIAC

St. John’s scored three unanswered goals in the third period and the Johnnies held on for a 5-3 win over Concordia (Minn.) on Saturday.
Alex Ach came through with his fourth goal of the year during the outburst, while Trent Johnson, Kevin Becker, Brady Riesgraf and Nick Vatnsdal also scored goals in the win.
The goal for Johnson was his first of the year and the game was his first one since Dec. 12 because of an injury. Riesgraf scored his first collegiate goal and Saxton Soley made 22 saves for the Johnnies, who are now 9-6 overall and 4-3 in the MIAC.
St. John’s has won four consecutive games and has come out on top in 15 of the last 17 meetings against the Cobbers.
Gustavus Adolphus scored three unanswered goals and rolled to a 4-2 win over Augsburg on Saturday to complete a weekend sweep of the Auggies.
Sam Smith, Alex Gallen and Andy Pearson all scored goals during the surge and Tyler Lapic scored a goal as well for the Gusties, who are 9-4-3 overall and 6-1-1 in the conference.
Gustavus tallied 35 shots and held Augsburg to 25 shots. John McLean racked up 23 saves and improved his record to 8-3-3. He made 13 of those saves in the third period.

NCHA

Adrian and St. Scholastica squared off in a battle of nationally-ranked opponents Saturday night and it was the top-ranked Bulldogs who prevailed with a 4-3 win in overtime.
Justin Basso scored in OT to give Adrian the victory over the 15th-ranked Saints. It was his third game-winning goal of the season.
Duston Hebebrand came through with two goals and an assist for the Bulldogs, while Jeremy Olinyk also scored as Adrian improved to 14-0-3 overall and to 8-0-2 in the conference.
The Saints, who fell to 9-4-4 overall and to 6-1-3 in the conference, got goals from Justin Krabben, Dave Williams and Joel Paiment.
Adrian was outshot 34-30.
The two teams played to a 1-1 tie one night earlier as both games in the series went to OT.

SUNYAC

Williams earned an impressive win on Saturday as it knocked off third-ranked Plattsburgh in a nonconference showdown featuring two of the best teams in the nation.
The Ephs, ranked 12th in the country, extended their win streak to five games and won their tenth game of the season.
Craig Kitto turned in a hat trick to pace the Ephs, who led 3-0 after the second period. Luke Stickel and Sam Gray also scored for Williams, which was outshot 36-21.
Not only did the Ephs win, improving to 10-2-2 on the year, but head coach Bill Kangas now owns the most wins as a coach in program history. He is 330-223-5 at the helm of the Ephs and is in his 25th season at Williams.

WIAC

In a huge nonconference showdown between sixth-ranked Wisconsin-Eau Claire and eighth-ranked St. Thomas, the Blugolds earned their fifth consecutive shutout with a 2-0 win over the Tommies.
With the shutout, Eau Claire becomes just the second team at any level of college hockey to ring up five consecutive shutouts. Lake Superior State last did it in 1994.
The streak began for UWEC back on Dec. 14.
Chris Heineman scored first for the Blugolds and Jack Callahan came through with the final goal of the night.
The Blugolds were outshot 39-32.
Tyler Green earned the win and has been the goalie in three of the shutouts during the streak. He made 39 saves and has not allowed a goal in 2014. Jay Deo has the other two shutout wins in the streak.
Eau Claire improved to 11-3-1 on the season while the Tommies fell to 10-3-2.

Three things I learned in the WCHA from Jan. 17-18

Here is what I think I learned after what turned out to be a crazy weekend in the WCHA, specifically in Mankato.

The race is on for the MacNaughton Cup

Just when we thought the WCHA regular season championship was destined for Ferris State, Minnesota State came along this weekend and made the conference title race interesting with a sweep of the Bulldogs in Mankato.

And boy was it an interesting series to say the least, with a line brawl during the third period on Saturday that resulted in 26 penalties for 160 minutes, with 10 players getting ejected. Of those 10, three received game disqualifications and will be missing Friday’s action. We’ll see if more suspensions are handed out today from the league.

Oh, and someone also wasted a perfectly good bottle of Buffalo Wild Wings sauce by chucking it onto the ice. Who does that?

[youtube_sc url=”http://youtu.be/-GfQ-Ysl00A?t=8m15s”]

The Mavericks’ 6-2 and 4-3 wins cut Ferris’ lead down to two points, however, FSU still has two games on hand and will be able to extend that margin on Friday and Saturday at Michigan Tech. The Mavericks wrap up nonconference play Friday and Saturday in the Minnesota North Star Cup.

Following the North Star Cup, MSU finishes the season at Northern Michigan, at home back-to-back weekends against Bemidji State and Alabama-Huntsville, at Lake Superior State and at home against Michigan Tech.

After traveling to Tech, FSU hosts Northern Michigan, travels to Bemidji, hosts Alaska-Anchorage, travels to Alaska and closes at home against LSSU.

Don’t overlook Alaska’s Morley brothers

Nanooks senior forward Cody Kunyk gets a lot of praise and deservedly so. He’s a tremendous player who can do great things with the puck.

However, I left the Berry Events Center in Marquette on Saturday night more impressed with Alaska freshman forward Brandon Morley and his older brother, sophomore forward Tyler Morley.

Brandon finished with two goals and an assist in the split with the Wildcats while Tyler totaled three goals. Both combined to score three goals and an assist in Saturday’s come-from-behind 4-3 win.

Brandon only had two goals and an assist in 22 games heading into the weekend as he has found the penalty box more than the net this year.

Tyler, however, is now tied with Kunyk for the team-high in goals with 12 as both sit tied for fourth overall in the WCHA.

Northern Michigan’s John Siemer is going to be special

As good as the Morley brothers were this weekend, especially on Saturday, Northern Michigan true freshman John Siemer was better.

In just his fourth and fifth collegiate games since becoming eligible in the middle of December and his first weekend playing in front of the Wildcats’ home crowd, Siemer scored two goals and two assists with three of those points coming Saturday in the loss to Alaska.

Siemer scored his first collegiate goal in his first game in Marquette on Friday to give NMU a 4-2 lead. Then on Saturday, he set up senior forward Erik Higby twice before scoring again in the third period to cut Alaska’s lead to one.

His coast-to-coast underdressing of the Nanooks that put NMU up 2-0 in the first period Saturday was as impressive of a play I’ve seen all year. Pinned back in the Wildcats’ own zone, Siemer escaped past one Nanook by passing the puck off the boards to himself. He then weaved through three more Nanooks before backhanding a pass at the end line to Higby through the same three Nanooks. Higby one-timed the shot for the score.

[youtube_sc url=”http://youtu.be/l8fO6_ip7vk?t=38s”]

Three Things: January 19, 2014

Three things from this past week in Atlantic Hockey:

Clichés and comebacks

It’s one of the worst clichés in sports: “A two-goal lead is the most dangerous lead in hockey”.

Call me crazy, but I’ll take a two-goal lead over a one-goal advantage any day. Someone actually went through the trouble of showing how teams are more likely to surrender a one-goal lead then a two-goal margin.

That said, the two goal, or even three-goal lead was not very safe this weekend in Atlantic Hockey play:

  • On Friday, American International led Robert Morris 2-0 late in the first period, but had to settle for a 4-4 tie.
  • Saturday night at Niagara saw the Purple Eagles lead Holy Cross 2-0 at the end of the first period, but the Crusaders rallied for a 3-2 victory, getting the game-winner with 2:18 to play.
  • Also on Saturday, Mercyhurst jumped out to a 3-0 lead early in the second period against Connecticut, but the Huskies scored the game’s final three goals to earn a tie.
  • On Saturday, Canisius was up 2-0 on Bentley, but, guess what? Another comeback from a two-goal deficit and another tie, 2-2.
  • And in the “almost” department, Army rallied from a 3-0 deficit at Rochester Institute of Technology on Saturday, twice cutting the gap to a single goal, but wound up falling, 4-3.

In case you missed it

Tuesday’s American International at Massachusetts game produced one of the most interesting box scores you’ll see this season. The Yellow Jackets were outshot 59-18, including 27-2 in the second period, but won the game, 3-2.

AIC scored twice in the second period (so yeah, on its only two shots) and held the Minutemen to just one goal over that span.

Hunter Leisner made 57 saves for the win and Alexander MacMillan got the game-winner with 5:20 to play.

Pairwise problems

That non-conference win by AIC aside, the league isn’t looking good to repeat last season when the AHA sent and unprecedented pair of teams to the NCAA tournament. Niagara was ranked between tenth and twelfth in the PairWise Rankings throughout the second half of last season, and that was good enough for the Purple Eagles to grab an at-large berth. Niagara was bolstered by a great record (23-9-5) and some success by the conference in nonleague games, making for a decent strength of schedule.

This season, with the league struggling to get OOC wins, we’re not not going to see a repeat.

Third-place Air Force, which has the best non-conference record in the league (5-3-1 including wins over Northeastern and Providence) is 28th in the PWR, best in the conference, but a long way from a top-16 spot that would give the Falcons a shot at an at-large bid.

First-place Mercyhurst comes in at 37 with Bentley in a tie for 39th.

So look for the usual postseason scramble where the it’s win-or-go-home for all AHA teams. No second chances.

Opening a gap, two teams with lost weekends and stealing two points

These are the three things I think I learned this weekend.

1. The regular season title is Boston College’s to lose.

The Eagles created more separation at the top of the Hockey East standings, defeating Boston University and Maine, while no other league team picked up four points in the standings. With a 10-1-1 Hockey East record, they now hold a six-point lead over their closest competitor.

Massachusetts-Lowell looks like the one team that could threaten BC, in part because those two teams appear to be the class of the league and also because the River Hawks are the one contender that not only holds three games in hand on BC but also plays the Eagles twice late in the season.

2. New Hampshire and Boston University were the only teams to lose twice on the weekend.

A couple of years ago, I’d have had a tough time imagining the writing of that last sentence. But it’s the new reality.

New Hampshire got swept by sixth-ranked Union, which is no disgrace and also has no effect on the Hockey East standings. But it does drop the Wildcats to a 1-8 record against Top 10 teams. They’ve done considerably better against teams ranked 11th-20th, but until they prove otherwise, it looks like there’s a ceiling on how far this team can go.

For BU, the talk isn’t about ceilings but floors.  The Terriers’ two losses this weekend came at the hands of BC and Lowell, so those were four lost points in the standings. It’s almost gotten to the point of kicking a team when it’s down, but the Terriers’ performance in the first period against Lowell spoke volumes. They were outshot 19-2.

Can anyone recall the last time BU ranked ninth in Hockey East scoring this late in the season?  I can’t.

And now that top defensemen Matt Grzelcyk is reportedly out for the season, the outlook appears even more grim.  Unless the Terriers start winning, this may be the last I discuss their plight.

3. Northeastern stole an important two points on Friday.

The Huskies moved into second place with a 3-2 win over Vermont that defied logic. They were outshot 48-19, and after two periods they led 1-0 despite being outshot 34-11.

Of course, there was some logic to the win. Clay Witt has been a revelation in goal this season — a save percentage of .943! — and he was a stud in net on this night. Additionally, Braden Pimm, who scored the go-ahead goal in the second period, may be the least appreciated 15-goal scorer in college hockey.

That said, since Vermont won the following evening, the Catamounts have to be kicking themselves over the lost opportunity, especially since the loss counted as a league game and the win did not.

Womens D-III wrap: Jan. 20

Falcons shutdown Saints
Wisconsin-River Falls goalie Ashley Kuechle posted back-to-back shutouts (3-0, 2-0) on home ice against struggling St. Scholastica. The Falcons ran their victory string to eight as a result. Kuechle (9-2-2, 1.21) equaled a program record with her sixth whitewash of the season; Plattsburgh’s Sydney Aveson leads the nation with eight. The Saints bolted out the starting proverbial blocks in opening the season, fashioning an 8-0-2 record along the way, but have experienced a loss of noticeable offense coming out of the break. Kuechle squelched both Nina and Isabel Waidacher, turning aside a combined 18 shots from the county’s top two scoring leaders. The Saints extended their current loss streak to four.

MIAC
St. Thomas moved to within one point of first place Gustavus Adolphus in the MIAC, following a pair of wins in a home-and-home with St. Catherine.  The Tommies received a 19-save, 2-0, road win from goaltender Alise Riedel on Saturday. St. Thomas improved to 7-0-1 in conference action. Riedel backstopped a 5-2 win at home on Friday, turning away 15 bids by the Wildcats. Junior forward Paige Baldwin had a pair of goals and an assist in pacing the Tommies offensive pursuits.

Gustavus Adolphus stayed perfect in the MIAC (8-0-0) thanks to Emily Gustafson’s game-winning goal in the third period of the Golden Gusties matchup with Augsburg on Saturday at Don Roberts Ice Arena. The Auggies closed to within one with under two minutes remaining in regulation, but senior goalie Marah Sobczak, who relieved starter Lindsey Hibbard midway through the second period, held the Auggies in check in the final moments in preserving the victory. Surprisingly, the Augsburg crew stayed within reach of a potential upset, despite finishing with just seven shots on net. Backed by a four-goal second period, Hibbard earned the win in the opener as well; collecting 14 saves in a 5-2 Gusties win at the Augsburg Ice Arena.

NESCAC
Amherst outshot No. 2 Middlebury 34-15 in a 2-1 loss at the Orr Rink Friday night, allowing the Panthers to stay at the peak of the NESCAC conference. Madeline Joyce’s power-play score in the second proved to be the decisive goal. The following afternoon, the teams combined for six goals in the third, leading to an eventual 5-5 tie. Middlebury moves to 6-0-2, while the Jeffs stay close at 5-1-2.

Three things from the Big Ten’s four games

Another light weekend in terms of conference games this weekend in the Big Ten. The two conference series both produced sweeps. Here are three things that I saw this weekend.

1. Gophers beat Buckeyes outside

Minnesota’s second time playing in the Hockey City Classic was better than its first. The Gophers defeated Ohio State 1-0 on Friday night at TCF Bank Stadium (the University of Minnesota’s football stadium).

You could really count number of solid scoring opportunities from both teams in the game on one hand. Minnesota scored the game’s lone goal when Taylor Cammarata’s shot stopped on the goal line and was knocked in by Ohio State’s goaltender.

Gophers’ head coach Don Lucia said that the game played out as he expected, even though Minnesota and Ohio State have high-scoring offenses. It was clear that the outdoor ice made playmaking difficult for both teams.

After the game, coaches and players for both teams focused on how thankful they were for the opportunity to play in the game and in front of 45,021 spectators.

“It was pretty surreal walking out there tonight,” Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik said. “There was a full moon above the stadium with a little haze. It was pretty special to be a part of it; certainly on behalf of the Ohio State University, we’re pretty thankful to be apart of this.”

2. Minnesota completes the sweep inside 

Offense was hard to come by on Friday night, Sam Warning quickly made up for it during Saturday’s game played on Mariucci Arena’s large ice sheet.

The junior recorded a natural hat trick in Minnesota’s 4-2 victory over the Buckeyes on Saturday. Warning netted his first goal 30 seconds after Ohio State took a 2-0 lead in the first period, which was key according to Minnesota captain Nate Condon.

“Anytime you get it back on your side like that and take the wind out of their sails, it’s huge,” Nate Condon said. “We did a good job responding there with that goal.”

Lucia moved warning onto a line with the speedy Condon and freshmen Justin Kloos a couple weeks ago, his natural hat trick was Minnesota’s first since 2010.

“We just tried to get behind their [defense], and get pucks low,” Warning said. “I think our speed took advantage of their [defense] this weekend.”

3. Michigan State rebounds against Penn State 

After only picking up one out a possible six points last weekend against Ohio State, the Spartans picked up a much needed conference sweep against cellar dweller Penn State.

Michigan State blanked the Nittany Lions 3-0 on Friday and eked out  a 3-2 win on Saturday.

Penn State tied Saturday’s game at two early in the third period, but Lee Reimer quickly scored Michigan State’s game-winning goal two minutes later.

“We talked right after they scored about taking the momentum back, and fortunately we were able to do so,” Michigan State head coach Tom Anastos.

The wins this weekend pushed Michigan State to third in the Big Ten with 10 points. The Spartans are four points ahead of Michigan and two behind Wisconsin.

Hot on the dot; predictions in the mirror; and Hobey hopes fading fast

Faceoffs: Still important!

What’s that? You missed this week’s stellar feature column about faceoffs? For shame! For if you had perused said piece, you might have enjoyed a modicum of added appreciation for this weekend’s action.

Take Yale’s Friday-night game at Clarkson. The host Golden Knights beat Yale to 45 of 63 dropped pucks (I’m still talking about faceoffs here), which – at 71.4 percent – is an even greater faceoff percentage than the 48-of-68 that Quinnipiac posted against Union, as referenced in the column. In large part thanks to their dominance at the dot, Clarkson out-shot the Bulldogs 35-19, allowing the Knights to ultimately down the visitors 3-2.

In fact, of the six ECAC teams to win the faceoff battle on Friday, all six also out-shot their opponents. The trend held true on Saturday, when four out of six games followed suit.

For the record, teams that won more faceoffs only went 5-6-1 this weekend… but that’s more a question about defense and goaltending, methinks. See Yale’s 4-2 win at St. Lawrence, despite being out-shot 30-29 and losing nearly 2/3 of the draws.

Trend-watch

More self-reference, because I know how much you love to see me be wrong: At the turn of the calendar, I looked at the hockey already played by the ECAC and how it might play out in 2014. A few thoughts in retrospect:

• Brown is 2-1-2 since the holidays, jumping into seventh place in the standing (both in points and win percentage). The Bears look just good enough to sneak into a 5-8 spot and earn a home playoff series, especially since they have seven more home games and five on the road.

• Still not sure about Clarkson. The Knights are 1-1-1 since the New Year against winning teams (Yale, UMass-Lowell) and 2-1 against .500 teams or worse (Brown, Merrimack). The former will have to improve in order for Clarkson to truly impress.

• Colgate’s record in one-goal (or fewer) games is now 8-3-3, which is still far too good for a team that is only 3-6 otherwise.

• Harvard has fallen to 2-7-3 in tight games (decided by one goal or less), but is 3-3 otherwise. They are the reverse-Colgate, as it were.

• In its six games in 2014, Quinnipiac has surrendered 30+ shots as many times (twice) as it did in its first 21 contests. So far this year, Maine and Merrimack have hit that mark.

• Rensselaer has been outscored in the first period once in its last four games, and beaten in the third three times already. RPI had troubles with the final act in 2013; the Engineers appear to be suffering the same malady today.

• Goaltending and defensive miscues continue to plague the Saints, who have lost seven straight and 10 of 12 (2-10). SLU has surrendered three goals or more in 17 of its last 19 games, and neither of its starting goalies has a save percentage above .865.

• Union is 3-1 since New Year’s Day, with the sole loss being a tight-checking 2-1 loss at Quinnipiac. Wins at Princeton and New Hampshire (twice) are great, but factor in just four goals against in those four games and you’ve got yourself a winning ticket. Faceoffs – and ergo puck possession – are becoming a conspicuous problem for the Dutchmen, but the team is emerging triumphant despite that flaw. This is appearing to be a legitimate national contender once more.

Hobey hopes fading away

What with Boston College star Johnny Gaudreau’s NASA-engineered trajectory – an 18-game point streak, eight goals and 19 points in his last seven games – the ECAC’s top players would be hard-pressed to appear as anything other than seat-fillers at the Hobey Baker ceremony. The significant drop-off in production hasn’t helped RPI’s Ryan Haggerty or SLU’s Greg Carey, either.

Carey started the year well, notching six goals and 19 points in the Saints’ first 10 games. Since then however, he has an 8-13–21 line in a dozen more contests. Not too shabby – not by a long shot – but it’s not Hobey-worthy. Haggerty never put up the kind of assists necessary to challenge Carey’s spot atop the ECAC scoring chart, but when the junior sniper jumped out to 18 goals in 15 games, he definitely turned some heads. Unfortunately, both his and his team’s fortune have been in swift decline: Haggerty has added just three assists to his scoring line since Game No. 16, a six-game stretch.

Perhaps not coincidentally, SLU is 2-10 since Carey’s negative acceleration (moment of physics nerdity: there is no such thing as “deceleration”); RPI is 0-5-1 since Haggerty hit the wall.

Notre Dame defenseman Russo ruled academically ineligible

Notre Dame junior defenseman Robbie Russo has been ruled academically ineligible by the university, according to a report in the South Bend Tribune.

Russo did not play this past weekend against Lake Superior State and Notre Dame coach Jeff Jackson isn’t sure when Russo will return.

“He’s trying to do some things to get a grade changed,” Jackson said to the paper. 

Russo tallied four goals among 15 points in 21 games this year for the Fighting Irish.

Boston University defenseman Grzelcyk out for season with shoulder injury

According to the student paper at Boston University, the Daily Free Press, sophomore defenseman Matt Grzelcyk is out for the rest of the season with a shoulder injury.

Grzelcyk reportedly suffered the injury in practice back on Jan. 9.

On the season, Grzelcyk had three goals and 11 points over 19 games.

To add to the growing list of injuries at BU, sophomore forward and St. Louis’ second-round pick from 2012 Sam Kurker has left the team for the Indiana Ice of the United States Hockey League.

Women’s D-I wrap: Jan. 20

Terriers finally trip
When No. 9 Boston University lost to Boston College on Jan. 8, that broke a streak of 23 straight conference wins for the Terriers. Because none of those 23 victories came over the Eagles, it was largely a case of BU beating those teams over which it was a favorite.

That string also came to an end on Friday at Providence after 24 victories over Hockey East teams other than BC. The Friars came from two down and scored the game’s final three goals to win, 4-3. Cassidy Carels tied the game in the second period and scored the game-winner in the third, both on the power play, with Haley Frade and Molly Illikainen assisting. Carels earlier had helpers on the goals by Beth Hanrahan and Rebecca Morse, allowing Providence to overcome a two-goal effort by Maddie Elia of the Terriers.

Things didn’t get any better for BU on Sunday, as it was upended by Northeastern, 4-2. Sarah Lefort scored for the Terriers to give her 19 goals on the season, tied for tops in the country. However, the Huskies got two goals from Brittany Esposito, and a goal and a pair of assists by Paige Savage, to win despite having only 13 skaters available. Northeastern also triumphed on Wednesday at Connecticut, 3-1, while being similarly short of bodies.

Colonials not going away
In most seasons, the fresh new face from the first half of the season begins to cool off as January lengthens. No. 8 Robert Morris faced its biggest test of the season to date, on the road at No. 10 Quinnipiac, and while RMU didn’t quite ace the test, it did pass convincingly.

The Colonials battled back to earn a 1-1 tie on Friday. Cydney Roesler’s goal 18 seconds into the third period had the Bobcats poised for a big win, but Anneline Lauziere scored on a late power play to even the score, and 36 saves by Jessica Dodds allowed the visitors to overcome a territorial disadvantage.

On Saturday, RMU took advantage of specialty situations in the second period to score four unanswered goals and went on to win, 5-1. Rebecca Vint scored both short-handed and on the power play, Rikki Meilleur tallied four-on-four, and Lauziere added another power-play marker. Thea Imbrogno connected on a third-period breakaway to offset an earlier score by Shelby Wignall for the Bobcats. Vint finished with four points and Dodds made 26 saves in staying undefeated through her first 18 starts.

Crimson improve prospects for crown
No. 6 Harvard’s 5-4 win at Colgate on Friday was less than emphatic. Melissa Kueber put the Raiders up, 4-2, in the third, but Miye D’Oench, Elizabeth Parker, and Hillary Crowe produced goals in a spirited rally over a 3:26 stretch over the back half of the third period. D’Oench finished with three points, and Crowe tallied twice.

The Crimson responded on Saturday with what is likely their best game of the season in a 3-1 victory at No. 3 Cornell. D’Oench opened the scoring and Marissa Gedman got the lead back after Anna Zorn had tied it up. Mary Parker finished the scoring into an empty net. Samantha Reber had a pair of helpers and Emmerance Maschmeyer was back in form with 30 saves. As seems to be their custom, the Crimson were outshot in both wins.

The Big Red opened the weekend with a 3-0 victory over Dartmouth when Taylor Woods scored twice and Paula Voorheis posted a 30-save shutout. Thanks to a game in hand on Harvard, Cornell still controls its own destiny for the ECAC title after losing the head-to-head with the Crimson and being down by a point in the standings.

Bulldogs fit to be tied
The Bulldogs were unable to win, but then, they didn’t lose either. Which Bulldogs? Pick one.

Host Yale got the weekend started with a 3-3 tie with No. 5 Clarkson. The Bulldogs’ Jamie Haddad opened the scoring while short-handed late in the first period, only to have Erin Ambrose respond for the Golden Knights on the same power play. Jamie Lee Rattray gave Clarkson its first lead with the only goal of the second period. Gretchen Tarrant tied the score, but it took only 67 seconds for Brittany Styner to give the visitors another lead. Three minutes later, Phoebe Staenz completed the scoring. Jaimie Leonoff needed 52 saves in the Yale net to earn her squad a point.

On Saturday, the Bulldogs got another game-tying goal, this time at 13 minutes of the third period from Taylor Marchin, for a 1-1 final versus St. Lawrence. Rylee Smith had given the Saints the lead back in the first frame. The ice was far less tilted in this contest, as Leonoff made 30 saves to 33 for Carmen MacDonald.

Farther west, the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs played to 0-0 and 2-2 ties with Ohio State. Nobody could figure out UMD’s Kayla Black all day as she made 21 saves during regular play and stopped all three Buckeyes in the shootout. Lisa Steffes was just as strong in the OSU net, making 34 stops. Katerina Marazova, the newest Bulldog, finally broke through in the shootout to gain UMD the extra WCHA point.

On Sunday, Ally Tarr scored her second game-tying goal in as many weeks at 15:17 of the third period. Until then, UMD looked to be positioned for the win, thanks to goals by Ashleigh Brykaliuk and Zoe Hickel sandwiched around one by Claudia Kepler. Once in the shootout, Steffes denied two shooters and both Annie Svedin and Kepler converted for the Buckeyes. The three points earned on the weekend allow Ohio State to move ahead of both Minnesota State and St. Cloud State into sixth in the WCHA.

Wisconsin wins record and status quo in rest of WCHA
The bottom four teams in the WCHA standings played series against the top half of the league, and the Buckeyes were the only lower-division team to gain points, as the top three enjoyed sweeps.

Minnesota State’s Danielle Butters had a busy weekend in facing 101 shots from No. 1 Minnesota. Whether it was outside in a chilly TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis or in All-Seasons Arena in Mankato, the games followed a similar script. The Gophers scored early in the first, held that lead until the latter stages of the second period, then blew the game open with a surge. Sarah Davis had three points outside in a 4-0 win, Kelly Terry scored twice and Rachel Ramsey contributed three assists in a 5-0 victory on the road, and Meghan Lorence and Rachael Bona scored in both games. The two shutouts give Amanda Leveille eight on the season, second to Clarkson’s Erica Howe with nine.

No. 2 Wisconsin took host Bemidji State down by 6-0 and 3-1 scores. Ann-Renée Desbiens turned in the 19-save shutout and was backed by three-point games by Blayre Turnbull, Brittany Ammerman, and Kaitlyn Harding, with the line of the latter pair including two goals. The news from the second game was Alex Rigsby’s return to the Badgers’ net. The senior picked up career win 92 to move ahead of Jessie Vetter for most in Wisconsin history. Her team took a lead in the second period on a power-play goal by Katy Josephs and Ammerman short-handed. Alex Citrowske moved BSU within a goal in the third period, but Karley Sylvester provided the coup de grâce into an empty net.

Results were similar in Grand Forks, where North Dakota triumphed over St. Cloud State, 4-0 and 3-1. Goals from Josefine Jakobsen, Gracen Hirschy, Andrea Dalen, and Layla Marvin were added to the 16 saves from Lexie Shaw in a comfortable win. On Saturday, Hanna Brodt broke the ice with the Huskies’ only tally of the weekend, but Michelle Karvinen struck twice to reverse the advantage. When Jakobsen hit an empty net, everyone on her line with Karvinen and Amy Menke finished with two points.

Engineers gain key sweep
Rensselaer was able to move up to sixth in the ECAC by sweeping Union, 4-1 and 3-0. The RPI defense was stout in front of Kelly O’Brien, holding the Dutchwomen to 11 and 18 shots. Ali Svoboda scored twice in the first game, as did Lauren Wash in the second. Jordan Smelker had two points in each in her return from an injury.

How the rest of the top 10 fared
No. 7 Boston College quelled any drama while playing without star Haley Skarupa in sweeping Vermont, 5-2 and 2-0. Melissa Bizzari and Haley McLean led the way in the opener by each scoring and adding a couple of helpers. Corinne Boyles’ 34 saves ensured that tallies by Emily Pfalzer and Andie Anastos would be enough in game two.

In the aftermath of the tie with Yale, Clarkson responded with an onslaught against Brown. It had a 32-4 advantage in shots on goal by the time the Golden Knights’ lead grew to 3-0 at 7:30 of the second period on goals by Genevieve Bannon, Olivia Howe, and Carly Mercer. Clarkson was able to coast to a 4-1 win.

2014 Hockey Humanitarian Award nominees announced
The BNY Mellon Wealth Management Hockey Humanitarian Award Foundation announced 18 nominees for this year’s award, and they include:

  • Amanda Colin, Quinnipiac;
  • Alyssa Gagliardi, Cornell;
  • Ashley Johnston, Union;
  • Brandi Pollock, Robert Morris;
  • Danielle Rancourt, Vermont;
  • Jocelyn Simpson, Colgate; and
  • Kelly Wallace, Northeastern.

All seven are seniors. The foundation will announce the finalists in February and recognize the recipient of the award on April 11 in Philadelphia at the Men’s Frozen Four.

Former CCHA commissioner Ruehl passes away at 83

Former CCHA commissioner and director of the BGSU Ice Arena Jim Ruehl passed away this past Friday (Jan. 17) at the age of 83.

Washington Capitals’ GM George McPhee, also a Hobey Baker winner at Bowling Green, called Ruehl “the man we all want to be” in a statement.

“It is with great sadness that I hear about Jim’s death,” current Boston College coach Jerry York and coach of Bowling Green’s 1984 national championship team added. “I was fortunate that Jim was at BGSU when I was hired, not only as my mentor in athletics, but in life as well. He was truly a great man and will be missed by many.”

Ruehl joined BGSU’s football coaching staff in 1956 and was a part of the 1959 undefeated national championship season. He was also a member of the BGSU faculty in health and physical education, earning his graduate degree from Bowling Green.

In 1972, Ruehl became the BGSU Ice Arena director, a post he held for 12 years. In 1982, while still the arena director, he was named CCHA commisioner and held that role when Bowling Green won the national championship two years later.

Ruehl and his wife of 63 years, Ann, had five children – Jim, Carol, Bob, Jeff and Julie.

A celebration of life service will be held Wednesday, Jan. 22, at 11 a.m. at First United Methodist Church in Bowling Green, Ohio.

Breaking Broncos

It’s getting impossible to ignore it: Western Michigan is one of the hottest teams in the country. The Broncos have yet to lose in the second half, and have beaten two top-five teams during their current 5-0-1 run. In fact, if you count the shootout win, the Broncos have beaten the number three team in the country three times, as they beat then-No. 3 Michigan in the Great Lakes Invitational, and this weekend got a shootout win and outright win against No. 3 St. Cloud. The Broncos also swept then No. 13 Miami.

However, this weekend’s wins against St. Cloud were perhaps the most impressive, as the Broncos did it on the road. On Friday, in a 5-5 tie/shootout win, Western Michigan rallied three times. After St. Cloud’s Cory Thorson scored a power-play goal at 5:33 of the second, it seemed the Broncos were out of it, as the Huskies led, 4-1. However, within a 5:35 span that began at 7:26 of the second, the Broncos scored three unanswered goals to tie it up again. Kenney Morrison assisted on the first two goals, and the Broncos’ big guns, Shane Berschbach, Justin Kovacs and Chase Balisy, came through. Berschbach scored one and Balisy scored the goal that tied it.

However, St. Cloud wasn’t done, as Nic Dowd scored the Huskies’ third power-play goal of the game at 7:37 to put St. Cloud back up, 5-4. Once again, the Broncos rallied, and it was Balisy who tied it, with assists to Kovacs and Berschbach.

In the shootout, Kovacs scored on his first attempt, and it was the only goal either team scored in the shootout.

Unlike Friday’s offensive outburst, Saturday’s rematch was a defensive battle more befitting of two teams that have won a lot this season with defense. After matching first-period goals, Berschbach scored the game-winner at 4:39 of the third. Lukas Hafner, who had replaced Frank Slubowski at the 14:34 mark of the first period after Slubowski gave up the third St. Cloud goal, was in net again, and stopped 32 shots.

Coach Andy Murray will probably want to ponder his goaltending situation ahead of this weekend’s series with Minnesota-Duluth. Slubowski has played in 18 games so far this season, and Hafner in 11. However, Hafner, a sophomore, has better stats across the board, including winning percentage.

Extra sessions

NCHC teams seemed to favor extra play this past Friday, as every NCHC team went to overtime. Denver beat Minnesota-Duluth, 3-2, on a Quentin Shore goal with 15 seconds left in OT. Nebraska-Omaha and Miami battled to a draw through OT, and Miami won a shootout. Western Michigan and St. Cloud also were tied after OT, with the Broncos winning a shootout. IN nonconference action, North Dakota tied Bemidji State in OT and Colorado College gave up a late goal to No. 6 Providence, and the two remained tied after OT.

On Saturday, only one game went to OT, as Denver and Minnesota-Duluth repeated their defensive battle. This time, it remained tied after OT, and the Bulldogs won the shootout, 2-1.

Top heavy

It was anticipated that once conference play started, the NCHC would turn into a bloodbath. Almost every coach in the league has made a comment about how competitive the NCHC is, and how difficult it is to get points out of both nights.

That competitiveness has created an interesting race for the Penrose Cup. Currently, six teams are within striking distance of first place. St. Cloud is on top, with 23 points, and then Denver, Nebraska-Omaha and North Dakota occupy the second stop with 21 points. Western Michigan is right behind with 20, and Minnesota-Duluth has 17 points, but with each win worth three points, the Bulldogs could easily make that up.

While there is still a lot of hockey to be played, it’s interesting to compare the current standings with the preseason coaches’ poll. The coaches picked Miami to win the conference, and picked Nebraska-Omaha to finish last. Miami is currently seventh in the league only one point above Colorado College, and the RedHawks have been in a tailspin since mid-November. Since beating Wisconsin on Nov. 15, the RedHawks have won only two games, plus a tie/shootout win on Friday night against Nebraska-Omaha.

The other interesting item is how teams seem to have switched their streaks. Western Michigan is one of the hottest teams in the country in the second half, but the Broncos struggled mightily in the first half. St. Cloud has started the second half 1-2-1, and if you include the December loss and tie against Union that closed the first half, the Huskies have been struggling to win. Miami started well, but has been in a tailspin, while North Dakota started slow, and is currently on a nine-game unbeaten streak.

There are only two conference series this coming weekend, and both are in Colorado, as Miami takes on Colorado College and North Dakota renews its bitter rivalry with Denver. Considering where each team is in the standings, those two series should be hard-fought and exciting.

Rankings roundup: How ranked teams fared, Jan. 13-19

Adam Wilcox was the center of attention after his 21-save shutout in No. 1 Minnesota’s victory over Ohio State on Friday (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Here’s how the 20 teams in the Jan. 13, 2014, USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll fared in games from Jan. 13 to Jan. 19:

No. 1 Minnesota won at Penn State 5-2 on Monday, beat Ohio State 1-0 at TCF Bank Stadium on Friday, beat Ohio State 4-2 on Saturday. Record: 17-2-3. Next: vs. St. Cloud State at Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 24; vs. Minnesota State or Minnesota-Duluth at Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 25.

No. 2 Ferris State lost at Minnesota State 6-2 on Friday, lost at Minnesota State 4-3 on Saturday. Record: 17-5-3. Next: at Michigan Tech, Jan. 24-25.

No. 3 St. Cloud State tied Western Michigan 5-5 (lost shootout 1-0) on Friday, lost to Western Michigan 2-1 on Saturday. Record: 12-4-4. Next: vs. Minnesota at Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 24; vs. Minnesota State or Minnesota-Duluth at Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 25.

No. 4 Boston College beat Boston University 6-4 on Friday, beat No. 19 Maine 7-2 on Saturday. Record: 16-4-3. Next: at Merrimack, Jan. 21; at Penn State, Jan. 25.

No. 5 Quinnipiac beat Merrimack 6-1 on Friday, lost at Merrimack 6-3 on Saturday. Record: 18-4-5. Next: at Dartmouth, Jan. 31.

No. 6 Union won at No. 17 New Hampshire 3-1 on Friday, won at No. 17 New Hampshire 3-1 on Saturday. Record: 15-4-3. Next: vs. Harvard, Jan. 24; vs. Rensselaer at Times Union Center, Albany, N.Y., Jan. 25.

No. 7 Providence tied at Colorado College 2-2 on Friday, won at Colorado College 7-2 on Saturday. Record: 14-5-5. Next: vs. Massachusetts-Lowell, Jan. 24; at Massachusetts-Lowell, Jan. 25.

No. 8 Yale lost at No. 14 Clarkson 3-2 on Friday, won at St. Lawrence 4-2 on Saturday. Record: 9-4-4. Next: at Brown, Jan. 24; vs. Brown, Jan. 25.

No. 9 Wisconsin did not play. Record: 13-6-1. Next: vs. Ohio State, Jan. 24-25.

No. 10 Massachusetts-Lowell tied No. 19 Maine 1-1 on Friday, beat Boston University 3-1 on Saturday. Record: 15-6-2. Next: at Providence, Jan. 24; vs. Providence, Jan. 25.

No. 11 Northeastern beat No. 18 Vermont on Friday, lost to Vermont 4-1 on Saturday. Record: 14-7-3. Next: at Notre Dame, Jan. 24-25.

No. 12 Cornell won at Harvard 3-2 on Friday, tied at Dartmouth 1-1 on Saturday. Record: 9-4-4. Next: vs. St. Lawrence, Jan. 24; vs. Clarkson, Jan. 25.

No. 13 Michigan did not play. Record: 10-6-2. Next: vs. Michigan State at Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, Jan. 23; at Michigan State, Jan. 24.

No. 14 Clarkson beat No. 8 Yale 3-2 on Friday, beat Brown 3-2 on Saturday. Record: 15-7-2. Next: at Colgate, Jan. 24; at Cornell, Jan. 25.

No. 15 Notre Dame beat Lake Superior State 6-3 on Friday, beat Lake Superior State 4-2 on Saturday. Record: 14-8-1. Next: vs. Northeastern, Jan. 24-25.

No. 16 Denver won at Minnesota-Duluth 3-2 in overtime on Friday, tied at Minnesota-Duluth 2-2 (lost shootout 2-1 in four rounds) on Saturday. Record: 12-7-5. Next: vs. North Dakota, Jan. 24-25.

No. 17 New Hampshire lost to No. 6 Union 3-1 on Friday, lost to No. 6 Union 3-1 on Saturday. Record: 13-12-1. Next: vs. Maine, Jan. 24; at Maine, Jan. 25.

No. 18 Vermont lost at No. 11 Northeastern 3-2 on Friday, won at No. 11 Northeastern 4-1 on Saturday. Record: 12-8-3. Next: at Boston University, Jan. 24-25.

No. 19 Maine tied at No. 10 Massachusetts-Lowell 1-1 on Friday, lost 7-2 at No. 4 Boston College on Saturday. Record: 11-8-3. Next: vs. New Brunswick, Jan. 21 (exhibition); at New Hampshire, Jan. 24; vs. New Hampshire, Jan. 25.

No. 20 North Dakota tied at Bemidji State 1-1 on Friday, beat Bemidji State 4-2 on Saturday. Record: 12-7-3. Next: at Denver, Jan. 24-25.

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