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D-III Bracketology, Version 2.0

As Selection Sunday approaches, it’s time for version 2.0 of Division III Bracketology. We’ll do one again on Sunday prior to the NCAA announcement, and then a “what the heck happened) postmortem.

Again this week, the NCAA has produced rankings based on the process it will use to select the Division III field. Using those rankings, let’s look at each eligible team’s chances of making the tournament.

To recap: eleven teams will get their tickets punched: 7 Pool A teams, 1 Pool B Team, and 3 Pool C teams. Pool A consists of the seven teams that will win playoff championships in leagues with an automatic qualifier: ECAC East, ECAC Northeast, NCHA, NESCAC, MCHA, MIAC, and SUNYAC. One Pool B slot is reserved for an independent team or team from a conference that does not have an AQ: ECAC West and MASCAC. Pool C bids will be handed out to the highest remaining teams according to the NCAA rankings.

The rub here is that there are East and West rankings, but not a combined one. So when the rubber hits the road, the committee will be combining the separate rankings on Selection Sunday.

Here’s my guess as to where the teams still in the running stand:

A lock : Oswego, Norwich, St. Norbert . These teams all won again last weekend and can also grab their conference’s autobids if they win out this weekend.

Bet On It: Plattsburgh, Middlebury. These teams fare well in most head-to-head matchups with other contenders. The only way they don’t get in is massive upsets in the conference chanpionships.

Good Chance: Elmira, Gustavus Adolphus: Elmira is in the lead for the Pool B slot right now, but that could change – Manhattanville could jump over Elmira based on the results of the ECAC West championship. Even though it lost the MIAC title game, I still can’t see Gustavus falling behind St. Scholastica in the rankings. But it all comes down to how the committee weighs the criteria, and if UW-River Falls wins the NCHA. That would knock out the Gusties, unless there’s a 6-5 split.

On the Bubble: St. Scholastica , Bowdoin, Manhattanville: Gustavus’ loss really hurts St. Scholastica. Bowdoin needs to either win the NESCAC or have Middlebury win it. Manhattanville has to beat Elmira in the ECAC West title game.

Probably Not: Amherst, Williams, Hamline: Just too many teams ahead of them.

Must Win Their AQ: Trinity, UW-River Falls, Babson, New England, Skidmore, Lawrence, Lake Forest, Curry, Johnson & Wales.

Playing Out the String: These teams are from conferences that don’t have an AQ, so even if they win their league championship, it won’t raise them high enough in the criteria to get an at-large bid. At this point, there’s just the two teams contending for the MASCAC title: Salem State and Fitchburg State.

Thank you Seniors: These teams have concluded their seasons: Utica, Lebabon Valley (forever?), Bethel, Concordia (MN), St. John’s, St. Mary’s, Finlandia, Concordia (WI), UW-Stout, UW-Eau Claire, UW-Superior, Conn College, Wesleyan, Geneseo, Potsdam, Cortland, Buffalo State, Castleton, S. Maine, Mass-Boston U of New England, Neumann (so a new champion this season), Hobart, Wentworth (big upset loss to Johnson & Wales), Suffolk, Becker, Nichols, W. New England, Salve Regina, Westfield State, Worcester State, Framingham State, Gustavus Adolphus, Augsburg, Bethel, St. Olaf, MSOE, Northland, UW-Stevens Point, Morrisville, Fredonia, Brockport.

OK, so let’s take a shot at a possible bracket, assuming the higher seeded team wins its respective league:

ECAC East: Norwich

ECAC Northeast: Curry

MCHA: Adrian

MIAC: St. Thomas (already a winner)

NCHA: St. Norbert

NESCAC: Bowdoin

SUNYAC: Oswego

Going into the ECAC West semifinals, Elmira gets pool B. Who gets the three Pool C bids? Right now I think it’s Plattsburgh, Middlebury, and Gustavus Adolphus, which would mean a 7-4 East-West split. Upsets in the East will make it 8-3. River Falls winning the NCHA will doom Gustavus Adolphus.

Assuming 7-4: would give us:

E1: Norwich

E2: Oswego

E3: Middlebury

E4: Plattsburgh

E5: Bowdoin

E6: Elmira

E7: Curry

W1: St. Norbert

W2: Gustavus Adolphus

W3: Adrian

W4: St. Thomas

First Round:

Curry at Oswego

Elmira at Middlebury

Bowdoin at Plattsburgh

Semifinals:

Bowdoin/Plattsburgh at Norwich

Elmira/Middlebury at Oswego

St. Thomas at St. Norbert

Adrian at Gustavus Adolphus

Assuming 8-3 with an upset in the East:

E1: Norwich

E2: Oswego

E3: Middlebury

E4: Plattsburgh

E5: Bowdoin

E6: Elmira

E7: Curry (or Trinity/Amherst/Williams/Hamilton)

E8: Babson/New England/Skidmore/Johnson & Wales

W1: St. Norbert

W2: Adrian

W3: St. Thomas

First Round:

St. Thomas at Adrian

E8 at Bowdoin

E7 at Elmira

Quarterfinals:

St. Thomas/Adrian at St. Norbert

Bowdoin/E8 at Oswego

Elmira/E7 at Norwich

Plattsburgh at Middlebury

And for fun, let’s say River Falls wins the NCHA and Gustavus gets a Pool C. That would give us a potential 6-5 split:

E1: Norwich

E2: Oswego

E3: Middlebury

E4: Plattsburgh

E5: Elmira

E6: Curry

W1: St. Norbert

W2: Gustavus Adolphus

W3: Adrian

W4: UW-River Falls

W5: St. Thomas

First Round:

St. Thomas at UW-River Falls

Curry at Middlebury

Elmira at Plattsburgh

Quarterfinals:

St. Thomas/River Falls at St. Norbert

Adrian at Gustavus Adolphus

Middlebury/Curry at Oswego

Plattsburgh/Elmira at Norwich

Tune back in Sunday afternoon for the final pre-selection version of Bracketology.

This Week in D-I Women’s Hockey: March 5, 2010

Not-So-Instant Classic

You didn’t miss that epic overtime game played last Sunday, did you?

No, not the one that Sidney Crosby ended barely eight minutes into extra time. We refer, of course, to the mammoth endurance test between RPI and Quinnipiac in the ECAC quarterfinals, the one settled by the Engineers’ Laura Gersten early in the fifth overtime period.

That’s right, friends. Five OT’s.

Gersten’s lazer into the upper corner past Quinnipiac goalie Victoria Vigilanti spanned 144:32 of game time, wore on for 5:13 of real time, and pushed RPI into a semifinal meeting with league champions Cornell.

All in one blurry instant.

“I didn’t remember what happened,” said Gersten, “until we saw the video. People were asking me how I got the puck, and I had no idea. I just remember seeing it go in, and finding the first teammate I could (to embrace).”

Coming as it did in the rubber match of a best-of-three series, Gersten’s goal served to keep RPI’s season alive while at the same time finishing off the Bobcats.

The previous two games had also been nailbiters, with the “Q” prevailing in double-overtime in Game 1, while RPI’ s Sonja van der Bliek outdueled Vigilanti in a 1-0 thriller on Saturday.

“It was a do-or-die game,” Gersten said. “You had to make up your mind that you were going to keep going. We were all doing that. It was just a great game to be a part of. Both for us and for Quinnipiac.”

Gersten said that the longer the game trudged on, the giddier everyone became.

“Between periods, we were saying we’d buy ice cream for whoever scored,” she said. “We’d say ‘let’s play musical chairs. I’m sick of sitting next to the same person all the time.’ We were just laughing. We didn’t even turn music on. We were too tired.

“I don’t know if we were delusional, or just tired.”

The longer the stalemate held, the more historic matters became. As the ice chips fell, so, too, did the old marks for the longest NCAA games played by either gender.

A sense of history had begun to settle in.

“After about the third overtime,” Gersten said, “some of us said, ‘this has got to be getting up there. We knew that our (double-overtime) Princeton game last year was about sixth (longest). It was definitely talked about.”

Even so, when Gersten scored, the game fell 1:03 short of the all-time endurance test, a pre-NCAA affair between between Providence College and UNH for the ECAC title back in 1996.

Somehow, the Engineers didn’t mind missing out on that one. They’d had enough of a taste of history to last them the rest of their lives.

Gersten said that what she expects to recall most vividly is not the winning goal, or the fatigue, or the tension.

It will be sharing the whole experience with her teammates.

“I’ll probably remember the locker room, the most,” she said. “More so than even the game. The girls. Getting to share that moment with 20 or so girls was just amazing. I think I’ll be telling my kids, or whoever, about the atmosphere in the locker room. How funny it was. It was just a great hockey moment for all of us.”

Changing of the Guard

Could we be witnessing a sea change in the WCHA? Seeing defending national champs Wisconsin fail to get past the league quarterfinals might be one indicator. Another possible sign came Thursday, when the league’s Player of the Year award was handed down, and it was split two ways.

And neither player came from the so-called Big Three schools (Wisconsin, Minnesota, Minnesota-Duluth) which have dominated the league (and the NCAA for that matter) since the inception.

The honorees are forward Felicia Nelson of St. Cloud and Bemidji goalie Zuzana Tomcikova. Oddly enough, Tomcikova did not win the league’s Goalie of the Year honors. That, instead, went to Minnesota freshman Noora Raty.

This Week in D-III Women’s Hockey: March 5, 2010

Championship Weekend

After months of practice and games, we’ve finally reached championship weekend. All five conferences will decide their tournament champions this weekend. Each conference has four teams remaining, except for the MIAC.

The MIAC has had a busy week as they were the last conference to wrap up its regular season last weekend and now, they’ll be the first conference to crown a tournament champion on Saturday when Gustavus Adolphus hosts St. Catherine.

The story line for this game is what movies are made for. St. Catherine’s season has been one of the best, if not the best story in D-III women’s hockey this year. The Wildcats (18-4-2) have had just one winning season in the program’s 12-year history, coming in 2001 when they won 15 games.

St. Catherine is just three years removed from going winless in the 2006-2007 season. The Wildcats’ coach Brad Marshall is in his fifth season at the helm of the program and guided the team from winning one game in his first two years, to the MIAC Championship.

Standing in St. Catherine’s way though, is the MIAC’s perennial powerhouse, Gustavus Adolphus.

The Gusties have won six straight MIAC tournament titles and have beaten St. Thomas in every championship game. St. Thomas was the last team other than Gustavus Adolphus to win the MIAC championship in 2003. Saturday will also mark the first time since 2002 that Gustavus Adolphus and St. Thomas will not meet in the title game. St. Mary’s topped Gustavus Adolphus that season, before the Gusties got retribution in the NCAA first round game to advance to the D-III Women’s Ice Hockey Championships in Elmira.

The two teams split their season series at the end of January with each team winning a game on the other’s home ice.

Gustavus Adolphus hasn’t lost since that 2-1 loss against St. Catherine on Jan. 29, winning 11 games in a row. What might be more impressive is the Gusties haven’t surrendered a goal in their last four games.

Sophomore goaltender Danielle Justice has been in goal for all four games as well after splitting the goaltending duties with Emily Klatt up until that point. She hasn’t given up a goal in 205 minutes and 52 seconds. She missed 34 minutes in the Augsburg series after being pulled to get Klatt some time.

MIAC Champion Pick

The sentimental pick is certainly St. Catherine and from that aspect and the quality of the story, it’d be great to see the Wildcats win. However, Gustavus Adolphus just doesn’t lose in these games and I’ll take the Gusties for the MIAC crown 1-0, while Justice continues her shutout streak.

The NCHA will also crown its champion on Saturday night after tonight’s semifinal matchups are decided.

Wis.- Superior will be looking to end the other storybook season in D-III women’s hockey this season in Lake Forest. Much like St. Catherine, the Forresters (19-2-4) have been on the backburner when it comes to women’s hockey. Their previous season-high win total came in 2003 when they won 14 games.

Carisa Zaban has been at the helm of the program for five years now and after four straight seasons of 11 and 12 wins, Lake Forest has finally broken through this year behind the emergence of Kim Herring.

The sophomore forward leads the country with 53 points. Her 28 goals and 25 assists, as well as nine game-winning and nine power play goals rank among the country’s elite in every category.

In the other semifinal, defending O’Brien Cup champion Wis. River Falls (18-3-6) has quietly gone unbeaten since Jan. 12, when they lost 2-1 to Gustavus Adolphus. Since then, they’ve reeled off a 16-game unbeaten streak (12-0-4), including two ties with Lake Forest.

The Falcons will meet Adrian, who is eligible for the NCHA postseason for the first time this year and the Bulldogs have been giving their conference foes fits.

Adrian was the only team to beat every NCHA team this season. They split with River Falls in early December with the Falcons taking Saturday’s game 4-2 and the Bulldogs winning the follow-up game 3-2.

NCHA Champion Pick

In January, I picked River Falls to come back and win. I’m sticking with that pick because of their playoff experience and run the NCAA semifinals last season. It’ll be a tough road though trying to knock off Adrian and then either Lake Forest or Superior on short rest. I like the Falcons’ goaltending duo though and coach Cranston will be able to split them if he chooses.

In the East, all three tournament championships will be decided on Sunday.

Plattsburgh hosts the ECAC West tournament after a one-year absence. The Cardinals have a 17-game unbeaten streak with their last loss coming to Amherst on Jan. 3. Plattsburgh is the heavy favorites to win the ECAC West after impressively sweeping both Elmira and RIT this season.

Plattsburgh hasn’t given up more than three goals this season and they’ve only allowed three goals, four times.

Steph Moberg and Megan DiJulio have emerged as stars this season in the wake of the Cardinals losing their 2009 senior class that include Danielle Blanchard.

The Cardinals will face the only team that gave them a blemish in conference play this season in the Utica Pioneers. Utica has always been a thorn in the Cardinals’ side and Plattsburgh may not have it as easy as you would think after looking at the game on paper.

Elmira and RIT will face-off in the second semifinal with big NCAA playoff implications on the line. RIT will surely be eliminated from all NCAA at-large consideration with a loss. Elmira has a little bit more breathing room, but would definitely take a big hit if they lost in the conference semis as RIT found out last year after going into the ECAC West Tournament with one of the best resumes.

However, the Tigers got beat soundly by Plattsburgh, 7-3 in the semifinals and were left out of the NCAA Tournament in favor of Amherst and Plattsburgh garnering the at-large bids. RIT hasn’t beaten Elmira since Dec. 1, 2007. Elmira is 4-0-2 against the Tigers since then.

ECAC West Champion Pick

Plattsburgh. The Cardinals don’t need the automatic bid nearly as much as RIT, Elmira, and Utica. However, they have been impressive this season recovering from the loss of their senior class last season. Home ice and conference coach of the year on its bench, Plattsburgh is the pick. But, it wouldn’t shock me if RIT or Elmira won either.

Manhattanville hosts the ECAC East Tournament this weekend at the Playland Ice Casino in Rye, N.Y. The Valiants have re-emerged as a national power this season after falling in the conference semifinals last season.

Manhattanville has rallied around the play of its freshmen class led by Katie Little’s 41 points. The Valiants will face New England College, who has played them tight in both games so far this season. The two teams tied on Jan. 15, 1-1 and then Manhattanville topped NEC 2-0 on Feb. 20 to close out the regular season.

Norwich and UMass-Boston meet in the second semifinal. The Cadets have been a bit of a disappointment so far this season, after I had and many others had made them the trendy pick to make it to the final four this year. However, the Cadets have struggled to put together any sort of streak after starting the season 7-0.

They’ve gone 9-5-5 in their 19 games since. Granted, the Cadets have faced some tough competition. But, losing 7-2 and 7-0 to Manhattanville and 7-2 to Plattsburgh have been surprises.

Norwich will have plenty to prove this weekend and they will try to avenge a 2-1 loss to UMass-Boston from earlier in the season to make to the finals.

ECAC East Champion Pick

This more than likely will raise a few eye brows but I’m going with Norwich. I picked the Cadets at the beginning of the season and in January and I’ve got a feeling they’ll work out the kinks this weekend and take the conference title for the second straight year.

The only conference tougher to figure out then the NESCAC this year was the NCHA. Amherst, Trinity, and Middlebury are certainly the favorites but every one of them hit bumps in the road this season when they lost or tied to teams lower than them in the conference.

Amherst hosts the conference tournament again this season and will try to claim their third NESCAC Tournament title in the last four years.

Middlebury topped the Lady Jeffs in last year’s conference championship and will need to win the tournament in order to make the NCAA tournament this season.

The Panthers are the only program that has qualified for every NCAA Tournament since the NCAA started sanctioning a D-III tournament in the 2001-2002 season.

They’ll face a tall order to keep that streak alive though as they’ll have to get by Trinity and Isabel Iwachiw in the semifinals.

The Bantams have made the jump to among the nation’s elite this season after a few seasons of hovering right on the edge.

Trinity (20-3-2) is in the discussion for a Pool C bid, but the Bantams can erase all doubt by winning their first NESCAC title.

In the other semifinal, Amherst will face Bowdoin. The Lady Jeffs swept the season series winning 3-2 and 5-0 earlier this year. The Polar Bears have shown improvement this season after two down seasons in 2008 and 2009. Bowdoin plummeted in 2008 to just five wins after six straight seasons of 17 or more wins.

NESCAC Champion Pick

The NESCAC is a toss-up this season between the top three teams. Draw a name out of a hat and you’ll have as good of a chance as any in picking the winner. Amherst has the defense, Trinity has the goaltending, and Middlebury has the conference’s best player. Records say Amherst, the sentimental pick is Trinity, and history says Middlebury.

Wouldn’t it be something if Bowdoin shocked the D-III hockey world? Alas, my pick is Amherst. Their six defensemen are incredible and give the Lady Jeffs a huge advantage every game.

The conference call will take place on Sunday night after all the games have been completed. However, the public won’t find out the results until the NCAA’s online selection show at 10 a.m. on Monday morning. Tune into www.ncaa.com to watch the selection show and found out who is in, who is out, and most importantly, where the 2010 Division III Women’s Ice Hockey Championships will be hosted.

MIAC Awards

Player of the Year: Michaela Michaelson, St. Catherine
Rookie of the Year: Lindsey Hjelm, Gustavus Adolphus
Coach of the Year: Brad Marshall, St. Catherine

F.Michaela Michaelson, St. Catherine
F.Katelyn Dold, Concordia-Moorhead
F.Lauren Tomford, St. Olaf
D.Kirstin Peterson, Gustavus Adolphus
D.Jenny Schnaible, St. Thomas
G.Danielle Justice, Gustavus Adolphus

This Week in the CCHA: March 4, 2010

The Photo Finish

Going into the last weekend of regular-season CCHA play, we knew several things. Miami had taken the regular-season title. Neither Bowling Green nor Western Michigan could move much. There was a lot of real estate, however, that was yet to be claimed.

With the regular-season wrapped up and the first round of the Girl Reporter hardware behind us, it’s time to reflect a little bit more esoterically heading into this weekend’s first round of CCHA playoffs.

They’ve Got This Second-Half Act Thing Down

Northern Michigan finished fourth in the league this season, one point behind Ferris State, three points ahead of Alaska — and nothing short of miraculous, again.

The Wildcats finished with a record of 13-9-6-3 in league play (the last number is for shootout wins, which may be confusing to the two or three non-CCHA fans who have stumbled into this page); their second-half CCHA record was 8-3-3-3. That means that 30 of their 48 league points came since Jan. 1.

After shutting out Lake Superior State 3-0 Saturday to secure fourth place, NMU head coach Walt Kyle told the Marquette Mining Journal that the team was not only playing for the first-round bye, but for a shot at the NCAA tournament as well.

“We’ve quietly crept into the NCAA picture,” said Kyle. Kyle makes no secret of what motivates him down the stretch; his mind is ever on the NCAA tournament, and that has to explain why NMU has the ability to finish strong — even after really shaky first halves.

Last year, NMU finished sixth in the standings after a first half that saw just two of the Wildcats’ 11 CCHA wins. Northern beat MSU in the first round of league playoffs, bested Miami in three games on the road and lost a heartbreaking 2-1 game to Notre Dame in Joe Louis Arena, with the game-winning goal coming for the Irish at the 19-minute mark in the third, the 36th shot that goatlender Brian Stewart faced in that game.

In 2007-08, the Wildcats finished sixth with a 12-13-3 CCHA record after beginning the season with seven straight conference losses. In that year, they beat Ohio State at home in the first round of the playoffs and then eliminated the defending national champions, Michigan State, in three road games in the second round to make it to Detroit — where they lost a heartbreaking semifinal game, a 6-4 decision to Michigan in which the game-winner came at 16:00 in the third, the empty-netter at 19:48, with a 36-save performance from Stewart.

In 2006-07, they didn’t advance to Joe Louis Arena — the only they haven’t done so to date under Kyle’s direction — but they did beat Ohio State on the road in three games in the first round of the playoffs before bowing out in the second round against Michigan. Stewart was the hero of the OSU games, too.

In 2005-06, eight of their 14 league wins came in the second half; in 2004-05, it was 10 of 17; in 2003-04, seven of 13; in 2002-03, six of 14 — but that was Kyle’s first season.

Obviously, Kyle is a force to be reckoned with. He preaches the NCAA tournament as a goal all season long, and has team has striven to fulfill that goal every single year he’s been at the helm. It doesn’t hurt that Stewart is a playoff goaltender, either.

And it certainly doesn’t hurt having the CCHA scoring champ to help front the team. Congratulations to junior Mark Olver, who scored both of the Wildcats’ goals in NMU’s 2-1 overtime win against LSSU Friday and assisted on all three NMU goals Saturday. Olver is the first Wildcat to win the league scoring title since Jeff Pyle did it in 1980-81.

Mere Mortals, After All

The Wolverines finished seventh. Seventh place. To say that I’m stunned by this doesn’t go far enough. I mean, it shakes me to my core. Michigan, finishing seventh? Next, will you be telling me that an American men’s bobsledding team can capture a gold medal, or that an earthquake in Chile can actually shift Earth’s axis enough to affect the length of a day?

OK, so it’s not as bad as all that. I learned at an early age that my parents used the same wrapping paper as the Clauses, so I’m not much of a believer in things magical. But there has been a kind of magic in Ann Arbor, an ability that head coach Red Berenson seems to have had to will his team to win.

Since the 1990-91 season, the Wolverines have made 19 consecutive NCAA tournament appearances and have finished lower than second place (or a tie for second place) in the CCHA once, when they ended the 2005-06 season in third place. Michigan has made 10 Frozen Four appearances under Berenson, including a streak of four from 1994 to 1998 that resulted in two national championships; UM has three total NCAA titles under Berenson.

This year, however, they’re merely mortal. In the first half, they struggled both offensively and in net. When junior goaltender Bryan Hogan settled down toward the end of the first half of the season and began playing steadily in the second half, the team in front of him didn’t. You’d think that having a more consistent netminder would produce a more confident product out front, but the Wolverines never seemed to knit this season, even after increasing their offensive output after December.

“We’re playing pretty well, but we’re not on a roll,” Berenson told The Detroit News this week.

Further jeopardizing UM’s chances to advance in these playoffs — or even to escape the first round this weekend at home against LSSU — is that Hogan is injured. He came out of Michigan’s 4-0 shutout Thursday win over Notre Dame (Feb. 25) at the 10:49 mark of the first period, apparently with a groin injury. Junior Shawn Hunwick finished that game and registered the 5-3 loss to the Irish in South Bend Saturday. Hogan is questionable for this weekend.

A League of One

There’s no question that Miami hockey has dynasty potential. A few more years of strong NCAA tournament performance and a national championship will cement that.

I was among the doubters early in the season. I didn’t vote the RedHawks first in my preseason poll … but, really, no one did. After their collapse in the final moments of regulation in last year’s NCAA championship game — and that gut-wrenching overtime loss to Boston University — I didn’t know how they’d react this year. They were an unknown quantity.

Miami has exhibited second-half uncertainty in recent, letting down at key times as the season came to a close. Even last year, the RedHawks missed the CCHA tournament in Detroit after losing at home to NMU in the second round of league playoffs.

The ‘Hawks also did the same thing in 2006-07, backing into the NCAA tournament after losing their home playoff series against LSSU.

Now I think I’ve learned something: Miami’s second-half swan dive has come later and later, last year (unfortunately) occurring at the last possible moment. Perhaps this year, no letdown at all.

Miami has achieved this status by recruiting quality players in every position. The RedHawks have incredible depth. They’re speedy. They’re as skilled as anyone playing the game. They’re well coached. Enrico Blasi preaches a steadiness in Oxford that has certainly translated into wins this season. The “Brotherhood,” as the program calls itself, is tight.

If chemistry counts, Miami wins.

Other End-of-Season Musings

• I still can’t figure out why Western Michigan announced Jim Culhane’s fate weeks before the end of the regular season. Do they think there will be some sort of rush for head coaching talent, a spate of firings that will make the pickings slimmer? I don’t get it. I don’t see what they stand to gain. And I can’t imagine how difficult these last few weeks have been for Culhane knowing that everyone knows they’re his last.

• Many people have asked whether this is John Markell’s last season at Ohio State. I have no idea. It’s the last year of his contract, so that ramps the speculation. I’ve known Markell a long time and will repeat that I hate to see any coach lose his job because I know of such a move’s ripple effect. Full disclosure: I’m genuinely fond of his assistant coaches, having known them since they were toddlers. (Well, not really, but it feels that way).

I do know this. If Markell is let go, Ohio State needs to bring in a guy who will force the university to build the Buckeyes a rink of their own. This weekend, having earned home ice, OSU plays in the Ice Arena with its capacity of 1,415. Every year they’re home for the playoffs, the Buckeyes are bumped out of Value City Arena because of that facility’s commitment to other paying customers. Can you imagine what would happen if men’s or women’s basketball were told they couldn’t play their playoff series in the Schott?

• I know the Fighting Irish were injured this year, but that doesn’t go far enough to explain Notre Dame’s lack of offense. The Irish have the 50th-best scoring offense in the nation, averaging 2.42 goals per game, keeping company with the likes of recent perennial offensive powerhouses such as Alaska-Anchorage, Holy Cross and Michigan Tech. Seriously? Last year, ND was eighth in the nation, averaging 3.38 goals per game. ND’s disappointing ninth-place finish is its lowest under Jeff Jackson and the Irish’s poorest showing since they finished in last place in 2005-06.

• No, I’m not advocating that they fire Jackson, either. Stop e-mailing me.

• Adjusting the points available in each game this season seems to have been a really good move. We all know that I’m no fan of the shootout, but the way in which points have become available — three for a win, one to each team for a tie, one extra for winning a shootout — has created some really dramatic swings from weekend to weekend (and even game to game) among the league standings. It certainly kept things interesting as the season closed. It’s interesting, too, that this change seemed to have no effect on the two teams that have lingered near the bottom for so long — and, no, I’m not being catty.

• After watching the IIHF World Junior Championship this year, I’m now a big fan of the four-on-four overtime.

• While I admire Walt Kyle’s drive to get to the NCAA tournament, I am an even bigger fan of FSU head coach Bob Daniel’s desire to make the CCHA a prize in itself. He calls the NCAA tournament “icing” — no pun intended — and beyond the charm in keeping the sport we love genuinely collegiate, there’s something to be said for seeing the conference play as a worthy end in itself.

• I know I’m forgetting many things. I have a pile of grading on the brain, spring break beckoning beyond that and the constant intrusion of middle age. E-mail me to remind me of what I’m forgetting, and I’ll get to it next week — unless you’re on the “Fire Jeff Jackson” bandwagon, in which case you’re e-mailing the wrong girl reporter.

Virtual Hardware, Part 2

For the third year running, I’m limiting each Girl Reporter All-League team to six players each.

The 2009-10 Girl Reporter All-CCHA Team

Zac Dalpe (F, OSU)
Dion Knelsen (F, UAF)
Mark Olver (F, NMU)
Matt Case (D, FSU)
Jeff Petry (D, MSU)
Drew Palmisano (G, MSU)

I know I’m going to take grief over my picks of Knelsen and Case — and I don’t care. Knelsen scored 14 conference goals … for Alaska. While the Nanooks are the eighth-best team in the nation defensively, they’re tied for 38th offensively. Knelsen, a senior, is having a career season.

Case, another senior, is also having a career season. He and Petry are just the two most dominant defensemen I’ve seen play this season. FSU gets a lot of credit for having a couple of lines that can score and a goaltending duo that is solid, but Case is also a big part of the Bulldogs’ success this year.

It was difficult making the choice between Palmisano and Alaska’s Scott Greenham for goaltender. I’ll leave it at that.

The 2009-10 Girl Reporter All-Rookie CCHA Team

Derek Grand (F, MSU)
Jordan Samuels-Thomas (F, BGSU)
Andy Taranto (F, UAF)
Joe Hartman (D, Miami)
Kyle Follmer (D, NMU)
Mike Johnson (G, ND)

The 2009-10 Girl Reporter All-Goon Squad

I can’t even joke about this — and that makes me even more irate about what I’ve witnessed this season. I enjoy a good throw-down. I love instigators. I don’t enjoy the disrespect, malice and lack of control I’ve seen increase this year in CCHA play.

The Silver Lining

There’s nothing like discovering that the game you love and cherish is still, after all, relevant.

The men’s gold-medal game last Sunday between the U.S. and Canada was watched by an estimated 27.6 million viewers according to NBC, making it the most-watched hockey game since the 1980 miracle from Lake Placid and the third-most watched televised hockey game in history.

This is good news, especially since NBC’s announcers couldn’t get enough of the gentlemen we’ve known and loved for decades. If U.S. sports fans didn’t know before this Olympics that the NHL is full of talent with NCAA experience, they do now. They know that Ryan Miller played at Michigan State — and they know that both he and Chris Drury won the Hobey Baker. (That they’ve now heard of the Hobey Baker Award is a bonus.) They know Jack Johnson played for Michigan, Zach Parise for North Dakota, that Dan Boyle played for Miami University — often mentioned without the “Ohio” attached, another bonus.

In all, five former CCHA players won medals — Boyle (Miami 1994-98) and Duncan Keith (MSU 2001-03) taking home gold for Team Canada, and Johnson (UM 2005-07), Ryan Kesler (OSU 2002-03) and Miller (MSU 1999-2002) earning silver.

Congratulations to Tessa Bonhomme and Lisa Chesson, former teammates at Ohio State, on their respective gold and silver medals. I had the privilege of interviewing these two extraordinary women for an article when I lived in Columbus; I came away from the interview thinking that Bonhomme could rule the world, if she so chose.

Remembering People Gone Too Soon

This week, I’m thinking of Mike Lockert, a beautiful voice that was silenced a year ago. Mike was the radio announcer for Notre Dame ice hockey for seven years when he died suddenly Feb. 27, 2009. Mike was 44.

I can’t help thinking, too, of Brian Fishman, the sports information director for Michigan hockey who died of accidental carbon monoxide poisoning in 1999. He was 28.

And, of course, Brendan Burke. Watching his father, Brian, at the Olympics last week, I couldn’t help but admire him for soldiering on so soon after such a life-changing loss. Brendan was 21, and he died last month.

This hockey world is such a small community. One ripple affects so many people.

USCHO.com Hobey Watch 2010 Podcast, Episode 6: Todd Milewski

USCHO.com Hobey Watch 2010 Podcast, Episode 6: Todd MilewskiHobey Watch

USCHO.com’s Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by USCHO.com Executive Editor Todd Milewski for a look at Todd’s dark horses and top picks for this year’s Hobey Baker Award.

This Week in the CHA: March 4, 2010

The regular season wraps up this weekend and soon enough, we’ll know the seeds for the last-ever CHA tournament, to be held next weekend at Niagara.

It’s definitely a bittersweet time for the CHA. Really, it feels like a funeral where everybody is bawling their eyes out, but the priest wants everyone to celebrate the deceased’s life.

Hard to do, but life does go on.

And with three of the four CHA squads finding new homes for next season, hockey will go on for those three, as well as for soon-to-be independent Alabama-Huntsville.

First things first, though, and Bemidji State plays in Huntsville this weekend, while Niagara and Robert Morris do battle in a home-and-home set.

BSU clinched the regular season title two weeks ago and pretty much ran away from the rest of the pack this season. All that’s left to determine is second place through fourth place.

Robert Morris, currently second, can finish as high as second or as low as third, while UAH can go as high as second and as low as fourth and for Niagara, it’s either third or fourth.

Game on!

NU Takes 2 Of 3 from Chargers

It was Ernie Banks meets “Badger” Bob Johnson last weekend in western New York.

Chris Moran scored for Niagara in a 3-1 win over Alabama-Huntsville last Saturday (photo: Niagara Athletics).

Chris Moran scored for Niagara in a 3-1 win over Alabama-Huntsville last Saturday (photo: Niagara Athletics).

Banks, the Hall of Fame slugger for the Chicago Cubs was famous for saying, “Let’s play two today,” while Badger Bob always said it was a great day for hockey.

When Alabama-Huntsville traveled to Niagara last weekend, it was a planned weekend of three games between the two longtime rivals. Great day(s) for hockey? Absolutely. Let’s play two? Nah. Let’s up the ante and play three.

And that the Purple Eagles and Chargers did, with NU winning the first two, but UAH getting the last game on Sunday.

Having already skated to three contests with one-goal margins against Niagara, Friday night’s contest proved to be no different as Alabama-Huntsville fell 4-3 to the Purple Eagles.

Matti Järvinen opened the scoring for UAH, only to see Egor Mironov (first goal since Jan. 3) and Robert Martini (first NCAA tally) give NU the lead.

“I do anything to help the team win,” Martini said. “It was very nice to see that it went in, but we have to keep looking forward and play hard.”

Marc Zanette made it 3-1 Niagara and Tom Train made it a one-goal game going into the third period.

Andrew Coburn tied the game early in the third, but Bryan Haczyk’s goal at 6:54 stood as the game-winner.

“This was a big victory for us tonight,” Niagara coach Dave Burkholder said. “Our theme tonight was to build momentum during each period. We came out ready and we had to be. When Alabama-Huntsville scored, we answered. I was very proud of my team for the way they responded tonight.”

Adam Avramenko posted the win in goal with a 15-save outing, while Cameron Talbot suffered the loss making 23 stops.

Saturday, Niagara scored three unanswered goals in a 3-1 win.

Davide Nicoletti scored just 1:25 into the game for the Chargers, but then Chris Moran, Haczyk and Jeff Hannan solved Talbot with nothing more getting by Avramenko, who made 22 saves.

Talbot took the loss in net with a 29-save night.

“I feel the positive momentum in our locker room and that we are going in the right direction,” Burkholder said. “I think we put a stamp on the game in the second period. The second period is what won us tonight’s game.”

“Plain and simple, I couldn’t let the early goal get to me,” Avramenko added. “I did my best to shake it off and help the team.”

In Sunday’s finale, UAH found the winning side of a one-goal game with a 3-2 overtime win to salvage one game of the three-game set.

Neil Ruffini’s second goal of the game 45 seconds into the OT won it for the Chargers.

And here’s a staggering stat: The win was Alabama-Huntsville’s first road overtime victory since Oct. 27, 2000, when UAH topped Western Michigan, 6-5. Yes — nearly a decade since UAH got to celebrate an OT win on road ice.

Train scored the other goal for the Chargers.

Paul Zanette and Hannan tallied for NU.

Talbot stopped 41 shots, while Avramenko kicked aside 19 shots. 

The win gives the Chargers the season series against the Purple Eagles with UAH holding a 4-2 advantage with all four victories coming via 3-2 scores.

“Tonight we ran into a hot goalie in Cameron Talbot,” said Burkholder. “I tip my hat to Talbot as he helped the Chargers secure two points tonight.”

Moran recorded his 99th career assist on Hannan’s goal and now has 136 career points, passing Peter DeSantis (1996-2000) for fifth place on Niagara’s all-time points list.

Beavers Split With Nebraska-Omaha

Bemidji State coach Tom Serratore called Friday night’s 3-1 win at then-No. 19 Nebraska-Omaha one of the most important wins in BSU’s storied history.

It would have made for a better story had the Beavers swept the Mavericks, but UNO spoiled the fun with a 3-2 win on Saturday night.

In Friday night’s win, BSU was outshot, 25-17, but goalie Dan Bakala stopped 24 shots to steal the win.

“I just told the guys in the locker room that we’ve had a lot of big wins in the history of the program, but this is one of the biggest,” said Serratore. “It was a total team effort and I am extremely proud of the guys.”

Tyler Lehrke had a goal and an assist, while Jamie MacQueen and Matt Read also tallied for the Beavers.

“You lean on your seniors and I can’t say enough about how well [Lehrke] has played,” Serratore said. “Jamie MacQueen has been outstanding the last two or three series and Chris McKelvie has been steady. Again, there is no question, we lean on those guys and they’ve delivered.”

Saturday night, BSU was outplayed for the first 40 minutes, but did get a second-period goal from Ian Lowe to be down, 3-1, going into the third period.

Read scored on a 2-on-none break with Chris Peluso to make it a 3-2 game, but even with Bakala on the bench for the extra skater, the Beavers couldn’t capitalize.

“They got the best of us for two periods — we just had no legs,” said Serratore. “But in the third period, I thought we played with a little urgency and made a game out of it. I am glad we responded in the third period. Hopefully, that will carry over to [this] weekend in Huntsville.”

He Said It

“I watch it and it’s pretty funny. In the summertime, I go down there and you’ll definitely see guys like that. They stretch it a lot, but there are guys like that. It’s like any other shore town, I guess. It’s funny when I’ll watch and recognize the spots.” — NU forward and New Jersey native Brayn Haczyk, commenting on the MTV show “Jersey Shore,” to the Niagara Gazette.

Stanley Cup Coming To Huntsville

The Stanley Cup is slated to make an appearance at Alabama-Huntsville’s game against Bemidji State on “National Defense Night” at the Von Braun Center in Huntsville on Friday for plentiful photo opportunities with fans.

“This is a special opportunity for our fans and community to come out and see one of the legends of hockey,” noted UAH coach Danton Cole.  “Every player from the time he puts his skates on dreams of winning the Stanley Cup.  I was blessed to have gotten the chance to do just that in ’95 with New Jersey.”

In addition, the Chargers will be wearing special camouflage third jerseys as part of “National Defense Night.”  The jerseys are being sold as a fundraiser for the team and will be presented to the buyers at the conclusion of the contest.

Here’s a nice touch, too. If the Chargers hold Bemidji State to two or fewer goals, ticket stubs from Friday night’s contest can be redeemed for a general admission ticket for Saturday’s regular season finale against the Beavers.

He Said It II

“We’re playing with a lot of energy. We’re getting scoring from our skilled players and we’re getting secondary scoring. Defensively we’re playing much better and we’re getting good goaltending. We’re close to being ready for what you prepare your whole season for.” — RMU coach Derek Schooley, to rmucolonials.com.

BSU’s Peluso Traded to Maple Leafs

Chris Peluso's draft rights went from Pittsburgh to Toronto at the NHL trade deadline (photo: BSU Photo Services).

Chris Peluso’s draft rights went from Pittsburgh to Toronto at the NHL trade deadline (photo: BSU Photo Services).

Pretty sure this is a first (and last) for the CHA as a current player’s rights were traded at the NHL trade deadline on Wednesday as Peluso was dealt from Pittsburgh to Toronto for a sixth-round draft pick this June.

Peluso was Pittsburgh’s seventh-round pick in 2004 when he was playing for the Sioux Falls Stampede of the United States Hockey League. He’s also the lone NHL draft pick in the CHA this year.

He’s the second NHL draftee of BSU’s Division I era; current Columbus Blue Jackets forward Andrew Murray (2001-2005) was the first when he was selected in the eighth round of the 2001 NHL draft. Murray also scored his first goal of the season Tuesday night in a 4-3 overtime loss to Vancouver.

In all, six former BSU players have gone on to play in the NHL: Jim McElmury (Minnesota/Kansas City/Colorado 1972-1978), Dale Smedsmo (Toronto 1972-1973), Gary Sargent (Los Angeles/Minnesota 1975-1983), Joel Otto (Calgary/Philadelphia 1984-1998), Murray (Columbus 2008-present) and Matt Climie (Dallas 2008-2009).

The Maple Leafs have until July 15 to sign Peluso or he will become an unrestricted free agent.

This Week in the WCHA: March 4, 2010

Look at that date. March. We’re finally nearing spring, which means warmer weather and more sun. The cold, dreary days of winter are finally coming to a close.

More importantly, we’re now in the last week of the regular season and just one month away from the end of college hockey.

So, let’s do this thing, shall we?

Red Baron WCHA Players of the Week

Red Baron WCHA Offensive Player of the Week: Rhett Rakhshani, DU.

Why: Had five points (the most out of any league player last weekend) to help his Pioneers sweep Minnesota State.

Also Nominated: Brad Malone, UND; Andy Bohmbach, UW.

Red Baron WCHA Defensive Player of the Week: Brad Eidsness, UND.

Why: Stopped 53 of 57 shots, including blanking CC’s power play, the best in the league, to help his Sioux sweep the Tigers.

Also Nominated: Patrick Wiercioch, DU; Alex Kangas, UM; Brady Hjelle, UMD.

Red Baron WCHA Co-Rookies of the Week: Matt Donovan, DU; Danny Kristo, UND.

Why: Donovan was a defensive force with 10 hits and four blocked shots to help his Pioneers sweep the Mavericks. Kristo scored two goals, both of them at crucial times, to help his Sioux sweep CC.

Also Nominated: No one.

Still Suffering the Fallout

We’ve had several new developments this past week regarding the case of one Aaron Marvin.

It came down from the league that Marvin will be suspended for three games as a result of his open-ice hit on Wisconsin center Blake Geoffrion. He will miss this weekend’s series against Minnesota State and the first game of St. Cloud State’s home playoff series next weekend.

However, as always, there’s a bit more to the story.

• Geoffrion, who has been cleared to play this weekend, holds no ill will toward Marvin, according to the Wisconsin State Journal. Geoffrion, who has played with Marvin in the past in USA Hockey festivals and camps, told the newspaper that “he didn’t intentionally hit me in the head … he’s a good kid. I know he didn’t mean to hit me on purpose.”

• Marvin’s suspension had the potential to be longer. A lot longer. As we all know, the league took a long time to hand down the suspension in the first place. St. Cloud was notified last Friday that a “potential violation” was forthcoming and the league didn’t announce its final decision until Monday.

Part of the delay was in part because St. Cloud had a bye week this past week, so the league could take longer to dole out a punishment. However, the final reprimand may have taken longer due to an appeals process.

According to Bruce Ciskie, a sports journalist (and blogger), radio personality and the radio voice of UMD hockey, among other things, Marvin’s suspension was supposed to be longer. Ciskie quotes an unnamed source apparently close to the deliberations that the WCHA’s original punishment would have suspended Marvin up through the first round of the playoffs and perhaps even the Final Five (Ciskie says his source wasn’t clear on the amount of playoff time Marvin would be out). However, the current three-game ban came as a result of St. Cloud appealing the initial decision.

IF Ciskie’s source is right, it makes me wonder a few things. Why would the league want to suspend Marvin for so long? Granted, his hit on Geoffrion was a second offense, so to speak, so a longer suspension was warranted based on that fact alone. However, a potential eight-game suspension seems a little severe, particularly for a hit that Geoffrion’s own coach said shouldn’t have been penalized if it weren’t for the NCAA’s head-hitting emphasis.

But to suspend the kid throughout the entire league tournament? Was that thought meant as a way of protecting the rest of the league’s top talent, as Marvin, intentionally or not (I’m not arguing either way because I just don’t know what was in his head) took out two of the league’s best players? (And yes, I realize that’s the tinfoil hat argument.)

I don’t want to discredit Ciskie in anyway, but Kevin Allenspach of the St. Cloud Times wrote something that made me think again:

“The league announced the suspension after discussions with St. Cloud State officials and the WCHA Executive Committee. McLeod said last week that SCSU had been notified of the league’s intention on Feb. 21 but was appealing the decision. That appeal was denied.”

From that, it makes me think St. Cloud just appealed the suspension in general; not that there was a double appeal.

The other reason why I might be hesitant to think Marvin’s initial suspension was for a potential eight games is this other fact mentioned by Allenspach:

“In 16 seasons as WCHA commissioner, McLeod said this is the first occasion he’s had to suspend a player for more than one game. There have been other players previously suspended multiple games, McLeod said, but they were according to penalties mandated in the NCAA rule book or through supplementary discipline administered by a school and not the league.”

Sixteen years and the first time McLeod breaks tradition he’s going to suspend a kid for that long? It just doesn’t make sense to me.

That fact brings up a separate and unrelated question of mine as well. In 16 years, absolutely nothing has warranted a suspension beyond something from the rule book? Color me cynical, but I find that hard to believe.

Fans, Prepare Retractions

Though Marvin’s hit on Geoffrion caused most of the hullabaloo the weekend it happened, there was another hit that raised a smaller firestorm — UND’s Corban Knight on UMD’s Mike Connolly.

While many argued for discipline on that hit as well, Brad Schlossman of the Grand Forks Herald blogged Friday that “word is that the WCHA has requested video of a Corban Knight hit on Duluth’s Mike Connolly from last week to use as an example that a textbook clean hit can still result in an injury.”

Knowledge is Sometimes Useless

… at least when it comes to knowing your playoff opponent before the final weekend. With their sweep of Minnesota State last weekend, the Pioneers clinched their 12th MacNaughton Cup and, by default, learned they’d be playing Michigan Tech in the first round of the playoffs.

However, this knowledge means nothing, as the Pioneers still have to close out the regular season with an important rivalry series with CC.

“You probably think about it in your spare time, but all of our work this week, is preparation for our next game,” Pioneers coach George Gwozdecky said. “No matter what time of year, you never spend any time contemplating or talking about or preparing practice for your opponent two or three weeks down the road.”

For the coaches and teams, there’s no advantage; it’s just nice for the rest of us to know.

Playoffs: What We Know

Denver and Michigan Tech will be playing each other in the first round.

Wisconsin can finish as high as second or as low as fourth.

St. Cloud State can finish as high as second or as low as fifth.

Minnesota-Duluth can finish as high as second or as low as fourth.

North Dakota can finish as high as third or as low as fifth.

Colorado College will finish either sixth or seventh, and will be on the road for the second time in coach Scott Owens’ 11-year tenure.

Minnesota will finish either sixth or seventh.

Alaska-Anchorage will finish either eighth or ninth.

Minnesota State will finish either eighth or ninth.

Around the WCHA

UAA: Though reprimanded by the school earlier this week, coach Dave Shyiak will be behind the bench this weekend when his Seawolves host Minnesota-Duluth. Shyiak earned a minor and a game misconduct for unsportsmanlike conduct last Saturday against Alaska.

Shyiak was penalized after he threw a water bottle on to the ice and then stepped off the bench on to the ice to argue with the officials; the argument was most likely triggered after no call was made as UAA’s Tommy Grant was taken down on a short-handed breakaway.

DU: The finalists for the Hockey Humanitarian Award are out and Denver’s Brandon Vossberg made the cut after his second nomination. The HHA “is awarded annually to college hockey’s finest citizen and seeks to recognize college hockey players … who give back to their community in the true humanitarian spirit.”

Vossberg is a three-time recipient of his team’s Most Active in Community Service Award. Before DU, he volunteered his time at various organizations including Habitat for Humanity, Big Brothers/Big Sisters and bagged groceries as a charity fundraiser. At DU, his community volunteering hasn’t stopped, focusing on local Denver organizations, most of which help out the city’s youth.

Matchups by the Numbers

It’s the final weekend of the regular season, which means everyone’s playing everyone.

Minnesota-Duluth @ Alaska-Anchorage

Overall Records: UMD — 19-14-1 (15-10-1 WCHA). UAA — 10-20-2 (8-16-2 WCHA).

Head-to-Head: UMD leads the overall series, 37-18-12.

Wisconsin @ Minnesota

Overall Records: UW — 21-8-4 (16-7-3 WCHA). UM — 16-16-2 (11-13-2 WCHA).

Head-to-Head: UM leads the overall series, 151-82-18.

Notes: The teams are playing at the Target Center on Friday. … UM leads the Badgers at the Target Center, 6-1.

Colorado College and Denver Home and Home

Overall Records: CC — 17-14-3 (11-12-3 WCHA). DU — 24-6-4 (18-4-4 WCHA).

Head-to-Head: DU leads the overall series, 153-106-14.

St. Cloud State and Minnesota State Home and Home

Overall Records: SCSU — 20-10-4 (15-8-3 WCHA). MSU — 14-18-2 (8-17-1 WCHA).

Head-to-Head: MSU leads the overall series, 57-42-9.

Michigan Tech @ North Dakota

Overall Records: MTU — 5-26-1 (4-22-0 WCHA). UND — 18-11-5 (13-10-3 WCHA).

Head-to-Head: UND leads the overall series, 138-89-8.

Future WCHA Team Watch

Bemidji State and Nebraska-Omaha split their series in a preview of next season. The Beavers next head to Alabama-Huntsville for a pair of games while the Mavericks host Bowling Green in the first round of the CCHA tournament.

No. 8 BSU: 22-8-2 overall, 4-4-0 vs. WCHA

UNO: 18-14-6 overall, 2-2-1 vs. WCHA

MacNaughton Cup > Frozen Four

George Gwozdecky, on his team’s MacNaughton Cup victory: “This is probably the most difficult college hockey title to win. It may not be the biggest; obviously the Frozen Four would be considered the biggest, but this is probably the most difficult one to win and is certainly a feather in your cap if you can win it, especially if you consider how competitive this league is.”

Olympic Pride

Like most hockey fans, I watched the USA-Canada gold medal game last Sunday. It was a good game, regardless of whether you were a hockey fan. While I was disappointed the U.S. didn’t win gold, I was proud anyway, given that no one expected the Americans to even medal.

The Olympics were fun to watch in general, particularly the hockey, because of all the former collegians playing.

It was also very cool to learn from the WCHA’s Web site that all 12 former WCHAers on the men’s side won medals (two golds, nine silvers and one bronze). So, congratulations to all of you. You represented your countries well and with pride, and it was a fun time watching all of you compete.

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: March 4, 2010

Tourney Time

Thanks to a less-than-impressive showing outside of Atlantic Hockey, no AHA teams are in contention for an at-large NCAA berth. That means for the 10 Atlantic Hockey teams, the NCAA tournament starts this weekend. Win and move on; lose and go home.

The opening round of the AHA playoffs has Connecticut at Bentley and American International at Holy Cross. The lowest surviving seed will travel to RIT for the best-of-three quarterfinals. The next lowest seed goes to Sacred Heart. Other quarterfinals already set feature natural rivals Army at Air Force and Canisius at Mercyhurst.

The last weekend of the regular season was not without some drama, as well as a pair of unexpectedly lopsided results.

On Friday, Canisius and RIT squared off with the Tigers having already clinched the regular season title and the top seed in the playoffs, and the Griffs desperately needing a win to stay in the hunt for a home playoff series. All that went out the window when RIT scored twice in the first three minutes and coasted to an 8-0 win.

“We weren’t expecting that,” said RIT coach Wayne Wilson. “Sometimes everything goes your way. [Canisius] is a much better team than that.”

On Saturday, Air Force, which could have found itself on the road in the quarterfinals, pummeled second-place Sacred Heart 8-1 to lock up third place. The Pioneers had been one of the hottest teams in college hockey before getting swept in Colorado Springs.

“For us to score 14 goals in just over five periods after we have struggled to score the last six games, I would have never thought that,” Falcons coach Frank Serratore said. “I knew we would compete well on our ice and I was very optimistic. … This weekend, everything fell into place for us.”

Mercyhurst went into Saturday’s game at ninth-place Connecticut needing a win or tie to lock up third place, but the Huskies rallied back from a 2-0 deficit, including an extra-attacker goal with 35 seconds to play, and then won the game in overtime on Jason Krispel’s second goal of the game.

“The kids deserve it; they’ve been battling all year,” UConn coach Bruce Marshall said after the game. “We really haven’t been that far away. If we could start the season over with a few of the things we learned, then we might have a little more success than what shows in the wins and the losses.”

“The truth is I thought we got what we deserved,” said Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin. “I don’t think we played nearly well enough to beat a good UConn team tonight. I was disappointed with our overall effort. They’re much better then what their record shows.”

Weekly Awards

Player of the Week for March 1:
Tim Kirby — Air Force

The sophomore defenseman had a goal and six assists last weekend to help the Falcons to a home sweep of Sacred Heart. His five assists on Saturday set a school record.

Goalie of the Week for March 1:
Jared DeMichiel — RIT

DeMichiel wins the award for the third week in a row, and it’s no coincidence that the Tigers are 6-0 over that span. Last weekend the senior stopped 45 of 49 shots to help his team to a 8-0, 5-4 sweep of Canisius. DeMichiel is 21-4-1 in AHA play this season with a 1.78 goals against average and .932 save percentage.

Rookie of the Week for March 1:
Adam Hartley — RIT

Hartley had a pair of goals and a pair of assists last weekend, including three points on Saturday.

Monthly Awards

Player of the Month for February:
Cameron Burt — RIT

Burt had 15 points in February to help the Tigers to a 7-1 record for the month. He leads RIT with 13 goals and is second in overall points with 36 points through 33 games.

Other players nominated: Tim Kirby, Air Force; Steve McLeod, AIC; Josh Heidinger, Canisius; Andrew Olson, Connecticut; Jordan Cyr; Holy Cross; Mike Gurtler, Mercyhurst; Nick Johnson, Sacred Heart.

Goalie of the Month for February:
Jared DeMichiel — RIT

No surprise here has DeMichiel has been named AHA goalie of the week for the past three weeks. He had a 1.91 GAA and .930 save percentage in February, including a pair of shutouts.

Other goalies Nominated: Thomas Tysowsky, Holy Cross.

Rookie of the Month for February:
Eric Delong — Sacred Heart

DeLong had four goals and six assists in February. He leads all AHA rookies and is sixth nationally with 30 points so far this season.

Other rookies nominated: Adam Pleskach, AIC; Joe Campanelli, Bentley; Grant Blakey, Mercyhurst.

First Round

Here’s your playoff outlook for the first round:

Friday, March 5:
No. 10 American International at No. 7 Holy Cross

How they got here: AIC was picked to finish last in the AHA preseason poll, and that’s where the Yellow Jackets wound up. Holy Cross showed this year that despite a seventh-place finish, it can play with anyone in the league. The Crusaders took points from every team except for Mercyhurst and Sacred Heart. However, AIC won the season series between the two teams 2-0-2.

How AIC wins: Keep doing what it did against Holy Cross all season: win low-scoring games. The Yellow Jackets have shut out the Crusaders twice, limiting them to a total of five goals in four games.

How Holy Cross wins: AIC’s defense is the worst in the league, allowing almost four goals a game. But against the Crusaders? Only 1.25 goals allowed per game. Holy Cross needs to get an early goal and build from there. The Crusaders can’t afford another power outage in a single elimination game.

Yellow Jacket to watch: Freshman Ben Meisner has shut out the Crusaders twice this season, so he’s the obvious choice in net.

Crusader to watch: Another rookie goaltender, Thomas Tysowsky is fourth in the league in GAA (2.44) and fifth in save percentage (.909).

Saturday, March 6:
No. 8 Connecticut at No. 7 Bentley

How they got here: Connecticut has just six wins this season, but two of those have come in its last four games. The Huskies have knocked off RIT and Mercyhurst, so they’re dangerous in a single game situation. Bentley has faltered down the stretch. Since becoming the only AHA team to beat RIT at Frank Ritter Arena on Jan. 30, the Falcons have gone 1-6-1. Losing Dustin Cloutier to injury in mid-January has hurt.

How Connecticut wins: The comeback win over Mercyhurst last Saturday has to give Marshall’s club a boost. They’ve beaten Bentley once already this season.

How Bentley wins: The Falcons need to stay out of the box — they’ve got the worst penalty kill in the league at 78.6 percent.

Husky to watch: Yet another rookie goaltender will be key: Garrett Bartus, who joined the team after the holidays and has posted a .903 save percentage to date.

Falcon to watch: Senior forward Marc Menzione leads the team with 11 goals and 29 points. He’s the go-to guy on the power play and has chipped in two shorthanded goals as well.


Contributing: Nate Owen

This Week in ECAC Hockey: March 4, 2010

Last season’s final column started with a quote from wily St. Lawrence coach Joe Marsh. (And really, is there a better way to describe Marsh in a coaching context? If so, I’d love to hear it.)

“In the playoffs there’s almost the mentality that you have to go twice as hard to go half as far,” he said. “I told the guys the other night how hard it is to end a team’s season, and don’t be surprised by how hard it is. It’s supposed to be hard this time of year.”

It’s one of my favorite hockey quotes, because it’s such a truism. It’s supposed to be hard this time of year.

No. 12 Clarkson @ No. 5 St. Lawrence

The far ends of the spectrum aren’t going to let each other off the hook this year. The Saints, coming off a disappointing February in which they failed to secure a Top Four spot, host North Country neighbor and archrival Clarkson for the sixth-ever postseason series between the schools.

The coaches said the right things about the draw:

“I don’t know if it’s that big of an advantage to be sleeping in your own bed and play close to home. No matter where you’ve got to go, you’ve got to go on the road, and we put ourselves in that position.” — George Roll, Clarkson …

“It’s a tough draw. We realize that. But at the same time, there’s great benefits to having it. Certainly, it doesn’t hurt the North Country, and the economy, and all of that. The building’s going to be filled — we’ve already sold out.” — Marsh.

… yet as sure as Cornell hates Harvard, Clarkson is tickled pink to have ducked the huge road-trip bullet, while SLU is cursing the fates for sticking it with its refreshed, reinvigorated rival.

Both coaches agree that beyond the basics, the atmosphere is going to be a critical component to the series.

“In that building … they are such a momentum team,” said Roll. “When they get it going, they get a goal, and the next thing you know it’s two or three. They build on that first goal, and for us it’s a matter of staying the course, no matter what happens.

“If they get a goal, we have to make sure that next shift or the next couple shifts we don’t turn a one-goal deficit into a two- or three-goal deficit. It’s happened to us a number of times this year, where we’ve given up a goal, and then a few shifts later we’ve given up a second goal or a third goal. That’s going to be key in their building.”

“I think what this does, is it kind of takes away a home-ice advantage,” mused Marsh, a few clicks down Route 11. “They’re 10 miles away, they have great fan support here. But at the same time, the flip side of it is that it’s a good thing. The building’s going to be filled, there’s going to be tons of energy and a lot of interest, and regardless of how it plays out … it’s going to be a really memorable series, because it’s Clarkson-St. Lawrence.

“The big thing is to try to establish some sense of home ice, to play with a lot of intensity and a lot of energy. [After that,] it usually comes down to the three main components: your power play, your penalty killing and your goaltender. The longer you play, the more it seems to come down to that.”

The teams are on a collision course, but are they headed in opposite directions? The Saints were 1-4-3 in February, including a 1-2-1 record at home. Clarkson was 3-4-1 over the same period, and 3-2-1 in the last three weeks.

“They’ve struggled here down the stretch, but we’ve been through it too. There’s such a fine line between winning and losing. They’ve lost a lot of tight games,” sympathized Roll, whose Golden Knights couldn’t have buried a golf ball in the Grand Canyon for most of the year.

Marsh is reasonably concerned about the matchup for reasons beyond local loyalties.

“They’re playing better hockey now, and we’ve certainly got to be wary of that. They’re getting healthier. We played them three times, and it was dead even: 1-1-1. Really, the two teams are pretty evenly matched, regardless of how the standings played out. It’s really going to be an unbelievable series.

“They’ve had some tough things [happen] to them this year, but now — just like us and everybody else — they’re tied for first,” he added.

Critical Factors

• Clarkson allowed 31 second-period goals in league play this year, which was the fourth-highest total for any period (by any team) in the conference. With only nine first-period goals scored — the fewest in ECAC Hockey, for any period — can the Golden Knights buck the trend and wrest … then hold … an early lead?

• On the other hand, the Saints scored only 14 first-period goals themselves. An early goal could prove momentous for either side.

• Clarkson took 15.3 penalty minutes per game in league action, while the Saints took an even dozen. None of the four special teams units was particularly inspired this year, so there’s a lot of room for improvement — and an equal opportunity for an energized club to take control with playoff-caliber special-teams play.

• An irrelevant history note: The last time any low-ranking team got so fortunate in the draw was Rensselaer — seeded 11th in early 2003 — when travel partner and cross-town foe Union finished sixth. Since we’re talking about Union’s past, any ECAC fan worth his salt will know the outcome: the Engineers swept.

Clarkson and St. Lawrence have met in five previous postseason series, and four of those five meetings — including the last four straight – have been in Potsdam. Clarkson swept at home in 2001-02 (the first round, which was also the quarterfinals), swept in ’92-93 (first round/quarters), swept in ’89-90 (second round/quarterfinals), and won the aggregate in ’84-85 (first round/quarters) with a 6-2 win followed by a 4-4 draw. The Saints won their only home series against the Knights, however, way back in early 1983 … winning Game 1, dropping Game 2 and winning a mini-game 3-0 to advance to the second round (and semifinals).

Thus, Clarkson is 4-1 all-time against SLU in playoff series.

No. 11 Brown @ No. 6 Rensselaer

Neither Brown nor Rensselaer is where it hoped to be entering last weekend.

The Bears had a shot at taking a home-ice spot away from Harvard … but instead, losses to Princeton and Quinnipiac buried Bruno in 11th in the standings. RPI had its eye on a first-round bye, but a Friday-night loss at Colgate — the Starr Curse — eliminated the team from Top Four contention.

Thus, here we are. The Bears and Engineers split their season series, with each team winning at home. Bruno has a little more jump and a little more jam than recent Brown squads, but will it be enough to slip by enigmatic but undeniably talented RPI?

“I really liked the way we played last weekend,” started Rensselaer coach Seth Appert. “Certainly from a result perspective, we wanted more, but I thought that was probably our most consistent hockey of the last month. I thought we played really well both nights, except for the penalty killing on Friday — that was really the only hiccup we had. We were a hard team to play against.”

“I think it’s going to be an interesting matchup, and a lot of things will have to click for us in order to be successful … and we haven’t been very successful on the road this year,” said Brown coach Brendan Whittet. “But we go into this as a new start, a second season for us. It’s going to be a tough challenge, but we’re embracing it.

“Our goal is to make sure we’re good in the first shift of the first period of the first game against RPI, and try to set a tone right at the beginning of the game, to be good for the whole series.”

The frequently overmatched Bears have had decent success this year by keeping the legs moving, forcing opponents to match Bruno’s efforts … or get out of the way.

“They attack the net well, which plays into their nature as a physical, fast team,” assessed Appert. “They’ve got some good older forwards, who are big: [Aaron] Volpatti, [Devin] Timberlake, [Harry] Zolnierczyk. They have a lot of juniors and seniors who … are the power-forward type, and can really get to the net well. They are a good power-play team; I think Jeff Buvinow’s a very good power-play quarterback for them. They’re a team that plays physical, and they don’t just run around hitting people; they’re physical with the puck, in using their size to try to get to the front of the net.”

Appert returned to Brown’s punishing style over and over again.

“Brown is, in my mind, probably the most physical team in our league. They go out of their way to be physical, their forwards are big, they’re physical, they try to finish every check. Because of that, they will take some penalties. We need to match their physical intensity, and we need to be the initiators of a lot of physical contact. That’s going to be an important element of the series. We also need to take care of the puck. Because they’re physical, they force teams into turnovers a lot, and they have good speed with their forwards.

“We need to take care of the puck and make them defend, which plays into the strength of our team, which is our group of forwards, and putting their defensemen on their heels with our team speed.”

“We’re going to have to work very hard to generate offensive opportunities,” said Whittet. “I think [the Engineers’] Allen York is a tremendous goaltender, and he has a very, very bright future in the game.”

Special teams — along with goaltending — are critical to postseason success, and neither coach has any delusions about how his units have functioned of late.

“Some games we’re real good on the PP or on the PK, and other games we’re not,” stated Brown’s bench boss. “It’s kind of part and parcel with a team learning to find its way, and what it takes to actually be competitive and win on a consistent basis in this league. We need to make sure we’re very, very intelligent; we can’t be in the box the whole game.

“[The penalty kill] has been good in stretches and bad in stretches. In a two-minute minor, we’ll be good for 1:50 and then just make an absolutely critical mistake — we won’t clear the puck, or we’re out there too long, or we lose coverage for a second, or we don’t get in a shot lane. So you know, it’s little things that get away from us sometimes in those situations.”

“I think our power play is just OK of late,” echoed Appert, of his own squad. “I know it can be better, and I have a lot of belief that the five guys we have on the first unit and the five guys we have on the second unit can go from being 15-17 percent — like they’ve been in the last month — to being the difference in the series, in a positive manner. I think we’ve just slipped a little bit in respect to our attention to detail, our urgency in terms of winning puck battles and getting to the net, and being a real aggressive shoot-first power play that converges on the net and scores some ugly, gritty goals. So we’ve got to get back to that this weekend if we’re going to want to have success against Brown and against [goalie Mike] Clemente, who’s a good goaltender. We need to make life hard on him by getting traffic and getting pucks to the net.”

Critical Factors

• Bearing down, or Bears down in the third? Brown has allowed 47 third-period goals in league action — over two a game — while RPI isn’t much better, surrendering 38 in the final frame.

• Can Brown penalty-killing (76.4 percent, eight points below Rensselaer) come through for key kills? Something has to give for Bruno — either a much-improved PK, or aberrationally few penalties.

• Speaking of box-able offenses, the Engineers lead the league (or bring up the rear, depending on how you look at it) in penalty minutes per game, with an even 17.0. Brown is second, at 16.4. In this series, maybe it’s the five-on-five units that should be termed “special teams” … they may never see the ice.

No. 10 Dartmouth @ No. 7 Quinnipiac

The Big Green had an outside shot at a home-ice position for the first round, but the dominoes didn’t fall Dartmouth’s way last weekend despite a three-point effort in the North Country. Quinnipiac avoided a first-round road trip and built a little momentum to boot, pounding Brown and edging local rival Yale for the four-point finale.

In other words, both of these teams are on a little bit of a roll, and yet are still flying under the radar in the greater scheme of things.

“We played well both nights [last weekend] and got a little bit of our confidence back, which had been an issue in recent weeks. It’s good to have a little bit of momentum,” said QU coach Rand Pecknold.

“In terms of Dartmouth, they’re a scary team right now. They’re playing well, they haven’t lost in the last five games, and they’ve got some nice wins in there. A couple of the ways they won scare me a little bit, how they came from behind to win. [Scott] Fleming and [Adam] Estoclet are their leading kids, and obviously [Doug] Jones is up there, too, so we’re going to have our hands full trying to shut down their offense.”

“The team’s played really well,” said Dartmouth coach Bob Gaudet. “I’ve actually liked my team all year long. We’ve battled through some injuries and that type of thing; we’re a relatively healthy team at this point.

“We know we’re playing a really good team in Quinnipiac. When we played them the first time, they were No. 5 in the country; they were 12-1, they beat us in their building, and I thought our kids played a solid game. They’re obviously a high-caliber team, one of the better teams in our conference, and a team that has a lot of firepower and a lot of really, really solid players in all the positions. It’s a good team we’re playing, and we’re decided underdogs in this series.”

Back when Dartmouth and Quinnipiac first ran into each other, the Big Green were a miserable 0-4-0, en route to a luckless first half and a fairly disappointing season overall. The Bobcats were 7-1-0 at the time, and went as far as 12-1-0 before the wheels fell off. The ‘Cats went 1-11-2 in a Charlie Brown spiral, as the team didn’t play a vastly different game than it had when it was winning … it’s just that none of the bounces were there anymore.

Now, though, both teams are on the mend — physically and emotionally. The cumulative youth is earning its stripes, and confidence is clearly growing in both camps.

“I do think they’re a different team now than they were for most of the season,” said Pecknold of his latest opponent. “They’ve got some confidence, they feel that they can win, and they’re winning. They beat Cornell, they’ve beaten some pretty good teams. They play a fun system, they really get after it pretty good on offense, but they focus on defense and they’ve got good goalies in [James] Mello and [Jody] O’Neill. I wouldn’t say they’re just an offensive team, because I don’t think they are. They’re playing well enough to win right now, and that’s all that counts in the end.

“A big part of the series will be my four freshmen defensemen. We have four freshmen and one sophomore in there, so we’re young. But those guys are seasoned now; they’ve played some games, and I think if they can be focused to play well, that’s certainly a key to the weekend. Obviously it comes down to goaltending and special teams in the playoffs, so I think those will be two main factors again, as always.”

“We’re not a team that matches lines at all; I’ve never done that in close to 27 years of this business,” stated Gaudet. “So what we do is, there’s tendencies with teams. Quinnipiac has a team that transitions very well, they’re very quick, they’ve got some excellent offensive players from the blue line obviously up through their forwards. Their goaltender handles the puck quite well, so turnovers and puck management is a huge thing. You don’t want to turn the puck over in bad areas, obviously, so that they work for everything they get. We’ve got to make sure we take care of the puck; that’s the focal point of playing against this team.”

Critical Factors

• Can Dartmouth (32 third-period goals against in league play) hold firm late in the game? The Big Green has certainly mustered some big comebacks this year, with a four-goal third-period outburst against Cornell two weeks ago and a similar three-goal barrage against RPI the week prior, but the Green also let a 6-4 lead with nine minutes to play fall by the wayside against Colgate. It will be interesting against a team as sharp as Quinnipiac.

• Can QU continue its first-period defensive dominance? The Bobcats gave up only 13 goals in the first frame against ECAC Hockey foes, which was the third-best defensive period in the league.

• While looking at scoring breakdowns, the second period may be the big one: The Q-Cats scored 30 in the second stanza this year, to only 19 out of Dartmouth. Maybe it’s coincidental, maybe it’s a matter of adjustments or momentum or whatnot, but it will be worth a keen eye as we kick off Friday night.

• Finally, will Dartmouth’s respectable special teams numbers (20 percent on the power play, an 80.7 percent kill rate) be able to keep up to Quinnipiac’s league-leading pace? The Bobcats are leading ECAC Hockey with a 25.2 percent success rate on the man-advantage, and are killing a second-best 86.2 percent of penalties.

No. 9 Harvard @ No. 8 Princeton

Princeton finally did it, passing Harvard in the standings on the final day of the regular season. The four-and-a-half-hour, 264-mile swing is just one of the subtexts to a fascinating series.

Not only did the two teams finish the season as next-door neighbors, but they’ve each shown flashes of brilliance despite extended periods of glaring mediocrity. Princeton’s disappointments were by and large a product of injuries, while Harvard is simply as inconsistent a team as you could ever hope to see. High-end players like Louis Leblanc, Kyle Richter, Doug Rogers and Alex Biega couldn’t carry the load, and true 60-minute performances were fleetingly rare.

When asked what the keys were for the Crimson, coach Ted Donato replied, “probably solving [Princeton goalie Zane] Kalemba, and making sure we get traffic and are able to get to him. They’re a very good team, they have a lot of guys that have been to the NCAA tournament the last couple of years, a lot of guys who have been to the Final Four of the ECAC’s. They’re a proud team and a team with a lot of character. They’re playing at home, but I think ultimately think he’s been the X-factor for them. He’s been very good against us at times, so it’s important that we are able to get to our game and find a way to not make it easy for him.”

Kalemba, the Tigers’ defending Ken Dryden Award-winner as ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Year, hasn’t been himself in his senior season as never-ending personnel changes played havoc with his defensive unit. He’s still a game-stealer at heart, though, and that has Harvard’s attention.

In the Crimson net, we’re not sure whether we’ll see junior Richter — himself a Dryden recipient — or classmate Ryan Carroll, as the duo has split time all year long. Richter has the experience, but Carroll may have the hotter hand.

As for the game between the nets, Donato is also wary of Princeton’s quick-strike ability.

“When they’re at their best, they’re a high-tempo team that really dominates on the forecheck and uses the transition game,” he said. “I think for us, that is something we’re going to have to handle, and also use that as a weapon ourselves.”

As always, special teams are a concern. Neither team has had exceptional numbers, but the Tigers’ seem especially suspect: the Stripes are killing only three of four penalties, and the power-play percentage is a pedestrian 15.7 percent.

“Any time you get in the playoffs — whether it’s a best-of-three series or a one-game playoff — special teams are huge,” said Donato. “In that respect, your goaltender is usually your best penalty-killer, and on offense you’ve got to be able to score some goals on the power play, or at least create enough chances and momentum to carry your team forward. I think both teams are probably excited about the prospects of their special teams, but neither one can point to them and say, ‘Hey, we’ve been good at this all year long.'”

Critical Factors

• When will the series be decided … after the first horn, or the second? Princeton allowed 37 second-period goals this year, but scored 20 in the third … Harvard scored 29 second-stanza goals, and surrendered 31 in the third. Princeton’s weak second or Harvard’s soft third?

• Which goalies will show up? Obviously, Harvard has to decide between Richter and Carroll … but for Princeton, will it be Zane the Game-Changer, or Zane the Hopelessly Overworked?

Readers’ Poll

Plain and simple, folks: pick the winners. Multi-votes allowed so that I don’t have to create four different polls, but if you vote for each team in the same series, I’ll just nullify your say. So there.

This Week in the ECAC East-NESCAC: Mar. 4, 2010

Well the first week of the conference playoffs definitely did not disappoint in terms of the level of play and excitement that sudden death hockey brings to any and all arenas.

There were favorites who won comfortably; there were upsets by visitors who came ready to play; and there were three 2-1 games decided in overtime that clearly demonstrated the old adage about “the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat.”

This week the final four for both conferences are set. The hosts are the top seeds. Norwich once again is hosting the ECAC East championship, while Bowdoin — and its new Sid Watson Arena — hosts the NESCAC title weekend for the very first time in search of their first conference title.

For both conferences, the top two seeds are into the final four and the other home ice seeds were upset in the quarterfinals, showing the great balance among the teams in both conferences. Anything can happen in a one-and-done tournament, so it may not be about being the best team but more about the team that is playing its very best right now — when it matters most.

This is what everyone started playing and prepping for way back on Nov. 1, when the first practices began in earnest. There is no question that everyone will be ready to play and leaving the maximum effort on the ice. Passing Bowdoin head coach Terry Meagher’s “pillow test” shouldn’t be an issue this weekend.

“When you finally go to sleep at night after a game and put your head down on the pillow, can you honestly say as a player and a teammate that you left everything on the ice and performed to the best of your ability that day?” asked Meagher. “If the answer is yes, then you should sleep well. If no, you need to step it up the next time out and focus on being the best you can be for the entire 60 minutes or more.”

There’s no question that players this week will leave it out on the ice, most likely for the last time this season. But depending on the outcomes, there probably won’t be a lot of good night’s sleep while wondering about what might have been for three teams that ultimately don’t skate with the championship trophy.

Here’s a look at the semis and likely final matchups for the two conferences.

ECAC East Final Four (Hosted at Norwich)

No. 6 New England College at No. 1 Norwich

Regular season result: Norwich won 6-2 at home in a game where they took the lead on a late second period goal and scored three in the third for the final differential.

Preview: The Cadets like home cooking as their 14-0-2 record would indicate. They have outscored their opponents 133-37 this season, so not only do they have firepower, they don’t give you much on the back end either. The FAT (Fast Attack Trio) line of Forkey, Anderson and Thomas is one of the best in the country, but the Cadets have a lot of other weapons and great balance from all four of their lines.

For NEC, Alex Muse has had a terrific season and several of the seniors on this team would clearly like nothing better than to knock off their long time rival. Aaron Harvey is going to have to be a big game goalie if the Pilgrims are to have any chance in this one, as the Northfield faithful will create a very hostile environment for the visitors.

Prediction: Norwich wants the title back and would like to enter the NCAA tournament as conference champions. Overall, it’s been an up and down year for NEC and while last week’s win at Castleton should boost the confidence, the Cadets have just too much depth and talent for the Pilgrims to post another upset in Northfield this weekend.

Score? Norwich 5, NEC 2.

No. 5 Skidmore vs. No. 2 Babson

Regular Season Result: Skidmore defeated Babson 4-3 on the road in a game where the Thoroughbreds took an early 3-0 lead and held on against the Beavers, who narrowed it to the one goal differential with an extra-attacker goal in the final minute of the game.

Babson goalie Zeke Testa has his eye on a repeat ECAC East title for the Beavers (photo: Tim Costello).

Babson goalie Zeke Testa has his eye on a repeat ECAC East title for the Beavers (photo: Tim Costello).

Preview: “I thought we had some great chances after a bad start,” said University of Massachusetts-Boston head coach Peter Belisle. “They are a very good hockey team and [Zeke] Testa is very, very good in goal. If they get that kind of performance from him this weekend at Norwich, they will definitely challenge again for the championship.”

Testa did not play in the regular season game between the two teams but has been a fixture in the Babson net down the stretch. For Skidmore, they will need to have playoff-caliber goaltending and continue to get big goals from Alex Mykolenko and Matt Czerkowicz. Both teams like to skate and move the puck so this one shapes up to be a track meet, meaning both teams will get good chances putting a further premium on the guys between the pipes.

Prediction: There is a lot to like about the way Babson plays at this time of the year. They have won two titles in the last four years and will be poised to challenge again this year. Zeke Testa is the difference this time around and the Beavers create the final between the two top seeds on Saturday night.

Score? Babson 4, Skidmore 2.

Projected ECAC East Championship Game: No. 2 Babson at No. 1 Norwich

Regular Season Result: The teams skated to a 3-3 overtime tie at Babson. Despite being outshot by almost a 2-to-1 margin, the Beavers held a 3-2 lead in the third only to be tied by a last minute goal by the Cadet’s Blake Forkey.

Preview: “I think this is the game everyone expects to see on Saturday night,” said Beacons head coach Peter Belisle. “Both of these teams are very talented and the goaltending for both is excellent which should mean a close game.”

Overall, Norwich has been exceptional anywhere they have played this year. But they have been especially good at home. Babson actually has a better record on the road than at home and has played more games away from campus this season.

Terry Woods, Chris Wood and the rest of the Beaver forwards are going to have to attack the size and speed of the Norwich defenders in order to get good opportunities on goalie Ryan Klingensmith. The power play, which clicked for two of their three goals against Norwich, will need to be effective here if the Cadets find themselves in the box.

The formula for Norwich doesn’t change much from what has worked all season. Pressure, pressure and more pressure on the opposition by rolling four lines and moving the puck quickly in transition will create good offensive chances that will challenge Zeke Testa.

Prediction: The number one seed and top ranked team in the country didn’t get to that lofty plateau by accident. The Cadets will reclaim the crown from last year’s champions in a hard fought title game. The home ice does matter in this one and the game is ultimately closer than the final score projects.

Score? Norwich 5, Babson 2.

NESCAC Final Four (Hosted at Bowdoin)

No. 6 Hamilton at No. 1 Bowdoin

Regular Season Results: Back in early February, the Polar Bears surrendered an early tally at home and then ran off six unanswered goals, including two shorthanded, on their way to a 6-1 victory.

Preview: There is something that just seems right about the NESCAC championship weekend being hosted at a rink named after a legend in college hockey, Sid Watson. I am sure he will have the best seat in the house watching the festivities in “his” arena.

Forward Chris Lorenc hopes to keep the Continentals rolling against the top seeded Bowdoin Polar Bears (photo: Mike Doherty).

Forward Chris Lorenc hopes to keep the Continentals rolling against the top seeded Bowdoin Polar Bears (photo: Mike Doherty).

Hamilton has been very good down the stretch, winning their last four in a row including two overtime wins in the last two weeks. Three 20 point scorers lead the way for the Continentals who will rely on the leadership of Chris Lorenc, Joe Buicko and Anthony Scarpino to carry the load offensively.

For Bowdoin, last week’s overtime thriller against cross-state rival Colby showed this team can get it done with defense and solid goaltending. While defenseman Kyle Shearer-Hardy leads the team in scoring, senior Colin MacCormick and junior Jeff Fanning have been key goal scorers for the Polar Bears who lead the conference in offensive production this season.

Goalie Chris Rossi has had a magical year, posting a 13-0-1 record, and last week came up with some big saves in overtime to give Bowdoin a chance to win their quarterfinal matchup at home.

Prediction: Don’t see overtime in this one but it is going to be close. The home crowd will be rocking and that will help Bowdoin rise to the occasion and take another step towards their first NESCAC title.

Score? Bowdoin 3, Hamilton 2.

No. 5 Trinity vs. No. 2 Middlebury

Goalie Wes Vesprini will be challenged by Middlebury's high powered offense in the semifinals of the NESCAC tournament (photo: Tim Costello).

Goalie Wes Vesprini will be challenged by Middlebury’s high powered offense in the semifinals of the NESCAC tournament (photo: Tim Costello).

Regular Season Result: Trinity came back to tie the Panthers on a late third period goal after falling behind 2-0. The Bantams were outshot 40-23 in the game and settled for the 2-2 overtime tie behind the great goaltending of Wes Vesprini.

Preview: “I am sure we are both different teams now than when we played the first time,” said Trinity head coach Dave Cataruzolo. “We have relied heavily on Wes [Vesprini] but actually have been asking him to do less as the season has gone on the defense matured over time. We really try to limit the Grade A scoring chances and have successfully kept things to the outside so hopefully we can do that against Middlebury who has a number of very talented offensive players.”

Five Panthers have double digit goal totals this season and sophomore goalie John Yanchek has taken over the number one spot down the stretch for the Panthers who have won seven in a row and ten of their last 11 on the season.

Last week they bombarded one of the nation’s best in Tufts’ goalie Scott Barchard so Vesprini should expect to see a lot of pucks from a lot of different angles.

These two teams are very familiar with each other in the playoffs and Trinity has recently had the better of the matchups. They will focus on playing a tight defensive game and trying to counter-attack when the opportunities present themselves. Adam Houli with 15 goals on the season is the only player in double digits for the Bantams so offensively they will need somebody else to find the back of the net to upset the Panthers.

Prediction: This is the proverbial matchup of offense vs. defense; the firepower of Middlebury vs. the defense and goaltending of Trinity. While the Bantams have had the better of recent matchups between the two teams, I think the offense wins out here in combination with the solid play of Yanchek for Middlebury. Vesprini has been great and will be in this one too but the Panthers prevail.

Score? Middlebury 3, Trinity 2 (OT)

Projected NESCAC Championship Game: No. 2 Middlebury at No. 1 Bowdoin

Regular Season Result: The Panthers built an early 4-1 lead at home against Bowdoin and won by a 5-2 score at the end of January.

Preview: Both teams were great in the final month of the season in trying to gain the top spot in the regular season standings. Bowdoin matched Middlebury’s seven game win streak to close the season and their last loss was to the Panthers.

Any time these two teams get together it is an exciting hockey game. Both teams play a similar 3-2 style of play that have some unique elements based on the styles of two great coaches: Middlebury’s Bill Beaney and Bowdoin’s Terry Meagher.

Yancheck played in the first game between the two teams and now will play in his first conference title game. Rossi did not play the first time around so the Panthers will have to solve the unbeaten senior in order to win the title.
Both teams skate very well and move the puck quickly in transition with a lot of support to the offense coming from the back line in players like Hardy for Bowdoin and Bryan Curran for the Panthers. These are the most prolific offenses in the league but don’t expect a big score here.

Prediction: Last year saw Amherst hosting for the first time and winning their first title on home ice over the Panthers in the final. This year Bowdoin will hand the Panthers their first loss to a NESCAC team all season in a hard fought game that will come right down to the end.

Score? Bowdoin 4, Middlebury 3.

NE-10 Conference Tournament

The two remaining D-II teams face off against each other in the finals of the NE-10 tournament on Saturday afternoon. St. Anselm, the top seed, will host the number two seeded Ice Dogs from Assumption College for the NE-10 crown.

Regular Season Result: Way back in early December the hawks put a hurting on the Ice Dogs, winning at home by an 11-2 score that included five power-play goals and two shorthanded tallies. Both teams are at a different place now so you can throw the first matchup out the window when a title is on the line this time around.

Preview: Assumption boasts two 40 point scorers in sophomores Tyler Larsen (18 goals, 22 assists, 40 points) and winger Pat O’Kane (26-14-40). Both have been prolific in any and all situations on the ice but especially deadly on special teams where they can score on the power play or shorthanded. Goalie Nick Blanchette comes into the final with a solid 2.92 goals against average and .922 save percentage, but will need to be at his best against the high flying Hawks.

For St. Anselm, being the top seed is not unfamiliar territory, but winning the tournament from that position has been a challenge as the hawks have only lifted the trophy twice.

“We know we come in with everyone gunning for us,” said Seney. “It’s great that we get to play this game at home with our fans here so hopefully we can be one of only three teams that can say they won their last game of the season.”

The Hawks will rely on leading scorer Coleman Noonan (21-22-43) and freshman Tucker Mullin (16-15-31) to lead the offense while goalie Alex Wyse looks to continue his clutch play in goal that belies his season statistical numbers.

Prediction: This one will be a high scoring affair as there is just too much offense on both sides for the goalies to stop everything thrown at them. St. Anselm had a great second place finish in the difficult ECAC East and interlocking NESCAC schedule so they are battle tested and ready to claim the only piece of hardware available to D-II teams today.

Score? St. Anselm 6, Assumption 4.

Everyone is focused, excited and really projecting the “take them one at a time” approach to the weekend. Win one and move on. Win two and enjoy the celebration in advance of playing on the national stage in the NCAA tournament. The rewards are right there in front of everyone, which makes the winning sweeter and the losing more difficult to swallow. The teams are ready — are you?

Drop the puck.

This Week in SUNYAC: Mar. 4, 2010

It Took Some Work

I finally caught my breath. I think.

The Oswego-Morrisville semifinal game was quite a roller coaster. From thinking you were witnessing a major upset to seeing Oswego declare enough is enough, scoring five straight goals for the comeback.

“The positive is some other teams, some other years, there would have been some finger pointing, some blaming of someone, but there was none of that,” Oswego head coach Ed Gosek said. “We told them afterwards, it wasn’t pretty. But the ability to come back, to hold together, not come unglued, not take stupid penalties, not get running around, not get selfish, not self destruct, that’s a positive sign for the team and what they accomplished this year.”

The Mustangs scored three goals within 1:53 for the shocking, early 3-0 lead, chasing Kyle Gunn-Taylor out of the net. Oswego scoring two goals late in the period were a key factor in making sure their opponents didn’t get any ideas.

“That was huge,” Gosek said. “So now going into the second period, you have some momentum. They clearly came out at us hard in the first. So for us to answer that, I thought was huge.”

Oswego forward Tyler Leimbrock notched a hat trick against Morrisville in the SUNYAC semis (photo: Angelo Lisuzzo).

Oswego forward Tyler Leimbrock notched a hat trick against Morrisville in the SUNYAC semis (photo: Angelo Lisuzzo).

After Tyler Leimbrock completed the hat trick to knot the game at four apiece after two periods, the other key moment in the game came 27 seconds into the third when Neil Musselwhite scored his sixth shorthanded goal by blowing by two Morrisville defenders for the breakaway.

“Pretty special kid as far as his speed is concerned,” Gosek said. “We certainly hope he gets in that Frozen Four Skills Challenge. Tonight is an example of what his speed can do. He’s come through in clutch times for us.”

“Big goal there starting the third period,” Morrisville head coach Brian Grady said. “Musselwhite just turning on the jets and beating our guys. That set the tone for the third period.”

The tone was Oswego outscoring Morrisville, 4-1, the last an empty net shorthander, to win 8-5.

The performance showed Morrisville’s upset of Fredonia earlier in the week was no fluke.

“Credit to them, they played extremely hard,” Gosek said. “I can see why they upset Fredonia. They play hard, they’re opportunistic, and they got great goaltending.”

“All in all, I love this team. There’s all fight in them. There’s no quit in this group,” Grady said. “We made a statement. There were probably 32 people in this building who expected us to be here. Our guys believe that we deserve this, that we should be here. There is absolutely a winning feeling in that room. We made a huge, huge step forward this year. There a young, talented, hard working group of guys. The confidence is sky high for next year.”

Meanwhile, up in the northeast corner of the state, Plattsburgh defeated Brockport, 5-2, also with an empty-net goal at the end. This, too, was not easy for the winning team.

The Cardinals did jump out early, scoring 35 seconds in and then midway through the first for a 2-0 first period lead. Then, Brockport got their game back under them.

“We definitely made the adjustment as a team,” Brockport head coach Brian Dickinson said. “Worked the forecheck extremely well. Worked a lot of turnovers in the neutral zone. We had a lot of good looks. Unfortunately, the period where we controlled the play we only got one goal while the period they controlled, the first, they scored two.”

“I thought Brockport had a pretty good game going,” Plattsburgh head coach Bob Emery said. “We came out and got on the board early. Brockport did a good job in the second period causing us a lot of neutral zone turnovers. We did okay in the third. Brockport had a game plan and really executed it.”

After Brockport got that goal in the second, Plattsburgh scored two early in the third to put the game away. A goal midway through the period was too little, too late for the Golden Eagles.

“All in all, a much better effort than it was last year when we went up there in a similar situation,” Dickinson said. “We were close to even with the shots. We kept them under 30 shots which was our goal. We felt we could win if we kept them under 30.”

Like Morrisville backing up their win over Fredonia with a solid effort against Oswego, Brockport followed up their successful season last year with an impressive showing this season.

“Definitely a successful season for us,” Dickinson said. “From where we’ve been in the history of the program, it was really important to back up last year with a similar season. We had 14 wins like last year and made it to the SUNYAC semifinals again. I’m excited where we are. We certainly have a lot to build on. We started to be competitive on a regular basis.”

All Rookie Team and Defensive Awards

This is the fifth year we’ve been helping out with these awards. I’ll repeat what I always do — I only coordinate this effort. I do not select these awards nor does USCHO. The coaches do in the same way they select the other SUNYAC year-end awards. I just count the votes since the SUNYAC did not want to handle more than what they already do.

The purpose is to bring some publicity to players who are not recognized by the traditional end-of-season awards. They may not be sanctioned by the conference, but I believe they hold the same credibility as the other official SUNYAC awards.

Here are the 2009-10 All Rookie Team and defensive awards:

Forward: Jon Whitelaw (Oswego)
Forward: Mat Hehr (Fredonia)
Forward: Luke Moodie (Oswego)
Defense: Cody Adams (Plattsburgh)
Defense: Taylor Farris (Oswego)
Goalie: Ryan Williams (Plattsburgh)

Best Defensive Defenseman: Jeff MacPhee (Geneseo)

Best Defensive Forward: Brad Dormiedy (Oswego)

Final Preview

Once again, Plattsburgh and Oswego meet for the SUNYAC championship and the automatic berth into the NCAA playoffs. Last year, Plattsburgh took the title, 5-4, in overtime. This year, they play in Oswego, the first SUNYAC championship to be decided in the new Campus Center Ice Arena.

If you cannot make the game, you can listen to the Web cast, watch the videocast, or keep track with the live stats.

(All statistics in the preview are for conference play only.)

Plattsburgh (13-2-1 in SUNYAC, 18-4-4 overall) at Oswego (15-1-0, 24-2-0)

There’s a reason these two teams have been the top two teams in the SUNYAC. The numbers say it.

Top two teams offensively. Top two teams defensively. Two of the top three teams on the power play. Top two teams on the penalty kill. Top two goaltenders.

There are two numbers where they diverge, however, and that may tell the story on Saturday.

Oswego has some big powerhouse scorers — Eric Selleck (14 goals, 25 assists, 39 points), Chris Laganiere (14-16-30), Justin Fox (5-22-27), Jon Whitelaw (8-14-22), and Neil Musselwhite (11-6-17), whereas, outside of Dylan Clarke (7-14-21), Plattsburgh doesn’t have that big sniper. They do it by committee as the Cardinals do have the second best offense in the league.

Plattsburgh commits the least number of penalties in the league while Oswego commits the second most. Oswego may have the best penalty kill, but it’s still something you don’t want to consistently test against Plattsburgh.

It’s also interesting to note that despite these two teams having the top two goaltenders statistically speaking, there is a question mark coming into this game.

Kyle Gunn-Taylor may have been pulled against Morrisville to shake up the team, but he has not looked sharp down the stretch. In fact, Oswego looked flat against Brockport, lost to Geneseo, and nearly were shocked by Morrisville. Do you stick with the netminder who got you here or go with Paul Beckwith who looked strong in relief?

In any case, Oswego has got to play better than their last three games.

“Let’s not get into a false sense of security,” Oswego’s Ed Gosek said after the comeback against Morrisville. “We certainly have to play better defensively than we did tonight. Plattsburgh is a hard working team with a lot of skill. We’re going to have to do a better job. The whole package. I don’t know the last time we gave up five goals. Playoff hockey, defense wins. We were fortunate tonight to put up some numbers, but you can’t expect to do that against a team like Plattsburgh.”

Plattsburgh has been rotating their freshmen goaltenders, so it is Ryan Williams turn. Expect Williams to play especially since Josh Leis struggled the last time these two teams met. Then again, Williams struggled the next big game Plattsburgh had against Middlebury. Both goalies were yanked in those instances.

“Coach Gosek knows us really well, and we know them really well,” Plattsburgh’s Bob Emery said. “It’s going to be a matter of execution and really good goaltending.”

The teams are extremely even across the board. Even home ice might not matter.

“I don’t think there’s any advantage for any team going in,” Emery said. “They’ll have the advantage of their home crowd getting them going. We’ve proven in the past that we can be successful there.”

On the Periphery

Since this is the last column of the 2009-10 season, I need to provide some updates.

How well did I do trying to convert my nephews to become hockey fans? Well, to be honest, between my schedule and their activities, I never really had the time to give it a shot. However, I did get my youngest nephew signed up for the Learn to Skate program at RIT. He won’t be the next Sidney Crosby, but every time the 8-year-old left the ice for the day, he had a huge smile on his face.

The Best Pretzel in SUNYAC once again goes to Brockport. However, they almost choked in the playoffs, as the pretzel I had that Tuesday was not up to par at all. Oswego still has the best cookie in all of SUNYAC. The chocolate chunk cookie will kill you … with a smile on your face.

I didn’t keep count of how many games I attended this year. I think it’s best not to say a number if my wife asks me. She already asks every Thursday, “Where are you this weekend?” The fact she takes the answer in stride deserves a big thanks.

A big thanks also to the coaches who as always have been very gracious and patient with me. Ditto to the sports information directors and SUNYAC Commissioner Pat Damore, as well as certain athletic directors and college presidents, who in a very difficult time were willing to talk to me.

Of course, great appreciation to you readers. It wouldn’t be any fun writing if no one was reading what I wrote. All of you are what keeps me going when I run out of steam.

Hope to see you all in Lake Placid!

This Week in Hockey East: March 4, 2010

Standings, Standings and More Standings

I’m not enough of a Hockey East historian to know whether this officially is the tightest logjam entering the final weekend of play in league history. If it’s not, I can’t imagine the math that pundits were going through in the past.

At this point in the season, the league title is up for grabs and no less than six teams are fighting for the final two home ice playoff spots and five of those six teams have yet to lock up a playoff spot!

Thus, this column, my final of the season, will be spent analyzing the craziness of the standings.

It would take a dissertation and months of research to play out every scenario, so I’m going to try to point out some of the key ones as well as some of the quirkier (like a five-way tie for fifth place?!?).

So away we go …

It’s All About Destiny… and Controlling It

With one week left to play, the optimal word around Hockey East is destiny. Every team is destined for some outcome whether it be winning a championship, getting home ice, making the playoffs or, well, hitting the golf links.

What every team does not have, though, is the ability to control such destiny.

I’ve always believed that controlling one’s own destiny late in the season in sports should be the ultimate goal. It’s that edge that propels teams — whether to championships, or simply to a postseason berth.

What’s ironic about this year’s Hockey East race (well, one of the things that’s ironic, I guess) is that every single team from first through eighth has control over some part of its playoff destiny:

• First-place New Hampshire and second-place Boston College have complete control over their destiny to win the Hockey East regular season title. Because the teams face off in a home-and-home series this weekend, and Boston College trails UNH by just three points, if either team sweeps, they capture the crown. At the same time, it’s even easier for the Wildcats as merely earning a tie in either game would give UNH the outright championship. It should be noted, as well, there cannot be co-champions.

• Both Maine and Massachusetts-Lowell control their destinies for home ice. If Maine sweeps Massachusetts or UMass-Lowell sweeps Vermont, they’d be guaranteed home ice.

• Boston University, Northeastern and Merrimack all control their playoff destinies. If any of these teams sweep, they’re guaranteed to make the playoffs.

• When it comes to destiny, though, no one controls more than Vermont does. Should the Catamounts sweep Lowell, they’d be guaranteed not only to make the playoffs, but to receive home ice in the first round as well. The Catamounts are just a point in back of the River Hawks in a three-way tie for fifth, but they also hold the tiebreaker against the other two clubs in fifth (Northeastern and BU), meaning all Vermont has to do for home ice is overtake Lowell.

The only team with playoff hopes that has no control? UMass.

The Minutemen lost control of their playoff destiny last weekend, dropping a 2-1 overtime decision to Boston College in their only game of the weekend. UMass could sweep Maine and get to 26 points in the standings but still needs help from another team to keep the teams in front of them from reaching that 26-point plateau.

Tiebreakers Galore

So that everyone is very clear, here is Hockey East’s procedure for breaking ties:

1. Head-to-Head.
2. Number of wins in conference play.
3. Best record against the first-place team(s), then the second-place team(s), then the third-place team(s), and so on.
4. Coin Flip.

If more than two teams finish in a tie, the same criteria will be applied to reduce the number of teams tied, and then the process will commence again. To understand this better, if three teams are tied, you take Team A’s combined win-loss record against Team B and Team C; Team B’s combined win-loss record against Team A and Team C; and Team C’s combined win-loss record against Team A and Team B. Comparing these against one another, you then rank the three teams. If in doing so, two teams remain tied, then, as was stated, you start the whole process again.

The most important criteria, of course, then becomes head-to-head. Here, then, are the critical head-to-head matchups entering the final weekend:

Two-Way Tiebreakers
BC wins season series vs. Maine, 2-0-1
Maine wins season series vs. UML, 2-1-0
Maine wins season series vs. NU, 2-1-0
Maine wins season series vs. UVM, 2-0-1
UML wins season series vs. NU, 2-1-0
UML wins season series vs. MC, 2-1-0
BU wins season series vs. Maine, 2-1-0
BU wins season series vs. UML, 2-1-0
BU wins season series vs. MC, 2-1-0
BU wins season series vs. UMass, 2-1-0
NU leads series vs. BU, 1-0-0
NU wins season series vs. UMass, 2-1-0
NU wins season series vs. MC, 2-1-0
UMass wins season series vs. UVM, 2-1-0
UMass wins season series vs. UML, 2-1-0
Merrimack wins season series vs. UVM, 2-0-1
Merrimack wins season series vs. UMass, 2-1-0
UVM wins season series vs. NU, 2-1-0
UVM wins season series vs. BU, 2-0-1

Some key head-to-heads to highlight:

• Northeastern’s 1-0-0 lead over Boston University this weekend means that BU would have to earn at least three points in this weekend’s series to overtake the Huskies in the standings. If Northeastern picks up two points with a win or two ties, Northeastern will be seeded ahead of BU.

• Northeastern and BU’s season series win over UMass will loom very large should the three teams finish in a three-way tie. This would happen if UMass sweeps Maine and BU and Northeastern split their weekend series. If that was the case, UMass would hold a 2-4-0 record against the field, BU would be 3-3-0 against the field and Northeastern would be 4-2-0 against the field. Thus, Northeastern would be the highest of the three, BU the middle and UMass the bottom.

Five-Way for Fifth

Believe it or not, with the jumbled standings at the bottom of the league, there is in fact a chance for a five-way tie for fifth place.

If …

• BU and NU split this weekend (either a win by both teams or two ties; we’ll assume a win by each team rather than two ties for purposes of calculations);

• UMass sweeps Maine;

• Vermont gets exactly two points from Lowell and;

• Merrimack takes exactly three points from Providence.

All five teams would end up with 26 points in a five-way tie for fifth place. So how the heck do you break a five-way tie for fifth?

According to Hockey East Media Relations Director Pete Souris, it’s quite easy. First, you determine the record of each team against the other four. The result:

• Northeastern: 7-5-0 (14 points)
• Merrimack: 6-6-0 (12 points)
• Vermont: 5-5-2 (12 points)
• Boston University: 5-6-1 (11 points)
• UMass: 5-7-0 (10 points)

Thus, you would award Northeastern the fifth seed based on the best record against the other four teams. Then? Start all over again, eliminating each of the remaining four team’s records against Northeastern. The result:

• Merrimack: 5-4-0 (10 points)
• Boston University: 4-4-1 (9 points)
• UMass: 4-5-0 (8 points)
• Vermont: 3-4-2 (8 points)

Merrimack is the winner of the four-way tie break and thus takes the sixth seed. Then, of course? We start all over again. The result:

• Vermont: 3-2-1 (7 points)
• UMass: 3-3-0 (6 points)
• Boston University: 2-3-1 (5 points)

Obviously, dropping Merrimack from the comparisons helps Vermont the most as the Catamounts were 0-2-1 against Merrimack. Thus, with seven points, Merrimack takes the seventh seed.

The final spot, then, comes down to head-to-head between BU and UMass. The Terriers won the season series, 2-1-0, against the Minutemen and thus would grab the eighth and final spot.

So, believe it or not, UMass could pull off a daunting sweep of Maine on the road, finish in a tie for fifth place, be ONE point out of home ice and STILL miss the playoffs.

Somehow, this doesn’t seem right.

One Final Interesting Note

Should Vermont earn a win against Lowell this weekend, NINE of the 10 Hockey East teams will have double digits in wins in league play. That would be a record, bettering the eight teams that reached 10 wins in 2004-05. That year’s parity meant nothing in the playoffs, though, as all four top seeds swept their quarterfinal playoff series. Don’t, though, expect that this year.

And Finally, Not That It Has Anything to Do With Anything, But …

I’m not going to say too much about the Olympics gold medal game. Certainly, both teams played very well, the ending to regulation was incredible as a U.S. fan but the eventual outcome left me thinking about what could’ve been.

I was proud of the way the U.S. played throughout the tournament and had sincere fear after their win in the round-robin against Canada that a sleeping giant had been awoken. That certainly was the case.

The gold medal game certainly goes down in infamy. And also makes me long for 2014.

On another hockey-related note, I’m sure there are a decent number of Boston Bruins fans who read this column. I’m probably not the only one who stands a little disappointed after Wednesday’s trade deadline. Here was an opportunity for GM Peter Chiarelli to make a statement that he believes this team has a chance, but by not finding a legitimate scorer or any type of players with Stanley Cup experience, I think the B’s have thrown up their hands and surrendered.

Maybe this team can rally, but, truth be told, I think this is going to be a playoff-bubble team that will be playing golf before May 1.

Narrowing the Field

So, the calendar has turned to March, and in two weeks, the finalists for the 2010 Hobey Baker Award will be announced. So, it’s time to start taking a serious look at who’s going to be in the field.

Of course, we already know some of the players who are involved, and I’m pretty sure about some others. I’m not sure about how exactly the field of 10 will look, but I am certain that these 24 players are the ones who make up the field.

THE MORTAL LOCKS

Gustav Nyquist, Maine – He currently sits as the nation’s leading scorer, the Black Bears are back in the top four in Hockey East, and in NCAA Tournament contention. His overall chances may depend on his team’s success in March, but it’s safe to say he’ll be in the top 10.

Bobby Butler, UNH – A senior leader among the nation’s top five scorers for the current Hockey East front-runner? Like Nyquist, his overall chances at the award are tied to his team’s fortunes, but Hobey likes seniors, at least as finalists.

Brendan Smith, Wisconsin – He’s the top-scoring defenseman in the country, the No. 16 scorer overall, and he has more goals than six of the forwards who are ahead of him. He’s also improved his defensive play for a team that is a favorite to advance to the Frozen Four.

Marc Cheverie, Denver – He leads the country in save percentage, win percentage and goals-against average, minds the net for the No. 1 team in the land, and doesn’t play with a superstar skater who gets most of the glory. His chances of winning the award itself are pretty slim – Hobey doesn’t particularly like goalies, and his numbers don’t quite measure up to other recent goalie finalists – but he’s certain to be one of the top 10.

ON SOLID GROUND

Mark Olver, Northern Michigan – Olver has been a key player for a Northern Michigan team that’s come on strong late in the year (as usual) to potentially put itself in NCAA Tournament position, and he even managed to snatch the conference scoring lead on the last weekend of the regular season. Trouble is, the U.P. isn’t a great place to get noticed – particularly in what is generally considered a down year for the CCHA – and Northern wasn’t really a factor until relatively recently. Still, as the leading scorer on a team that’s in the mix, Olver could be the best Hobey candidate the CCHA has this season.

Broc Little, Yale – He’s the top goal-scorer in the land, and we all know how Hobey likes goals. He also gets a good “student-athlete” boost playing in the Ivy League, and Yale’s overall success probably doesn’t hurt either. I say “probably” because Yale is the top offensive team in the country, which may make it possible to discount Little’s contributions a bit, and he might be shorted a bit in the respect department playing in ECAC Hockey. Still, I think Little is *almost* a sure thing.

Chase Polacek, RPI – He’s the top overall scorer in ECAC Hockey, and his contributions on the scoresheet tend to be of the “clutch” variety, and he was recently rewarded with an All-ECAC Hockey First Team nod. That said, it remains to be seen how the rest of the country will perceive him. RPI still hasn’t quite regained its form as an elite program, and it’s hard to get noticed when you’re not really a player on the national stage. The numbers are going to be hard to argue with, and I think Polacek will get a nod, but don’t be *too* terribly surprised if Polacek finds himself on the outside looking in.

QUESTION MARKS

Corey Tropp, Michigan State – The Spartan forward had been the CCHA’s scoring leader until recently, and has been coming up big in the clutch on a pretty regular basis for a Spartan team that’s bounced back from a horrible season last year. Tropp has bounced back himself, although it’s not from poor play, but from the suspension that had him gone from the team. That’s really where the question lies. My gut feeling is that he gets a finalist nod, as the Hobey folks have shown themselves willing to overlook instances of bad behavior, both on the ice (Nathan Gerbe) and off it (T.J. Oshie). Still, you never know.

Rhett Rakhshani, Denver – Among the WCHA’s top forwards, no one was as clutch as Rakhshani when I applied the Campbellnomics system to the top scoring forwards in the WCHA. He also has the benefit of having produced those clutch goals for the No. 1 team in the land, and as an senior and a draft pick of the New York Islanders, he gets bonus points for sticking it out until his senior year. Where it gets a little tricky is that Cheverie is pretty clearly Denver’s top Hobey candidate, and it remains to be seen how that perception will affect Rakhshani’s candidacy.

Blake Geoffrion, Wisconsin – Our friends at INCH think that Geoffrion is the Badgers’ top Hobey contender, and while I think that distinction belongs to Brendan Smith, Geoffrion certainly has a strong case. He’s a senior leader on one of the nation’s top teams, the No. 5 goal-scorer in the country, and a name player and NHL draft pick who stuck it out for all four years of college. The main thing that could derail Geoffrion’s candidacy is a case of “too many cooks spoil the sauce.” Wisconsin has four players who could make a case as a Hobey candidate, and while Smith’s scoring numbers as a defenseman separate him from the pack, the three forwards – Geoffrion, Michael Davies, and Derek Stepan – could wind up taking votes from one another. Also, he’s missed time recently due to injury, which could play a role. I think Geoffrion’s the best of the bunch among the Wisconsin forwards, but I’m not on the committee.

Mario Valery-Trabucco, Union – He’s the leading scorer in ECAC Hockey play, playing for a team that’s in NCAA tournament contention and a program that usually isn’t. That should probably be enough to make him a Hobey Baker finalist. Then again, it should have been enough to make him a first-team All-ECAC selection, but that’s not the case, either. He wouldn’t be the first high-scorer in the conference to get a total snub at Hobey-time – does the name “Bryan Leitch” ring a bell? – but past performance isn’t always an indicator of future results, especially since the Hobey committee has a certain amount of turnover to it. Still, if the coaches in his own conference aren’t going to go to bat for Valery-Trabucco, who will?

Dave Jarman, Sacred Heart OR Cory Conacher, Canisius – Conacher is the No. 2 scorer in the nation, and has been firmly entrenched in the top 5 for months. Of course, Jarman doesn’t have to take much of a backseat in that department, and he has the bonus of having helped lead Sacred Heart on a dramatic second-half run that saw them finish second in Atlantic Hockey under first-year head coach CJ Marrottolo. The thing about this slot – and my instinct says there is a spot for an Atlantic Hockey player here – is that it goes to a player from a successful team, and sometimes even that isn’t enough (just ask former Mercyhurst stars Jamie Hunt and Dave Borelli).

Ben Scrivens, Cornell – Of the top goalies in the country, it’s tough to find one who’s spent a higher percentage of game time in net for his team. He’s No. 3 in the nation in goals-against average and save percentage, and is a senior, which tends to help in these matters. However, when Cornell goaltending comes up, “the system” is rarely far behind, and it may derail Scrivens as a Hobey candidate here.

James Marcou, UMass – A month or six weeks ago, Marcou would have been hovering somewhere between “MORTAL LOCK” and “ON SOLID GROUND.” Marcou is an assist man, and Hobey likes goals, but when you’re one of the top three scorers in the country playing in a major conference, that won’t stop you from getting a finalist nod. What will probably stop Marcou is the Minutemen’s slide as of late, as his numbers have fallen off along with his team. If the Minutemen can right the ship and make it to the KurtCenter (aka TD Garden), Marcou will be right back where he was, but I don’t think he’s a serious contender for the Hobey.

Brian Gibbons, Boston College – From where I sit, this Eagle has flown under the radar a bit (yuk yuk yuk), as he doesn’t seem to have the same kind of buzz that accompanied, say, Nathan Gerbe, Chris Collins or Patrick Eaves, the last three BC forwards to be recognized as Hobey finalists (of course, when it comes to Gerbe and Collins, I was doing a lot of the buzzing). The fact of the matter is that Gibbons is the No. 12 scorer in the country, playing for a BC team that could steal the Hockey East title from UNH this weekend. That puts him in the mix. Much of the same could be said about Cam Atknison, who has more goals, but I think the difference is small enough that if there’s a guy from BC, it’ll be Gibbons.

OUTSIDE CHANCE:

Jack Connolly or Justin Fontaine, Minnesota Duluth – The Bulldog boys’ scoring has fallen off a bit as of late, and UMD’s success has gone with it. If the Bulldogs can right the ship, make it to St. Paul, and stay in the mix for an NCAA tournament spot, one of them (probably the elder and higher-scoring Fontaine) could have a shot, but these guys picked the wrong time of year to fall off.

Stephane Da Costa, Merrimack – He’s a shoo-in for Hockey East Rookie of the Year, and could even bring home the national ROTY award, but the Frenchman has two things working against him: Merrimack’s overall lack of success, and the rarity of a freshman being nominated for the Hobey. I think Da Costa has a Hobey finalist nod in his future, but I don’t think it’s this year.

Cody Reichard, Miami – He probably shares his time with Connor Knapp too much to be get much traction as a serious Hobey contender, but there is certainly a chance that he’ll get a finalist nod.

Matt Read, Bemidji State – Read was a big part of the Hobey conversation early in the year, but his star has faded a little in the second half of the season. He’s still a likely CHA Player of the Year pick, but Read’s best chance at a Hobey finalist nod (or more) will be next year, in the Beavers’ inaugural WCHA season.

Blake Kessel, New Hampshire – The No. 2 offensive defenseman in the nation behind Brendan Smith, Kessel has been a major weapon for the Wildcats. What I suspect, though, is that as a sophomore on a team that has a senior forward contending for the award, Kessel will collect his Hockey East All-League and All-American hardware and be happy with it…for now.

Michael Davies, Wisconsin – Davies has had a very nice senior year for the Badgers, but takes, to my thinking, a clear backseat to teammates Brendan Smith and Blake Geoffrion when it comes to the Hobey race. He is a senior, and he has a higher point total than Geoffrion, but I think that Geoffrion’s goals give him the preferred spot behind Brendan Smith.

Derek Stepan, Wisconsin – See above, although Stepan is, to my thinking, a less likely pick than Davies. He’s a sophomore as opposed to a senior, and his numbers are skewed more heavily towards assists than Davies’ are. One thing Stepan may have going for him is his performance at the World Juniors, although that’s not really a matter for consideration where the Hobey is concerned.

This Week in MIAC: Mar. 4, 2010

If anyone had any doubt about the parity in the MIAC after the regular season, this weekend’s playoff games put that to rest — in a hurry. On Wednesday, St. Thomas heads down to St. Peter to face off against Gustavus Adolphus for the MIAC Championship.

Let’s first take a step back and look at the events that brought us to this point.

Three games were played this past weekend, combining for an eye popping seven overtime periods. Two Division III NCAA records were set: saves and longest game ever. It’s also possible there was a record set for most shots in a game, but more on that later.

The first game of the weekend seemingly set the tone for the other two. In the play-in game, fourth seeded Augsburg hosted fifth seeded St. Olaf on Friday. Both teams traded goals in the first period, in what seemed like the start of a regular playoff game.

Augsburg and St. Olaf Set the Tone

St. Olaf took a 2-1 lead just 12 seconds into the second period, and there the score would stay until there was less than a minute remaining in regulation. That’s when the drama started — and it didn’t end for over 30 minutes later.

With Augsburg’s net empty, Mario Mjelleli scored his second goal of the game to knot the score at 2-2 and send things to overtime. Both teams would get chances in the extra time, but both goalies were up to the task, sending the game to a second overtime.

St. Olaf’s Ben Leis was tremendous in net, turning away 47 shots by the time all was said and done, including several game-saving ones. Augsburg’s Justin Lochner was also up to the task, eventually stopped 39 shots, including 18 in overtime alone.

With the clock ticking past midnight, it seemed like this game might go on and on. About nine minutes into the second overtime, a rare penalty was called against St. Olaf, putting Augsburg on the power play. Thirty seconds later, the game was over, as Nick Guran knocked in a rebound past a sprawling Leis, and Augsburg began their celebration.

This was one of those games where no matter who you were rooting for, you felt bad for the team that lost. Both teams proved they were up to the task, and it was almost a shame that someone had to come out on the short end. Both teams played hard for the entire game in a tense playoff atmosphere, and in the end the Auggies came out on top in the third longest NCAA Division III game ever. Their celebration wouldn’t last long though, as they would face Gustavus Adolphus in a semifinal game in less than 19 hours.

Tommies Gun Down the Pipers

The other seminal game on Saturday pitted second ranked Hamline against third seeded St. Thomas. Coming into the game, Hamline had the better season and better overall numbers, but had split their two games against St. Thomas, with each team winning in a blowout.

In front of a raucous split crowd at Drake Arena, Hamline opened the scoring just 30 seconds into the game, sending their fans into a frenzy. Halfway through the period, though, St. Thomas would score two quick goals and take a 2-1 lead into the second.

Throughout the game, Hamline got their best offensive looks when they were able to hold the zone, cycle the puck, and apply steady pressure. St. Thomas, meanwhile, got several chances through transition, and did a tremendous job clogging up passing lanes and forcing the Pipers to make quick decisions with the puck or risk turning it over.

The second period saw both teams get several chances, but the score remained 2-1 in favor of St. Thomas as time dwindled down. A late power-play opportunity for St. Thomas was quickly cashed in for a 3-1 lead with just over one minute left, and that was the score as the team’s headed to their locker rooms in preparation for the third period.

Both teams played somewhat tentatively to start the third, with St. Thomas playing defensively, and Hamline appearing to focus more on avoiding mistakes than in generating offense. A little less than seven minutes into the third, St. Thomas’ Steve Murphy broke free alone to the Hamline net, but was slashed and wasn’t able to get a shot away.

The split crowd murmured anxiously, then roared in both excitement and dismay as the referee raised his arms above his head to signal a penalty shot. Murphy brought the puck in slowly, made his move, then slipped the puck in on a backhand to give the Tommies a 4-1 lead with less than 15 minutes remaining.

After that point though, the game turned decidedly in Hamline’s favor. Less than a minute later, the Pipers were given a chance on the power play, and scored 15 seconds later, cutting the lead to 4-2. Five minutes later, Hamline was controlling play, generating chances, and drew another penalty from St. Thomas. Hamline wasn’t able to score while on the power play, but a scramble in front of the net resulted in a goal just after the penalty expired, before the fifth St. Thomas skater could join into the play.

Hamline continued to apply pressure, desperately trying to tie the score to keep their season alive, and with under three minutes to go, Spencer Anderson knotted it at 4-4, silencing the St. Thomas portion of the crowd and sending the Piper fans into a frenzy.

Neither team was able to score in the dying minutes of the third, and yet another MIAC playoff game was headed to overtime.

The extra session started off much more evenly than the third period ended, with both teams trying to generate chances without sacrificing on defense. St. Thomas looked very dangerous in transition, even on 2-on-2 and 3-on-3 rushes. Hamline continued to try and hold the puck in the Tommie zone, and got several good looks, but weren’t able to beat St. Thomas goaltender Joe Shraeder, having several shots blocked by St. Thomas defenders or just missing wide of the net.

Hamline’s best chance came just past 10 minutes into the overtime period. Shraeder made the initial save, but was down and had left a rebound to the left of the net. A Piper forward skated in, with a mostly empty net staring him in the face.

The puck bounced over his stick, though, was picked up by St. Thomas, and quickly brought down the right wing. After bringing the puck into the faceoff circle to the left of Hamline goaltender Beau Christian, Andrew Kappers fired a shot to the far post that beat Christian, sending the Tommies streaming off their bench to celebrate the 5-4 win and move them into the MIAC championship game.

Even though this game started after the other semifinal game, the Tommies didn’t yet know whether they’d be traveling to face Gustavus or staying home to play Augsburg. Even though St. Thomas won over 10 into overtime, word had trickled into Drake Arena that the other semifinal game was still going on… .

One for the Ages

I could devote an entire column summarizing the Augsburg-Gustavus game, and it still wouldn’t do it justice. The Gusties’ rink has a tremendous atmosphere for any game, but when packed full of fans, in a do-or-die playoff game, it goes to another level. After attending the Hamline-St. Thomas game, I tuned in online to watch the second overtime of the Gustavus-Augsburg game.

Before I did so, however, I missed out on a lot of scoring. Augsburg tallied first, but then were forced to come back from 2-1 and 3-2 deficits, before roaring back to a 5-3 lead. Gustavus scored near the end of the second period to make it 5-4, and then finally tied things up with under four minutes to go in regulation. It would be over 80 minutes before someone scored again.

Less than 24 hours after winning the third longest D-III game in history, the Auggies were headed back to overtime. The wear of all those minutes finally began to show, and the Gusties began to take control of the game. The Gusties held a 44-33 shot advantage through the first three periods, which isn’t a huge margin, but through overtime Gustavus outshot the Auggies 60-24.

Freshman Justin Lochner was in net for Augsburg, and for over 60 minutes in overtime, turned away every shot he saw. For most of the third and fourth overtimes, Gustavus would control play in the Augsburg zone, the Auggies would eventually gain control, bring it down the ice, go off for a line change, and the Gusties would bring the puck right back to put the pressure on again. Time and time again, Lochner would be there to end the threat.

Eventually, though, the Gustavus pressure would become too much, and at 18:38 of the fourth overtime period, Eric Bigham knocked in a loose puck in a scramble of bodies to win the game for the Gusties, triumphantly putting them into the MIAC title tilt.

In the end, Lochner made 98 saves on 104 shots — an NCAA D-III record — in a game that lasted 138:38, also a record. Over the entire weekend, Lochner played over 228 minutes, nearly four games worth of ice time, and made an astounding 137 saves. In comparison, Gustavus’s Josh Swartout did not make that many saves in his last seven games combined. And he is one of the league’s top goaltenders.

There have been at least two other college games that were longer, with a Division I men’s game between Yale and Union and a D-I women’s game between RPI and Quinnipiac both going into a fifth overtime. This game saw over two full games’ worth of action, with 11 total goals, 161 total shots, and only seven penalties for 14 minutes.

This weekend was an example of college and playoff hockey at its best, and the MIAC showed how even a field it truly is, with each game pushing both teams to their limits.

MIAC Championship

St. Thomas at Gustavus Adolphus, Wednesday March 3, 2010

With the incredible way the games unfolded this past weekend, it almost seems shocking that the biggest game is yet to come. On Wednesday, St. Thomas will travel down to Don Roberts Ice Arena to play Gustavus Adolphus for the conference championship, with a bid to the NCAA tournament on the line.

This is the final game of the MIAC season, and it’s the only game I’m not going to make a prediction for. With the parity that’s been obvious all season long, and only growing stronger in the playoffs, I’d rather just flip a coin or pick a name out of a hat than try and figure out who has the edge in this game.

Last season, Gustavus Adolphus entered the tournament as the second seed, and ended up making a run that didn’t end until they lost in the national championship game. This year, they added a regular season championship banner to go with their MIAC playoff and NCAA banners. They’ve had a tremendous season so far, and even if they falter in the title game, still have a chance to be selected as an at-large team for the NCAA tournament.

St. Thomas, on the other hand, has had a down year, finishing the regular season just one game over .500. The conference playoffs are a chance for them to redeem an otherwise so-so season for them and add another championship banner to their MIAC-leading collection. The playoffs reward teams who peak at the right time, and the Tommies are certainly playing their best hockey of the season right now. They need to win this game if they don’t want to see their season end.

Gustavus's Josh Swartout's excellent play in net this year has brought the Gusties back to the MIAC title game (photo: Scott Bridges).

Gustavus’s Josh Swartout’s excellent play in net this year has brought the Gusties back to the MIAC title game (photo: Scott Bridges).

By the numbers, this matchup favors Gustavus heavily. The Gusties finished the season 12-2-2 in the MIAC and 18-5-2 overall. Their junior net minder, Josh Swartout, leads the league in goals against average, giving up a miniscule 2.13 goals per game to go along with his save percentage of .910.

While St. Thomas’s Joe Shraeder has posted a 3.37 GAA and .878 save pct. over the course of the season, he’s shown that he can elevate his game to the level the playoffs demand. Against Hamline, Shraeder faced 45 shots, turning away 41 of them. St. Thomas has now won six of their last seven games, and are definitely playing at the level they need to if they want to extend their season.

The special teams numbers nearly all favor Gustavus

Then again, when St. Thomas played Hamline, the numbers nearly all favored the Pipers too. St. Thomas’s penalty kill checks in at 80.2%, while their power play clicking at a rate of 14.9%. While that is not a very good power play percentage, something that may worry the Tommies even more is that they’ve given up seven shorthanded goals this season, tied for fourth most in the nation.

The reason this may be important is that Gustavus has scored nine shorthanded goals of their own this season, tied for the most across the country.

For the Gusties, their power play is rolling at 20.3%, while their penalty kill is at 82.3%. Neither of those are statistically amazing, but they’re definitely solid, and the nine shorties add a whole other dimension to their special teams.

For Gustavus, the bulk of their offense comes from David Martinson, whose 29 goals lead the nation, and Ross Ring-Jarvi, who is 18th in the nation in points per game. While those two provide the biggest punches, the rest of this team is dangerous as well.

This team is deadly in transition, but can also get a cycle going, throw their bodies around, and muck in the corners. One of their biggest assets is how they can dominate a game. Gustavus outshoots their opponents close to 40-to-25 on average. That keeps a lot of pressure off their own defense, instead focusing it onto their opponents.

St. Thomas’s game tends to involve disrupting the flow of their opponents, creating chances through transition, and quick passing to either break out of their own zone, or catch an opponent off guard defensively. They play hard, and aren’t afraid to throw checks or dig the puck out of the corner.

It sounds cliché to say that this game will come down to goaltending, special teams, and execution, but it’s true. Whoever executes their game plan the most effectively will most likely be raising a new banner at their rink. Whoever takes the fewest penalties, capitalizes on their chances, and doesn’t sacrifice on defense, will obviously hold the advantage.

You can say that about virtually any game, but in the playoffs, with the teams so close together in their level of play, subtle differences can pay large dividends when the game is over. Despite any disparities in numbers, the playoffs are called the second season for good reason. These two teams will come out fired up to claim the tournament championship, bragging rights, a chance at a national title, and to keep their season alive.

This Wednesday, St. Thomas and Gustavus Adolphus will lay it out there on the ice, with one of them emerging the champion.

Short Shots

It’s going to be one heck of a finish to the season, and if the atmosphere is anything like last year’s championship game, it will be a great night for hockey. Gustavus’s Web page offered a video feed to watch the semifinal game online. If you can’t make it to St. Peter this Wednesday at 7:05, be sure to check there to see if it’s available for the championship as well.

The NCAA does not keep track of team shot records. It’s quite possible that Gustavus Adolphus’ 104 shots were an all-time record. The former saves leader was ex-Northland goalie Daniel McIntosh who stopped 95 of 99 shots against Adrian in 2009. The former second place number was 77 saves by Nichols goaltender John Herud, set in 1973. Now, the record for most goals scored in a game was 26, so even without box scores we can tell that the most shots Herud could have faced was 103, and we have the box score from the Adrian-Northland game, and know Adrian had 99 shots.

So while neither of those games could have had more shots in them, why isn’t this definitely a record for shots in a game? The problem with the save records is that it’s only for one goalie. If a goalie gives up six goals and makes 30 saves in the first period and is replaced, and the second goalie gives up six goals and makes 30 saves in the second period, and the third string goalie comes in and gives up six goals and makes 30 saves in the third period, their opponent has scored 18 goals on 108 shots. That would break Gustavus’ total from this past weekend, but wouldn’t show up anywhere in the NCAA record book

It’s highly unlikely that something like that has occurred in the past, and 104 is definitely the highest shot total I can ever remember seeing in my years of following D-III, but unfortunately it still can’t be definitively called a record.

This Week in the ECAC West: Mar. 4, 2010

No. 1 Elmira vs. No. 2 Manhattanville

The top two teams square off for the league title on Saturday at the Thunderdomes. Elmira and Manhattanville found themselves in scraps last weekend during the semifinal games, but both prevailed in the end by identical 4-2 scores.

Manhattanville hosted third seeded Hobart, who came out flying during the first half of the game. The Statesmen built a 2-0 lead by the middle of the second period and had the Valiants on their heels.

“The first 30 minutes of the game, Hobart did a lot of things that contributed to us not being very good,” said Manhattanville head coach Keith Levinthal. “The last half of the game, we stepped it up and really started to take the game over. Once it was 2-1, we started to generate a lot of good scoring opportunities and I thought we would be okay.”

Levinthal called a timeout at 12:17 of the second period to settle his team down. The plan worked like a charm as freshman Brett Skalski scored less than two minutes later to get Manhattanville on the board. Momentum swung to the Valiants side of the ice and Manhattanville ripped off three goals in the third period to win the game.

“I’ve been calling timeouts all year in the middle of the games,” said Levinthal. “All I did was try to refocus. We were not skating, trying to over-handle the puck, over-complicate the game, and all we did was say to simplify the game. Let’s just get pucks in deep, make sure we finish our hits, not try and make fancy plays, and let’s calm down. What was happening for us was a little adversity in a playoff game, one and done deal, and we started being individuals. I wanted us to get back to being a team.”

Elmira found themselves down not once, but twice, against fourth seed Neumann in its semifinal game. The Knights established leads of 1-0 and 2-1 in the first two periods, but each time Elmira sophomore Kevin Willer answered the call with a goal to tie the game up.

Senior Rusty Masters finally scored at 16:20 of the third period to give Elmira its only, and most important, lead of the night to propel the Soaring Eagles to the championship game.

“We were playing pretty well, got down and came right back, then got down and came back again,” said Elmira head coach Aaron Saul. “The third period, we played pretty strong, put a lot of pressure on them and it was a matter of time until we got that late goal. Neumann played their hearts out and it was a good college hockey game to watch.”

Now it is all on the line Saturday as Elmira and Manhattanville square off for the league title.

They have met three previous times this season, with each one winning a game in the other’s barn. All three games were decided by a single goal, as Elmira won games 5-4 and 3-2, while Manhattanville took the last meeting between the teams 1-0 just two weekends ago.

“It will be an interesting game because it is the third time we’ve played each other in a short period of time,” said Levinthal. “You really get to know each other in the ECAC West and it comes down to who can execute.“

The teams won’t have to watch much game tape to prepare this week, both because of familiarity and because both teams play similar up-tempo styles.

“Both teams are real similar as far as their speed,” said Saul. “Offensively, they have some quick forwards and we do as well. In the back end, they are very strong as are we. The two teams are very evenly matched on both sides of the puck.”

“It is a great challenge because Elmira is a really good team,” said Levinthal. “Going into this game, both Elmira and us are playing well. We have played well in that rink. Both teams have a lot on the line and it is going to be one hell of a game.”

Looking ahead to the work of the NCAA selection committee on Sunday, the winner of this game will make the national tournament, while the loser will be on the bubble.

Everything is on the line in a single game showdown.

“These are two very good teams,” said Saul. “Manhattanville has been pretty steady all year long and have had a great second half. Right now, they are playing their best hockey. It is going to be a game for the ages.”

On the Lighter Side

Fans of the game certainly know that college hockey players are a rare breed. Lessons learned both on and off the ice last a lifetime. One such case was recently brought to my attention by Hobart head coach Mark Taylor.

Cameron Lochhead, a 1982 Hobart graduate who scored 46 goals and 35 assists during his collegiate career, is still lacing up the skates and recently participated in the World Pond Hockey Championship held in Plaster Rock, New Brunswick.

Lochhead decided to take things a step further and used the opportunity to raise funds for Doctors Without Borders to aid their Haitian relief efforts. He and his teammates solicited pledges and donations from former teammates, Hobart alumni, and elsewhere to raise over $10,000 for a very worthy cause.

ECAC West All-USCHO Team

The 2009-2010 ECAC West season will come to an end on Saturday. It has been a year of ups and downs, highs and lows, good and bad. The hockey on the ice has been as entertaining and thrilling as ever.

It is time now to name the ECAC West All-USCHO teams, as well as the usual array of individual awards.

The players, coaches, and staffs are who make the ECAC West such a great league to follow, so it is only fitting that we take some time to highlight the best of the best this season.

For the awards, I take in to account the entire season of play, all conference games, non-conference games, and playoff games that have occurred up to this point.

Player of the Year honors goes to Darcy Vaillancourt of Elmira. Although only a sophomore, Vaillancourt had a spectacular season, scoring 16 goals and adding 20 assists to lead the league with 1.50 points per game. Vaillancourt increased his point production four fold over his freshman year as he settled into a leading role on the Elmira power play.

Nick Broadwater, who started all but five games this year for Hobart, is the Rookie of the Year. Broadwater led the league with a 92.5 save percentage and his 2.41 goals against average ranked second. Entering the season with a trio of freshmen goaltenders, Hobart coach Mark Taylor wasn’t sure what he had in net, but the Statesmen have found a gem in Broadwater.

The Coach of the Year award goes to Aaron Saul at Elmira. After two seasons at the helm of Potsdam, Saul returned to his alma mater last summer. His Soaring Eagles were thrown right into the fire, opening up with a home-and-home series against powerhouse Oswego and gained a split. Elmira didn’t miss a beat under its new coach and finished the season atop the league standings for the third consecutive season.

ECAC West First Team

Forward: Darcy Vaillancourt, Elmira, So.
Forward: Tim Coffman, Utica, So.
Forward: Mickey Lang, Manhattanville, Jr.
Defense: William Lacasse, Neumann, So.
Defense: AJ Mikkelsen, Manhattanville, Sr.
Goal: Pierre-Olivier Lemieux, Manhattanville, So.

ECAC West Second Team

Forward: Arlen Marshall, Manhattanville, Sr.
Forward: Rusty Masters, Elmira, Sr.
Forward: Matthew Wallace, Hobart, Jr.
Defense: Greg Moore, Elmira, Sr.
Defense: Dillon O’Hara, Manhattanville, So.
Goal: Casey Tuttle, Elmira, Sr.

ECAC West Rookie Team

Forward: Chris Cannizzaro, Hobart
Forward: Scott Hudson, Manhattanville
Forward: Jordan Zalba, Neumann
Defense: Brad Richard, Hobart
Defense: William Brown, Lebanon Valley
Goal: Nick Broadwater, Hobart

Player of the Year

Darcy Vaillancourt, Elmira

Rookie of the Year

Nick Broadwater, Hobart

Coach of the Year

Aaron Saul, Elmira

End of Another Season

The presentation of the championship trophy to either Elmira or Manhattanville on Saturday will mark the end of another thrilling ECAC West season.

I would like to express my appreciation to everyone who has lent a hand to my weekly column this season. First of all, thanks to the coaches who willingly take time out of their busy schedules to chat with me each week.

Next to thank are the sports information directors, players, and league officials who have also helped out during the year.

Last, but certainly not least, I most appreciate you the readers, without whose support this column wouldn’t exist.

Enjoy the run to crown a national champion over the next two weeks, and I’ll see everyone next season.

Bracketology: March 3, 2010

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 Ice Hockey Championship Committee will use the PairWise to determine the NCAA Tournament bracket.

Just remember that this is not a prediction. This is a possible look into what the Committee might be thinking.

If you’re new to Bracketology, click here for the background.

Here is the top 16 of the current PairWise Rankings (PWR), and the conference leaders (through all games of March 2):

1 Denver
2 Miami
3 Wisconsin
4t St. Cloud State
4t Bemidji State
6t Boston College
6t North Dakota
8t Yale
8t Alaska
10 New Hampshire
11 Cornell
12t Michigan State
12t Vermont
14t Minn.-Duluth
14t Ferris State
16 Northern Michigan
— RIT

Current conference leaders based on winning percentage:
Atlantic Hockey: RIT
CHA: Bemidji State
CCHA: Miami
ECAC: Yale
Hockey East: New Hampshire
WCHA: Denver

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 RIT.

From there, we can start looking at the bubble in a more detailed fashion.

The bubbles consist of St. Cloud State and Bemidji State at 4, Boston College and North Dakota at 6, Yale and Alaska at 8, Michigan State and Vermont at 12 and Minnesota-Duluth and Ferris State at 14.

Looking at the head-to-head PairWise comparisons and the RPI we break all of our ties.

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

1 Denver
2 Miami
3 Wisconsin
4 St. Cloud State
5 Bemidji State
6 Boston College
7 North Dakota
8 Yale
9 Alaska
10 New Hampshire
11 Cornell
12 Michigan State
13 Vermont
14 Minnesota-Duluth
15 Ferris State
16 RIT

Step Two

Now it’s time to assign the seeds.

No. 1 Seeds — Denver, Miami, Wisconsin, St. Cloud State
No. 2 Seeds — Bemidji State, Boston College, North Dakota, Yale
No. 3 Seeds — Alaska, New Hampshire, Cornell, Michigan State
No. 4 Seeds — Vermont, Minnesota-Duluth, Ferris State, RIT

Step Three

Place the No. 1 seeds in regionals. Following the guidelines, there are no host teams in this grouping, so that rule does not need to be enforced.

We now place the other No. 1 seeds based on proximity to the regional sites.

No. 1 Denver is placed in the West Regional in St. Paul, Minn.
No. 2 Miami is placed in the Midwest Regional in Fort Wayne, Ind.
No. 3 Wisconsin is placed in the East Regional in Albany, N.Y.
No. 4 St. Cloud State is placed in the Northeast Regional in Worcester, Mass.

Step Four

Now we place the other 12 teams so as to avoid intra-conference 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 are 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 Yale is placed in No. 1 Denver’s Regional, the West Regional.
No. 7 North Dakota is placed in No. 2 Miami’s Regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 6 Boston College is placed in No. 3 Wisconsin’s Regional, the East Regional.
No. 5 Bemidji State is placed in No. 4 St. Cloud’s Regional, the Northeast Regional.

No. 3 Seeds

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

Therefore:

No. 9 Alaska is placed in No. 8 Yale’s Regional, the West Regional.
No. 10 New Hampshire is placed in No. 7 North Dakota’s Regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 11 Cornell is placed in No. 6 Boston College’s Regional, the East Regional.
No. 12 Michigan State is placed in No. 5 Bemidji’s Regional, the Northeast Regional.

No. 4 Seeds

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

No. 16 RIT is sent to No. 1 Denver’s Regional, the West Regional.
No. 15 Ferris State is sent to No. 2 Miami’s Regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 14 Minnesota-Duluth is sent to No. 3 Wisconsin’s Regional, the East Regional.
No. 13 Vermont is sent to No. 4 St. Cloud’s Regional, the Northeast Regional.

The brackets as we have set them up:

Northeast Regional:

Vermont vs. St. Cloud
Michigan State vs. Bemidji State

Midwest Regional:

Ferris State vs. Miami
New Hampshire vs. North Dakota

East Regional:

Minnesota-Duluth vs. Wisconsin
Cornell vs. Boston College

West Regional:

RIT vs. Denver
Alaska vs. Yale

Our first concern is avoiding intra-conference matchups. We have two in UMD-Wisconsin and Ferris State-Miami.

It’s pretty simple, we just swap the two teams.

Our new brackets:

Northeast Regional:

Vermont vs. St. Cloud
Michigan State vs. Bemidji State

Midwest Regional:

Minn.-Duluth vs. Miami
New Hampshire vs. North Dakota

East Regional:

Ferris State vs. Wisconsin
Cornell vs. Boston College

West Regional:

RIT vs. Denver
Alaska vs. Yale

Do we like the way this looks?

We have to look at attendance, especially in the Northeast and West Regionals. The East and Midwest Regionals should be just fine.

We would be better off served by just switching the whole bracket.

We would dramatically improve St. Paul’s attendance, and slightly improve Worcester’s attendance.

So we have to do that.

Our new brackets:

West Regional:

Vermont vs. St. Cloud
Michigan State vs. Bemidji State

Midwest Regional:

Minnesota-Duluth vs. Miami
New Hampshire vs. North Dakota

East Regional:

Ferris State vs. Wisconsin
Cornell vs. Boston College

Northeast Regional:

RIT vs. Denver
Alaska vs. Yale

The big debate here is whether or not to switch the Northeast and East brackets altogether as well.

There is some merit to that, given that there is no Boston-area school in the Northeast Regional at the moment, while you have BC sitting out there in Albany. A possibility for sure.

But if I were the committee, that’s what I would put out as the bracket.

Check the Bracketology Blog for other items and we’ll see you here next week for the next Bracketology.

Pearl Gets 3-Year Extension at Holy Cross

Holy Cross coach Paul Pearl and the school have agreed to a three-year contract extension, the school announced Wednesday.

Pearl has a 225-224-54 record in nearly 15 full seasons with the Crusaders. He became the school’s all-time winningest coach in 2006 with his 168th victory.

Related link: Paul Pearl’s coaching history

“I am happy that Paul has committed his future to Holy Cross,” Holy Cross athletic director Richard M. Regan said in a news release. “His values are entirely consistent with those of the College. He continues to maintain a competitive hockey program in an increasingly competitive environment, and at the same time his players graduate and make academic progress as well as any in the country.”

Pearl orchestrated one of the biggest upsets in NCAA tournament history in 2006 when the Crusaders beat No. 2 overall seed Minnesota in overtime in the first round.

“Holy Cross is a special place for me and my family and we love being a part of it,” Pearl said. “The future is very bright for our hockey program and I am honored to be able to lead it.”

Wisconsin’s Plans for Secondary Rink Stall

Wisconsin has halted planning on a project that would give its women’s hockey team a new home rink that would double as a practice rink for the school’s men’s team.

The proposed facility was to be built adjacent to the Kohl Center and include new locker rooms for both teams.

“This project has been very well received and we are most appreciative of those who have supported it financially thus far,” Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez said in a news release. “We are, however, not quite where we feel we need to be to move forward at this time from a financial standpoint. It simply would not be responsible, particularly in this economic climate, for us to proceed until we feel comfortable doing so. We will continue to work diligently toward our goal of building this important facility.”

The men’s team practices most often at the Bob Johnson Hockey Complex attached to the Dane County Veterans Memorial Coliseum, the team’s former home. School administrators have expressed concern about having players venture off campus daily for practice.

The women’s team has a full-time locker room at the Camp Randall Memorial Sports Center.

Three Mercyhurst Forwards Make Patty Kazmaier Top 10

No. 1 Mercyhurst has three forwards among the 10 finalists for the 2010 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award.

Juniors Vicki Bendus and Jesse Scanzano and sophomore Bailey Bram were voted among the top 10 by Division I women’s hockey coaches.

The other finalists: Minnesota-Duluth senior forward Emmanuelle Blais, St. Cloud State senior forward Felicia Nelson, Dartmouth senior forward Sarah Parsons, New Hampshire senior forward Kelly Patton, Minnesota freshman goaltender Noora Räty, Northeastern sophomore goaltender Florence Schelling and St. Lawrence senior defender Britni Smith.

Three finalists will be chosen by a 13-member selection committee made up of coaches, media and a member from USA Hockey, which administers the award. The finalists will be named March 9, and the winner will be announced on March 20 in Minneapolis.

Following is a bio of each of the finalists provided by USA Hockey:

Vicki Bendus

Mercyhurst • Forward • Junior • Wasaga Beach, Ontario

Elected as one of four team captains … Leads the NCAA in points (26-34–60) and shorthanded goals (5) … Ranks second in the nation in points per game (1.88), third in assists per game (1.06) and fifth in goals per game (0.81) … Scored five game-winning goals … Recorded seven power-play goals to tie for seventh in the country … Recorded point streaks of seven, six and five games …Obtained points in 26 of 32 games played … Marked a season-high four points four times … Named College Hockey America Player of the Week four times … Named to the 2009-10 Preseason All-CHA Team … Volunteers time on a regular basis at the Erie Veterans Hospital, taking care of patients and organizing events, including evening activities and field trips … Also spent time for the second-straight year with the annual Mercyhurst Thanksgiving Food Drive.

Emmanuelle Blais

Minnesota-Duluth • Forward • Senior • Lasalle, Quebec

Ranks seventh in the NCAA with a career-high 53 points (26-27) and a 1.47 points-per-game average … Sits sixth in the nation with 26 goals and 12th in assists (27) … Ranks second in the NCAA with eight game-winning goals and fourth in power-play goals (9) … Ranks second in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association in points (40) in 28 league games … Is third with 20 goals and fifth in assists (20) in the WCHA … Ranks third in the WCHA with seven power-play goals and second in game-winning goals (6) … Recorded 19 multi-point games … Named the WCHA Offensive Player of the Week on both Feb. 24, 2010 and Oct. 30, 2009 … Became the 12th player in UMD history to reach the 100-point mark on Nov. 14, 2009 … Volunteers every Christmas by wrapping presents for the Salvation Army and organizing an Adopt-a-Family for the Bulldogs … Participates in various cause walks around Duluth, Minn., including the Buddy Walk for Down Syndrome in fall of 2009, and the Find a Cure for Cancer Walk.

Bailey Bram

Mercyhurst • Forward • Sophomore • Ste. Anne, Manitoba

Elected College Hockey America Player of the Week three times …Finished the regular season with 49 points (25-24) … Ranks second in the nation in power-play goals (12) and game-winning goals (8), third in goals per game (0.86), fourth in points per game (1.69) and seventh in assists per game (0.83) … Tied for second in the country in shorthanded goals (4) … Recorded point streaks of 11, seven and five games … Scored a goal in 18 of 29 games played and posted points in 25 of 29 games played … Recorded 15 multi-point games … Voted to the Preseason All-CHA Team … Worked with kids involved in the Gliding with the Stars program, a figure skating program designed for children with disabilities … Helped raise money for Mercyhurst’s Haiti Relief Week, collecting donations at local Mercyhurst events and in the community… Also spent time at several local elementary schools, teaching children hockey skills and playing floor hockey.

Felicia Nelson

St. Cloud State • Forward • Senior • St. Paul, Minn.

Team captain … Leads the NCAA and the Western Collegiate Hockey Association with 31 goals … Completed the regular season as the nation’s leading goal-scorer at both the NCAA Division I men’s and women’s levels (30) … Leads the nation and the WCHA with 15 power-play goals … Tied for ninth in the nation and fourth in the conference with 46 points (31-15) … Ranks second in the WCHA in power-play points (15-9–24) … Recorded her 100th career point on Feb. 19 … Three-time WCHA Offensive Player of the Week selection … Notched 14 multi-point games … A WCHA All-Academic Selection … Volunteered at the St. Benedict’s Senior Center during fall semester … Helped coach floor hockey and hockey clinics in St. Cloud area.

Sarah Parsons

Dartmouth • Forward • Senior • Dover, Mass.

Led Dartmouth in all offensive categories (20-20–40) … Named first team All-Ivy and ECAC Hockey Second Team … Leads ECAC Hockey and is eighth in the nation in points per game (1.43) … Leads ECAC Hockey with 40 points … Ranks fourth in the nation in assists per game (0.71), seventh in goals per game (0.71) and 13th in goals (20) … Ranks second in ECAC Hockey with 20 assists and fourth in power-play goals (6) … Posted 13 multi-point games … Finalist for the ECAC Hockey Student-Athlete of Year, Best Defensive Forward and Player of the Year … Participated in Holiday Helpers, a program with Dartmouth student-athletes providing holiday gifts for the less fortunate … Member of Link-Up, a student-run group that matches incoming freshmen women with female mentors from the senior class on campus … Volunteer with Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Kelly Paton

New Hampshire • Forward • Senior • Woodstock, Ontario

Three-time Hockey East Player of the Month … Three-time Hockey East Player of the Week … In the NCAA, is fourth in assists per game (1.03), fifth in points per game (1.65), 15th in game-winning goals (4), 16th in power-play goals (6) and 17th in goals per game (0.61) … In 10 games against nationally-ranked teams, recorded 14 points (6-8) … In Hockey East conference action, ranked first in shorthanded points (2), second in points (32), assists (27) and power-play points (13), as well as third in goals (7) … Led team in points (51), goals (19) and plus/minus (plus-19), and tied for the lead in game-winning goals (4) … Ranked second on the team in assists (32) and tied for second in power-play goals (6) … Ended the regular season with a nine-game point-scoring streak (6-10) … Opened the season with a 12-game point-scoring streak that included a seven-game assist streak… Tallied a point in 27 of 31 games with 12 multiple-point efforts.

Noora Räty

Minnesota • Goaltender • Freshman • Espoo, Finland

Leads the NCAA in goals-against average (1.06) and save percentage (.958), and is third in winning percentage (.818) … Leads the Western Collegiate Hockey Association in conference games with a 0.94 goals-against average … Holds a 16-2-4 record and leads the nation with seven shutouts … Named WCHA Defensive Player of the Week four times and WCHA Rookie of the Week twice … Posted back-to-back shutouts three times this season … Set a school record for most assists in a season by a goaltender (3).

Jesse Scanzano

Mercyhurst • Forward • Junior • Montreal, Quebec

Named a captain during the final week of the season … Recorded 56 points (19-37) … Leads the NCAA in points per game (1.93) and assists per game (1.28), and tied for second in shorthanded goals (4)… Recorded a point in 24 of 29 games played … Marked 19 multi-point games, including seven three-point performances and three four-point performances … Tallied six power-play goals and three game-winning goals … Scored points in seven straight games twice …Named College Hockey America Player of the Week once … Voted Preseason CHA Player of the Year and to the Preseason All-CHA Team… Has volunteered time with numerous Mercyhurst projects this year, including the Mercyhurst Food Drive and Thanksgiving Food Drive … Spent time working with the homeless at a mission home in Erie, Pa.

Florence Schelling

Northeastern • Goaltender • Sophomore • Oberengstringen, Switzerland

Tied for third in the NCAA with a .949 save percentage and ranks fifth in goals-against average (1.37) … Leads Hockey East with a .946 save percentage in conference games and ranks second in the conference with a 1.50 goals-against average … Named Hockey East Goaltender of the Month for October and November … Honored as Hockey East Defensive Player of the Week seven times (Oct. 5, Oct. 12, Nov. 2, Nov. 9, Nov. 16, Nov. 30, Jan. 25) … Earned four shutouts … Allowed two goals or less in 18 of 21 games, and one goal or less in 13 of 21 games … Won five games in which Northeastern was outshot … Won three of four shootouts and stopped 19 of 21 shootout attempts overall … Volunteers at local hockey camps over the summer.

Britni Smith

St. Lawrence • Defender • Senior • Port Perry, Ontario

Ranked third in the NCAA among defensemen with 25 points (8-17) … Recorded eight multi-point games … Named ECAC Hockey Player of the Week on Dec. 14 … An ECAC Hockey All-Academic Team member … Earned Second Team All-Conference honors … Volunteered at both the E.J. Nobel Physiotherapy Clinic and the Adirondack Physical Therapy Clinics … Volunteered at the Little River Community School, working with four- to seven-year-old children to develop reading and writing skills … Participated in “Skate with the Saints,” which allows local children a chance to meet and skate with their favorite college players.

Yale, Cornell Headline ECAC First Team

League champion Yale and second-place Cornell each placed two players on the all-ECAC Hockey League first team announced Tuesday.

Forwards Sean Backman and Broc Little represent the Bulldogs, while defenseman Brendon Nash and goaltender Ben Scrivens carry the Big Red flag on the first team.

Rensselaer forward Chase Polacek and Union defenseman Mike Schreiber also made the first team.

The postseason awards were voted on by league coaches.

Polacek led the ECAC with 1.59 points per game and led the league with 15 power-play goals. Little was tops in the league in both goals (20) and game-winning goals (5). Backman, a four-time all-ECAC member, scored 16 goals in league play for the Bulldogs.

Schreiber led league defensemen with 19 league points. Nash led a Cornell defense that allowed just 43 goals in 22 conference games.

Scrivens won the goaltending championship with a 1.89 goals-against average, .933 save percentage and .705 winning percentage.

The full list of all-conference members follows:

First Team

Forwards: Chase Polacek, Rensselaer; Broc Little, Yale; Sean Backman, Yale.
Defensemen: Mike Schreiber, Union; Brendon Nash, Cornell.
Goaltender: Ben Scrivens, Cornell.

Second Team

Forwards: Mario Valery-Trabucco, Union; David McIntyre, Colgate; Colin Greening, Cornell.
Defensemen: Tom Dignard, Yale; Taylor Fedun, Princeton.
Goaltender: Allen York, Rensselaer.

Third Team

Forwards: Riley Nash, Cornell; Aaron Volpatti, Brown; Travis Vermeulen, St. Lawrence.
Defensemen: Derek Keller, St. Lawrence; Evan Stephens, Dartmouth.
Goaltender: Keith Kincaid, Union.

All-Rookie Team

Forwards: Jerry D’Amigo, Rensselaer; Brandon Pirri, Rensselaer; Louis Leblanc, Harvard.
Defensemen: George Hughes, St. Lawrence; Nick Dagostino, Cornell.
Goaltender: Kincaid.

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