Home Blog Page 1080

Minnesota Pair Lands Women’s First Team All-American Honors

Five of the six women’s Division I All-Americans are from teams playing in the Frozen Four.

Minnesota has two of them — goaltender Noora Raty and defender Anne Schleper. Also on the first team: Cornell defender Laura Fortino, Mercyhurst forward Vicki Bendus, Minnesota-Duluth forward Emmanuele Blais and New Hampshire forward Kelly Paton.

Minnesota, Minnesota-Duluth, Cornell and Mercyhurst will play in the Frozen Four in Minneapolis starting Friday.

Second Team

Forwards: Felicia Nelson, St. Cloud State; Jesse Scanzano, Mercyhurst; Catherine White, Cornell
Defenders: Courtney Birchard, New Hampshire; Lauriane Rougeau, Cornell
Goaltender: Florence Schelling, Northeastern

Atlantic Hockey Championship Live Blog: Friday

Join us for live coverage from the Atlantic Hockey Championship.

WCHA Final Five Live Blog: Friday

Join us for live coverage from the WCHA Final Five.

Hockey East Championship Live Blog: Friday

Join us for live coverage of the Hockey East Championship.

Bracketology Live Blog

Join us for a Bracketology live blog with Jayson Moy at 11 p.m. Eastern Friday.

Brown Looks to Future After ECAC Semifinal Loss

After upsetting two of the most offensively talented teams in the conference in RPI and Yale during the first two weekends of the ECAC Hockey tournament, the 3-0 loss suffered by Brown in the opening semifinal of the championship weekend was understandably disappointing.

Still, the Bears have a lot to look forward to as first-year coach Brendan Whittet works to bring the program back to a level of attention and prominence it has not experienced since he played well over a decade ago.

“I played at Brown,” started the playoff-bearded coach, “and had some really good success, and the amount of e-mails and well-wishes and people that are checking in, believe me, there’s a lot more of it than at the beginning of the year where we’re struggling. Our goal is to get this team back to the level it was when I played and to win championships. It’s not going to be easy by any stretch. I mean this run is nice, but again it’s going to be progress.”

Nearly every returning player on the Bears roster put forth a career-best performance in 2009-10. Many improved their numbers so dramatically that one has to think it must be the coaching. Junior Harry Zolnierczyk had only five points through his first two seasons before he exploded for 31 this campaign. Jack Maclellan, who has led this year’s edition of Brown hockey with 34 points, was coming off a freshman year in which he had been on the scoresheet but six times.

“We’re a program that was unbelievably down when I got there,” Whittet said matter-of-factly. “We had to change the mentality and the culture and lay the foundation for what’s going to lead to success. It paid dividends I thought as the season wore on. We’re a streaky team but we have definitively improved from the beginning of the year to the end of the year. And I thought that was spelled out with the way we were able to play down the stretch.”

Senior tri-captains Devin Timberlake, Aaron Volpatti, and Jordan Pietrus each nearly doubled his previous career scoring numbers just this year alone. And that with Pietrus having missed all of February and March up until his return Friday afternoon. The same can be said of the likes of Bobby Farnham, Jesse Fratkin, and Jarred Smith as well.

“When Coach Whittet and the new coaching staff came in, they brought a lot of enthusiasm and excitement to Brown,” Pietrus said. “[He] played at Brown and bringing that pride back is very exciting. We grew as a team and, unfortunately, I only got to play one year with [him] because I think they are going to do some big things here in the near future.”

“My senior class was just an unbelievable group of guys and were instrumental in helping to turn this program around,” said Whittet. “We want to have momentum going into next year, but it’s going to be a different team. We’re losing some really good hockey players. Every year is different, different chemistry.”

Brown has not only improved on offense, but also has taken on a defensive style that Whittet says is the same used by Cornell under Mike Schafer.

“I just like the way they play,” Whittet said with admiration. “They’re big and strong and they possess pucks. When I played for Bob Gaudet at Brown, we played a 1-3-1 [defensive setup] and that’s what we play now. It’s something that I have always felt is an effective system. I think it’s very accountable. If we want to play in-your-face hockey, I think it’s the way to go.”

Gustavus’ Martinson Honored as Top D-III Men’s Player

Gustavus Adolphus forward David Martinson has been awarded the Sid Watson Award as the top player in Division III.

Martinson, the MIAC player of the year, led the nation with an average of exactly one goal per game. He had 29 goals and 49 points for the Gusties, who advanced to the NCAA quarterfinals.

“David is an outstanding person and an outstanding hockey player,” Gustavus coach Brett Petersen said. “He is our leader on and off the ice. He gets more out of his teammates than any other player I have coached at Gustavus.”

The runner-up was Oswego’s Eric Selleck.

Here are the men’s Division III All-Americans:

East First Team

Forwards: Mickey Lang, Manhattanville; Eric Selleck, Oswego; Alex Smigelski, Williams.
Defensemen: Kyle Shearer-Hardy, Bowdoin; Eric Tallent, Norwich.
Goaltender: Ryan Klingensmith, Norwich.

West First Team

Forwards: Jordan Chong, St. Scholastica; Joel Gaulrapp, Wisconsin-Stout; David Martinson, Gustavus Adolphus.
Defensemen: Chris Berenguer, Hamline; Nick Tabisz, St. Norbert.
Goaltender: B.J. O’Brien, St. Norbert.

East Second Team

Forwards: Chad Anderson, Norwich; Martin Drolet, Middlebury; Coleman Noonan, St. Anselm.
Defensemen: A.J. Mikkelsen, Manhattanville; Steve Rizer, Fredonia.
Goaltender: Scott Barchard, Tufts.

West Second Team

Forwards: Tyler Czuba, Wisconsin-River Falls; Mike Dahlinger, Adrian; Chris Johnson, Augsburg.
Defensemen: Mitch Carlson, Gustavus Adolphus; Chris Stansik, Adrian.
Goaltender: Josh Swartout, Gustavus Adolphus.

RedHawks Star at CCHA Awards Banquet

Miami finished first in the CCHA this year off a surprise Frozen Four appearance last April, and coach Enrico Blasi took home the prize for the league’s coach of the year Thursday.

He’s the first coach in CCHA history to win four times. In his acceptance speech, he emphasized the personal struggles he’s gone through this past season and the support and comfort his hockey family has brought him.

Miami’s Tommy Wingels took home the best defensive forward award, and the best defensive defenseman went to teammate Will Weber. Weber was the third RedHawks player to win the award in the past five years, and the fourth in Miami’s history.

RedHawks goaltender Cody Reichard completed the Miami set, taking home the player of the year award. He was on the CCHA first team, was a Perani Cup winner, the CCHA’s best goaltender and was featured in the top 10 finalists of the Hobey Baker Award.

“The credit really goes to my teammates,” Reichard said. “They’re the ones blocking the shots in front of me, taking pucks, making plays. They’re a great group of guys and we have a great staff at the university to support us all the way.”

Northern Michigan’s junior Erik Gustafsson took home the best offensive defenseman prize. Gustafsson was also nominated for player of the year and best defensive defenseman and was the only player to return to the first team. Teammate Mark Olver was also on the first team with the most votes. He also took home the leading scorer award and is one of the top 10 Hobey Baker finalists.

Alaska took home their first rookie of the year award with Andy Taranto who was also on the All-Rookie team. Teammate Dion Knelsen took home the CCHA top scholar athlete and the CCHA Humanitarian Award.

“I feel so honored, but it’s all a team effort,” Knelsen said. “I don’t feel like I do a whole lot. All my teammates are just as committed to humanitarian efforts and academics as I am. Our whole program makes a great effort.”

Net Difference

Well, nine out of 10 really ain’t too bad.

The top 10 finalists for the Hobey Baker Award have been announced, and your humble Hobey pundit correctly predicted 9 of the 10 finalists. It’s my best performance yet – although I did have to share top honors among the media forecasters with Adam Wodon of College Hockey News – and while I’d like to have all 10 right one of these years, I’m happy to have improved over last year’s performance.

Still, happy as I am, I can’t help but think about the one I got wrong. I had Cory Conacher of Canisius in my top 10, in a spot that wound up going to Miami’s Cody Reichard. Looking back at it now, I realize that I made two fundamental errors on this one.

First, I picked an Atlantic Hockey player who wasn’t a clear pick. While Atlantic Hockey has gotten better and better about getting players into the Hobey top 10 – Reid Cashman, Eric Ehn, Simon Lambert and Jacques Lamoureux were Hobey Finalists in the space of five years – each of those players was the clear choice in the conference. This year, while I picked Conacher, the folks over at INCH picked RIT defenseman Dan Ringwald, and you could have also made the case for Sacred Heart forward Nick Johnson or even a repeat appearance by Lamoureux. If there’s not a clear-cut choice in the conference, there probably won’t be a finalist from Atlantic Hockey. I neglected that, to my cost.

The other error I made was to think that a team as strong as Miami – a team that spent a good chunk of the year at No. 1 in the country – was going to go home empty-handed from this party. Do I think that’s right? No, but I should have counted on it anyway.

Please note that this is NOT a slight against the Miami program. If I could give a Hobey Baker Award to a team, the RedHawks would be it. I think the culture of the program and the sense of unity among the players, coaches and staff are characteristics that Hobey Baker himself would have admired, even if the RedHawks take a few more penalties than Hobey would have approved of.

That said, though, there’s no one on the team I can point to and say “They don’t win without ___________.” There’s no player that’s performed at so high a level that he stands out from the team. From Jarod Palmer, Tommy Wingels, Carter Camper and Andy Miele straight on down, the RedHawks have so many different weapons that it’s been hard for one player to stand out a la Ryan Jones two seasons ago, Nathan Davis the year before, or Andy Greene before him.

Except, of course, that Reichard was the national leader in goals-against average and No. 3 in save percentage, making him as elite a performer as Miami has had this year, and hence, a finalist.

Here’s the thing, though: While Reichard was first nationally in goals-against average, his partner in Miami’s goaltending tandem, Connor Knapp, was fourth. And while Reichard was third in save percentage, Knapp was ninth. Granted, Reichard played the majority of the minutes, by more than eight games, but to borrow a term from baseball, I’m not sure Reichard’s VORP with Knapp on the team (that’s “Value over replacement player”) is so high as to merit a Hobey finalist nod.

All of that said, though, it’s hard to begrudge Reichard this honor. He clearly made the most of the time he had in net, so it’s not like he didn’t play well enough.

And as for my pursuit of a perfect pick, well, there’s always next year…

Rensselaer’s Polacek Named ECAC Player of the Year, Teammate Jerry D’Amigo ECAC Rookie of the Year

Rensselaer junior forward Chase Polacek was named the ECAC Player of the Year at the annual ECAC banquet on Thursday.

Polacek netted 35 points in 22 ECAC games this season, tallying 17 goals and 18 assists, with six of the goals being power play goals and two shorthanded. Overall, he finished third in the nation with 26 goals scored, and also third in the nation in points with 52 points (26-26–52). He also finished tied first nationally for power play goals (13), seventh in goals per game (0.67), and ninth in points per game (1.33).

In addition he was named one of the Top 10 Hobey Baker Award Finalists.

His teammate Jerry D’Amigo was named the ECAC Rookie of the Year. D’Amigo scored seven goals and added 17 assists for 24 points in conference play. In 35 games played he had 10 goals and 24 assists for 34 total points. D’Amigo missed time this season as a key member of the United States’ gold-medal winning team at the World Junior Championships.

Cornell’s Ben Scrivens was named the Dryden Award winner for Best Goaltender.

The senior posted a .933 save percentage and a 1.89 GAA in conference play this season. He also posted the same numbers overall as he has played in all 31 games this season for Cornell. He finished the season with five shutouts and only allowed 58 goals all season. He was also named one of the Top 10 Hobey Baker Award Finalists.

Scrivens’ teammate Justin Krueger was named the Best Defensive Defenseman. He had a plus/minus rating of plus-15 this season in helping Cornell and Scrivens to a great defensive season in which the Big Red have surrended only 61 goals in 31 games.

Denver’s Cheverie, Gwozdecky Get Major Awards in WCHA

Denver picked up two major awards and took half of the spots on the first team at the WCHA’s awards ceremony Thursday.

Goaltender Marc Cheverie is the league’s player of the year, and George Gwozdecky is the WCHA’s top coach.

Cheverie, forward Rhett Rakhshani and defenseman Patrick Wiercioch were first-team all-WCHA members, along with Wisconsin defenseman Brendan Smith and forwards Blake Geoffrion of Wisconsin and Jack Connolly of Minnesota-Duluth.

The league’s goaltending champion, Cheverie had a 2.05 goals-against average and a .934 save percentage in league play. He leads the country in overall victories (24) and save percentage (.937).

“I think it’s the result of playing on a great team,” Cheverie said. “Anytime you’re on a first-place team, guys are rewarded.”

The coaching award is the fourth for Gwozdecky, joining honors in 1995, 2002 and 2005. The Pioneers spent the majority of the season ranked first or second in the country and won the WCHA’s MacNaughton Cup as regular season champion.

He’s won those awards with a variety of well-known assistant coaches like current Miami coach Enrico Blasi and current Rensselaer coach Seth Appert and longtime assistant Steve Miller.

“I think I’ve been very fortunate to have the kind of quality people on the coaching staff that just have made the program better and better and better and have made me look awful good at times,” Gwozdecky said.

Rakhshani earned the most points among voting for forwards; Smith had the most points overall.

North Dakota forward Danny Kristo was named the rookie of the year after he led freshmen with 10 goals in WCHA games this season.

Wisconsin’s Smith was named the league’s defenseman of the year. The junior led WCHA defensemen in goals (11), assists (18) and points (29) in league play.

Michigan Tech defenseman Eli Vlaisavlejevich earned honors as the league’s outstanding student-athlete. A Rhodes Scholarship candidate, the senior has a 4.0 grade-point average in Bio Medical Engineering.

The student-athlete award was selected by league faculty athletic representatives. The defensive award was chosen by a vote of the league’s 10 head coaches. All other awards were decided by a vote of 80 players, coaches, media and sports information directors — eight from each school.

Here is the full list of award winners:

First Team

Forwards: Rhett Rakshani, Denver; Blake Geoffrion, Wisconsin; Jack Connolly, Minnesota-Duluth.
Defensemen: Brendan Smith, Wisconsin; Patrick Wiercioch, Denver.
Goaltender: Marc Cheverie, Denver.

Second Team

Forwards: Justin Fontaine, Minnesota-Duluth; Ryan Lasch, St. Cloud State; Tyler Ruegsegger, Denver.
Defensemen: Ryan McDonagh, Wisconsin; Nate Prosser, Colorado College.
Goaltender: Brad Eidsness, North Dakota.

Third Team

Forwards: Michael Davies, Wisconsin; Joe Colborne, Denver; Garrett Roe, St. Cloud State.
Defensemen: Garrett Raboin, St. Cloud State; Chay Genoway, North Dakota.
Goaltender: Dan Dunn, St. Cloud State.

Rookie Team

Forwards: Danny Kristo, North Dakota; Craig Smith, Wisconsin; Rylan Schwartz, Colorado College.
Defensemen: Matt Donovan, Denver; Justin Schultz, Wisconsin.
Goaltender: Joe Howe, Colorado College.

Individual Award Winners

Player of the Year: Marc Cheverie, G, Denver
Outstanding Student-Athlete of the Year: Eli Vlaisavljevich, D, Michigan Tech
Defensive Player of the Year: Brendan Smith, D, Wisconsin
Rookie of the Year: Danny Kristo, F, North Dakota
Scoring Champion: Rhett Rakhshani, F, Denver
Goaltending Champion: Marc Cheverie, G, Denver
Coach of the Year: George Gwozdecky, Denver

St. Anselm’s Junior Forward Coleman Noonan Wins 10th Annual Joe Concannon College Hockey Award

Gridiron Club of Greater Boston president Ray Gallant announced on Wednesday that junior forward Coleman Noonan of St. Anselm College is the winner of the 10th annual Joe Concannon Award, which recognizes New England’s best American-born hockey player at the Division II-III level. Noonan is the first D-II player to receive the award.

Noonan, from Norfolk, MA, had an outstanding season, leading the Hawks in scoring with 23 goals and 24 assists for 47 points. The versatile forward led St. Anselm to a second place regular season finish behind Norwich and the NE-10 conference title with a 10-1 win over Assumption in the final. He was a first-team ECAC East All-Star selection as well as the ECAC East Player of the Year and NE-10 Co-Player of the Year.

“As a freshman Coleman had just 12 points and as a sophomore he had 23 points. This year he again doubled his output to 47 points and really had more chances to get points based on ice time with the addition of penalty killing and power play time on the ice,” said St. Anselm head coach Ed Seney.

“He really improved his skating and overall play since coming out of Catholic Memorial as an 18 year old. The biggest improvement in his game, and biggest compliment that I can give him, is that this year in any 3-on-5 shorthanded situation he would always be on the ice. He was our best face-off guy and really had improved his overall game and helped the team have a successful season.”

The 2010 Joe Concannon Award will be presented at the New England Hockey Writers’ Dinner on Tuesday, April 13. Last year’s winner was Jeff Landers from Amherst College.

“With new conferences and conference alignments, this year has provided a new level of competitive hockey at the Division II and III levels in New England,” said Tim Costello, committee chairman. “Each and every one of our nominees had an outstanding season; our five finalists truly distinguished themselves among the players in their own conferences and in the New England area overall.”

Previous winners include:

2001: Keith Aucoin, Norwich University
2002: Michael Carosi, Bowdoin College
2003: Nick Stauder, Salem State College
2004: Jim Pancyzkowski, Wesleyan University; Michael O’Sullivan, Curry College
2005: Brian Doherty, Curry College; Joseph Ori, Trinity College
2006: Adam Dann, Bowdoin College
2007: Greg Osborne, Colby College
2008: Tom Maldonado, Middlebury College
2009: Jeff Landers, Amherst College
2010: Coleman Noonan, St. Anselm College

Brown’s Pietrus to Return to Lineup in Albany

With all the attention surrounding the injury to Yale’s Sean Backman last weekend, it was probably forgotten that Brown senior tri-captain Jordan Pietrus had been out of their lineup since the beginning of February. In an odd coincidence, both players wore No. 16 for their respective teams.

The Providence Journal has reported that Pietrus, who was expected to be out for the season with a torn abdominal muscle, will return to the lineup in Friday’s ECAC Championship semifinal against Cornell.

Pietrus, like nearly all of his upper-class teammates under first-year coach Brendan Whittet, was having a career year until he went down. He had 17 points through 21 games before the injury after tallying only 23 total through his first three seasons with Brown. He was also third on the team in points per game when he went down.

“It has affected [our team] a lot,” Whittet just a week ago. “Jordan is a leader in every sense and he’s a good hockey player also. Without Jordan in the lineup, our depth is not overly strong up front, meaning we have to go to the well a lot with our top two lines. Those six guys, we play them a lot. It’s hard, you run out of energy at times when you’re doing that and you put a lot of pressure on those specific guys in order to come through. It really limits some of the stuff we can do on the offensive side.”

“Jordan is a huge part of our team and he still is,” added fellow captain Devin Timberlake, who also knows a thing or two about being injured — he missed all but 10 games last year. “Before he went down, he was probably our most consistent and our best player to that point. To lose him wasn’t easy, but he’s such a positive influence around the guys. We really want to do it for him, too. The longer we play, the better chance he has for coming back. He’s such an inspiration to everyone of us with how hard he works that we just want to give him a chance.”

A role model both on and off the ice, Pietrus is one of 18 finalists for this year’s Hockey Humanitarian Award.

“It’s a team sport,” Pietrus said before the series at Yale. “Especially with our team, it’s about all 21 guys on the ice and all 29 guys on our team. We have to compensate for each other in different ways and when guys get injured, that’s an opportunity for other guys to step up and show their worth. We’ve had some guys step up and play great; David Brownschidle, Jesse Fratkin, and Bobby Farnham have all been able to step up and do well in bigger roles. I’m still a member of the team so I love seeing the guys do well. It is a little bit bittersweet. Obviously, I wish I was out there and able to contribute, but I kind of contribute any way I can and it’s great to come back in a room with smiling faces after a big win. There’s no better thing in the world than winning.”

Denver, Wisconsin Each Have Two on Hobey Top 10

The top three teams in the country claimed half of the finalist spots for the Hobey Baker Award when the list of 10 was revealed Thursday.

Denver goaltender Marc Cheverie and forward Rhett Rakhshani, Miami goaltender Cody Reichard and Wisconsin forward Blake Geoffrion and defenseman Brendan Smith made the cut to the final 10 names selected by Division I head coaches and a fan vote.

Also in the top 10: New Hampshire forward Bobby Butler, Maine forward Gustav Nyquist, Northern Michigan forward Mark Olver, Rensselaer forward Chase Polacek and Cornell goaltender Ben Scrivens.

Cheverie and Rakhshani have the Pioneers ranked No. 1 in the nation with a powerful combination of goaltending and offense. The WCHA player of the year, Cheverie is 24-4-3 with a 1.94 goals-against average and a .937 save percentage.

Rakhshani, Denver’s captain, is seventh nationally in scoring with 49 points.

Reichard backstopped Miami to a runaway victory in the CCHA standings, going 15-0-2 in league play while allowing only 21 goals in 17 games. He’s 18-3-3 with a 1.64 goals-against average and a .930 save percentage.

Geoffrion led the Badgers and the WCHA with 19 goals in league games, and he has 23 goals and 41 points in 34 games.

His teammate, Smith, is the only defenseman in the final 10 in large part because he’s the nation’s top-scoring defenseman with 15 goals and 44 points in 36 games. WCHA coaches named him the league’s top blueliner.

Butler, also a finalist for the Hockey Humanitarian Award, was named Hockey East’s player of the year after leading the nation in goal scoring with 27 in 37 games. Twenty-one of those goals came in league play.

The national points leader with 59 in 37 games, Nyquist tied for first in scoring in Hockey East with 41 points. He was the runner-up to Butler for Hockey East player of the year honors.

Olver led the CCHA with 35 points in 27 league games, and leads the Wildcats in overall scoring for the third straight season. He has 16 points in his last 10 games, helping Northern Michigan to a CCHA first-round bye.

The ECAC Hockey player of the year, Polacek ranks third in the nation in both points (52) and goals (26). He’s second in the nation with 13 power-play goals.

Scrivens is second in the nation in goals-against average (1.89) and save percentage (.933) and had five shutouts this season for the Big Red.

A 24-member selection committee and another round of fan balloting will choose the Hobey Hat Trick of three finalists, which will be released on March 31, and the award winner, who will be announced during the Frozen Four in Detroit on April 9.

Canisius’ Conacher Named Atlantic Hockey’s Top Player

Canisius junior forward Cory Conacher was named player of the year in Atlantic Hockey at the league’s annual awards banquet Thursday.

The Burlington, Ontario, native led the league with 44 points, the second-highest regular season point total in AHA history. Overall, Conacher has 53 points to date (20 goals, 33 assists).

Joining Conacher on the first team are Air Force’s Jacques Lamoureux (forward) and Tim Kirby (defense), RIT’s Dan Ringwald (defense) and Jared DeMichiel (goalie), and Sacred Heart forward Nick Johnson.

RIT defenseman Chris Tanev was named rookie of the year. Tanev has 26 points and is a league-best plus-29.

Sacred Heart coach C.J. Marottolo was named coach of the year. In his first season behind the Pioneers bench, Marottolo guided Sacred Heart to a second-place finish after being picked to finish eighth in the coaches’ preseason poll.

All-AHA First Team
Cory Conacher, jr., F, Canisius
Nick Johnson, sr., F, Sacred Heart
Jacques Lamoureux, jr., F, Air Force
Tim Kirby, so., D, Air Force
Dan Ringwald, sr., D, RIT
Jared DeMichiel, sr. G, RIT

All-AHA Second Team
Brandon Coccimigilo, F, Mercyhurst
Andrew Favot, jr., F, RIT
Cody Omilusik, jr., F, Army
Marcel Alvarez, so., D, Army
Carl Hudson, sr., D, Canisius
Andrew Volkening, sr., G, Air Force

All-AHA Third Team
Cameron Burt, so., F, RIT
Dave Jarman, sr., F, Sacred Heart
Vincent Scarcella, jr., F, Canisius
Paul Ferraro, sr., D, Sacred Heart
Chris Tanev, fr., D, RIT
Ryan Zapolski, jr., G, Mercyhurst

All-Rookie Team
Joe Campanelli, F, Bentley
Eric Delong, F, Sacred Heart
Adam Pleskach, F, American International
Alex Greke, D, Connecticut
Chris Tanev, D, RIT
Steven Legato, G, Sacred Heart

Player of the Year: Cory Conacher, Canisius
Rookie of the Year: Chris Tanev, RIT
Coach of the Year: C.J. Marottolo, Sacred Heart
Best Defensive Forward: Dave Jarman, Sacred Heart
Best Defenseman: Dan Ringwald, RIT
Individual Sportsmanship Award:Chris Risi, Mercyhurst
Team Sportsmanship Award: Army
Regular-Season Scoring Trophy: Cory Conacher, Canisius
Regular-Season Goaltending Trophy: Jared DeMichiel, RIT
Regular-Season Champions: RIT

WCHA Final Five Live Blog: Thursday

Join us for live coverage of the WCHA Final Five.

North Dakota Penalty Kill Negates Minnesota-Duluth

If you boil things down to the critical elements in postseason hockey, you usually end up looking at goaltending and special teams.

Both teams had the goaltending in the opening game of the WCHA Final Five Thursday night, but one had the special teams advantage.

That’s why North Dakota is into the league semifinals Friday, headed for a matchup against league champion Denver.

The Fighting Sioux killed all five Minnesota-Duluth power plays and broke a scoreless tie with a third-period shorthanded goal in their 2-0 victory over the Bulldogs.

“It’s been a huge factor for a lot of our wins,” said Jason Gregoire, who scored the shorthanded goal. “We try to limit their puck time, and that’s a huge advantage for us. If they have puck time, they’re making plays and we just try to limit that. Once they get shots, our [defensemen] are boxing out, our forwards are collapsing to clear pucks.”

It was on the Bulldogs’ fifth and final power play that the game was decided.

After an icing on UMD brought the faceoff into the Bulldogs’ end, Sioux defenseman Derrick LaPoint stepped up to hold the zone, then got the puck to Chris VandeVelde, whose shot was turned away by Bulldogs goaltender Kenny Reiter.

But Gregoire got the rebound and fired a shot home high.

The Sioux’s penalty-killing success was a whole-ice effort, North Dakota goaltender Brad Eidsness said.

And it had to be, considering how strong the Bulldogs’ power play has been this season. Entering Thursday’s game, it had scored a power-play goal in eight straight games, and UMD led the league at 23.5 percent.

“I think we did a really good job disrupting them up ice,” said Eidsness, who stopped all 22 shots he faced. “We didn’t allow them to get set up in our zone a lot, and I think that’s one thing that we’re very good at. We score a goal shorthanded because two guys are down deep breaking up a play and making a play of their own.

“I think it’s frustrating for a power play as well to have it be difficult to come up ice and be set.”

It had to be frustrating for the Bulldogs, who opened the third period with 1:22 of power play time left but didn’t get an official shot on goal — they had a goal waved off because of a high stick.

In five power-play opportunities, UMD got five shots on goal while conceding four and the shorthanded goal.

“We knew that they were going to pressure,” Bulldogs coach Scott Sandelin said. “They look for a lot of offensive chances on their penalty kill. They’re pretty aggressive up the rink. We didn’t come up the rink with a lot of speed. We didn’t get pucks deep.

“You can’t come up the rink half speed. You’ve got to come up with some urgency, with a little more speed, continue to get pucks behind and get support. I didn’t think we did a great job of that most of the night.”

There wasn’t much surprise at the pressure the Sioux brought.

“We knew what they were going to come with and we didn’t respond,” Sandelin said.

With Eidsness turning away everything that came his way and the penalty kill getting the job done, the Sioux had a good formula going Thursday.

“It’s about four guys being on same page and your goaltender making saves,” Sioux coach Dave Hakstol said. “You can make what you want out of it, but that’s really what it comes down to. It’s hard work.”

D-III National Semifinal: Oswego vs. St. Norbert

Oswego Lakers (26-2-0 overall, 15-1-0 in SUNYAC)

The last time the Oswego Lakers won the national championship in 2007, they had to travel way out to Superior, Wis. The following year, the national tournament was moved to nearby Lake Placid. Oswego didn’t make it. Lake Placid hosted it again. Oswego didn’t make it. Lake Placid got it one more time while it was announced it would move out to Minnesota the year after.

Oswego finally made it with an emphasis, thrashing Bowdoin, 9-2, in the quarterfinals.

“Thank God they’re hosting again,” Oswego head coach Ed Gosek said. “It’s awesome for our fans. Feels great.”

Teams between regions don’t get to see each other much, but St. Norbert is probably the one western team Oswego is most familiar with lately. They met in the 2007 national semifinal game, which Oswego won 4-3 in overtime. Then, the following year, St. Norbert came to the Oswego Pathfinder Classic, though they did not face each other.

The year after that, Oswego returned the favor, traveling to Green Bay for the St. Norbert Thanksgiving Tournament where the Lakers defeated the Green Knights, 4-3.

(In fact, 4-3 seems to be the magical score. Oswego won both games in the 2007 championship weekend by 4-3 scores, both in overtime, and Oswego won both games they ever played against St. Norbert by 4-3 scores.)

“They are as usual very good defensively,” Gosek said. “And when I say defensively, I mean the whole team philosophy, not just good individual defensive skills. Opposite of Bowdoin. They take their chances and opportunities only when you offer it to them. They don’t give up odd man rushes. They have firepower up front.”

Speaking of firepower, that’s something Oswego has many times over. Every coach who faces Oswego says the same thing — Oswego has the best group of finishers in the game.

Oswego's goalie Kyle Gunn-Taylor will get the start this weekend against St. Norbert (photo: Angelo Lisuzzo).

Oswego’s goalie Kyle Gunn-Taylor will get the start this weekend against St. Norbert (photo: Angelo Lisuzzo).

“They’re the second best team offensively I’ve seen this year and the other one is going to be millionaires in 10 years — the under-18 national team,” Bowdoin coach Terry Meagher said.

“They came as advertised. That is a very skilled and talented group. Their finishing ability is special. In the game right now that’s what everyone is striving for at any level. I’ve seen a lot of good teams but I’ve never seen as dynamic and as gifted and as opportunistic as that one. It was a pretty special show. I expect them to make a lot of noise in Lake Placid.”

Six players have double digit goals with the lowest sitting at 13 (one less than the highest goal scorer for St. Norbert) and Neil Musselwhite has six shorthanded goals. The forth line lately, as well as a defenseman who only scored one goal prior to the playoffs, are lighting the lamp up. This is a team that does not have to outplay their opposition. They just need enough opportunities to outscore their opponent because they hardly miss.

The key question on everyone’s mind is will the Olympic size ice surface be an advantage to the speedy Lakers?

“I don’t know if it matters when it comes to this point to change what you do because of the ice surface,” Gosek said. “You stick to what you do. What got you here. You still have to win the 1-on-1 battles, defend, and distribute the puck properly. Maybe it will give you that little bit of extra time to make a move with the extra space compared to a smaller rink, and then we can be in a position to use our speed.”

One thing speed does do is wear a team down. During the postseason run, Oswego has exploded in the second or third period. Against Morrisville, they fired in four third period goals to break a 4-4 tie. The next week, Oswego got three second period goals to pull away from Plattsburgh to an eventual 6-3 win. Then, versus Bowdoin, the Lakers burned the lamp out in the second with five goals.

The scoring by periods this season displays this progression: 38 goals in the first period, 54 in the second, and 59 in the third. While defensively, Oswego keeps it consistent, 19, 18, and 18, respectively.

“I thought in the first period it was pretty even play,” Bowdoin captain Colin MacCormack said. “But then in the second period … It was pretty impressive to watch.”

“Everybody looks good,” Gosek said of his team’s health. “At this time of year, everybody has their bumps and bruises, but no injuries that will keep anyone out.”

The question is, can any defense keep the puck out of their net against Oswego.

St. Norbert Green Knights (23-3-3 overall, 14-2-2 in the NCHA)

With a 4-3 opening round win over Adrian and a 3-1 victory over Gustavus Adolphus in a quarterfinal last Saturday, St. Norbert College has again advanced to the Final Four.

Hosted in Lake Placid, N.Y. for the second straight year — and site of the Green Knights’ 2008 national championship — it will mark their sixth Final Four appearance in school history, with all coming since 2003. The Green Knights will face Oswego State in Friday’s first semifinal. Game time is 4:00 p.m. EDT.

“Well it’s awesome,” said St. Norbert head coach Tim Coghlin, who is in his 17th season behind the Green Knights bench and holds an overall record of 346-103-39. “I’m really really proud of our guys. I think we’ve done so much together this year and I think we’ve grown so much as a group so it’s exciting to be able to end it with the final weekend of hockey in Lake Placid.

“What a rewarding experience for our seniors, our staff, our fans and all of the administration on campus.”

St. Norbert’s first foray into the Final Four in 2003 ended with a loss to Norwich in the semifinals, but the Green Knights’ returned in 2004 to score a semifinal win over Plattsburgh state before becoming yet another Middlebury victim in the championship game.

After bowing out in the 2005 quarterfinals, they made appearances the next three seasons, and lost to Middlebury in the 2006 title game and Oswego in a 2007 semifinal before finally breaking through in 2008 with wins over Norwich and Plattsburgh to earn the national championship.

It might seem the return to Lake Placid is something that might work in the Green Knights’ favor this weekend as it will be a somewhat familiar experience, but Coghlin doesn’t necessarily think that will be the case.

“Does it help to know a little bit about Lake Placid? Probably. But we don’t know any more about it than any of the other teams do. These are three of the same four teams that were here in 2008, so in the end I don’t think our experiences will be any sort of significant advantage.”

And as to how national championship experience pertains to Oswego itself:

“It’s interesting because all the seniors on Oswego’s roster played in one of these and won a national championship when they were freshmen. Then a lot of our guys won a championship when they were sophomores or freshmen. Both teams have the advantage of having guys who have been in that spot.”

The Final Four often has a bit of mystery to it, especially in the case of East-West match ups as unfamiliar opponents can often create unexpected results. In this case, however, St. Norbert and Oswego are no strangers to each other as they have met twice in the past three seasons.

The Lakers are 2-0 in those contests as they dropped St. Norbert 4-3 in overtime in the 2007 semifinals before traveling to St. Norbert a year ago and once again downing the Green Knights 4-3. St. Norbert also participated in the Oswego Pathfinder Bank holiday tournament in 2008, but the two teams failed to meet.

“When we played them in that ’07 game it was a really hard fought tooth and nail sort of game, and of course they won it in overtime,” Coghlin said. “Then they beat us here a year ago so we’ve actually crossed paths with them a few times the past couple years and now we have a chance to do it on the big stage with them, which I know I’m excited about.”

This year’s Lakers have proven to be a juggernaut since the early portion of the season, especially on the offensive side of things. Their 5.39 goals per game ranks second in the nation as a team and their top line of Justin Fox, Eric Selleck and Chris Laganiere has been the most prolific in the country this year, having scored a combined 143 points. These are all threats St. Norbert is well aware of.

“They are a high-powered team,” said Coghlin. “You can see the way they explode like when they scored six in the second period last weekend. They are capable of doing that.

“I think they are a little more offensive where we are a little more defensive minded but opportunistic offensively. At the same time, though, it’s not like we get outshot every night and we’re not a team that sits back. I just think this has the makings of being an excellent, excellent game.”

As far as the Green Knights go, defense has once again been the name of the game. The Green Knights have allowed only 1.69 goals per night on the season, which is good enough for second best in the land. At 10-0-2 in their last 12, St. Norbert has allowed more than one goal only three teams and never conceded more than three.

Goaltender B.J. O’ Brien has been up to task when called upon and enters the semifinals with a 23-2-3 record, 1.58 goals against average and .923 save percentage.

The Green Knights bring a veteran group of blueliners to the table, including senior Jason Nopper, and juniors Nick Tabisz, Mike Bernardy, Adam Hammerbeck and Sam Tikka. Freshman defenseman Justin Favreau has also been a major contributor this season.

Much of St. Norbert’s defensive prowess can also be attributed to the stellar defensive play of its forwards, specifically the Brandon Longley-Scott Pulak-Johan Ryd line. Often called upon to shut down the top line of the opposition, they have performed in stellar fashion down the stretch.

Coghlin admits, however, they might not be able to do it alone this Friday against a team as potent as Oswego. The Green Knights will be the home team and have the last change, however, which will certainly not be a hindrance in this regard.

“We’ve had an opportunity to [have last change down the stretch],” Coghlin said. “Sometimes we’ve matched lines for lines and something it’s been a D pairing or two. We certainly have taken advantage of that and I don’t expect this to be any different. I don’t know if you can use one line to contain them or not, though. Clearly they are a team that scores a lot of goals so I don’t know if we will be able to contain them or not. At some point we might have to make adjustments and come up with another plan.”

Coghlin also hopes the Green Knights two most recent playoff experiences helped prepare them for a team with the firepower of Oswego.

“Adrian is a high-powered, high-skilled team that has a lot of guys with a lot of points and that didn’t phase us. It was the same thing with Gustavus. I thought Martinson was dynamite the other night and he played excellent but he wasn’t on the scoresheet.”

Beyond the defensive capabilities of the Green Knights’ forwards, they have proven to be plenty competent on the offensive end as well. Though St. Norbert has largely scored by committee this season, prominent scorers include seniors Shane Wheeler (13 goals, 18 assists, 31 points), Tyler Allen (14-16-30) and Matt Boyd (9-19-28). Ryd has chipped in 26 points while freshman Cody Keefer has added 24 and Longley 23.

With the Oswego game only two days away, much talk has once again circled around the Lakers’ team speed and whether St. Norbert will be able to keep up with the pace. While we’ll know for sure come Friday, but for the time being the Green Knights’ remain confident in this regard.

“I think our team speed is good and I don’t have an issue with it,” Coghlin said. “We’ve played some very, very good skating teams this year including the last two teams we saw. In particular I thought Gustavus Adolphus was an extremely strong skating team and that’s a group that made it all the way to the finals last year.”

The same can be said for the fact that Herb Brooks Arena features an Olympic-sized ice sheet.

“Part of the mystique of the bigger sheet is to just remember not to put yourself in bad spots and we’ve talked about that. Our guys are pretty comfortable with that and I don’t think it’s going to be an issue,” Coghlin said.

Everyone will know how all the unknowns will shake once the puck drops on Friday, but as of now, the Green Knights appear confident with what they will be bringing to Lake Placid.

“We try to talk about ourselves and do what we need to do and we’ve done a good job of that,” Coghlin said. “We’ve won 23 games this year for a reason; we’ve played in big games, and in tough road situations. We’re a battle tested group and I like what we bring to the table — we don’t seem to get too out of sorts.

“I like our demeanor right now, I like our intangibles right now, and I still think our best 60 is in front of us. With Oswego I’m always reminded of what a great group of young men they have there and what a storied program they have. It’s going to be a heck of a hockey game.”

This Week in ECAC Hockey: March 17, 2010

Let’s face it: Even though this is a pretty unusual quartet, Albany-wise, it’s not the first time we’ve seen them. If you want the nitty-gritty on each team, I recommend reading the past two columns … this is purely the final polish.

Go get ’em, boys.

No. 11 Brown

The bear went over the mountain to see what he could see. Last year, he decided to spend his hibernation on the valley floor.

This year, he climbed the next mountain, too.

“It’s a team that believes. We believe in what we’re doing, we believe in the progress we’ve made, we believe in each other, and that’s a pretty powerful thing when the guys have that sense of family,” said charismatic Brown coach Brendan Whittet. “There’s 29 guys in that room that all love each other, and don’t want to take off their jerseys, that’s for sure.

“We’re excited. It should be fun.”

Fun. That’s not a word that most teams use at this time of year … but maybe they should. As Whittet said, this team believes, and they are living, skating proof of one of the oldest sports truisms in the book: hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard.

That’s not to say that Rensselaer and Yale didn’t work hard. They just didn’t work hard enough.

“We got absolutely top-notch goaltending from Mike Clemente,” said Whittet, not only of the Yale series last weekend, but against RPI the week prior. “He was very good, but he was not the sole reason that we advanced past Yale. We played very, very good hockey in Game 1 and again in Game 3. We were good on the defensive side, we kept a lot of things to the outside, we were selfless in the respect that we sacrificed ourselves … to block pucks, to get in shot lanes, to deflect things out of harm’s way throughout the series, just like we did the weekend before at RPI.”

Hard-skating, hard-hitting, hard-working Bruno has a new opponent in Cornell on Friday, but it’s not a style the Bears are unaccustomed to: to many degrees, it is their own.

“It’ll be an interesting game because we play fairly similar styles,” described Brown’s coach. “Obviously, Cornell does it better, to a certain extent. We’re going to have to limit their Grade-A opportunities, we’re going to have to limit their power-play opportunities — they have an excellent power play — we’re going to have to play in their zone if we can, we’re going to have to get to Scrivens. Cornell does an unbelievable job on the defensive side, to shore things up and make sure shots are coming from the outside … there aren’t too many second or third opportunities against Cornell, but we’re going to have to create those opportunities. We’ll have to win battles in our zone and along the walls, because they’re very, very good possessing pucks and wearing you down, then attacking or drawing penalties when you’re tired.”

No matter what happens this weekend, Whittet is indescribably proud of this program in his first year at the helm. A former Brown Bears player himself, the energetic coach didn’t pause for one second when asked if this season was a success already.

“Yes. It’s more than the wins and losses; we were able to inject new life into a program that was broken, and make Brown hockey exciting again — exciting for alums, exciting for our team, exciting for the people associated with this university,” he said. “It’s a proud program, and it’s a program that’s going to win championships … and it may be this year.”

Brown is a known quantity on paper. It’s big, it plays hard, it hits often. It blocks shots (28 in Sunday’s series-clinching win over Yale alone), it has strong goaltending and a passionate coach. What can’t be defined or quantified is how bad it wants it, and how far it’s going to get it.

“We have to play physical, no matter who we play,” said Whittet. “We have to get in people’s grills … and we have to play with a swagger, because if we don’t, we’re in trouble. We’re in trouble. We’ll come out with a lot of pride, and we’ll come out with a chip on our shoulder.

“We’re the underdog, we relish that opportunity and that role, and we’ll go out and try to dispel what people believe about our program and the direction that we’re going. We’re on the upswing, we’re a proud university with a deep, deep winning tradition with Brown hockey. We’re on the way back.”

No. 5 St. Lawrence

Coach Joe Marsh said that last week’s series at fourth-seeded Colgate felt like the movie “Groundhog Day:” another spring, another series in Hamilton.

What he failed to realize is that his program’s late-season charge is in itself another edition of “here we go again.”

The Saints have won five of six, vanquishing archrival Clarkson and homestanding Colgate in the process. They’ve won relatively higher-scoring games (4-3 wins over Harvard and Colgate) as well as a number of tight ones (a 2-1 victory to open the Colgate series, and two 3-2 wins along the way as well). It’s not T.J. Trevelyan’s team anymore, but it’s still the same hard-fightin’ Saints.

“It was like ‘Groundhog Day,'” Marsh ironically repeated in this week’s interview. “I felt like Bill Murray when he wakes up and hears that Sonny and Cher song. But really, we were very fortunate, [Colgate was] a dangerous team. They were pretty even games. We just kept working, got some breaks; I don’t think there was anything really specific [that put us over]. The two teams were pretty evenly matched.”

In the semifinal, SLU takes on a team that’s had its number this year: Union. The Dutchmen haven’t exactly taken the Saints to the woodshed, but they did pin four goals on each of Marsh’s goaltenders in 4-3 and 4-2 wins.

“Playing Union, they’re a real good team, they’ve beat us twice. I’ve got tremendous respect for how they’ve done it, Nate Leaman was a real good choice [for coach of the year]; I know I voted for him. It’s not just for what they’ve done this year, but really what they’ve done in the last few years and how: They’ve had a very honest, systematic approach to developing good players and how they rebuilt their team. They’re like a lot of us smaller-market teams, where we all have to rebuild, and they’ve done a great job at it. I have a tremendous amount of respect for them. We know we’re going to have to bring our A-game, and it should be really exciting game.”

Marsh isn’t going to let St. Lawrence sit back and expect the past to carry it through to the title game. The Saints may have played in Albany in three of the last four springs, but this is a whole new year with a whole new opponent.

“They’re excited, they’re pumped to be there and it’s in their neighborhood,” Marsh warned.

Like most coaches at this point of the year — at least, those with healthy lineups — Marsh doesn’t foresee any big philosophical shifts in how the Saints play hockey from last weekend to this. It’s all about taking care of business, and working as hard as they always have, he said.

This year’s Saints have exhibited all the major characteristics of a traditionally successful St. Lawrence squad: dangerous and responsible talent up front, highly active and hard-skating defenders, and a viable netminder holding down the fort.

Unlike years past, this year’s team has fought uphill to Capital District. It’s not a favorite, it’s not an at-large contender … these Saints are flying under fire, and they’re approaching their target at high velocity.

No. 3 Union

The Dutch haven’t been this powerful since the War of Spanish Succession.

Union is in the midst of its best season in school history — literally, not just lyrically — and now laces up a mere 20 miles from Messa Rink in its biggest game ever.

Again, literally.

St. Lawrence looms for the Dutchmen, and even though UC has come out on top twice, Leaman remains wary of the foes from the North Country.

“I know that St. Lawrence is always a team that’s well-coached. They play with a lot of passion, a lot of energy, a lot of jump, and they don’t stop coming … so we know we’re going to have our hands full, without a doubt,” said Leaman, ECAC Hockey’s recently crowned coach of the year.

“I think they’re similar [to Quinnipiac]. Both teams are very good in transition, both teams have good team speed, both teams have a little bit younger defensive corps. I think the one difference for St. Lawrence is that they score so many goals from their defensemen. They use their defensemen well in their offense, all over the ice, so that will be an adjustment we’ll have to make going into this game.”

One of the obvious questions facing the Dutchmen is how the team will perform under completely novel circumstances. Not only have none of its current players ever been to the league championships before, but neither has the program itself.

Leaman isn’t sweating those points, though; experience is what teaches you how to play better hockey … not how to play better hockey in Albany.

“I don’t put a huge amount of stock into [experience], honestly,” he said. “Some of my experiences have been just the opposite way: When I was part of the University of Maine staff, we didn’t have a player that had ever played in the national tournament, and they won the national tournament that year. It’s funny, I was listening to the radio coming into work two days ago, and [legendary college basketball coach] Bobby Knight had mentioned the same thing. He mentioned that it’s about the players, and it’s not about the experience, and I tend to agree. I agree that it’s about the players that are playing the game. Every year it’s different teams. Different year, different team.”

The other focal point for Union-watchers is between the pipes. Keith Kinkaid is up for rookie and goaltender of the year honors, but it was actually junior Corey Milan who picked up each of the UC’s wins against Quinnipiac last weekend.

“He controls his rebounds really well. I think that’s the best thing about Keith and his adjustment to this level, is the fact that he does a tremendous job at controlling his rebounds, so a lot of the time he’s not being forced to make the second or third save. He’s a big body in there that has a good set of hands and is very athletic, so he’s got some great, great traits that go along with being an elite goaltender. He’s had a great freshman campaign,” praised his coach, who went on to describe some of his roster adjustments on Saturday.

“We basically wanted to get fresh guys in there. I put all of our extra forwards in the lineup and obviously started Corey [Milan in net]. One thing we feel about our team is, we feel we have a lot of depth. We wanted to use that depth in the series, we’ve been using that depth all season long, and the guys who stepped in played tremendously for us, including Corey.

“Looking at the weekend, both Keith and Corey played two games: Keith actually played more than Corey on the weekend, from one night’s game. The decision to go back to Corey was a lot about rest, Corey played extremely well [Saturday], so we just thought it was right to go back with him once again. That obviously worked out for us there.”

A lot has been working well for Union this season. Records have fallen, and a new bar has been set for future Dutchmen … but how high will it be? We’ll certainly know by Saturday night.

No. 2 Cornell

And without further ado, the Cornell Big Red. It’s only fitting that they’re the highest remaining seed, because even if Yale had made it through, the Red would still have been the true pedigree pooch of the lot.

Cornell was the last ECAC Hockey team to make the Frozen Four (2003). It has been the most successful team this decade, without much debate, and it represents generations of legendary Cornell hockey players every time it dons those classic jerseys.

But don’t get them wrong; that ain’t Joe Nieuwendyk taking the draws, and it’s not David LeNeveu tending the twine. This is a self-made Big Red team, led by a self-made coach … heck, Mike Schafer doesn’t even have a secretary.

What this team does have in common with its predecessors is size, strength and smarts. Cornell will herd you into a corner, have some of its 6-foot-3 sentinels beat the tar out of you, then transition the puck up ice to Blake Gallagher, Colin Greening or Riley Nash (to name the “usual suspects”) for a really pretty goal. It’s what they do.

That last bit though, about the scoring? That’s pretty new. Cornell’s always been known for its defense and goaltending, but this year’s team is adding a page to the Book of Red: scoring. The above-named trio combined for 44 goals in a 31-game season to date, which is also 44 percent of the team’s offense (99 overall goals).

Ben Scrivens is, as a senior, exactly what Ben Scrivens was hoped to be as a senior: simply great. He’s got a .933 save rate and a 1.89 goals-against average, not to mention five shutouts and eight more one-goal games. In his last four outings, Big Red opponents have scored once, once, once, and … none. That’s clutch ‘keeping right there.

There is no question that the Red will also pack the house this weekend, bringing the league’s largest fan base to the Times-Union Center once more. If there’s any part of this team that relies on its past, it’s the fans: Legions of Cornell students have swayed to “Hail Cornell” and jumped about to “Give My Regards to Davy;” it’s an inimitable facet of the Ithaca experience.

One team, one season, will never kill that kind of loyalty, nor can any one year elevate such devotion to something beyond … but boy, one year can resonate for a long, long time in the hearts of those who care. The Big Red have a lot of those hearts, and the power to make them beat in unison.

Annual Honors

Tim Taylor Award

On Monday, the league named Leaman the recipient of the Tim Taylor Award as coach of the year. Under his guidance, the Dutchmen finished with a program-record 20 overall wins, 12 conference victories and a .622 winning percentage. Picked sixth in both the coaches’ and media preseason polls, Union is instead the third seed and contends in the league’s final four for the first time in school history.

“It’s a good team award,” said a deferential Leaman. “You’re a good coach because you have good players and good staff around you. It’s a nice recognition for our team.”

Dryden Award Finalists

Union’s Kinkaid, Cornell’s Scrivens and Rensselaer’s Allen York have been named the three finalists for this year’s Ken Dryden Award for the league’s top goaltender. Freshman Kinkaid and sophomore York will probably be considered longshots against the senior Scrivens, who has been a Dryden contender for just about his entire Big Red career.

Player of the Year Finalists

Yale’s Sean Backman, Rensselaer’s Chase Polacek and Cornell’s Scrivens compose this year’s player of the year hat trick. Polacek led the league in points (50) and goals (26), and ranks third nationally in each category as well. Backman’s story is well-worn by now, and I have a hard time seeing voters look past their suspicions to pick him over either Scrivens or Polacek, who is likely the favorite in this race.

Rookie of the Year Finalists

Rensselaer’s Jerry D’Amigo, Union’s Kinkaid and Harvard’s Louis Leblanc are the three names in the hat for the honor. D’Amigo finished second in league scoring among rookies, notching seven goals and 17 assists, and tallied 34 points in 35 overall games. Leblanc led the Crimson in scoring with 23 points, and scored all 11 of his overall goals in league play. Leblanc also ranks sixth nationally in rookie goal-scoring, and was ECAC Hockey’s leader in that category.

Vermeulen Named Best Defensive Forward

Cornell’s Joe Scali, St. Lawrence’s Travis Vermeulen and Brown’s Aaron Volpatti were in the running for the award, but Vermeulen was ultimately named the winner on Wednesday afternoon. Vermeulen played the PK for the Saints, excelled in the faceoff circle and was called “the best defensive forward I have ever coached” by Marsh. The senior is currently second on the Saints with a plus-10 rating, and leads SLU in goals (17), assists (24) and points (41).

Defensive Defenseman Finalists

St. Lawrence’s Derek Keller, Cornell’s Justin Krueger and Union’s Mike Schreiber were named the league’s top contenders for this award in a traditionally defense-minded league. Keller was among the Saints’ top horses this year, eating up the ice time and leading both of SLU’s special-teams units. Krueger tied for the league lead in plus-minus, as the plus-14 blueliner supplemented that number with 18 points and countless blocked shots. Schreiber, arguably the league’s best offensive defenseman, nonetheless anchored a defense that ranks 15th in the nation (2.59 goals-against average) and supports a plus-.95 goal differential per game, 11th in the country.

NCAA Doomsday Scenario

With Alabama-Huntsville’s shocking win in the CHA tournament, the available spots in the NCAAs are now down to 14: UAH takes one, and CHA partner and one-time favorite Bemidji State will take another as an at-large team (as the Beavers are currently seventh in the PairWise Rankings).

Wait, did I say 14? I meant 13.

That’s because Atlantic Hockey’s ultimate champion — RIT is the prohibitive favorite, and is now playing in the semifinals — will take another of the NCAA bids, which cuts the number of open seeds down to unlucky 13.

Alaska currently occupies the 13th spot, but the Nanooks were bounced from the CCHA tourney last weekend, so they can only be jumped … they can’t drop on their own. Among teams currently outside the top 13 who are still in contention are Michigan, Vermont, Maine, Boston University, and all four remaining AHA participants. Top-13 teams who are no longer playing include aforementioned Bemidji State and Alaska, as well as Yale.

The Bulldogs probably thought they were safe in 10th, but now they’ll have to be feeling some heat. Chances are the Elis are safe, but I haven’t run all the possibilities yet.

What does this mean to our teams still skating? Union: win, nothing else will get you through. Same deal for St. Lawrence, and same goes for Brown, obviously. Cornell is in, though they might need one win out of the weekend to breathe a little easier about things.

No shortcuts this weekend, boys.

Readers’ Poll

Only Richter547 picked Brown over Yale in last week’s poll … but unfortunately for him/her, he/she also picked Quinnipiac and Colgate. Oops. SCONF correctly picked three of four again (with Brown of course being the fourth), as did Red Cloud; for some reason, none of the other five 75-percenters from last week voted, and Humanoid was only 1-for-4.

Therefore, it’s SCONF and Red Cloud for the championship, and This Week is still seeking its first perfect weekend. This week’s poll is a little tricky, so you’ll have to pay attention: pick Friday’s winners, then in accordance with your first picks, pick the championship and consolation games from the proper pairings. If you pick the wrong Saturday matchup(s) given your Friday picks, you’re a cheater.

This Week in the WCHA: March 17, 2010

Happy St. Patrick’s Day, everyone!

Lucky you, you get the last column of the year a day early due to the WCHA switching around its awards banquet. So, onward, and if of legal age, hope you’ve been enjoying being Irish today.

Around the WCHA

As the season has ended, we’ve already seen two players sign with professional teams. Anchorage’s Trevor Hunt, a senior, signed an amateur tryout agreement with the ECHL’s Stockton Thunder (for five games), while Minnesota’s Jordan Schroeder, a sophomore, signed with the Vancouver Canucks, forgoing his eligibility.

DU: Although the league’s awards banquet is Thursday afternoon, the Pioneers have already claimed two of the many accolades they’re expected to bring in. Rhett Rakhshani became the first Pioneers player since Paul Stastny in 2006 to capture the WCHA scoring title, and Marc Cheverie won the league goaltending title, the first since Wade Dubielewicz in 2002.

UND: The Sioux will be without forward Matt Frattin for Thursday’s game with Minnesota-Duluth. Frattin, who returned to the Sioux team in January after being dismissed last summer, was suspended by the league for his hit on Minnesota’s Kevin Wehrs Sunday night.

This year is also the second time UND has been the fourth seed heading into the Final Five. The last time the team was a four seed was in 2003, when it lost to the Bulldogs in the quarterfinals.

Final Five Preview

All top seeds advanced for the technical best of the best of the league in St. Paul.

No. 1 Denver

First Playing: The winner of North Dakota/Minnesota-Duluth

Who to Watch: G Cheverie, F Rakhshani, F Tyler Ruegsegger, F Joe Colborne, D Patrick Wiercioch

In Depth: As mentioned last week, the Pioneers were the unanimous No. 1 pick to win the league and they accomplished that. The next item on the team’s proverbial to do list was to make the Final Five, and it accomplished that as well, sweeping Michigan Tech.

Up until last year, every time Denver made it to the X, it had won the tournament … until it ran into the buzz saw that was Minnesota-Duluth. As a result, even though the team has had success in the building, it’s got a bit of a chip on its shoulder this year.

“We’ve got a lousy taste in our mouth after last year’s championship game, there’s no question,” said coach George Gwozdecky. “That’s our most recent experience and it was an experience that we gave a lot of credit to our opponent, Minnesota-Duluth, for a great championship run.”

That being said, of course, Gwozdecky knows the experience of success his team has had will help.

“I think any time, the more experience you have in a venue, the more experience you have in a tournament, the more comfortable you feel in it,” he said. “Like any team in our league, it’s a tournament you want to play in as much as possible.”

Even though the Pioneers’ success might indicate comfort in the building, they still came into St. Paul not knowing their opponent. However, Gwozdecky is confident, knowing that his team has the keys to success — namely, goaltending.

“You might suggest that you change the name of the game from hockey to goaltending because goaltending is the name of the game,” he said. “It has been for us this year as it has been for many teams and the success of your team, no matter how strong you are offensively or how strong you are defensively as far as skaters are concerned, it’s the goaltender who really makes the difference.

“Obviously, Marc Cheverie has made a huge difference for us and has helped us stay close in games we’re not playing very well in, has at times stolen games for us and has really given us a sense of confidence as a team.”

No. 2 Wisconsin

First Playing: St. Cloud State

Who to Watch: F Michael Davies, F Blake Geoffrion, F Derek Stepan, D Brendan Smith, D Ryan McDonagh

In Depth: After a successful year and the subsequent dispatching of Alaska-Anchorage, the Badgers are back in the Final Five. This year’s opponent is St. Cloud State, a team they’ve had a little trouble with this season.

“We lost both Friday games to St. Cloud and responded,” said coach Mike Eaves. “We did some good things but ended up losing the opening games; we don’t have that luxury of responding on Saturday night. We’ve got to come out big on the Friday [afternoon]. I think both teams know they can beat each other and it comes down to one game and the team that’s the crisper, sharper team right away.”

Eaves has faith that his team can be the crisper team, thanks in part to its’ senior leadership. Eaves has the most upperclassmen since UW’s 2006 national championship season.

“We look at our team and I think a couple of big reasons why we’re going [to St. Paul] is the fact we’re an upperclassmen team,” he said. “Having a guy like Blake Geoffrion lead us as a forward up front, to give us that leadership as well as a high level of play is huge and having a junior defenseman like Brendan Smith step up.”

Eaves will also need other players to step up, but most importantly, he wants them to play their game the best way they can.

“The best way for our kids to play the game is shift by shift, the best way you know how and keeping it as simple as you can,” he said. “Because, you start thinking about the future and what could happen and what might happen, you’re playing with fear in your heart and you can’t do that. So, shift by shift, play the best way you know how and leave it all on the ice.”

No. 3 St. Cloud State

First Playing: Wisconsin

Who to Watch: F Garrett Roe, F Ryan Lasch, D Garrett Raboin

In Depth: The Huskies gained success this season by being a consistent team, but they came very close to missing the Final Five for the second year in a row. It took all season for the Huskies to face Minnesota State, but then the two teams played five games in nine days, with each team going 2-2-1.

The difference was that the Huskies ended up winning the last two to make it to St. Paul, thanks in part to their top players.

“The big thing there is our captain, Garrett Raboin,” Huskies coach Bob Motzko said. “He’s been playing a little banged up right now; it’s no secret, and he just gutted through three games and got the tying goal and he’s doing it all on will and determination right now and by all accounts, he should be resting right now.”

Motzko also mentioned his bread and butter on offense. “Garrett Roe and Ryan Lasch, they’ve been back on top of their game since Christmas and been back on top this same time,” he said.

While he’s had his go-to skaters, Motzko has switched back and forth between his goaltenders.

“We’re in a good situation right now in how our season has went and both guys have helped get us to this situation and both Dan [Dunn] and Mike [Lee] have beat Wisconsin this year,” he said. “We had a little hot hand here this last weekend in Mike Lee and we’re still pondering the situation.

“We’re in a very good situation as we move forward and we’ve got two goalies that have helped get us to this spot and they’ve helped each other become better goaltenders.”

No. 4 North Dakota

First Playing: Minnesota-Duluth

Who to Watch: G Brad Eidsness, F Chris VandeVelde, F Jason Gregoire, F Danny Kristo, D Jake Marto

In Depth: If there has been one team this season that has overcome a lot of adversity and came out successful, it has been the Fighting Sioux.

If there’s been a reason for it, it’s because the team has never stopped learning.

“Our regular season, you could probably sum it up and say it was a lot like the playoff series we just came through: It’s a learning experience, it’s a developmental experience for our team, we have few seniors in the line-up [and] we’re a young team in terms of class structure,” said coach Dave Hakstol.

“You never want to go to a Game 3 when you win the first game of a three-game series, but for us, I thought it was a great experience for our team to go through this last weekend, the challenge of having everything on the line, one game on Sunday and learning to prepare for that and finding a way to meet that challenge on Sunday night was a great experience for our team,” said Hakstol, expanding on his team’s playoff series against Minnesota. “I think that’ll be much of the same going into the Final Five.”

As much as the regular season has been a learning experience for the Sioux, Hakstol also knows that the regular season doesn’t necessarily matter when it comes to the playoffs. Case in point is his team’s opponent on Thursday night in Minnesota-Duluth, a team against which his squad won the season series, 3-1.

“I throw the regular season out. I know how good Minnesota-Duluth is, I know how competitive the individuals on their roster are, so the regular season doesn’t mean a whole lot, whether we’ve had success or not had success over a team,” he said. “It’s a focus on one game. So much during the regular season as well as potentially the playoffs is how well a team is playing when you run into them.

“Other than the experience of knowing how they play and knowing some of the individual tendencies, maybe, I really take the records and throw them out the window and know there’s a clean slate going into Thursday night’s game.”

No. 5 Minnesota-Duluth

First Playing: North Dakota

Who to Watch: F Jack Connolly, F Justin Fontaine, F Mike Connolly, D Brady Lamb

In Depth: The Bulldogs made Final Five history last year as the first team to win three games in a row to win the Broadmoor Trophy. After a season that started well before slipping a bit after Christmas, the team may need to find that magic again to defend its title.

“We’ve got certainly a big challenge ahead of us to play [North Dakota] Thursday to continue playing,” said coach Scott Sandelin. “We expect to go in there and play 60 minutes as best we can and see what happens.”

Though his opponent’s season has had a different trajectory, Sandelin agrees with Hakstol that his team’s success will come as a result of their season’s education.

“This league, you learn. There’s no easy nights and you go through ups and downs and it’s kind of how you respond and our guys have really battled back when things have maybe looked a little bleaker,” he said. “Bottom line is, as long as they believe in each other, we’ll be fine and I think they’ve proven that through the course of the year and we’ll have to do that here in the playoffs.”

Future WCHA Team Watch

Bemidji State lost to Niagara and then tied Robert Morris to finish out the CHA tournament last week. The Beavers are off this week and await who they’ll play in the NCAA tournament as an at-large team. Nebraska-Omaha, on the other hand, was swept by Ferris State and is most likely done for the season. See you next year, Mavericks.

No. 8 BSU: 23-9-4 overall, 4-4-0 vs. WCHA
UNO: 20-16-6 overall, 2-2-1 vs. WCHA

The addition of these teams will change the format of the Final Five next season, the details of which we’ll find out on Saturday.

Dear Hockey Season …

Earlier this season, I wrote that I wasn’t ready for you at the start.

That changed, obviously, and we ended up settling into our old familiar rhythm.

By the end, however, I’ve lost a bit of focus. I forgot how much you took out of me. Maybe I need to learn how to balance you better with triathlon training and work and family and friends. After all, I had a few more things on my plate this year.

As a result, hockey season, this will be our last hurrah. The end of the WCHA’s season this year will be the end of mine. This summer, I’ll work on balance so I can be ready for you come October. What happened this year won’t happen next year.

Farewell for now, hockey. Enjoy the NCAAs, the Frozen Four and the offseason. I’ll see you in the fall.

Love,

T

Latest Stories from around USCHO