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Bowling Green’s Carpenter makes long-awaited season debut a special one

Ryan Carpenter (22) scored on his return to the Bowling Green lineup (photo: Todd Pavlack/BGSUHockey.com).

Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.

That cliché summed up the mind-set of Bowling Green junior forward Ryan Carpenter last week as he once again prepared to make his regular season debut for the Falcons.

Carpenter, an all-WCHA preseason first-team selection, missed the Falcons’ first 24 games of the 2013-14 season because of two separate injuries.

He finally returned to the lineup last week at home against Alaska and got a goal to top it off as the Falcons took three of four league points to move into second place in the WCHA.

“I’ve gotten my hopes up so many times — I was prepared but I didn’t want to get my hopes up,” Carpenter said Friday after BGSU’s 3-0 win over Alaska.

Carpenter broke a finger during an Oct. 5 exhibition when he was hit by a shot. Then, just two days before he was supposed to return against Ferris State, Carpenter broke his foot in practice courtesy of another shot.

It wasn’t until a week ago that Carpenter finally let his guard down.

“I knew when it felt good on Thursday, I knew I was playing. It was a good feeling,” Carpenter said.

“I usually nap before the game, but my mind was just racing. I didn’t know I was going to play until Thursday. My foot kept progressing.”

Carpenter led Bowling Green with 18 goals and 15 assists as a sophomore center last year in the CCHA.

Against the Nanooks, he was at wing, although coach Chris Bergeron said that will change when the team returns to action Jan. 24-25 against Lake Superior State with Carpenter returning to his natural position.

“He obviously reminded us all of how positive a presence he is on the bench, in the dressing room,” Bergeron said during his weekly news conference on Tuesday. “He was rewarded Friday, could have been rewarded Saturday. He had a couple good chances, especially in the first.

“He is progressing to where I think he’s pretty close to 100 percent, if not there. Now it’s make sure he is in condition and in shape. The only thing he didn’t do, which I’d like to see him do, is kill penalties. At least be in that conversation.”

Alaska-Anchorage goaltender Chris Kamal is 4-1 in the Seawolves’ last five games (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Kamal emerges for Seawolves

Alaska-Anchorage senior goaltender Chris Kamal’s first action of the season came in a relief appearance against Minnesota State in Mankato on Nov. 30. His team trailed 3-1 in the first period, and he gave up four more goals the rest of the way in what ended up as a 7-3 loss.

Fast forward six weeks, and Kamal was shutting down the Mavericks in Anchorage. Despite a lopsided shot advantage in favor of Minnesota State, Kamal allowed just two goals on 64 shots in a pair of upset victories, 2-1 and 3-1.

After that first appearance in Mankato, Kamal sat out another three games before getting his first start of the season on Dec. 14 against Lake Superior State. He recorded a 19-save shutout that night. He has started the Seawolves’ last five games, going 4-1 in that stretch, including an impressive road split at Wisconsin.

“It’s been fun for me,” Kamal told the Anchorage Daily News after his 35-save performance against Minnesota State on Saturday. “These guys are playing such good hockey.”

Before Kamal moved in, another senior, Rob Gunderson, got most of the action, playing in 12 games. Freshman Michael Matyas played in six games.

Big series in Mankato

One of the most anticipated series of the first season of the new-look WCHA will take place this weekend when Ferris State plays at Minnesota State.

The teams were the top two picks in both preseason polls (coaches and media), with the Mavericks being the overwhelming favorite and the Bulldogs following in line at the time.

The standings don’t reflect those late-summer picks, however. No. 2 Ferris State leads the WCHA by five points with four games in hand on second-place Bowling Green and has yet to lose a league game. Third-place Minnesota State, which has played two more games than Ferris, is six points behind in the standings.

The Bulldogs boast the WCHA’s top offense (3.39 goals per game) and defense (2.09), while the Mavericks have the conference’s best power play (21.2 percent) and penalty kill (88.5).

Ferris has been unbeatable so far in the WCHA at 12-0-2. The Bulldogs have captured 26 of 28 league points, but FSU coach Bob Daniels said the team is not chasing points.

“What we’re trying to do is chase performance,” Daniels said Saturday following a sweep of Michigan Tech. “We want to have good performance night in and night out. That’s what we’ll talk about over the course of this week as we get ready for Mankato — chasing good performances, chasing good hockey.”

Around the WCHA

• Northern Michigan redshirt freshmen goaltender Mathias Dahlstrom has quietly emerged as one of the league’s best goaltenders, boasting a .946 save percentage and 1.53 GAA in league games this year to lead the WCHA in both categories. Overall, Dahlstrom ranks fourth in the league in GAA (2.10) and third in save percentage (.930). His team in front of him is averaging only 2.25 goals per game in conference play and 2.30 goals per game overall.

• Since sweeping Alaska in Fairbanks Nov. 29-30 for its first two road wins of the season, Michigan Tech has won just once — Jan. 4 at Lake Superior State — since then, going 1-5-4. The one win and four losses all were decided by a goal. The Huskies have played in 13 consecutive games that ended in a tie or one-goal margin dating to a 2-2 tie on Nov. 23 at Alaska-Anchorage. In 20 games this year that were decided by a goal or ended in a tie, Tech is 5-9-6.

• Lake Superior State freshman forward Alex Globke was credited with an assist on all three Lakers goals against Bemidji State. Globke leads LSSU in scoring with eight goals and 13 assists. He’s fifth in the league in overall points and third in assists. Globke also leads all WCHA freshmen in scoring.

• Bemidji State not only snapped an eight-game winless streak with its sweep at Lake Superior State last weekend, but with its sixth and seventh wins of the season, it surpassed last season’s win total of five.

• Seven WCHA players are included in the Hobey Baker Award’s online ballot for the fan voting phase of the selection process. Fans can log on and place one vote a day during the process. The WCHA players include: Alaska’s Cody Kunyk; Bowling Green’s Dan DeSalvo and Bryce Williamson; Ferris State’s CJ Motte and Garrett Thompson; and Minnesota State’s Jean-Paul LaFontaine and Matt Leitner.

• This week’s WCHA players of the week were Bemidji State forward Cory Ward (offensive) and goalie Jesse Wilkins (rookie) and Alaska-Anchorage goaltender Chris Kamal (defensive).

• The WCHA now features a top plays video highlight package on its website uploaded every Wednesday afternoon. Here’s this week’s edition:

[youtube_sc url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JKnGi5tKwow]

Eighteen players nominated for 2014 Hockey Humanitarian Award

The Hockey Humanitarian Award is on display at the 2012 Frozen Four (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Eighteen players, including repeat honorees Jordan Heywood of Merrimack and Jeffrey Reppucci of Holy Cross, have been named as nominees for the 2014 Hockey Humanitarian Award.

The award, in its 19th year, recognizes college hockey’s finest citizen and includes players from Divisions I, II and III and both genders.

Finalists will be announced in February, and the 2014 recipient will be named at the Frozen Four in Philadelphia on Friday, April 11.

Here are the nominees:

NameYearSchool
Wade BennettSeniorDenver
Amanda ColinSeniorQuinnipiac
Nic DowdSeniorSt. Cloud State
Kelsie FralickJuniorConnecticut College
Alyssa GagliardiSeniorCornell
Jordan HeywoodSeniorMerrimack
Cole IkkalaSeniorUnion
Andy IlesSeniorCornell
Ashley JohnstonSeniorUnion
Mark MacMillanJuniorNorth Dakota
Brandi PollockSeniorRobert Morris
Danielle RancourtSeniorVermont
Joe RogersSeniorNotre Dame
Jeffrey ReppucciSeniorHoly Cross
Mike SanteeSeniorArmy
Jocelyn SimpsonSeniorColgate
Max SmithSophomoreConcordia (Minn.)
Kelly WallaceSeniorNortheastern

The nominees cover nine conferences:

• In Division I men, Atlantic Hockey, ECAC Hockey, Hockey East and the NCHC.

• In Division III women, the CHA, ECAC Hockey and Hockey East.

• In Division III men, the MIAC.

• And in Division III women, the NESCAC.

St. Anselm’s Tucker Mullin was the 2013 recipient.

U.S. College Hockey Online has been a Hockey Humanitarian Award media and marketing partner since 2007.

Crandall, Minnesota-Duluth defense start making second-half strides

Minnesota-Duluth goalie Aaron Crandall stops a shot by Nebraska-Omaha’s Johnnie Searfoss in last Saturday’s 3-1 Bulldogs victory (photo: Michelle Bishop).

Through the first half of the year, Minnesota-Duluth established itself as a .500 team, getting some good wins, but playing inconsistent hockey. In my second-half preview, I wrote that the Bulldogs would need better goaltending to have success.

Evidently, the coaches felt that same way, as coach Scott Sandelin challenged not only his goalies, but his entire team, to play better defensively. It was a message the team seemed to take to heart last weekend.

Goalie Aaron Crandall made 38 saves on Friday and 52 on Saturday in leading the Bulldogs to their first series sweep of the year, a six-point weekend against Nebraska-Omaha on the road.

Asked about the first series sweep, Sandelin chuckled.

“I can mention one guy: It was our goalie, Mr. Crandall,” he said. “He played awesome. He played great for us all weekend, and really was the difference I thought, especially on Saturday, but both nights he made some really key saves and was really solid in the net, which gave our team some confidence.”

Of course, a goalie alone can do only so much, and while Crandall made some key saves, Sandelin stressed that his entire team needs to be better defensively in the second half.

“I thought the last month, we didn’t play very well defensively from our goalies on out,” said Sandelin. “In turn, we only got one win out of four games. We talked at the break to the team and certainly the goalies that we had to challenge everybody to be better defensively, and we started this year with the exhibition game and these two games as an indicator, but again, it’s something we will see all the time. It’s a big part of the game. I think everyone knows a good goalie can make a coach look really good.”

Part of the challenge for Duluth has been its youth. The Bulldogs have seven freshmen and nine sophomores. Only four players, including Crandall, are seniors, and only one, Joe Basaraba, is scoring much for the Bulldogs. In fact, freshman Alex Iafallo is Duluth’s leading scorer, and freshman Kyle Osterberg is the fourth-leading scorer. While Iafallo was expected to lead the way for Duluth, Osterberg has been the revelation.

“I think Kyle has kind of surprised more production-wise than Alex,” said Sandelin. “I think Alex came in here, he’d played a couple of years of junior hockey, a little bit older, had a good year in Fargo. So we were expecting him to be a big contributor, along with him and Dom [Toninato], because they had that chemistry and had played together. Kyle’s a little bit younger, but he’s very tenacious. I think he plays the game hard every shift. He’s been a real pleasant surprise offensively.

“You need those guys every year. You need some young guys to come in and contribute. Our teams over the years, we’ve had those guys every year, two or three guys come in as freshmen and be an impact or key contributors. Last year it was [Tony] Cameranesi and [Austin] Farley, and this year it seems to be those two.”

It’s not just the forwards where young players are leading the Bulldogs. Sophomore Andy Welinski is the leader at the blue line, and Sandelin believes Welinski’s play last weekend in Omaha points toward his continued growth.

“I think he’s gotten better through the year, and if last weekend is any indication, obviously it’s great for us,” Sandelin said. “It’s weird to think that he is a sophomore and he’s kind of the leader back there, but he really is, and he’s got to play that way.”

While the sweep of UNO was a good first step, Sandelin and his team know that the second half will be a continual challenge, starting this weekend against Denver.

“As I keep reminding them, though, it gets tougher in the second half,” said Sandelin. “They’re prepared for it. … I think playing good teams keeps your kids focused on the weekend. We have to put last weekend behind us and move on. It was one weekend; we got six points, but we talked as a team about trying to put a run together, and we came back from break and tried to move on.

“We accomplished one of those last weekend; now it’s about trying to see if we can get points this weekend at home against a team that hasn’t lost much over the last 12, 13 games.”

Denver’s Sam Brittain had a rough return from the break but showed signs of returning to form last Saturday (photo: Candace Horgan).

Denver responds to challenge

While Minnesota-Duluth finally got a taste last weekend of how much a goaltender can contribute to a team’s success, the No. 16 Denver Pioneers, who face the Bulldogs in Duluth this weekend, have experienced it all season, with senior Sam Brittain leading the way.

Entering the second half, he led the country in goaltending. However, he struggled in the first two games back, a 3-3 tie with Brown and then a 6-2 thumping at the hands of St. Cloud State last Friday. It was the most goals Brittain, who has played every game but one for Denver this season, had ever given up in a game in his college career.

Brittain responded well on Saturday, holding St. Cloud to two goals while making 35 saves.

“It was definitely a frustrating night Friday,” said Brittain. “The team played well, but I kind of let them down and didn’t play the way I’ve been playing all season and know I’m capable of, so it was just forgetting about it and sticking to my game on Saturday, and I did that and we played great and got the win.”

Rookie coach Jim Montgomery also had faith in Brittain, knowing he would respond, and seems to believe Brittain can continue to play strong in the second half.

“I think he takes great care of himself,” Montgomery said when questioned about whether Brittain can continue to log the extensive minutes he has to date. “He’s extremely mature, and really mentally tough. He has the option on Mondays of if he wants to be on the ice or not, but I just think he takes care of himself like a pro, and that’s why he’s going to be a pro.”

Brittain said he believes the break will help him in the stretch run, which will be important if Denver is to make it back to the NCAA tournament.

“I think that big break at Christmas was nice to get some time off and regroup, and the coaching staff is good at managing everybody’s time from practices and workouts,” said Brittain. “It’s also getting enough sleep and making sure you are ready to go on the weekends and fresh.”

Like the Bulldogs, the Pioneers are young, sporting 11 freshmen, and like the Bulldogs, a freshman is leading the team in scoring. Trevor Moore began a surge in late November, and he scored a key goal in Saturday’s win over St. Cloud.

Denver also gets a lot of contributions from its defensemen. Joey LaLeggia is second on the team in scoring, and David Makowski and Nolan Zajac are fourth and sixth, respectively. Moore said that helps the forwards to do their job.

“I think it starts in the defensive end, just being sharp there,” he said. “And our line has really been able to break out easy, and that leads to good offense. … I think our forward group thinks we should be able to contribute more, but I think we are lucky to have those guys back at the point who can produce like that. Good offense comes from defense, and it’s working for us.”

Another similarity between Duluth and Denver comes in having a more mature freshman class, something Moore points to as a way the Pioneers can improve.

“We have a lot of older freshmen, which is good,” Moore said. “I think we’re coming in as freshmen, but we’re a little more mature than freshmen.”

While the defensive scoring has been important to the Pioneers’ success so far, Montgomery knows the forwards need to step up. After Friday’s bad loss, he challenged five skaters in particular, and they responded.

Quentin Shore had perhaps his best game of the year on Saturday, scoring a goal and two assists.

“I thought our forwards won us the game with their work ethic and how hard they competed all over the ice,” said Montgomery. “Because of that, we got a lot of five-on-five goals.”

Denver is 26th in the PairWise Rankings and has dug itself a deep hole as far as qualifying for the NCAA tournament is concerned. The team is aware of its PairWise placement but is trying to limit its focus.

“Obviously for us, we want to look big picture, but the important thing is to take it one game at a time,” said Brittain. “If we do that, we will have success and move up the standings. And if we look too far ahead, we won’t be focused and we won’t be successful.”

Heading into this key series with Minnesota-Duluth, over which Denver holds a two-point lead in the NCHC standings, Montgomery is expecting a defensive battle, especially between Brittain and Crandall.

“He’s playing great, and he’s seeing the puck like a beach ball,” Montgomery said of Crandall. “But our guy has been seeing the puck like a beach ball all season long. We know that the majority of our games are going to be tight, one-goal games, and we prepare and fight in practice that way so that we are used to it.”

NCHC players of the week

Offensive player of the week — Chase Balisy, Western Michigan: Balisy led Western Michigan to its first weekend sweep of Miami since 2003 by recording five points on the weekend — three of which were short-handed — scoring two goals and adding three assists. He also finished plus-5 on the weekend. On Friday, he scored a short-handed goal to tie the game at 3-3 and then set up the game-winning, short-handed goal at the end of the game. On Saturday, he scored an early short-handed goal and then assisted on the game-winner in the third period.

Defensive player of the week — Dillon Simpson, North Dakota: Simpson was a big reason that North Dakota swept Colorado College and moved into second place in the NCHC. In the two-game set, he notched a goal and two assists, assisting on the first goal and scoring the game-winner in Friday’s 5-3 win. Simpson finished even in plus/minus for the series and leads all NCHC defensemen in scoring with 11 points in league play. Simpson previously won NCHC defensive player of the week honors for the week of Nov. 11.

Rookie of the week — Jaccob Slavin, Colorado College: Slavin scored three goals and blocked six shots, establishing himself as a force on the ice against North Dakota though his team dropped both games. On Friday, Slavin, a draft pick of the Carolina Hurricanes, scored two goals in a 2:13 span in the third to get the Tigers to within a goal at 4-3. It was Slavin’s first collegiate multi-goal game, and the first multi-goal game by a CC player this season. On Saturday, Slavin scored in the third to put CC up 2-1 before North Dakota rallied. Slavin previously earned NCHC defenseman of the week honors for the week of Oct. 14.

Goaltender of the week — Aaron Crandall, Minnesota-Duluth: Crandall’s stellar netminding was a big reason Minnesota-Duluth earned its first series sweep of the year. In a two-game set at Nebraska-Omaha, Crandall stopped 90 of 93 shots for a .968 save percentage and 1.50 GAA. On Friday, he set a career mark for saves in game with 38 while allowing only two goals, one of which was a power-play tally. On Saturday, he shattered his Friday mark by making 52 saves and giving up only one goal in a 3-1 win. That was the most saves by a Bulldogs goalie since 2007, and the first time a Bulldogs goalie stopped more than 50 in regulation since Bill Perkl did so on Nov. 9, 1979.

Minnesota owes success to more than talent

Players on the 2012-2013 All-USCHO D-I Women's teams (Hannah Brandt). (Tim Brule)
Players on the 2012-2013 All-USCHO D-I Women’s teams (Hannah Brandt). (Tim Brule)

What has allowed Minnesota to ascend to a two-year reign atop the game with a possibility of extending that run come March? Many of the answers from the past couple of seasons are gone, but others are obvious.

In Hannah Brandt, the Gophers possess someone who has eclipsed 80 points in a season, a rare commodity in an Olympic year. The list of current college players who have reached even 50 is rather brief: Christine Bestland (career high of 72 points); Michelle Karvinen (61); Kelly Babstock (59); Haley Skarupa (53); and Jillian Saulnier (52).

Minnesota still has Canadian U-22 veterans Sarah Davis and Kelly Terry to anchor its other top lines. Each demonstrated in a postseason overtime that stopping Brandt’s line doesn’t mean an opponent is safe. The Gophers can turn to other scoring threats like Rachael Bona, fourth in points per game, and defensemen Milica McMillen and Rachel Ramsey, fourth and sixth in scoring average from the blue line. All contribute to the country’s top scoring offense.

It’s impossible to overstate the value of goaltender Amanda Leveille. She has started every game, and ranks in the top five in goaltending leaders, beyond ranking sixth in goals against average.

While there are untold factors in why a given team is successful or not, the following have played a vital role in putting the Gophers on top.

Staff stability
Through Brad Frost’s first four seasons as coach, his assistants might just as well have been on a carousel. He started with Laura Slominski and hired Tom Osiecki on an interim basis. After the season, Slominski left to become a high school teacher and coach, Osiecki became coach of the U.S. residency program in Blaine, and Jamie Wood and Natalie Darwitz were hired. The next season, Darwitz took a leave to train and play in the Olympics and Osiecki returned, again on an interim basis. Following year three, Wood left for New Hampshire, Osiecki’s stint was up, Darwitz returned, and Joel Johnson was hired to replace Wood. In the wake of Frost’s year four, Darwitz also left for a high school gig. Nadine Muzerall joined Frost and Johnson a month into the 2011-12 campaign. That year, Andy Kent became the goaltending coach, a spot that had been similarly in flux in recent years.

With a staff of Frost, Johnson, Muzerall and Kent for the last two and a half seasons, Minnesota has done little but win.

“I think Joel, when I brought him back to the university with our staff, he obviously had that familiarity with the university already, but with him and I being best mates in college allowed me to know that his values and his perspective are in line with mine and my philosophy, and because of that, we’re on the same page the majority of the time,” Frost said.

Frost and Johnson were teammates at Bethel, and coached together on Laura Halldorson’s staff at Minnesota.

“I think there’s a trust factor that has to be established in any coaching staff,” Johnson said. “The longer the relationship, and in particular, the deeper the relationship, where you’ve known each other as long as we have, and played together, been friends off the ice, and coached together, I think you develop a certain trust level. He knows that there’s never going to be anything that I do that takes away from our best opportunity to be on the same page as a staff, and ultimately, do what’s best for the program under his guidance.”

Having been coach of the men’s hockey team at Bethel during three of the years between his stints at Minnesota, Johnson has an appreciation for Frost’s position.

“It’s a lot easier to offer suggestions at times as an assistant because the head coach is the one that has to deal with the repercussions of whatever we do as a staff,” Johnson said. “I try to give different synopsis or different suggestions, while also maintaining the sense that, ‘Hey, whatever you decide, Brad, that’s what we’re going to decide; we’re going to go at it together.'”

Because Johnson is now in his fourth season on Frost’s staff, there has been consistency.

“I think the thing that I’ve been able to do is help stabilize, because I know him so well, and say here’s what we want to do,” Johnson said. “Let’s make these the standards in our program and put some words and some ideas to things I already know he agrees with.”

That forms the foundation of what the Gophers have accomplished under Frost.

“To me, it just goes back to our culture, our values, and the type of kids and players that we recruit,” Frost said. “We recruit great people that happen to be really good hockey players, and we expect them to fall in line with the goals that we have as a staff for them and the expectations that we have in regards to our culture being nonnegotiable.”

Leadership and effort
Bethany Brausen isn’t exactly a household name outside of Minnesota. She garners a bit more name recognition in her home state, having been named Minnesota’s Ms. Hockey as a senior at Roseville Area High School.

“She was a captain in high school, and often times in high school, the captains are just the most popular kids or the best players,” Frost said. “Bethany is someone who just oozes leadership.”

Along with Megan Bozek, Brausen was a co-captain on last year’s squad. This season as a senior, she’s again wearing the “C,” with classmates Davis, Terry, and Baylee Gillanders as assistants. Over her tenure as captain, Minnesota has compiled a record of 61-1-1.

“She has never played above a third-line role, necessarily, for us, never been on the power play, doesn’t kill a ton of penalties, but is somebody who has accepted her role,” Frost said. “I think she shows her leadership through her acceptance of her role, and how hard she works, and how much she cares about the team.”

That effort isn’t confined to Brausen.

“Very rarely do I have to say, ‘We have to work harder,’ or after a game say that, ‘We got outworked,'” Frost said. “I think that’s a credit to the culture of our team, but also, a huge credit to our players.”

Brausen, Davis, and Terry set an example by their willingness to skate back in defense of their own net with the same zeal that they show in attacking the opponent.

“That back pressure is a huge reason for our success,” Frost said.

Junior Meghan Lorence has skated on a line centered by Davis for much of the last couple of years.

“Every day [Davis] comes to practice and just outworks everybody,” Lorence said. “She gives 100 percent every time she hits the ice. I think if you do that and you have that kind of attitude every single day, it’s bound to pay off. She’s become a big leader on our team. We rely on her a lot, on and off the ice.”

As the only senior on the blue line, Gillanders leads in a different way, as her position doesn’t allow for the frenetic energy that the forwards bring.

“I think Baylee first and foremost is one of the most caring and compassionate people that you’ll meet, and I say that as an utmost compliment,” Johnson said. “She’s able to also be a very competitive and tough, hard-nosed hockey player. But certainly, the care and concern that she has for her teammates is second to none, and that’s why she is a great leader.”

The leadership goes beyond the senior class.

“We lost a lot of key players with [Amanda] Kessel, and Bozek, and Noora [Räty] being gone,” Lorence said. “So us coming in, the upperclassmen, I think we just had to step up and put ourselves in different roles, and even though we’re not captains, become leaders on the team and help the younger ones along the way.”

Placing the team first
A key for the Gophers heading into the season was how their retooled blue line would hold up. Three of the mainstays from last year’s unit are preparing to play in the Olympics next month, Mira Jalosuo for Finland, and Bozek and Lee Stecklein for the United States.

Along with Ramsey and McMillen, Gillanders was asked to carry more.

“Her role has expanded, and the key for Baylee, as it is for every player, is to find out what is it that [she is] expected to do, and then do that to the best of her ability,” said Johnson, who coaches the defensemen. “I think over this season, on the ice and off the ice, those roles are still being sorted out.”

Gillanders has made her presence known to a greater extent on the offensive end; her four goals are more than she tallied in her previous three seasons combined, and include a power-play goal in her team’s most recent game to erase a third-period deficit.

“She made a great play for us on that first goal, where last year she probably doesn’t get put into that spot,” Johnson said.

Heading into the season, she knew that an increase in both opportunity and responsibility was likely.

“Every year we want to develop our game a little bit better,” Gillanders said. “Be stronger in the D-zone and then again in the offensive zone. That’s something that I focused on, but at the same time, I don’t want to get too far away from my defensive abilities and all that. That’s kind of my role.”

Even with expanded roles for the three returnees, more defensemen were needed because the Gophers typically give a regular shift to six. Candidates included incoming freshmen Paige Haley and Kelsey Cline. Junior Jordyn Burns had previous experience on defense, although not as a Gopher. In part because Haley is the only right-handed shot in the mix, the staff decided to also try moving a couple of right-handed forwards back to defense in sophomore Brook Garzone and rookie Megan Wolfe.

“If you’ve got a kid who’s potentially your 11th, or 12th, or 13th best player, if she doesn’t have a spot as a forward, then you’ve got to insert her as a ‘D’ or move somebody around so that you’re getting your very best players out on a regular shift,” Johnson said.

In recent weeks, Wolfe has been part of the defensive rotation on a full-time basis.

“She’s made a great jump,” Johnson said. “She simplifies the game and makes a good breakout pass. I know she probably in her heart of hearts wants to jump into the offense a little more and see what she could do as a forward, but she’s accepted that role and done a great job.”

Burns, Cline, Garzone and Haley have continued to alternate, playing one game each series on defense and one as a forward on the fourth line.

“Players like Brook Garzone have settled down and just tried to make a simple play,” Johnson said. “Jordyn Burns, who played forward last year, trying to just do things within their skill set and not anything more. I think that’s really a testament to them, and also to us hopefully putting them in the right positions.”

In part because she is left-handed, Lorence was spared such a move.

“I did play defense a little in the summer, but I’m happy where I am right now and playing forward,” she said. “That’s kind of a lot of pressure to change positions like that and I give credit to Megan Wolfe and Brook Garzone, the ones who do move back, because they took a big one for the team and they’re adjusting really nicely back there.”

However, Minnesota players don’t know what sacrifice may be asked of them, next season or next week.

“We’re recruiting often times the best players off their high school teams, and we have high expectations for each of the players that we recruit to fulfill a role and to put the team above themselves,” Frost said. “This is another team that has done that, and I think you can see by the way they play, they really do play for the person next to them. And that’s critical for us to be successful.”

Masten and Bethel seek more milestones

As a freshman, Cristina Masten merely sought to contribute. In the final game of 2013, the Bethel senior arrived full circle in knocking home a late third-period goal in a one-sided win over Wisconsin-Eau Claire.

To the eventual outcome, the scoring play was relatively immaterial. In the larger scope however, Masten’s goal, with 1:12 left, etched her name in the Royals’ record books as the program’s all-time leading scorer.

Masten’s three-point performance in the win over the Blugolds eclipsed previous record-holder Bethany Murphy-Aultman, who concluded her career in 2008-09 with 41 goals and 105 points.

Masten’s potentially most productive season is in perfect symmetry with her teammates, who are on pace for the highest winning percentage in team history. The Royals have teased the top 10 rankings from the outset, and at 9-2-2 overall (5-1-1 MIAC), topping a program high 15 victories is well within reach.

Coach Brian Carlson, who is also in his fourth season in St. Paul, has been the architect of the two 15-win win campaigns in program history. In his initial season in 2010-11 with the Royals, the team finished 15-10-2. Masten scored 14 times that year, finishing third on the club in scoring, and most importantly, establishing the offensive skills that the Royals sought.

“My time at Bethel has been everything I have wanted and more,” said Masten about her four-year run with the Royals. “I have played under great coaches and alongside some amazing hockey players and friends.”

Record-setting moment aside, Carlson’s crew is squarely focused on the immediate future.

“Conference play is very competitive,” Carlson said in regard to what is sure to become a torrid race down the stretch. “If you aren’t ready to play, you will likely pay a price. A common trait of highly successful programs is consistency. That is who we want to be.”

The Royals are two points behind MIAC leader Gustavus Adolphus heading into weekend action against St. Mary’s. Carlson’s charges began their current eight-game unbeaten run in late November. Masten has recorded 11 points in the current streak. She is ranked ninth in the nation in scoring.

After a first half shakeout, the MIAC title chase is most likely down to a quartet that includes St. Thomas and St. Catherine along with the Golden Gusties and Royals.

“We need to have that to consistently win games,” Carlson said. “Our goal for the second half is to get better at all parts of the game, specifically special teams and the level of consistency and intensity we play with, period by period, game to game,”

Nationally, the Royals are ranked 12th in power play efficiency and 13th in penalty killing.

“Conference play is intense and there are no easy games,” Carlson said, peering ahead. “Five out of 10 teams make the playoffs.”

Masten, a native of Fergus Falls, Minn., is unquestionably on board with Carlson’s insistence on the value of retaining momentum for the remainder of the regular season.

“The most important thing for us is to remain focused for every game and practice,” she said. “In order to continue in the direction that we want our team to go, we need to make sure that we are improving every day. If we focus on all the little things that need to get done day in and day out, the big things like the MIAC race and the top 10 will take care of itself.”

Sophomore Caroline Kivisto and junior Kalie Johnson have supplemented Masten’s contribution to the team’s offensive profile. Also, six freshmen have registered points for the Royals thus far.

“With our team being as young as it is, our upperclassmen have been doing a good job of keeping everyone on the same page and being a support system for the younger players,” Masten said in redirecting the spotlight from her personal contribution to Bethel’s hopeful rise to national prominence. “I view my role on the team as someone who goes out to practice and works hard every day. In regards to the newcomers on the team, I try to be someone that they can reach out to if they have questions or need help with something.”

Carlson appreciates the no-nonsense attitude that encompasses Masten’s approach to the game.

“She is a quiet leader, who leads by example. These attributes are evident in everything she does, and have brought success both on and off the ice.”

Despite trying season, Wentworth still has eyes on ECAC Northeast crown

Wentworth junior forward Sean McLaughlin has been one of the Leopards’ more consistent offensive players this season (photo: SportsPix).

The defending ECAC Northeast champions have some work to do

After a 16-9-3 record during the 2012-13 campaign, Wentworth is just 4-10-1 this season despite not losing much off the roster from last year’s team.

If the Leopards want to make a turnaround in the second half of the season, everyone in the program will need to get better at what they do.

“From our perspective, myself included, we have to do a better job and turn the corner and overcome a little adversity,” Wentworth coach R.J. Tolan said. “Hopefully, [we] can start winning some games here.”

Last year, Wentworth was tied for fourth in the conference in goals scored with 86 and tied for first in goals allowed with 64. On special teams, the power play was at 20.8 percent (22 goals on 106 chances) and the penalty kill was a respectable 81.1 percent, just allowing 20 goals on 106 chances.

This year the Leopards have 34 goals through 15 games played and have given up 50. In 64 opportunities on the man-advantage, they have only tallied eight goals. The penalty kill is nearly similar to last year’s numbers at 78.7 percent.

Tolan said his squad is working on all aspects of its game.

“I think it’s a little of everything,” the coach said. “One night, we need one more goal and we don’t score the goal. We need to prevent [the opposition] from scoring and we’re just not making enough plays to win college hockey games, which is obviously the goal.”

Forwards Sean McLaughlin, Mike Cox and Devin Smith each lead the team with seven points.

McLaughlin, who is a junior, had seven points in both his sophomore and freshman years. As a freshman, Cox had five goals and 16 helpers in 27 games. Smith is entering his freshman year after putting up 10 goals and 12 assists with the New Hampshire Jr. Monarchs and Valley Jr. Warriors of the former Eastern Junior Hockey League.

For Tolan, he said isn’t looking for anyone in particular to step up their game offensively.

“A lot of our players who have been here for a long time have learned to overcome some adversity,” Tolan added. “I would say at 4-10-1, we need to win games to be successful. I am hoping for some guys to step up in the second half. We all can do a little better to turn the corner here.

“For us, the last couple of years when we were winning quite a bit, I think it’s been the sum of all of our parts. We haven’t had any real star or anything like that.”

There is some light at the end of tunnel as the Leopards are still in the thick of the conference regular-season title with a 2-3 record, only four points behind Salve Regina, which is 4-1 in conference play.

Tolan isn’t looking past the final weekend of nonconference play where the Leopards face Assumption on Saturday before returning back to ECAC Northeast play against Becker on Jan. 25.

“I think anything is possible in sports,” Tolan said when asked about the ECAC Northeast crown. “For my group, we have a game this weekend and we have to go out and try to make enough plays and move on from there.”

Wrapping up Frozen Fenway, where the weather didn’t want to cooperate

Maine’s Cam Brown and Boston University’s Matt Lane splash through the puddles during last Saturday’s Frozen Fenway game (photo: Melissa Wade).

The grounds crew working at historic Fenway Park last Saturday looked more like they were working to get the greens playable at a rain-soaked U.S. Open golf tournament rather than a crew trying to clean wet ice.

And that the last sentence referenced three sports tells you just how crazy Saturday was at Frozen Fenway.

But that’s exactly the image that was put forward near the midway point of the first period between Boston University and Maine.

After massive claps of thunder accompanied bright flashes of lightning, rain poured down upon the ice sheet in buckets, putting a layer of nearly a half a foot of water on the temporary rink. And just when everyone thought the game would be halted because of the rain, out came a crew of seven with large brooms that you typically see rink crews use to remove a little bit of excess water after a flood from a Zamboni.

This time, these brooms were being used to push gallons of water toward an opening behind one of the goals onto the third-base line of Fenway Park.

The surreal scene was what was necessary to even give the crew a shot at keeping the ice playable. After removing as much water as possible, the two Zambonis did the rest of the work, providing a dry scrape that took most of the remaining water away.

At the end, it was the single strangest moment in hockey most will ever witness.

The torrential rain brought to an end two weeks of Hockey East’s attempts to stage outdoor hockey when Mother Nature had no plans to cooperate.

Week one was made difficult by more than a foot of snow that fell two days in advance of a doubleheader pitting Merrimack against Providence and Boston College against Notre Dame. Although the Fenway crew removed most of the snow, the frigid temperatures that followed on game night made the ice so brittle it was cracking.

It took seven-and-a-half hours to play those two games without any sort of delay like Maine and BU faced last Saturday. Extended intermissions and lengthened TV timeouts allowed the ice crew to mend as many holes as possible in the Fenway ice.

When the original weather forecast was presented for this past Saturday’s doubleheader, there was optimism as the temperatures were predicted in the high 40s, ideal conditions for players and fans alike.

Then came the rain. Hockey East wisely moved up the game times from 3 and 6:30 p.m. to noon and 3 p.m. But forecasts showed even that might not be enough.

Given a difficult decision to postpone the two-game slate to Sunday, something that could have made it difficult for ticket holders to attend, and try to squeeze the games in between rain drops, commissioner Joe Bertagna chose the latter.

“You have a lot of people who bought tickets for [Saturday] and maybe they can’t come Sunday,” said Bertagna. “We were trying to have that balance between accommodating people and juggling the elements.”

Once the commitment to Saturday was made, it was up to Bertagna’s ice crew to provide the best conditions possible. That included dry scraping the ice at times, taking breaks to clear away standing water and yes, moving gallons of water off the top of the ice surface during what amounted to a 69-minute rain delay.

Bertagna, who admirably faced the media during the second intermission of the BU-Maine game, was clear that he knew they could never provide the conditions that would be found at a campus rink. But they also knew that they could provide conditions that made the ice playable.

“It was a matter of maintaining the ice to playable conditions,” Bertagna said. “Not typical conditions, but playable conditions.”

In the end, both games of both doubleheaders were finalized and, even though conditions were difficult, those involved maintained as positive of an attitude as could be expected.

“[The spirit] of the coaches was pretty good,” said Bertagna. “Coaches are driven and these are league games. In the context of our new schedule, when you reduce the number of games, one point has a lot of weight to it.”

One coach who was a bit critical of Frozen Fenway was Notre Dame’s Jeff Jackson. After his team’s loss to Boston College in the first week of the event, Jackson said that there is an oversaturation of outdoor games resulting in a lack of interest.

In a way, that showed both weeks at Fenway. The first two versions of the event, played in 2010 and 2012, sold out each single-day doubleheaders.

This time, Hockey East took a larger bite of the apple with two separate doubleheaders. The result was two dates where games were played in front of a half-empty-looking stadium. According to Bertagna, the first week’s games drew more than 30,000 in ticket sales but only about 24,000 fans in the seats. Last Saturday’s announced paid attendance was 25,580, and Bertagna estimated about 17,000 fans walked through the turnstiles.

The attrition can mostly be attributed to the poor weather of both dates. But the reality was more than 55,000 fans purchased tickets to the event.

So the question comes: Should Frozen Fenway continue?

Not surprisingly, Bertagna wasn’t going to answer that question last Saturday. He said speculating would take away from the hard work of everyone involved, something that easily can be overlooked. The truth is, most involved closely with this event put in countless hours of overtime to pull it off.

So what should the league do moving forward with what has become an every-other-year event?

There are a number of options. The most obvious might be reducing the Hockey East portion of the event to a single game. Though the original event in 2010 featured a men’s and women’s doubleheader, most of the tickets sold were related to the men’s game, thus creating a sold-out feel to the ballpark.

One of the challenges to this is financial. The cost of putting a rink at Fenway Park or any other venue is significant, and one single game cannot in any way recoup those expenses. But the league could consider allowing other leagues/teams to use the ice, similar to what was done this year (women’s, Division III, high school, prep school, alumni games, etc.), but market to the masses the single Hockey East game.

At the same time, there could be a consideration of a change in venues for the event. While Fenway Park and the Red Sox have been gracious hosts, the simple fact is the sight lines are poor. Any seats in the lower box levels of the park block the ability to see the puck. The top seats at Fenway in club/luxury levels and on top of the Green Monster were cost-prohibitive for many. Thus, most of the fans crushed themselves into the tight grandstand seats, far enough away from the action to remove much of the atmosphere.

One potential venue for the event in the future could be Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Mass., the home of the New England Patriots. There has already been some rumor that the NHL might be looking at Gillette for a future outdoor game, and piggy-backing that event would make sense. There would be considerably more seats that would have a clear view of the play (albeit from far away).

Regardless the future decisions, the 2014 version of Frozen Fenway is over. Bertagna can breathe a sigh of relief and maybe spend some time thawing/drying out.

Boston College’s Johnny Gaudreau (right) has six goals and six assists in five games since the winter break (photo: Melissa Wade).

Gaudreau takes over national scoring lead

A couple of weeks ago, I noted in this space that Johnny Gaudreau was playing some pretty impressive hockey.

In the last two weeks, that has hardly ceased. We couldn’t have known, though, that in a short period of time, he would become the nation’s scoring leader.

Entering the holiday break, Gaudreau had 28 points, eight behind St. Lawrence’s Greg Carey. Between BC’s return on Dec. 28 and now, Gaudreau’s Eagles have played four more games than Carey’s Saints.

And just like that, the explosive Gaudreau now leads the points race, 40-37.

Gaudreau has potted six goals and six assists in the five games since returning from the break, with the Eagles posting a 4-0-1 mark in that time. Last Friday night, Gaudreau factored into four of BC’s five goals (2-2–4) in a key 5-2 league victory over Providence.

Saturday, when Gaudreau played in his 100th collegiate game, he registered a single assist, his 21st of the season to collect career point No. 136, passing his coach Jerry York (to his credit, York got 135 points in 81 career games).

At this point, Gaudreau has scored in 16 consecutive games and 20 of 21 contests.

As impressive as the 5-foot-7 forward has been throughout his career at BC, York said his current play is something college hockey hasn’t seen in quite a while.

“Johnny has had an incredible career here at BC, but right now he’s at the very top of his game,” said York. “He’s improved every year. But right now, this is the best I’ve seen him play. Practices, games. People last year were saying, ‘What else can Johnny do?’

“Johnny wants to get better at every facet of his game. He’s better defensively. I think he’s stronger on the puck. He’s shooting the puck better.

“It’s an awful lot of fun for us to watch him play.”

Here is a stat to put on display Gaudreau’s clutch play: He has scored five game-winning goals, just one short of his career high set last season. But he’s also factored into four other goals that either won the game or tied it in the third period.

You have to go back to 2009 and BU’s Matt Gilroy since Hockey East has had a Hobey Baker Award winner. But if Gaudreau keeps on his current pace, he could easily be a unanimous choice for that award.

Hockey East and the PairWise

With USCHO debuting this year’s PairWise Rankings, we see how Hockey East stacks up against the rest of the nation.

Right now, it’s pretty impressive.

As of Wednesday, five Hockey East teams rank in the top 16 led by Boston College at No. 2. Northeastern (t-6th), Providence (t-8th), Massachusetts-Lowell (t-8th) and New Hampshire (13th) and Notre Dame (16th) all sit above the PairWise line (though, if the season ended today, Notre Dame would lose its position in the NCAA field to the Atlantic Hockey champion).

And while having six teams above the bubble line is impressive, what’s more eye-opening is that the 17th and 18th ranked teams are Vermont and Maine, respectively.

There’s a lot of hockey to be played, but imagining as many as six Hockey East teams in the NCAA field is an absolute dream scenario.

Well-traveled Turgeon finds a home with Buffalo State

Dan Turgeon landed at Buffalo State after a slew of stops in junior hockey and a two-year stint playing community college hockey (photo: Dan Hickling).

Let’s name hockey animals that start with the letter ‘B.’

There are Bulls, such as you might find in the big horn country of Billings.

There are Bison, which roam across rinks in Boulder.

And there are even Brown Bears, the likes of which prowl in chilly Kenai River.

The common thread between all those ‘Bs’ is that Dan Turgeon has played for them all.

It stands to reason, then that the talented junior winger would attach himself to another beastly B bunch – the Bengals of Buffalo State.

Turgeon has blended into his new spot in hockey’s menagerie quite nicely, too, after having previously put in two years at Monroe (N.Y.) County Community College. (No B’s there, alas. MCCC skaters call themselves the Tribunes.)

He leads Buff State scorers with 11 points (six goals, five assists) and stands just three points off the SUNYAC scoring lead.

“You put the puck on his tape,” said Bengals’ coach Nick Carriere, “and he knows what to do with it. He’s been great on and off the ice. You can talk to him like a man.”

Well, Turgeon is a ripe 23-year-old whose wizened demeanor has earned him the nickname “Uncle Turge.”

And his performance has merited the Arvada, Colo., native a spot on the Buff State top line.

“It’s a great program,” said Turgeon. “He [Carriere] put me into a pretty high role right off the bat and he’s kept me up there, so I must be doing something right. I’m just going to keep trying to produce.”

As you might guess, Turgeon’s path to Buffalo was a meandering one, one that took him through five time zones and a few years of searching for the right spot.

“I was trying to find the best place for me,” he said. “I was all over the place in juniors.”

The trail led him to Rochester, N.Y., and the realm of juco hockey, a place where for most, hockey dreams go to die.

“I needed a spot and had nowhere to go,” Turgeon said. “They [MCCC] made me an offer and I jumped on it.”

And because of the buzz that began to build about Turgeon, his dreams gained new life.

“I heard about a big kid at MCCC who can score,” said Carriere, who admittedly doesn’t take in too many community college tilts. “And then I heard from someone else about him. I said that somewhere down the road, I’ve got to see what’s going on and see him. It’s tough to judge because that level is inconsistent, but he was a guy who can handle the puck and can skate and he had maturity on the ice. It was well worth taking a risk on him.”

At this stage, it hardly seems like a risk.

It’s more like a no-brainer.

Nine weeks out, and we can get a good regional bracket

It’s time once again to do what we like to call Bracketology, college hockey style. It’s our weekly look at how I believe the NCAA tournament will wind up come selection time.

It’s a look into what are the possible thought processes behind selecting and seeding the NCAA tournament teams.

Those of you that are veterans of the college hockey scene know that it is all about the PairWise Rankings. This is USCHO’s numerical approach that simulates the way the NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Committee chooses the teams that make the NCAA tournament.

The criteria are tweaked every so often — every so often being every year lately — in order to give what the committee believes will be the best tournament.

There were some major changes this year to the selection criteria. In short:

• PairWise comparisons are now done against all teams. There is no cutoff for the amount of teams, so the most PWR comparison wins that a team can have is 58 since there are 59 teams.

• There is now a home and away wins weighting applied to the Ratings Percentage Index. In calculation of the index, wins on the road and losses at home have a weighting factor of 1.2. Wins at home and losses on the road have a weighting factor of 0.8. All neutral-site games have a weighting factor of 1.0. A tie is one-half of a win and one-half of a loss, so home/road ties are treated accordingly for the teams involved.

• There is a quality wins bonus for wins against teams in the top 20 of the RPI. A win against the No. 1 team in the RPI is worth 0.05 points, and is scaled down by 0.0025 points for each place until you reach No. 20, where a bonus of 0.0025 points will be given.

The changes are a little complicated, so it is best to check out our FAQ.

Since USCHO has begun the PairWise Rankings, we have correctly identified all of the teams that have been selected to the NCAA tournament.

For the past three years, I am the only prognosticator to have correctly predicted the exact brackets for the NCAA tournament, meaning that I have predicted how the committee thought when putting together the brackets.

This is the next installment of our Bracketology, and we’ll be bringing you a new one every week until we make our final picks before the field is announced on March 23.

If you want to skip the inner workings and get to the results of the analysis, then click here.

Here are the facts:

• Sixteen teams are selected to participate in the national tournament.

• There are four regional sites (East — Bridgeport, Conn.; Northeast — Worcester, Mass.; Midwest — Cincinnati; West — St. Paul, Minn.)

• A host institution that is invited to the tournament plays in the regional for which it is the host and cannot be moved. There are four host institutions this year: Yale in Bridgeport, Holy Cross in Worcester, Miami in Cincinnati and Minnesota in St. Paul.

• Seedings will not be switched. To avoid undesirable first-round matchups, including intraconference games (see below), teams will be moved among regionals, not reseeded.

Here are the NCAA’s guidelines on the matter, from the 2014 pre-championship manual:

In setting up the tournament, the committee begins with a list of priorities to ensure a successful tournament on all fronts, including competitive equity, financial success and the likelihood of a playoff-type atmosphere at each regional site. For this model, the following is a basic set of priorities:

1. Once the six automatic qualifiers and 10 at-large teams are selected, the next step is to develop four groups from the committee’s rankings of 1-16. The top four teams are No. 1 seeds and will be placed in the bracket so that if all four teams advance to the Men’s Frozen Four, the No. 1 seed will play the No. 4 seed and the No. 2 seed will play the No. 3 seed in the semifinals. The next four are targeted as No. 2 seeds. The next four are No. 3 seeds and the last four are No. 4 seeds.

2. Step two is to place the home teams. Host institutions that qualify will be placed at home.

3. Step three is to fill in the bracket so that first-round conference matchups are avoided, unless it corrupts the integrity of the bracket. If five or more teams from one conference are selected to the championship, then the integrity of the bracket will be protected (i.e., maintaining the pairing process according to seed will take priority over avoidance of first-round conference matchups). To complete each regional, the committee assigns one team from each of the remaining seeded groups so there is a No. 1, No. 2, No. 3 and No. 4 seed at each regional site.

Given these facts, here is the top 16 of the current PairWise Rankings (PWR), and the conference leaders through all games of Jan. 14:

1 Minnesota
2 Boston College
3 Ferris State
4 Quinnipiac
5 St. Cloud State
6t Union
6t Northeastern
8t Providence
8t Massachusetts-Lowell
10 Wisconsin
11 Cornell
12 Yale
13 New Hampshire
14t Clarkson
14t Michigan
16 Notre Dame
— Mercyhurst

Current conference leaders based on winning percentage:

Atlantic Hockey: Mercyhurst
Big Ten: Minnesota
ECAC Hockey: Union
Hockey East: Boston College
NCHC: St. Cloud State
WCHA: Ferris State

Notes

• Bracketology assumes that the season has ended and there are no more games to be played — i.e., the NCAA tournament starts tomorrow.

• Because there are an uneven amount of games played inside each conference, I will be using winning percentage, not points accumulated, to determine the current leader in each conference. This team is my assumed conference tournament champion.

Step one

From the committee’s report, choose the 16 teams in the tournament.

We break ties in the PWR by looking at the individual comparisons among the tied teams, and add in any current league leaders that are not currently in the top 16. The only team that is not is Mercyhurst.

From there, we can start looking at the ties and bubbles in a more detailed fashion.

The ties and bubbles consist of Union and Northeastern at 6, Providence and Massachusetts-Lowell at 8, and Clarkson and Michigan at 14.

We break all of our ties based upon the RPI.

Therefore, the 16 teams in the tournament, in rank order, are:

1 Minnesota
2 Boston College
3 Ferris State
4 Quinnipiac
5 St. Cloud State
6 Union
7 Northeastern
8 Providence
9 Massachusetts-Lowell
10 Wisconsin
11 Cornell
12 Yale
13 New Hampshire
14 Clarkson
15 Michigan
16 Mercyhurst

Step two

Now it’s time to assign the seeds.

No. 1 seeds: Minnesota, Boston College, Ferris State, Quinnipiac

No. 2 seeds: St. Cloud State, Union, Northeastern, Providence

No. 3 seeds: Massachusetts-Lowell, Wisconsin, Cornell, Yale

No. 4 seeds: New Hampshire, Clarkson, Michigan, Mercyhurst

Step three

Place the No. 1 seeds in regionals.

Minnesota, as a host school, is placed first.

No. 1 Minnesota is placed in the West Regional in St. Paul.
No. 2 Boston College is placed in the Northeast Regional in Worcester.
No. 3 Ferris State is placed in the Midwest Regional in Cincinnati.
No. 4 Quinnipiac is placed in the East Regional in Bridgeport.

Step four

Now we place the other 12 teams so as to avoid intraconference matchups if possible.

Begin by filling in each bracket by banding groups. Remember that teams are not assigned to the regional closest to their campus sites by ranking order within the banding (unless you are a host school, in which case you must be assigned to your home regional).

If this is the case, as it was last year, then the committee should seed so that the quarterfinals are seeded such that the four regional championships would be played by No. 1 vs. No. 8, No. 2 vs. No. 7, No. 3 vs. No. 6 and No. 4 vs. No. 5.

So therefore:

No. 2 seeds

No. 8 Providence is placed in No. 1 Minnesota’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 7 Northeastern is placed in No. 2 Boston College’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 6 Union is placed in No. 3 Ferris State’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 5 St. Cloud State is placed in No. 4 Quinnipiac’s regional, the East Regional.

No. 3 seeds

Our bracketing system has one regional containing seeds 1, 8, 9, and 16; another with 2, 7, 10 and 15; another with 3, 6, 11 and 14; and another with 4, 5, 12 and 13.

No. 9 Massachusetts-Lowell is placed in No. 8 Providence’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 10 Wisconsin is placed in No. 7 Northeastern’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 11 Cornell is placed in No. 6 Union’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 12 Yale is placed in No. 5 St. Cloud State’s regional, the East Regional.

No. 4 seeds

One more time, taking No. 16 vs. No. 1, No. 15 vs. No. 2, etc.

No. 16 Mercyhurst is sent to No. 1 Minnesota’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 15 Michigan is sent to No. 2 Boston College’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 14 Clarkson is sent to No. 3 Ferris State’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 13 New Hampshire is sent to No. 4 Quinnipiac’s regional, the East Regional.

The brackets as we have set them up:

West Regional (St. Paul):
16 Mercyhurst vs. 1 Minnesota
9 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 8 Providence

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
14 Clarkson vs. 3 Ferris State
11 Cornell vs. 6 Union

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
15 Michigan vs. 2 Boston College
10 Wisconsin vs. 7 Northeastern

East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 New Hampshire vs. 4 Quinnipiac
12 Yale vs. 5 St. Cloud State

Our first concern is avoiding intraconference matchups. We have two, so let’s solve them.

We have Cornell vs. Union and Massachusetts-Lowell vs. Providence.

We can swap Cornell with Wisconsin, an East and a West team to swap regions. Sounds good.

West Regional (St. Paul):
16 Mercyhurst vs. 1 Minnesota
9 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 8 Providence

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
14 Clarkson vs. 3 Ferris State
10 Wisconsin vs. 6 Union

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
15 Michigan vs. 2 Boston College
11 Cornell vs. 7 Northeastern

East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 New Hampshire vs. 4 Quinnipiac
12 Yale vs. 5 St. Cloud State

Now to solve Providence vs. Massachusetts-Lowell. Let’s see if we can once again bring a Western team back to the West and an Eastern team back to the East.

We can. Providence and St. Cloud State can swap. This will provide a great attendance boost as well for St. Paul.

West Regional (St. Paul):
16 Mercyhurst vs. 1 Minnesota
9 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 5 St. Cloud State

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
14 Clarkson vs. 3 Ferris State
10 Wisconsin vs. 6 Union

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
15 Michigan vs. 2 Boston College
11 Cornell vs. 7 Northeastern

East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 New Hampshire vs. 4 Quinnipiac
12 Yale vs. 8 Providence

What else can we do?

We harped on attendance the last few years and making attendance a priority for regionals and swapping teams. We can do that once again here.

The obvious one is swapping Clarkson and Michigan.

West Regional (St. Paul):
16 Mercyhurst vs. 1 Minnesota
9 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 5 St. Cloud State

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
15 Michigan vs. 3 Ferris State
10 Wisconsin vs. 6 Union

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
14 Clarkson vs. 2 Boston College
11 Cornell vs. 7 Northeastern

East Regional (Bridgeport):
13 New Hampshire vs. 4 Quinnipiac
12 Yale vs. 8 Providence

Now that looks like a good bracket. Let’s look at the criteria when placing teams.

Attendance: Check. We have Minnesota and St. Cloud State in St. Paul; Michigan, Wisconsin and Ferris State in Cincinnati; and four ECAC-Hockey East matchups in the East. It works for me.

Protecting the No. 1 seed: Done.

No. 1 seeds geographically closest to home: Done.

I think we’re done here.

So that is it. My bracket for the week.

See you here next week for the next Bracketology.

Here’s a summary of everything that we have covered.

This week’s brackets

West Regional (St. Paul)
16 Mercyhurst vs. 1 Minnesota
9 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 5 St. Cloud State

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati)
15 Michigan vs. 3 Ferris State
10 Wisconsin vs. 6 Union

East Regional (Bridgeport)
13 New Hampshire vs. 4 Quinnipiac
12 Yale vs. 8 Providence

Northeast Regional (Worcester)
14 Clarkson vs. 2 Boston College
11 Cornell vs. 7 Northeastern

Conference breakdowns

Hockey East — 5
ECAC Hockey — 5
Big Ten — 3
Atlantic Hockey — 1
NCHC — 1
WCHA — 1

On the move

In: Yale

Out: Vermont

Attendance woes?

None.

Last week’s brackets

West Regional (St. Paul)
16 Mercyhurst vs. 1 Minnesota
11 Clarkson vs. 8 Massachusetts-Lowell

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati)
14 Vermont vs. 3 St. Cloud State
9 Michigan vs. 5 Union

East Regional (Bridgeport)
13 New Hampshire vs. 4 Ferris State
10 Northeastern vs. 6 Quinnipiac

Northeast Regional (Worcester)
15 Wisconsin vs. 2 Boston College
12 Cornell vs. 7 Providence

Midseason slump, break have Michigan looking for its first win since Dec. 2

Goalie Zach Nagelvoort and Michigan haven’t won since Dec. 2 (photo: Michelle Bishop).

After going 1-2-1 in December and getting off to a 0-2 start in 2014, all is not well in Ann Arbor.

Michigan hasn’t won since it completed a home-and-home sweep of Ohio State in Columbus on Dec. 2. The Wolverines then lost an exhibition game to the U.S. National Developmental Team a couple days later and tied Ferris State a week later.

Then, after more than two weeks off, came the Great Lakes Invitational. The Wolverines dropped their first game on outdoor ice 3-2 to Western Michigan in overtime and were blanked 3-0 by Michigan State the next day.

After another two-week break, Michigan was swept last weekend by Wisconsin at the Kohl Center in its first series of 2014. The Wolverines will get another chance to get their first win of the season’s second half after another weekend off this week.

“Well, we haven’t played a lot in the last month,” Michigan coach Red Berenson said. “I’ve said all along we’ve got to be better with the puck and without the puck.”

Michigan’s offense has been the problem when the Wolverines don’t win this season. It has averaged 1.375 goals per game in Michigan’s six losses and two ties.

“It’s nothing they’re doing, it’s all on us,” sophomore forward Andrew Copp said after last Friday’s 5-2 loss to Wisconsin, in which the Wolverines struggled in getting good looks at the net. “We’re a good enough team where we should be providing offense down close to the net.”

Copp is the only Michigan player with double-digit goals this season — he has lit the lamp 10 times and has six assists.

Overall, the Wolverines have the nation’s 29th-ranked offense, averaging 2.78 goals per game. Michigan’s power play is 12th in the nation and is currently going at a 15-for-70 clip.

The Wolverines put 29 shots on frame last Saturday’s game against Wisconsin, but managed to get only one puck past Joel Rumpel.

“Frustrated is a good word to describe it,” senior defenseman Mac Bennett said. “They’re a chippy team, and we knew they were going to be chippy. It’s frustrating when you’re throwing pucks to the net and they don’t go in.”

Michigan finished 18-19-3 last season and missed the NCAA tournament for the first time in 22 years. Bennett doesn’t see the same fate happening this season.

“This year, at least we know we can play,” Bennett said. “We’ve had good times, and like any hockey season you have ups and downs. Unfortunately, we’re a little bit down right now.”

The midseason slump has coincided with some of Michigan’s key freshmen being injured. JT Compher and Tyler Motte have recently been hampered, along with freshman defenseman Kevin Lohan. Compher and Motte have combined for 11 goals and 13 assists.

Michigan will get back into action against Michigan State next week. The Spartans and Wolverines will play at Joe Louis Arena on Thursday, Jan. 23 and at Munn Arena on Friday, Jan. 24.

TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis is ready to host the 2014 Hockey City Classic (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Gophers prep to host Hockey City Classic

After traveling to Chicago and facing off against Wisconsin in the 2013 Hockey City Classic at Soldier Field, Minnesota will have a much shorter trip to the event this week.

Minnesota will face off against Ohio State outside on Friday at TCF Bank Stadium, which is conveniently located across the street from Mariucci Arena.

The Gophers and Buckeyes will be the second game of a doubleheader on Friday. The Minnesota women’s team will play Minnesota State at 4:30 p.m. CST and the men’s game will get under way at 8 p.m. CST.

“Any time you have an opportunity to play outside in a nice, big football stadium like this with great surroundings, it’s going to pretty special,” Gophers women’s head coach Brad Frost said.

The games will conclude more than a week’s worth of events at the stadium. The Hockey City Classic Winter Festival kicked off last Thursday with a skate with the greats event. A variety of Minnesota hockey greats were at the event, and proceeds went toward the University of Minnesota Amplatz Children’s Hospital.

Five high school hockey games took place on the outdoor ice Saturday, followed by a public free skate on Sunday.

The inaugural Hockey City Classic was held last year and featured two men’s matchups. Notre Dame beat Miami 2-1 and Wisconsin defeated Minnesota 3-2.

The ice at the rink was suspect due to Chicago’s weather in mid-February last year.

“When we first came out in the first period, I thought the ice was pretty good,” then-junior Minnesota defenseman Nate Schmidt said after the game against Wisconsin last year. “As the game went on … it started getting choppy.”

Weather shouldn’t be much of a factor on Friday — forecasts call for a high of 19 degrees and a low of 5.

“The weather is going to be fine for an outdoor game,” Gophers men’s coach Don Lucia said. “The benches are heated and the guys are used to skating outside when they were growing up. You’ll go out there for the period then go back to the warming shack and warm up, just like they did when they were kids.”

Hobey voting gets under way

The fan voting for the Hobey Baker Award officially began on Tuesday. Fans are allowed to vote once every 24 hours. The Hobey will be handed out on Friday, April 11 at the Frozen Four in Philadelphia.

Here is the list of Big Ten players up for fan voting:

Michigan: Forward Andrew Copp

Michigan State: Goaltender Jake Hildebrand

Minnesota: Goaltender Adam Wilcox

Ohio State: Forward Ryan Dzingel

Wisconsin: Forward Michael Mersch, goaltender Joel Rumpel and defenseman Jake McCabe.

Three stars of the week

First star — Wisconsin senior forward Michael Mersch: Mersch had three goals and two assists in Wisconsin’s sweep of Michigan last weekend. The senior had his first collegiate hat trick and second career four-point game on Friday night, when the Badgers beat the Wolverines 5-2. This is the second conference weekly award for Mersch this season.

Second star — Ohio State junior forward Ryan Dzingel: Dzingel also had his first collegiate hat trick on Friday night in the Buckeyes’ 5-3 win over Michigan State. He had three goals and two assists in Ohio State’s win and tie against the Spartans. Dzingel leads the Big Ten in points (27) and points per game (1.5). This is his second weekly honor this season.

Third star — Minnesota sophomore goaltender Adam Wilcox: The sophomore netminder stopped 64 of 68 shots he faced in Minnesota’s Sunday-Monday sweep of Penn State at Pegula Ice Arena. Wilcox matched his career high in saves when he stopped 36 pucks in Minnesota’s 5-2 win on Monday. He leads the Big Ten in wins with 14 and hasn’t been beaten in his last eight outings. This is Wilcox’s first weekly award of the season.

Big Ten in the poll

Here’s how the six Big Ten team stand in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll:

No. 1 Minnesota (Last week — No. 1)

No. 9 Wisconsin (LW — No. 14)

No. 13 Michigan (LW — No. 8)

Ohio State received 40 votes in the poll, which was second-most out of unranked teams.

This week’s matchups

Ohio State at Minnesota (Friday at TCF Bank Stadium, Saturday at Mariucci Arena)

Penn State at Michigan State (Friday and Saturday, Munn Ice Arena)

Kangas having ‘lot of fun’ coaching Williams this season

Williams freshman defenseman Frankie Mork has opened eyes this season, even if his aren’t (photo: Williams Athletic Dept.).

You might think that a stretch of playing five games in eight days, including a “home” game at Frozen Fenway, might have a team a bit tired and looking for a little rest.

Not the case for Williams, which enters this weekend’s nonconference matchups with Manhattanville and Plattsburgh excited to play more difficult opponents in preparation for the remaining conference schedule.

“We played those five games in a short period of time and only one of the games was really at home,” said Ephs’ coach Bill Kangas. “The Fenway game was our home game and it was a special night for the team and the school. Because it was a home game, our support staff was all able to participate, so everyone from our scorekeeper to singer of the national anthem was part of that night. We had the Red Sox locker room as the home team and winning the game was special. Playing the other games, including the Plattsburgh tournament, took care of the midweek game schedule while we were still on break, so now starting this weekend, we can get into a rhythm of playing only on the weekends the rest of the season and use our weekday practices to work on things and get better.”

One dimension of Williams’ game that has clearly progressed over the course of the season has been the play of the freshmen. Their progress and contributions to the team’s overall success have been duly noted and appreciated by their coach.

“We had to bring in a few more guys than usual this year due to the graduation of a large senior class last spring,” noted Kangas. “I think the group, in general, has really done a nice job adjusting to the college game and are showing steady improvement in their level of play. George [Hunkele] and Frankie [Mork] are both among our offensive leaders and made a big jump quickly in their understanding and playing at the college level. We are very happy with how they continue to perform well and are very happy with the way all of our first-years are acclimating themselves in the program.”

In addition to the thrill of the victory over NESCAC rival Trinity on Tuesday last week, Kangas also had a different thrill closer to home when his team faced off against Johnson and Wales on Saturday night.

Kangas’ son, Brett, is a sophomore defenseman for the Wildcats, who upset the Ephs by a 3-2 score with a goal in the final minute of overtime.

“It was probably more fun for my wife and the family in the stands than it was for me on the bench,” Kangas said. “I noticed him on the ice a few times and I think he played pretty well, but I also have to concentrate on coaching Williams, so I can’t really tell you much about what he did out there. They are a good team and their goaltender was excellent. Brett definitely has bragging rights for a while and maybe later in the spring when he is on a break, we can sit down together and watch the game film since I really haven’t watched the film other than a few clips. It would be fun to relive it together away from the competitiveness of the game itself. It is great that he really likes the school he is at and is having some success on the ice.”

When the subject of competitiveness comes up, there are a number of items that were triggered in Kangas’ thoughts.

First is the high level of competition his team brings to each and every contest regardless of their opponent. To date, the Ephs have played in five overtime contests this season and suffered their only two losses in overtime. The ability to play in very tight games is something that the coach thinks will benefit his team in the second half and certainly down the road come playoff time.

“We have played a lot of one-goal games and overtime games this season,” said Kangas. “With the level of competition in our league being so strong top to bottom, we need to continue to play our best hockey in close games where one play or one mistake can make the difference in a one-goal game. This team has bought in to the significance of playing good team defense and I have been very impressed by our great gap control and commitment the team has to taking care of the defensive end first. Those are the kinds of things we will continue to work on along with special teams which for the most part, have been pretty good so far this season.”

One of the beneficiaries of the commitment to team defense has been junior goaltender Sean Dougherty.

This season, Dougherty is 7-2-2 in 11 starts and is among the top goalies in the nation sporting a .939 save percentage and 1.69 goals-against average. As good as the numbers and level of play have been, his coach thinks there are better days ahead for the talented junior.

“I think Sean’s best hockey is still ahead of him,” stated Kangas. “I know that may sound strange when you look at his numbers and how he has played not only this season, but since he has come to Williams. He may be the most competitive kid on the team and that is saying something. He is competitive in everything and that really drives him to perform well and continue to look for improvement in his game. Sean has been a big part of our success this season and will be a big part in whatever happens over the balance of the season.”

This weekend sees the end of nonconference games for the Ephs, who finish the rest of the schedule in conference play starting next weekend with a road trip to Maine to face Colby and Bowdoin.

“We have the same goals that probably every team in the conference have,” Kangas said. “First, qualify for the conference tournament. Second, get a home-ice seeding in the playoffs. Third, be the No. 1 seed overall. These are the goals we start out the season with and we will continue to focus on achieving what we have set out to accomplish as a team. This league is as competitive as it has ever been, so realizing these goals is going to be a good challenge for the team, as well as for me and our staff. As excited as the kids are to play, I am equally excited to be doing what I am doing with this group of young men.

“This is a lot of fun.”

New England College poised to battle for points

James O’Reilly has been a catalyst for the New England offense this season. (photo: Mike Briglio).

A quick look at the standings in the ECAC East finds a logjam in second place with three teams with 12 points in conference play.

While Babson and Massachusetts-Boston might not surprise anyone being there at this point in the season behind conference-leading Norwich, New England College has put together a solid first half and is ready to compete for a top spot in the league in the second half.

“We had a solid first half,” said Pilgrims’ coach Tom Carroll. “We have seen everyone once, but are not taking anything for granted the second time around. We have to be very short-term in our focus and continue to work on things to make us a better hockey club. This conference is really competitive, so each and every game brings its own challenges. It is nice we had a good first weekend back last week, but those two games with Southern Maine and UNE were battles and that is what it is going to be every weekend from here to the end of the season. We need to play well and get points.”

At 10-4-0 overall, the Pilgrims have already surpassed last season’s win total and part of that success has been found in solid goaltending and some very balanced scoring from the entire roster.

Sophomores Cheyne Matheson and Kyle Manlow lead the team in scoring, but junior James O’Reilly has shown great versatility this season for NEC and the coach hopes last weekend’s big goal against Southern Maine might jump start some goals for O’Reilly.

“James has really done some very good things for us this season,” noted Carroll. “Last season, we had him mostly playing off the wing and he really was great on the power play and scored a bunch of power play goals for us. This season, we have him more in the middle and he has been great creating things for the team and his linemates. Things are a little different for him this season, but he is contributing a lot for us offensively and I am sure the 2-11-13 line will see more goals in the second half for James. He is getting his chances and last week, scored a real big goal for us against USM that tied the game at 2-2 very late in the first period. That jump-started us into our great second period, so I am not worried about the goals coming.

“We knew this season wasn’t going to be offense from a single player or line and so far, we have had some pretty good balance from all our lines getting some goals. Our power play could be better and we will keep working and tinkering with that here in the second half. The teams we have coming up don’t take a lot of penalties, so even-strength goals against some very tough goaltenders and defenses will be important for us to compete with the league’s best.”

On the back end, Carroll has been impressed with his defensive group’s efforts, as well as the solid play from his senior goaltender, Sebastian Anderson.

Anderson is 8-4-0 through last weekend with a really consistent .925 save percentage and 2.42 goals-against average with two shutouts. The senior has been a beneficiary of solid defense, but by his coach’s estimate, has been a key factor in the Pilgrims’ strong start.

“Sebastian has overcome some nagging injuries that have bothered him the past couple of seasons,” Carroll said. “He really has been healthy this year and very consistent for us all season. We want to keep our goals-against average under three and really as close to two as we can get it as a team and he certainly has been making the key saves to help us keep our opponents off the scoreboard.”

January finds the Pilgrims at home in Henniker, N.H., for six of eight games. While most teams might find that to be a strong advantage, Carroll is taking nothing for granted at home or on the road.

“January is a tough month for everyone with the varying academic schedules,” noted Carroll. “We don’t come back to later in January, so there isn’t that normalcy of the school and hockey schedule for us right now. We practice and the players are off and then we play and the players are off. The mid-week game, like this week with Fredonia, is a great way to break up the schedule a little bit, but we aren’t going to win just because we are home. It is great we aren’t going someplace on a bus, but this league is too good to assume we are going to have good results because we are the home team.

“We have to continue to battle every weekend against the teams we are playing no matter where we are playing and try to get points that will keep us battling near the top.”

Carroll also doesn’t put too much stock in the experience of the first games against the common opponents. The second half brings the return end of the home-and-home league-play format that is likely influenced greatly by time and experience in between the last time the Pilgrims saw some opponents.

“Look at UMass-Boston,” said Carroll. “The last time they lost was to us back in November and that was a long time ago. I am sure based on their results they are a different and better team and hopefully, so are we. We are going to continue to need to focus on getting better as a team and playing consistently against whoever that night’s opponent is with a focus on getting some points from that game. I like what we have done so far and we need to keep moving in that positive direction here in the second half.”

Following Tuesday night’s 3-3 tie with Fredonia, the Pilgrims will host the two teams with whom they share second place. Babson is first up on Friday night and Carroll is looking for a better result than their 3-0 loss back in early November.

“We know both teams are playing really good hockey right now,” said Carroll. “We are going to play Fredonia and hopefully play well and build on that and focus on Friday night against Babson. Any and all points are going to be really important and this team will be ready to battle with anyone.”

It’s getting to be the time when you really want to build some momentum and the games this weekend could be important statement games as well as potential tiebreakers in conference playoff seeding come the end of February.

Yale’s Staenz selected for Swiss women’s Olympic team

Armed with previous experience representing her country, Yale’s Phoebe Staenz will play for Switzerland at next month’s Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia (photo: Sam Rubin/Yale Sports Publicity).

Yale freshman forward Phoebe Staenz has earned a spot on the Switzerland women’s roster for the Winter Olympics next month in Sochi, Russia.

Staenz, a Zurich native, was one of 21 players selected for Switzerland’s roster and has extensive experience playing with the Swiss National Team, including three appearances in the IIHF Women’s World Championship (sixth place in 2013 in Ottawa, a bronze medal in 2012 in Vermont and a sixth-place finish in 2011 in Switzerland).

“Making the Olympic team was always the goal,” said Staenz in a news release. “As a team, there’s a lot of synergy and harmony going on at the moment. There’s a lot of chemistry and we’ve grown fairly close. Everybody gets along really well. That makes it easier to come together.”

Prior to making the Swiss National Team for the World Championship in 2011, she played for the Swiss Under-18 team for three years.

Green shouldering workload, pressure in Wisconsin-Eau Claire crease

Wisconsin-Eau Claire sophomore goalie Tyler Green won a national title last year and has oozed confidence this season with the Blugolds (photo: UW-Eau Claire Photography).

Tyler Green said he joked with Brandon Stephenson after last season’s national championship run by Wisconsin-Eau Claire about setting the standard for goalies at the school.

“He told me the stage is all mine next year and I told him thank you for setting the bar so low for me,” Green said as he recalled a conversation after the Blugolds knocked off Oswego for the title.

Green, a sophomore, certainly entered this season with big skates to fill between the pipes. Stephenson won 22 games a year ago and allowed only 59 goals. He also made 790 saves.

Green only played in one game last season, but he had the luxury of learning about life as a goalie in college hockey from Stephenson.

It’s paid off for him this season as he has seen action in eight games, fashioning a 5-3-0 record in that time. He has allowed 18 goals and has racked up 200 saves.

“It was great for me to sit back and watch one of the best goalies and was a big help to be able to learn from him every day,” Green said. “I learned what it takes to be successful at this level and anytime I ever had a question, he would always answer it for me.”

Even now, Green is still getting advice from Stephenson.

“We keep in touch. He will text me and tell me to just go out and do my thing,” Green said. “He tells me to enjoy the time I have here and to not over-think anything.”

Green and fellow goalie Jay Deo, a freshman, seem to have settled into a nice rotation for the Blugolds, who have put together a five-game win streak. Eau Claire has blanked its last four opponents. Deo and Green have each come through with two shutouts during the streak.

Deo has played in six games and has made 128 saves. He is 5-0-1 and has allowed four goals.

“We are very happy for each other and we always want to see each other do well,” Green said. “We talk a lot and push each other every day in practice. It’s nice to have two goalies who can both step up at any time.”

Green said the Blugolds’ latest win streak is a credit to how hard the team is playing and to being physically ready to go every night.

“We’ve put in a lot of time with conditioning lately and we have all worked very hard on the ice,” Green said. “The puck isn’t in our defensive zone very long and that makes my job a lot easier. Our defense has been our best offense.”

Green said his own personal success is a linked to the confidence he gained from being a part of a national championship team.

“My competitiveness and my confidence has really gone up this year,” Green said. “I learned a lot about having confidence from Stephenson and I know I have the ability to excel at this level. It’s really paid off for me.”

The eighth-ranked Blugolds head into this week at 10-3-1 overall and are 0-1-1 in the WIAC. They have one nonconference game remaining as they battle No. 6 St. Thomas on Saturday before getting into the heart of their league schedule.

Joe Krause leads Eau Claire offensively with eight goals and eight assists. Jon Waggoner has come through with seven goals and six assists, while Jack Callhan has tallied two goals and 11 assists.

Eau Claire has scored 86 goals this season.

Green believes the Blugolds are starting to hit their stride and are capable of making another run if they continue to play up to their potential.

“We just have to keep battling hard every night,” Green said. “We had a few losses earlier in the year, but that was before we really all got on the same page and got used to playing together. We know that when we are playing at our best, we are a good team.”

Happy Birthday: Hunt Arena turned 40 this past week and Wisconsin-River Falls nearly earned a win over St. Scholastica on Saturday.

The Falcons scored two early goals, but the Saints battled back and the nonconference game ended in a 3-3 tie. The game featured two nationally-ranked teams as River Falls was 13th and St. Scholastica was 14th.

Willie Hess scored his 10th goal of the season in the tie. Zach Schrotenboer and Jeff Bergh also scored goals for the Falcons. Schrotenberger tallied his fifth goal of the season.The goal for Bergh was the first of his career.

River Falls outshot St. Scholastica 23-22 and Tanner Milliron made 19 saves for the Falcons, who are now 9-3-2 overall.

Thrilling Showdown: Wisconsin-Stevens Point squared off with St. Norbert in a matchup of top-five teams and the Pointers ended the game in a 2-2 tie with the Green Knights.

The Pointers, who came in ranked No. 2 in the nation, got goals from Kyle Sharkey and Scott Henegar. Sharkey scored his fifth goal of the season. Henegar punched his eighth goal of the year into the net.

The Pointers trailed 1-0 early before Sharkey tied the game. Henegar gave the Pointers a 2-1 lead before the fourth-ranked Green Knights responded to forge the tie. Stevens Point was outshot 33-27 and is now 12-1-1 on the season. Brandon Jaeger made 31 saves for the Pointers.

Bethel hoping to put pieces together to solve season struggles

Despite their season-long misfortunes, Bethel has maintained a positive attitude and is primed for second-half improvements (photo: Nathan Klok).

Bethel coach Charlie Burggraf compared his hockey team to one of those time-consuming 1,000-piece puzzles he enjoys doing in his free time.

He talked about how, at the start, the puzzle can be very confusing. Ultimately, as the pieces begin to come together, the puzzle becomes easier to do because the picture is much more clear.

“That is the way our season has been,” Burggraf said. “We’re starting to find the right combinations for our lineup and we are seeing what we can do as a team if we play up to our potential. We’re not there yet, but we are real close.”

Close has been a theme for the Royals all season. They are just 2-10-2 on the year, but have lost six games by just a goal. Two other games have ended in a tie.

“We have played some really close games, but we’ve had some mistakes that have cost us,” Burggraf said. “The biggest challenge for us has been our special teams. We haven’t converted on a lot of our chances and we haven’t always done a good job of stopping the other team. If we change that, the results might be different. It’s something we are working to improve on.”

Bethel entered this week just 10-of-60 on the power play. Opponents haven’t been too much more successful against the Royals, though, converting on only 12 of their 53 opportunities.

Losing the close games can wear on a team. Players begin to over-think, frustration can set in and the fabric of team chemistry can be torn apart.

That isn’t the case at Bethel.

“Our guys have been awesome,” Burggraf said. “The leadership has been excellent and everyone has done a great job of sticking together.”

There are, of course, benefits to dealing with difficult times in athletics, benefits that will serve the athletes well long after they have hung up the skates.

“I spent a number of years in the business world and I tell the guys about perseverance,” Burggraf said. “Life can get tough and you can’t let yourself pout about it. You have to persevere and learn from the challenges that come your way.”

Brock Rafaelle and Travis Payne lead the Royals with 13 points apiece. Both players have scored six goals.

Mitch Hughes has tallied five goals and two assists, while Colin Mayer has come through with three goals and four assists.

The Royals have scored 28 goals in all.

Steven Bolton has spent the majority of time in goal, having tallied 308 saves. He has allowed 28 goals.

The Royals have a rugged schedule ahead as they attempt to make up ground in the MIAC. They will play three of the teams currently in the top four in the standings – St. Thomas, Gustavus Adolphus and St. John’s – and also have a nonconference game with nationally-ranked Wisconsin-Stevens Point.

Bethel is 1-4-1 in conference play.

Burggraf said starting strong and continuing to compete hard are the keys.

“We’ve had some bad first periods and we need to get rid of that problem by being ready to play from the start,” he said. “We need to start strong and play hard. If we can do those things, we’ll be poised for a good second half to the season.”

Sweep for St. John’s: The Johnnies completed a 2-0 weekend on Saturday with a 2-1 overtime win against Marian.

Phil Johnson provided the game-winner as he scored 1:41 into OT on the power play. It was his fourth goal of the season. St. John’s had struggled on the power play throughout the game, coming up short on its first five chances.

John Haeg also scored a goal for the Johnnies, who improved to 8-6 on the year. Josh Gross and Dave Mylrea assisted on Haeg’s goal. Gross has now had at least one point in nine games. He has tallied six goals and eight assists during that stretch.

Saxton Soley earned the win as he racked up 37 saves. He is 7-4 on the year and 22-9-1 in his collegiate career.

The Johnnies opened the weekend with a 5-3 win over Wisconsin-Stout and have won three consecutive games.

Tight Battle: St. Olaf faced off against Adrian on Friday and gave the top-ranked team in the nation all it could handle before ending the game in a 4-4 tie.

The Oles led 3-1 in the second period, but the Bulldogs scored twice in the period to tie the game. St. Olaf outshot Adrian 38-31 and four players scored goals for the Oles.

Dan Cecka, Nick Marsh, Mike Erickson and Mark Rath all scored goals for St. Olaf. Cecka has racked up nine goals on the season.

Steve Papciak made a total of 27 saves for St. Olaf. Both teams combined for 11 shots in OT, but no one could come up with the game-winner.

The Oles fell 4-3 to Lake Forest on Saturday and are now 3-9-3 on the season. They are on a five-game winless streak.

At the faceoff dot, ECAC Hockey teams can start to swing a game in their favor

Quinnipiac’s Connor Jones and Brown’s Mark Naclerio tie up on a faceoff (photo: Matt Eisenberg).

If you’ve read my blather for more than a season or two, you have probably noticed my maddening obsession with affinity for trends and statistics. I love the humanity and romance of sport as well — don’t get me wrong — but nothing fascinates me quite the same way as a pattern in bloom. I know, I know, I’m the sentimental type.

With numbers fresh in my mind and a new wonder to investigate, I turned my eye toward the subtle game-within-a-game that takes place 50, 60, 70 times during every hockey game yet never draws a reaction from the fans.

Think about it: When was the last time you cheered for a faceoff?

The dot’s the spot

What is a faceoff really worth? On the face of it, not much: The only times anyone sincerely seems to care about the outcome is, A, when a team is on a power play or killing a penalty, or, B, at the very end of a period or game. While those are admittedly high-leverage scenarios, they make up a small portion of the total number of draws taken in the average contest.

Top draws in ECAC Hockey

The top 10 faceoff-winners in the league (minimum 150 opportunities):

• Mike Zalewski, Rensselaer, .620 (101-62)

• Ben Sexton, Clarkson, .590 (273-190)

• Connor Jones, Quinnipiac, .589 (339-237)

• Matthew Peca, Quinnipiac, .585 (230-163)

• Jesse Root, Yale, .581 (137-99)

• Jordan Samuels-Thomas, Quinnipiac, .578 (141-103)

• Luke Esposito, Harvard, .576 (140-103)

• Matt Carey, St. Lawrence, .570 (237-179)

• Mike Borkowski, Colgate, .565 (203-156)

• Brian Ward, St. Lawrence, .565 (143-110)

Furthermore, the best centers in the sport top out at only about a 60 percent success rate at the dot, or more pessimistically, they lose two out of every five faceoffs they take. The worst full-time centers win around 45 percent of their draws, with the remaining sliver usually lost to wingers who are called on during special-teams situations or following a center being kicked out of the circle.

So if the frequency of high-pressure, high-opportunity faceoffs is low, and the odds of winning a draw are practically a toss-up, why do we even keep track of faceoff win/loss statistics? Why not just call it the 50-50 coin flip that it is and worry about other things?

Because, dear reader, while the outcome of a single faceoff may not signify much, it is the volume of faceoffs in any given game that validates their importance as an item of strategic interest.

The power of small amounts

Last Friday night, Quinnipiac and Union grappled and clawed for 60 brutal minutes. The teams finished with 28 shots apiece. Each side went 0-for-4 on the power play. Neither team’s top lines registered a point with first place and a postseason tiebreaker on the line, and in the end the biggest difference between the teams wasn’t even evident in the box score.

When the Bobcats evened the season series, leapfrogged the Dutchmen for first place and ended Union’s 10-game unbeaten run with a 2-1 victory, the 48 moves that made the difference never drew so much as a raised eyebrow from the standing-room-only 3,550 in the stands.

Out of 68 faceoffs taken in the game, Quinnipiac won an outlandish 48 … and that made all the difference.

“Two faceoff goals says it all,” Union coach Rick Bennett lamented following the game. “Faceoffs are huge. It’s a one-on-one battle, a commitment. It’s not only our centermen, but also our wingers who are trying to win those little pocket battles, and I just don’t think that compete level was there tonight.

“It’s a huge part of the game — two goals — and I credit their team for buckling down on those; they won the game because of it.”

Bennett pointed to the two goals — both resulting from faceoffs in the Union zone — as the decisive moments in the game, and he has a point. But should the Dutchmen have gone 66-for-68 on the dot with those two exceptions, it’s unlikely the coach would have singled out faceoffs as his side’s Achilles’ heel.

“I think we’re gonna call [current Chicago Blackhawks and former North Dakota center] Jonathan Toews and bring him in,” Bennett said. “I know he can’t go on the ice — that would be against NCAA rules — so we’ll just try to bring him in and see what advice he can possibly give us.”

The fact of the matter is that when it comes to faceoffs, sometimes a big play will happen right off the drop, and that will draw attention. But more often, the biggest benefit of a 55 percent or 60 percent success rate comes down to two words: puck possession.

“We were really good on faceoffs,” Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold said. “I know last week we were No. 1 in the country on faceoffs [and they still are, winning 56 percent]. It’s something that we focus on, that we want to be good at, and we even talked about it before the game tonight: We actually changed some of the faceoff plays to try to generate some more offense. I don’t know if those plays in particular worked, but it was a big part of the game.

“We have guys who can win draws, and wings that can win draws, and it’s an important part of puck possession.”

Do the math: If there are 60 faceoffs in a game — the average is between 60 and 70 — a team as good as Quinnipiac is winning 33 draws, losing 27. If we conservatively estimate that the Bobcats hold onto the puck for 10 seconds each time they get the puck, that’s a full minute of possession that the opponent doesn’t have.

As teams improve their faceoff numbers — and thus their puck-possession time — they demonstrate a loosely correlated increase in shots per game. More importantly, they allow far fewer shots against and exhibit a wider shot differential than teams with more mediocre success on the draw.

“It’s not everything, but it’s a small part of the game and you want to be good in as many facets of the game as you can,” Pecknold said. “I’d rather be 48-20 than 20-48, for sure. It’s a good part of the game, it’s important.”

Faceoffs determine puck possession, which often swings games toward one team (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

Being able to burn one or two of the opponent’s shifts is an opportunity any coach would love to have, and these are just the conservative results. That is why teams everywhere practice faceoffs, discuss strategy, even look at video of the upcoming opponent’s centers to find any edge possible.

“We just drop pucks. We have guys in the middle and say, ‘Let’s do pucks,'” said Pecknold. “We make our wings take ’em, we make our centers take ’em, and we just work on things. I give Connor Jones a lot of credit — I think last year he was No. 2 in faceoffs. He’s really good, and he teaches the younger kids some things to try.

“I think the things we do best is we get our wings and our D involved in a lot of the draws. It’s not just centers taking faceoffs; you’ve got to have other guys involved.”

Senior center Connor Jones leads the nation in faceoff wins with 339, and is sixth in faceoff success (.589) among players who have taken at least 200 draws. (Clarkson senior Ben Sexton is the only player in ECAC Hockey with a better rate — .590, one thousandth of a point higher. Jones has taken over 100 draws more than Sexton.) Jones finished last season with an astounding .610 faceoff percentage; he finished second nationally to Dane Walters of Western Michigan. Walters took 440 fewer faceoffs, but won a solid two-thirds of those he took.

Suffice to say, Connor Jones is a quick-draw expert.

“You can win it straight up; I can tie them up; depending on who I’m going against I can go forehand or backhand,” Jones said. On tie-ups, “you can swing your foot, or tie up their stick and let the wingers go get it.”

Faceoffs require a triggerman to field the drop, and that is the beginning and end of how many people see the art of the draw. It’s a lot more complicated than that, though, as a faceoff is truly won only when a player gains possession of the puck. That player is hardly ever the man straddling the dot.

“A lot of times I have to credit my two linemates with wins,” Jones said. “You get [freshman Sam] Anas and [Connor’s twin brother] Kellen, if they have great faceoff intensity, sometimes a loss turns into a win. If the puck goes off to a side or behind [their center] and Sam or Kellen picks it up, that counts as a win.”

Jones emphasized that faceoffs are not an irrelevant toss-up but rather a delicate cat-and-mouse game that requires skill, focus, research and strategy.

“As a team, we work real hard in practice with faceoffs, whether it’s live draws or practicing what you’re going to do or watching video on guys. It’s not a thing you just go out and do; it’s something you’ve gotta work on. Our coaches stress it, and as players we’ve come to realize how important it is to the game.”

Jones, his teammates and just about every other high-level center in the world prepares for faceoffs in advance, scouting opposing centers and lines for tells and tendencies.

“I’m not going to give away any secrets, but I do video,” he said. “I look at what I do against [a specific opponent]. I’ll look three years past — I’ll see what worked and what didn’t work. It’s about having a plan about what you’re going to do; you can’t just guess. It takes a lot of practice.”

Sure, players have natural preferences, but it’s the rare mismatch in which a center can win a draw on ability alone.

“Certain players have certain tendencies,” Jones said. “We all have them, but you’ve got to just bear down and focus on every faceoff.”

Sometimes both players will try the same move — it’s the hockey equivalent of both players throwing the same sign in rock-paper-scissors — and that is where intuitive linemates can become a big help.

“If it’s a bigger guy, sometimes I’ll end up on my butt, and hopefully Kellen or Anas will get the puck,” Jones said. “If you’re a bigger guy, usually you’re going to rely on your strength. I’m a smaller guy, I rely on my quickness, but I switch it up. It’s a game of strategy.”

And yes, Jones even watches the pros to learn every edge, trick and maneuver. It’s not just standing there and swatting, after all. Faceoffs are part chess game, part wrestling match and part ping-pong.

“I watch [Boston Bruins’ Patrice] Bergeron: He’s amazing. You see that he knows what he’s doing every time,” Jones said. “Toews is another guy, he’s awesome. I like to watch [Washington Capitals’ Niklas] Backstrom and guys like [Detroit Red Wings’ Pavel] Datsyuk, because they’re so creative that you’ll see new things.”

Ultimately, what appears to be a random, roughly 50-50 method of puck distribution is anything but. The best players are always trying to stay above the 50 percent mark, because for every second that your team has the puck, the other one doesn’t. You can pass, shoot, score … and they can’t.

“It’s so important, because you don’t want to be chasing the puck at the end of the day,” Jones said. “You want to get possession so that you have the puck and your teammates have the puck, so that you can score, you can generate chances, you can get momentum.

“It’s such an important thing that — I don’t know if I’m teaching the guys; I’m just trying to stress how important it is.”

Wednesday Women: Portents of doom?

Players on the 2012-2013 All-USCHO D-I Women's teams (Erica Howe). (Tim Brule)
Players on the 2012-2013 All-USCHO D-I Women’s teams (Erica Howe). (Tim Brule)

Arlan: The past week provided us with another burst of results that we may not have expected, from Harvard losing, to Ohio State regrouping in game two at Minnesota much like North Dakota did in the first half, to Boston College having a tougher time with Northeastern than Boston University.

I’d like to start with another result that while not unexpected I see as just as significant. Clarkson handled St. Lawrence with relative ease, 6-0 and 3-0. The Saints were able to keep the second game scoreless into the final period, but that was about it in terms of challenging. Shots were two to one in Clarkson’s favor in each game. The Golden Knights went through a four-week stretch from the middle of October into November where they played at a 3-3-2 clip after starting with five wins. Since that 2-0 loss to Harvard that ended that slump, Clarkson is 8-1 and has outscored opponents 37-6. They’ve only allowed 23 goals all year, and six of those came in the loss to Cornell.

When I spoke to co-head coach Shannon Desrosiers last week, she said that her team was back to playing as expected. Would you agree that they are back on track and what we anticipated at the start of the year, a threat for the Frozen Four and beyond?

Candace: I’ll say yes, with a caveat. It’s impressive that Clarkson has gone 8-1, and Erica Howe and Jamie Lee Rattray are leading the Golden Knights in a great direction. However, if you look at the streak, aside from the split with North Dakota, and perhaps the 3-0 win against Quinnipiac, the Golden Knights haven’t faced top teams. Two of those wins were against Providence, one was against RIT, one against Princeton, and the pair against St. Lawrence. I’m not ready to pencil Clarkson into the Frozen Four until I see the Golden Knights face Cornell and Harvard again and see how they do. The Golden Knights host Cornell in two weeks, and then face Harvard in mid-February. I figure Clarkson will finish top three in the ECAC, although catching Cornell might be tough. The Big Red have a three-point lead and a game in hand on Clarkson, which also trails Harvard by two points, though the Golden Knights have a game in hand; Clarkson also trails Quinnipiac by three, but has three games in hand.

Speaking of Harvard and Quinnipiac, both had a bad loss this weekend, which could come back to haunt them. Of the two, the Harvard loss to Yale shocks me much more than Quinnipiac’s to Rensselaer. Yale outshot Harvard, though only by two, 31-29, and scored one in the first and one in the second in blanking the Crimson, 2-0. We’ve alluded to offensive struggles at Harvard during the year; is this a potential cause for hitting the panic button?

Arlan: A panic in Cambridge won’t accomplish much. The Harvard roster isn’t going to change, and as presently configured, it doesn’t contain a lot of explosive power. The forwards do a nice job of controlling play for long stretches. The Crimson have some speedy people that can score off of turnovers and in transition. Once into the postseason, their stingy defensive game will make them a tough matchup for anyone. But there just aren’t many Harvard forwards we’d put on a short list, or even a medium-length list, of dangerous weapons in the women’s game. Nobody averages a point a game. Hillary Crowe tops the team in that regard with 11 points in 12 games played, and that ranks 40th in the country. Someone like sophomore Miye D’Oench may develop during the course of her career into more of an offensive force, but as of now she’s more in that category of a player that can be a bit of a pest and make life uncomfortable for the opponent. Maura Crowell is left with the No. 12 scoring offense. Maybe they can squeeze more production out of the power play, a Harvard staple over the years, that is currently converting 16.7 percent of the time. The Crimson will be in mainly tight games, so anything they can do to discover an extra goal on one end while denying one defensively could be decisive.

The problem is very similar at Quinnipiac. The scoring defense is not as good as Harvard’s, but the offense is a touch better because the Bobcats do have an elite scorer in Kelly Babstock. She had a hat trick versus Princeton, allowing her team to win, 3-1. RPI and Union held her off the score sheet, and Quinnipiac was mired in two one-goal, low-scoring games, losing to the Engineers.

The ECAC doesn’t have a lot of offenses like the one Cornell possesses. That allowed the Big Red to basically outscore Mercyhurst on the weekend. Your forecast there was accurate, as you said the Lakers would likely get a tie. Did anything stand out to you from those games?

Candace: What really stands out is how many goals the Big Red gave up. I’m used to thinking of Cornell as a stingier team, and that Lauren Slebodnick can shut opponents down. Mercyhurst does have some potent forwards; five of them average a point a game or better, including Christine Bestland. However, Bestland was held to a point in each game. Emily Janiga, the Lakers second-leading scorer, had three points, and Christie Cicero, who is third, had a goal in each game. However, the Lakers got balanced scoring from players who aren’t Mercyhurst’s top threats, such as Molly Byrne, Jaclyn Arbour, and Kathy Donohue, to stay close to the Big Red. I think the series this weekend, where the Lakers host Robert Morris, should be an excellent one. If the Lakers can get that type of scoring going forward, they may be able to catch RMU in the CHA standings and win the CHA tournament.

At the other end of the ice, I’m wondering what giving up four goals in each game means for Cornell. A couple of years ago, Cornell barely beat BU, 8-7, in triple OT. It’s often said that defense wins championships, and Cornell will have to be better in that regard. The Big Red are only 10th nationally in scoring defense, despite playing only four teams that are tops in scoring. They managed to shut Boston College down in one game, but Cornell has given up a lot of goals in some games, including four against Princeton, four against St. Lawrence, three against Clarkson, four against Boston College in one game, and the four in each Mercyhurst game. If Clarkson can shut down Cornell’s high-flying forwards, such as Jillian Saulnier, Emily Fulton, and Jessica Campbell, it could spell trouble for Cornell. Even if Clarkson doesn’t do it, teams like Wisconsin and Minnesota have the defense to do so, and it will be tough for Cornell to win a defensive battle against those squads.

Speaking of Wisconsin and Minnesota, each had a blip this past weekend. Wisconsin lost to North Dakota, 4-1, which isn’t too much of a surprise, despite the lopsided historical record Wisconsin has against UND. Alex Rigsby still isn’t back in net for Wisconsin yet, but Ann-Renée Desbiens has played well as the backup so far. Minnesota however, lost in a shootout to Ohio State, the team dwelling in the cellar in the WCHA. OSU got a late goal to tie it in the third, then Lisa Steffes stopped all Minnesota scorers through nine rounds before OSU’s Kendall Curtis won it for the visitors. Interestingly enough, both of Minnesota’s blips have come on home ice this year. Minnesota is still the dominant team in the country, but are these blips something others can take heart from and use to beat the Gophers come playoff time?

Arlan: In the sense that Minnesota is more beatable than it was a year ago, I’d say yes, others can be encouraged. I think that we knew coming into the season that Minnesota wasn’t going to be able to just shrug off its personnel losses from last year’s roster. If anything, the Gophers have been a bit better than most would have expected, maybe even they themselves. As for the blips, I’d say that there have been at least three others. Their wins in the second games at Bemidji and St. Cloud were far from convincing. The season opener at Colgate was also pretty ragged, although that can probably just be written off as game one for a new roster. Of those blip games, I felt that they played the best in the one that they lost; it was more about North Dakota playing well.

Against Ohio State on Saturday, Minnesota did not play well at all. There were so many more defensive breakdowns than usual, and the offense couldn’t bail the team out. I think to some extent, the Gophers are a bit untested defensively. Who has the best offense that they have faced this year? Wisconsin has the sixth scoring offense, but back in week two when the teams met, I would think that the Badgers were still a work in progress. North Dakota is eighth, but it also can run hot and cold on offense. Since that UND game, the best the Gophers have seen are Yale and Princeton, which are both middle of the pack. Running into any of the top 10 teams offensively, which is basically the overall top 10 with Mercyhurst and without Harvard, could require a period of adjustment.

The result is more encouraging for the Buckeyes. Despite losing the other three games to Minnesota, they have also had two series sweeps since their low point that occurred eight games back. If they continue to play like they did on Saturday, then the Buckeyes are not long for the WCHA basement. They’ve now taken points from both Minnesota and North Dakota, and I don’t know that some of the other lower teams in the league have the same potential.

The surprise to me isn’t that Wisconsin lost a game to North Dakota, because they played very tight games in Grand Forks. However, allowing four goals was twice what they’d yielded in any previous game this season, and I don’t get the sense that Desbiens was the problem. Being outshot by a 36-21 margin in that game isn’t what I’d have expected, particularly 16-3 in the final period. Obviously, Wisconsin didn’t respond well to Susanna Tapani’s goal at the end of the second period to give UND the lead. Even though it got one win, North Dakota likely needed more in order to keep its hopes alive for the WCHA season title, particularly with the Olympics and roster absences looming.

Boston University was another team that came into a third period trailing, and the Terriers were badly outplayed in those 20 minutes by Boston College. Given how BU’s game at Maine played out, do you think that BC loss will have a lasting impact on the Terriers’ collective psyche?

Candace: Probably not except when the Terriers next face BC. Then it could either serve as extra motivation, or perhaps provide a seed of doubt. That is doubly important, as it looks at this point as though the only way a Hockey East team gets in is by winning the Hockey East tournament. There’s still some potential wiggle room I guess, but right now, BU is eighth in the PairWise and BC is ninth. Quinnipiac and Mercyhurst aren’t too far behind. The only TUC BU has left on its schedule is the Eagles, although the Terriers could potentially face Harvard in the Beanpot. It’s also possible that Northeastern could play its way into being a TUC, which would help both BU and BC immensely. BC has the same problem in the PairWise, as BU is the only current TUC that BC is scheduled to face. Beating up on the Terriers three more times, which is unlikely, won’t help BC in the national picture either, and the same goes in reverse for BU. More and more for BC, it appears that the loss to Quinnipiac, as well as the loss to Syracuse, really hurts the Eagles. For BU, its PairWise standing is helped by Minnesota-Duluth being a TUC again, but if the Bulldogs suffer a few losses and drop out of that scenario, it can really hurt them. The only current TUC that BU has beaten besides Minnesota-Duluth is Robert Morris; BU has lost to Wisconsin, Harvard, and BC. That win will keep the Terriers from dropping too far, but neither BU nor BC can really afford any losses except to each other.

Regardless, BU needs to tighten up defensively. Giving up three to Maine is a big surprise. BU has actually had problems defensively at times, especially against TUCs. The Terriers gave up five to Wisconsin. three to Harvard, and three to Robert Morris. And while BU swept Minnesota-Duluth, one of the games was a 6-5 decision. BU’s team defense rank is currently 11, and once again we could see scenarios where defense could be a team’s Achilles’ heel.

Northeastern gave BC all it could handle this past weekend, earning a tie and holding a lead in the Sunday game before the Eagles rallied. BU faces the Huskies this weekend; do you think that Chloe Desjardins can do to the Terriers what she did to BC, and perhaps even carry her team to a win?

Arlan: Other than a 6-1 loss in its first game at BC back in November, Northeastern has played tough against the other three Boston teams. What it hasn’t managed to do is win any of those games, and the tie at BC on Saturday was the first time the Huskies avoided a loss in those matchups. The rest have eventually brought disappointment. Desjardins’ play against the Eagles was very strong, and maybe as good as I’ve seen her. If she maintains that level, that definitely improves the Huskies’ prospects. I don’t know about them becoming a TUC, however. Their RPI is sub .500 by a healthy bit. I suppose they could get hot against the non-Boston teams in Hockey East, but because those teams currently rank in the 20s and below in RPI, the gains from each win won’t be as great.

The biggest problem for the Huskies looks to be the dearth of healthy bodies. They started Sunday’s game with 14 skaters, and after Claire Santostefano left with an injury, they were down to eight forwards and two centers. My understanding is that most of the other players that are out are done for the season, so that could be a long-term issue. How do you finish strong in games if people are just getting worn down from having to skate too many shifts? Northeastern has Connecticut on Wednesday, so it will have to see how it comes out of that game before it thinks too much about BU. Perhaps Northeastern will be able to establish itself as the best of the rest in Hockey East.

Right now, that distinction would have to belong to Vermont. The Catamounts are three points up on Northeastern with a game in hand. The problem for Vermont is that its four remaining games in January are all against BC and BU, teams that drubbed the Catamounts back in November. Should they drop in the standings, they’ll have another shot at teams like New Hampshire, Providence, and Northeastern in February.

Vermont threw a monkey wrench into the works for BC last season. Could the Catamounts do that to the Eagles again this weekend?

Candace: Possibly, but I find it unlikely. The Catamounts haven’t started well this second half, losing a pair to Syracuse and then splitting with Connecticut. They also had two ties with Colgate and OT wins against Brown and Dartmouth. The Catamounts have some great scoring threats in Amanda Pelkey and Brittany Zuback, so a few goals against BC are likely, but I don’t know that the Catamounts can shut down BC’s offense. Roxanne Douville has a 2.31 GAA and a .910 save percentage. The Catamounts gave up four and three goals against Syracuse in a pair of games two weeks ago, and Syracuse, while it did beat BC, doesn’t have the offensive depth that the Eagles can bring to bear. More important, BC doesn’t have the luxury of relaxing anymore. The Eagles are ninth in the PairWise, and have played themselves into a hole as far as qualifying for the national tournament. I think BC will come out determined in every game to avoid an upset going forward. I think Vermont might make it more respectable than the 6-1 thumping the Eagles dished out in November, but I don’t see them winning this go round.

Another team that can’t afford a blip is Quinnipiac, especially since the Bobcats lost to Rensselaer on Friday. As you pointed out, the Engineers kept Kelly Babstock off the score sheet, and while Shiann Darkangelo netted a pair in the third, the Bobcats fell short. They also struggled the next night against Union, winning 1-0, and Babstock was again kept off the score sheet. The last time the prolific scorer was held without points in two or more consecutive games was in the ECAC playoffs last season, when St. Lawrence held her without a point in all three games while upsetting the Bobcats. It’s a bad time for Babstock to have a power outage, as the Bobcats host Robert Morris in a huge PairWise series this weekend. Can the Colonials cement their NCAA tournament aspirations with a sweep?

Arlan: A sweep on the road sounds a touch ambitious. Quinnipiac is 10-1-2 at home, with the only loss coming versus Clarkson. RMU is even better on the road at 6-0-1, but its opponents haven’t been the caliber of Quinnipiac. The best road win was probably at Syracuse, the site of the tie as well. And the Colonials’ most impressive sweep at any venue was likely either St. Lawrence or RIT. Statistically, the two teams are very close. RMU is a might better offensively; Quinnipiac enjoys a slight edge on defense. Hockey games are often a race to three, but these may wind up being a race to two, or the first goal could be the only goal. I don’t see Quinnipiac failing to get at least a tie out of the deal, and a split is more likely. When games are so low-scoring, they are a devil to predict, because every bounce becomes paramount. If a split does result, we’ll have to see whether that damages the Colonials’ PairWise prospects to any large degree. There’s also the possibility that the Bobcats defend their home ice with vigor and thrust themselves back into the at-large picture.

The only other game featuring a clash of ranked teams this weekend is Harvard at Cornell. We’ve already talked about those teams, and the Harvard loss to Yale took a little luster off the Crimson versus the Big Red, because Cornell will still control its ECAC destiny even should it lose to Harvard.

That means that the other top teams in action will be trying to avoid the upset. Nothing really jumps out at me on that front, although their very unexpected nature is what makes them upsets. BU at Providence on Friday night perhaps? The Friars have often saved their best play for the second half, and I think they have more potential than they’ve displayed thus far. If the Terriers are in a funk after playing BC — and 14 shots on goal at Maine was not encouraging — then it would behoove them to get out of it sooner rather than later.

Do you see any upset specials looming? Maybe a hit to a team in the next tier if not a ranked team?

Candace: I don’t know if upset is the word, but I see a VERY interesting clash in the east, with Union and Rensselaer playing a home-and-home. The Engineers are currently sitting in seventh in the ECAC, tied with Yale (in the eighth spot) with nine points. Dartmouth is in ninth with nine points, and Union is in 10 with six points. Union beat fifth-place Princeton last weekend, and then gave second-place Quinnipiac all it could handle the next night. Rensselaer beat Quinnipiac and tied Princeton. If Union gets at least one win, the Dutchwomen can keep pace for a spot in the ECAC playoffs. Yale, of course is another. I don’t know if beating St. Lawrence would be an upset per se, as they only trail the Saints by two points and are on home ice, but can the Bulldogs repeat last weekend’s big upset of Harvard when they face off against Clarkson on home ice? That should be a VERY interesting game as well. The ECAC also has another potential upset game, as Dartmouth travels to Cornell. For some reason, the Big Green always give the Big Red trouble, and they have shown signs of life in the second half. Back in November, when Dartmouth couldn’t beat hardly anyone, they lost a close one to the Big Red, 4-2.

You mentioned Providence and BU, and the Friars have definitely been playing better of late, so the Terriers will have to be on their guard. How about out west? The potential upset I see is if the Buckeyes can repeat last weekend’s performance when they travel to Minnesota-Duluth. The Bulldogs currently sit in fourth, but they have been inconsistent. If Lisa Steffes can turn in another tour-de-force goaltending performance, UMD could wind up suffering a setback.

How about you? Does anything strike you from this coming weekend?

Arlan: UMD already lost at home to St. Cloud State and Bemidji State, so a loss to OSU is definitely possible. The WCHA doesn’t have a team that is much weaker compared to the others, so everybody is in range on any given week. I don’t expect Wisconsin to have a problem in Bemidji, but BSU can present a thorn to anyone, so who knows. The ECAC seems similar, although I haven’t seen evidence that teams nearer the bottom can score with Cornell, but as you say, there seems to be a pattern with Dartmouth. Once past the top four ECAC teams, what is an upset and what isn’t can be difficult to determine. There is very little action on tap in the CHA; Syracuse is the only other squad from that circuit playing twice. Hockey East still looks like the most likely location of an upset. BU has been very good at taking care of business over the last year and a half, so the Terriers may be on borrowed time in terms of hiding from Cinderella. Plus, every time I think I’m starting to get a handle on BC, the Eagles remind me that I have no clue.

Beyond upsets, Hockey East also had the news last week of former New Hampshire coach Brian McCloskey seeking reinstatement. I don’t know if that creates an atmosphere of uncertainty for the Wildcats, or if it becomes more of an investigation as to whether or not the proper process was handled administratively at UNH. To offer an opinion as to who is right or wrong in the situation is hard when we don’t possess all of the facts. What are your thoughts on the matter?

Candace: Without knowing more about the incident, it’s really hard to say. However, from what I’ve read, even though McCloskey is seeking reinstatement, he doesn’t deny grabbing the player on the bench, and any physical contact between a coach and player can lead to a firing. This isn’t the ’70s, when someone like Bobby Knight was viewed as “colorful” for throwing a chair. It’s a different era, and I think that even if McCloskey’s account of the incident is correct, in that he was trying to get a player who had lost her temper to sit down on the bench, depending on how it happened, I could perhaps understand UNH’s thinking. Regarding McCloskey’s statement that he believes that from the way the school announced the departure it could have been construed as sexual, I just don’t see it. The university specifically cited “inappropriate physical contact with a player on the bench.”

The other question is about UNH’s development. The team was once the power in the east, but no longer, and McCloskey has had difficulty fielding teams with a full roster in the last few years. A few high-profile players also left, including Jenn Wakefield, who transferred to BU after her sophomore season at UNH. I always wondered about the circumstances that led to Wakefield’s departure, and again, that’s probably something we won’t know.

I have a hard time believing McCloskey will be reinstated, but stranger things have happened. Regardless, the attention can’t be good for the players as they enter the meat of the second half of their season.

What’s your take?

Arlan: By his own account, McCloskey was not entirely blameless in the matter, but without actual facts, it is impossible to say whether his termination was justified. I do agree with him that the matter was announced poorly. I saw a clip of a TV news story that left it ambiguous as to what the nature of the improper contact was, and even in the initial release, one had to get deeper into the story to learn that it was a game-related offense.

I do find that zero-tolerance policies in general could easily be described as zero-sense policies, because they wind up lumping largely inconsequential acts, situations of grave danger, and everything in between in the same category. If a coach is being dismissed for an improper act, then the team’s performance is irrelevant. Otherwise, you create situations where heinous deeds are covered up to protect a regime of a national power in football or basketball, while a hard line is taken with coaches viewed as expendable. If the desire is to remove a coach for nonperformance, then call it that. Similarly in the case of player transfers, it shouldn’t matter if the student athlete is a national-team superstar or a role player on the end of the bench; equal consideration should be paid to the reasons behind it if the program was in error.

Close finishes, night-to-night swings are signs of what’s ahead in Atlantic Hockey

American International’s Jon Puskar scored four times against Niagara last Friday (photo: Omar Phillips).

Last week, Atlantic Hockey demonstrated just how much parity exists in the conference, especially once you get past the top three teams.

It was no coincidence that of the six conference series played last weekend, the three sweeps went to the teams already at the top of the standings: Mercyhurst, Bentley and Air Force. But Mercyhurst needed some incredible goaltending against Holy Cross on Friday and Air Force had to come from behind on Saturday to defeat Army. Only Bentley cruised to four points.

The other three series weren’t just splits. There were dramatic swings between the two games:

• Connecticut defeated Robert Morris 5-1 on Thursday but fell to the Colonials 6-1 on Friday.

• American International won big at Niagara (the first win by AIC over the Purple Eagles in school history) 6-2 on Friday but fell 5-0 the next night.

• Canisius erased a two-goal deficit to Sacred Heart on Saturday, winning 5-4. On Sunday, it was the Pioneers’ turn to come back from two goals down, prevailing 3-2.

“It was a pretty even game where Sacred Heart was able to find a way to win, similar to what we were able to do yesterday,” Canisius coach Dave Smith said after Sunday’s game.

“It was a great team effort from start to finish that resulted in a huge bounce-back win for us,” Niagara coach Dave Burkholder said after Saturday’s victory. “I’m very proud of the team. This was a big test for us and the win puts us right back in the hunt in Atlantic Hockey.”

The only lopsided series was Bentley’s rout of Rochester Institute of Technology, which started with an 8-2 win on Friday, the first home victory for the Falcons against the Tigers since 2007. Saturday’s contest was closer with Bentley putting RIT away with two third-period goals in a 4-1 win.

“[Bentley] is the best team we’ve seen so far this season,” RIT coach Wayne Wilson said in a postgame radio interview on Saturday. “Speed, skill and goaltending. Our hat’s off to them.

“But you never know what’s going to happen in this league. Last season we had the eighth-place team win the championship. You never know.”

Tricky

Can anyone spare a hat? There were a whopping four hat tricks scored last weekend in the AHA. There were no surprises on the list — all four players are have demonstrated a scoring touch in the past — but I can’t remember a weekend when four guys were able to earn the chapeau fantastique:

Chris Bodo (Mercyhurst): The junior had three two-goal games in the past but on Saturday got his first career hat trick, scoring three of the Lakers’ four goals in a 4-2 win over Holy Cross.

Alex Grieve (Bentley): Grieve scored three of the Falcons’ first four goals in an 8-2 win against RIT on Friday. It was his second hat trick of the season (Dec. 6 against Robert Morris was the other). His 16 goals are third-most in the nation.

Billy Latta (Connecticut): The senior’s hat trick in a 5-1 win over Robert Morris was the first in his collegiate career. He’s had three two-goal efforts in the past.

Jon Puskar (AIC): Three goals in a game wasn’t enough for Puskar, who scored four times on Friday against Niagara. The senior has six career two-goal games but this was his first hat trick.

Amazingly, none of the above players was named player of the week in Atlantic Hockey. There was an effort deemed even better by the league — more on that later.

Coach Gary Wright and American International beat Massachusetts on the road on Tuesday (photo: Omar Phillips).

Breakthrough for the Yellow Jackets

Thanks to American International’s 3-2 win over Massachusetts on Tuesday — the Yellow Jackets’ first-ever win over a Hockey East opponent — the league improved to 9-17-1 in out-of-conference games since Thanksgiving.

Not great, but the AHA was just 6-47-4 before that. With one nonleague game left in the regular season (Connecticut at Providence on Feb. 11), Atlantic Hockey can do no better than 16-64-5 (.217) in nonconference play, which is considerably off the high-water mark of .365 (25-48-12) set last season.

The third team

I had a chance recently to sit down with Gene Binda, supervisor of officials in Atlantic Hockey.

Binda, who has held the position since 2004, is in charge of scheduling, recruiting and mentoring of officials for the league, as well as for College Hockey America and three Division II/III leagues: the MASCAC, ECAC Northeast and Northeast-10.

Getting his start as a referee in 1974, Binda is also active in several junior hockey leagues, holding the title of Referee-in Chief for the Eastern Junior Hockey League (EJHL), Empire Junior Hockey, Eastern Hockey Federation and Mass Selects Hockey Leagues, which supply not only players to college hockey, but also referees.

Finding new talent to wear the stripes is often difficult, according to Binda, who is evaluating as many as 800 officials in the pipeline.

“Of those 800, there’s probably 100 to 150 that will hopefully supplement our leagues,” said Binda. “We’re trying harder to nurture young guys, former players that maybe want to stay with the game and give back to the game.”

Skating and communication are the most important factors in moving up, according to Binda.

“Skating obviously because you have to keep up and have to be in position to make the call, especially at the goal line, which we call the ‘money line.’ Skating is so important to overall game management.”

Officials in every league are looking to improve communication between officials, players and coaches, Binda said.

“Hockey used to be a sport where it was frowned on [for the referee] to talk to anybody,” Binda said. “It stemmed from having one referee but now we’ve transitioned to a four-man crew and it’s important they talk to each other as well as coaches and players.

“We approach it now like there are three teams on the ice, the two teams playing each other and the officials. It’s very important that we’re communicating with each other.”

Binda said that a point of emphasis in training referees is to keep cool and take a step back when dealing with potentially explosive situations.

“There’s always been this notion that it’s alright to scream at each other to get our point across,” he said. “We want better communication and officials that can tell the difference between an emotional situation and an abusive situation. Hockey is an emotional game and things can be said in the heat of the moment that a good official can recognize. But they’ve also got to know where the line is between an emotional conversation and an abusive one.”

Another game management strategy that Binda is employing with his officials is to try to identify the instigator in situations and avoiding matching penalties when possible.

“A washing of penalties, taking guys off each team and making it still five-on-five or even four-on-four doesn’t penalize the aggressor enough,” said Binda. “If a player is clearly the aggressor, he should pay the penalty. It’s the difference between intentional and reactionary. If somebody gives you a two-hander across the hands, there’s going to be a reaction on your part. We don’t expect that there won’t be.”

Binda is also preparing current and future officials for the management of video replay, which is currently being used at Air Force, Army, Bentley and RIT. Next year it will be mandatory across the league.

“Why not get it right if you have the tools?” he said. “Look at the Air Force game against Vermont in the NCAA tournament. That was a heartbreaking situation for Air Force, but in the end it was important to get it right.

“That’s what we want. When you have to send somebody home [with a loss], at the end of the day, you want to get it right.”

Hobey hopefuls

The countdown to the Hobey Baker Award started this week with the opening of fan balloting. Fans can vote once per day and the results will be good for 1 percent of the total vote in each phase of the selection process.

The following Atlantic Hockey players are on the ballot:

• Brett Gensler (Bentley)
• Kyle Gibbons (Canisius)
• Matt Ginn (Holy Cross)
• Alex Grieve (Bentley)
• Isaac Kohls (Niagara)
• Dan O’Donoghue (Mercyhurst)
• Jimmy Sarjeant (Mercyhurst)
• Steve Weinstein (Bentley)
• Cody Wydo (Robert Morris)
• Matt Zay (Mercyhurst)

USCHO weekly awards

Player of the week — Bentley’s Brett Gensler: You have to have a pretty good weekend to beat out four guys with hat tricks, and Gensler did just that, scoring four goals and adding four assists in a sweep of RIT.

Goalie of the week — Mercyhurst’s Jimmy Sarjeant: Sarjeant stopped 87 of 89 shots last weekend, including a 51-save shutout against Holy Cross. His save percentage in 12 conference games is .950.

Rookie of the week — Sacred Heart’s Justin Danforth: The league selected Air Force goalie Chris Truehl, who has been impressive standing in for the injured Jason Torf, but I’m going with Danforth, who had four assists, two in each game, in a split at Canisius. Danforth has 17 points so far, most among AHA rookies.

Minnesota a near-unanimous pick at top of D-I men’s poll

Minnesota garnered 48 of 50 first-place votes in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll to stay atop the national rankings.

The Gophers defeated Penn State Sunday night in their only action of the weekend and then swept the Nittany Lions with a win Monday night.

Ferris State climbs to No. 2 this week after a sweep of Michigan Tech and the Bulldogs had one first-place vote on the ballots.

No. 3 St. Cloud State, down one after splitting with Denver, also tallied a first-place nod.

Boston College defeated Providence and tied Brown and jumps one to No. 4, while Quinnipiac tied Harvard, beat Union and beat Rensselaer to rise two places to No. 5 this week.

Union falls two to No. 6 with the QU loss and a win over Princeton, Providence falls one to No. 7 after losing in overtime to Northeastern and to BC, Yale beat Harvard and jumps two spots to No. 8, Wisconsin swept Michigan and moves up five to No. 9 and with a loss to Northeastern, Massachusetts-Lowell drops a spot to No. 10.

Northeastern’s two wins propels the Huskies from No. 16 to No. 11, idle Cornell stays 12th, Michigan tumbles from No. 8 to No. 13, Clarkson split with Merrimack and is down three notches to No. 14 and with a sweep of Alabama-Huntsville, Notre Dame keeps the No. 15 slot for another week.

Denver is up one to No. 16, New Hampshire topped Dartmouth and jumps three spots to sit 17th, while Vermont beat St. Lawrence and lost to Colgate to keep a firm hold on No. 18.

With a win over Boston University, Maine enters the rankings at No. 19 and with a sweep over Colorado College, North Dakota is back to being ranked at No. 20.

In addition, nine other schools received votes 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.

Around college hockey, team travel nightmares make for some good stories

Alaska-Anchorage senior Matt Bailey carries equipment bags into a Minneapolis-area FedEx location on Jan. 8 so they can be shipped back to Anchorage in time for the team’s home series starting two days later (photo: Alaska-Anchorage Athletics).

A college hockey team from the contiguous United States is scheduled to play a series in Anchorage, Alaska, and actually arrives there before its hosts?

Yes, it’s just about as rare as you’d think it is.

It might be best not to tell that to Alaska-Anchorage coach Matt Thomas, though.

Many college hockey teams fell victim to the unusually severe winter weather events a week ago that hit the Great Lakes region and east coast of the country. None of those teams, however, faced a situation as potentially harrowing as the one Alaska-Anchorage was made to endure.

“In the end, I think this only helps us in terms of team bonding, and it’s probably something we can use to push us forward as we continue the second half of our season.”

— Alaska-Anchorage coach Matt Thomas

Following a series split Jan. 3-4 at then-No. 13 Wisconsin, the Seawolves’ homeward travel itinerary had them flying from Madison, Wis., on Jan. 5 to Minneapolis and then onto Anchorage, all on Delta Airlines jets.

So why are we still talking about UAA’s travel plans being thrown into disarray?

It was jarringly cold in Minneapolis a week ago — what with it being January — but the Twin Cities area wasn’t hit with anything like the snow accumulation much of the rest of the country got.

No, this was something else.

“We were late coming out of Madison into Minneapolis,” Thomas said. “We got off the plane [from Madison], all 28 of us, sprinted to the next gate and we got there and literally watched the plane not yet pulling out of the gate, but they’d separated the jetway from the plane.”

It gets worse.

“The plane was right there and we went up to the gate and asked if they couldn’t hold it any longer, and we knew that was the last flight to Anchorage from Minneapolis that day, so we knew we were stuck,” Thomas said. “So right away we started looking for hotels with 15 rooms, and half the people in the airport missed their connections with the weather on the east coast, so there was suddenly a rush.

“Baggage claim was absolutely crazy because half the people’s bags didn’t show up, and we went down and more than half our bags had made the trip back to Anchorage. We couldn’t understand that: How could our bags make it to Anchorage, but we get off the plane [from Madison] and try to make it to the next one home and missed it?”

In all, what the Seawolves had expected to be a five-day trek to the lower 48 turned into one that lasted eight. Delta’s upcoming flights from Minneapolis to Anchorage were already fully booked, leaving the UAA team stranded.

The trip, spanning from the small hours of the morning on New Year’s Day to late last Thursday, saw the Seawolves finally touching down in Anchorage on Jan. 9 at approximately 9 p.m. local time.

That was less than 24 hours before they were scheduled to open a WCHA series against Minnesota State, which had played the weekend before in Fairbanks, Alaska, and stayed in the state between the series.

The rearranged travel plans presented their own problems for UAA to deal with.

“The way we needed to get home, we had to FedEx our equipment home on Wednesday because [FedEx] had too many connections and couldn’t guarantee they’d make all the connections Thursday,” Thomas said. “And thank God we did because there was a hailstorm in Salt Lake City Thursday, so we were delayed 45 minutes getting out of there, and we landed in Seattle and had to run because we were taking Delta to Salt Lake and then Alaska Airlines to Seattle, then up to Anchorage.

“Alaska Airlines actually added a flight for us because they’re a big partner of [UAA’s], and we had to sprint just to that gate [at Seattle-Tacoma] just to make that flight in time. If we’d done that Thursday, our equipment wouldn’t be here in Anchorage ahead of the games with Mankato.”

All’s well that ends well, though: The Seawolves swept the Mavericks to move two games above .500 overall and into the top half of the WCHA standings.

They weren’t the only team to experience travel headaches at the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport.

Both getting to and from Boston for Frozen Fenway had their challenges for Notre Dame (photo: Melissa Wade).

Ferris State and Rensselaer, both having just taken part in Minnesota’s Mariucci Classic, also had to endure delays at the same airport from which UAA was trying to get home.

The Arctic cold front didn’t make things any better for teams on the east coast trying to move westward. Both Notre Dame and Nebraska-Omaha had issues departing Boston on Jan. 5 for South Bend, Ind., and Omaha, respectively.

Notre Dame, in fact, had trouble going both to and from Boston, where it took part in the Frozen Fenway event at Fenway Park. When the Fighting Irish’s originally scheduled flight from Chicago O’Hare International Airport to Boston’s Logan International Airport on Jan. 2 was canceled, Notre Dame used a partnership it had previously forged with the NHL’s Chicago Blackhawks to use a charter jet that earlier in the week had carried the Blackhawks to Boston.

The Fighting Irish again used a charter service to get back to Indiana, but getting home wasn’t easy, either.

They were set to use a charter jet that Clemson’s women’s basketball team had just used while traveling to South Bend for a game, but plans for that were scrapped due to a major snowstorm in Chicago that kept the Tigers from getting to the plane at Chicago’s Midway Airport.

Instead, Notre Dame’s hockey team was able to use a Baltimore-based charter plane to get from Bedford, Mass., back to South Bend, which welcomed the Irish back Jan. 5 with 20 inches of snow, a temperature of minus-13 and a wind chill of minus-45.

As for Nebraska-Omaha, which suffered a pair of losses Jan. 3-4 at New Hampshire, its originally scheduled flight from Boston Logan to Chicago O’Hare was canceled. Even before UNO’s second game against UNH, the Mavericks learned their connecting flight from Chicago to Omaha had also been scrapped.

They were then booked onto a later United Airlines flight from Boston to Denver, and then the Mavericks would be able fly home to Omaha’s Eppley Airfield from Denver.

Once UNO knew it was bound for Denver, however, Mavericks hockey equipment manager Mark Pane pulled some strings.

Pane spoke with an United operations employee working out of Eppley, and eventually the United flight from Boston to Denver landed in Omaha along the way to drop the Mavericks and other Omaha-bound passengers off.

“I don’t know how they explained it,” said Dave Ahlers, Nebraska-Omaha’s radio play-by-play commentator and sports information director. “But the Denver passengers knew we were stopping in Omaha.

“They were still a little perplexed because that’s the way airlines used to fly in the old hub-and-spoke system, but it was kind of remarkable when we found out that we got on the plane but that it was going to stop in Omaha to drop us off, thereby saving us probably an eight-hour bus ride [from Denver to Omaha].

“At that point in time, knowing everything was canceled and everything was such a mess, we were just thinking, ‘Get us someplace close and we’ll get a bus.’ We were thinking, ‘Get us to St. Louis, get us to Kansas City, get us to somewhere where we could take a bus,’ and if it had to be Denver, it had to be Denver, and then that bit from Heaven came down and we lucked out.”

One common theme for all of these five teams, though — as well as any traveling group that’s become stranded due to inclement weather — was that their ordeals made for good team-bonding experiences.

Being in close quarters for an unexpectedly long amount of time, all that’s left for it is to make the best of the experience.

Luckily for Alaska-Anchorage, which was affected the most by the cold front that gripped so much of Canada and the U.S., accommodations were made.

The Seawolves were able to practice out of Richfield, Minn., for two days and were able to book rooms at a Hilton hotel near the Mall of America, which, even for grown men, apparently provides an atmosphere that promotes togetherness.

“[The weather] made for an inconvenience and adversity to deal with, but our guys had fun,” Thomas said. “They got on all the rides for free at the Mall of America, so they were acting like 10-year-old kids again and were able to do that and go bowling and go to movies.

“We ended up making it pretty fun considering the situation we were in, and I think the guys enjoyed that opportunity to be around their teammates even that much more. In the end, I think this only helps us in terms of team bonding, and it’s probably something we can use to push us forward as we continue the second half of our season.”

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