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Boston University’s Trivino Expected to Miss Rest of Season

Boston University center Corey Trivino is expected to miss the remainder of the 2009-10 season after suffering a fractured right fibula in Saturday’s 5-2 victory over Maine, the school announced on Wednesday.

Trivino has appeared in all 28 games this season for the Terriers, tallying 15 points on four goals and 11 assists. He scored the game’s first goal in Saturday’s win before suffering the injury in the third period. He has centered the Terriers’ top line since the team returned from the break in January.

“This is obviously a devastating injury for Corey and our team,” Terriers coach Jack Parker said in a statement. “After really coming along toward the end of his freshman season, he has blossomed into a strong first-line center, especially on defense, and it will be difficult to adjust our lineup based on the way he and our team have been playing as of late.

“Fortunately for Corey, he is only a sophomore. Once his injury has healed, we expect him to pick up where he left off and continue to develop into an All-America-caliber centerman here at BU.”

Trivino, who was selected by the New York Islanders in the second round (36th overall) of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft, has totaled 28 points (10 goals, 18 assists) in 60 career games at BU.

Harvard Puts 4 on Patty Kazmaier Nominee List

Harvard leads the way with four nominees among the 45 names unveiled Wednesday as candidates for the 2010 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, the prize for the nation’s top women’s college hockey player.

Forwards Kate Buesser and Liza Ryabkina, defender Leanna Coskren and goaltender Christina Kessler represent the Crimson on the list, which will be pared to the top 10 on March 2.

A 13-member selection committee will choose the winner, whose name will be unveiled March 20 on the Minnesota campus during the women’s Frozen Four. The three finalists will be named on March 9.

Six nominees are back from last year’s list: Connecticut defender Cristin Allen, Boston University forward Melissa Anderson, Clarkson goaltender Lauren Dahm, Syracuse goaltender Lucy Schoedel, Clarkson forward Dominique Thibault and Dartmouth forward Amanda Trunzo.

Clarkson, Cornell, Mercyhurst, Minnesota and New Hampshire have three nominees each.

The full list:

• Cristin Allen, D, sr., Connecticut
• Melissa Anderson, F, sr., Boston University
• Jenni Bauer, G, jr., Niagara
• Vicki Bendus, F, jr., Mercyhurst
• Courtney Birchard, D, jr., New Hampshire
• Emmanuelle Blais, F, sr., Minnesota-Duluth
• Bailey Bram, F, so., Mercyhurst
• Kate Buesser, F, jr., Harvard
• Leanna Coskren, D, jr., Harvard
• Lauren Dahm, G, jr., Clarkson
• Brianna Delaney, F, so., Robert Morris
• Kate Dunlop, F, sr., Sacred Heart
• Lauren Fontaine, F, jr., Sacred Heart
• Laura Fortino, D, fr., Cornell
• Laura Fridfinnson, F, jr., Minnesota-Duluth
• Laura Gersten, D, sr., Rensselaer
• Caitlin Hogan, F, sr., St. Cloud State
• Christina Kessler, G, sr., Harvard
• Bray Ketchum, F, jr., Yale
• Genevieve Lacasse, G, so., Providence
• Hokey Langan, F, fr., Ohio State
• Micaela Long, F, sr., New Hampshire
• Felicia Nelson, F, sr., St. Cloud State
• Sara O’Malley, F, jr., Robert Morris
• Sarah Parsons, F, sr., Dartmouth
• Kelly Paton, F, sr., New Hampshire
• Noora Räty, G, fr., Minnesota
• Lauriane Rougeau, D, fr., Cornell
• Liza Ryabkina, F, jr., Harvard
• Jesse Scanzano, F, jr., Mercyhurst
• Florence Schelling, G, so., Northeastern
• Anne Schleper, D, so., Minnesota
• Lucy Schoedel, G, sr., Syracuse
• Britney Selina, F, sr., Clarkson
• Britni Smith, D, sr., St. Lawrence
• Jaclyn Snikeris, G, jr., Yale
• Natalie Spooner, F, so., Ohio State
• Katie Stewart, F, sr., Colgate
• Dominique Thibault, F, sr., Clarkson
• Allie Thunstrom, F, sr., Boston College
• Zuzana Tomcikova, G, so., Bemidji State
• Amanda Trunzo, F, jr., Dartmouth
• Sonja van der Bliek, G, jr., Rensselaer
• Emily West, F, jr., Minnesota
• Catherine White, F, so., Cornell

Bracketology: Feb. 17, 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.

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 Feb. 16):

1 Miami
2 Denver
3 Wisconsin
4t St. Cloud State
4t Bemidji State
4t Boston College
7 Colorado College
8 Yale
9t Minnesota-Duluth
9t Cornell
9t New Hampshire
9t Vermont
13t North Dakota
13t Michigan State
15 Massachusetts
16 Ferris State
— RIT

Current conference leaders based on winning percentage:
Atlantic Hockey: RIT
CHA: Bemidji State
CCHA: Miami
ECAC: Yale (wins head-to-head tiebreaker with Cornell)
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, Bemidji and BC at 4; UMD, Cornell, UNH and UVM at 9; and North Dakota and MSU at 13.

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

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

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

Step Two

Now it’s time to assign the seeds.

No. 1 Seeds — Miami, Denver, Wisconsin, St. Cloud State
No. 2 Seeds — Bemidji State, Boston College, Colorado College, Yale
No. 3 Seeds — Minnesota-Duluth, Cornell, New Hampshire, Vermont
No. 4 Seeds — North Dakota, Michigan State, Massachusetts, 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 Miami is placed in the Midwest Regional in Fort Wayne, Ind.
No. 2 Denver is placed in the West Regional in St. Paul, Minn.
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 Miami’s Regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 7 Colorado College is placed in No. 2 Denver’s Regional, the West 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 Minnesota-Duluth is placed in No. 8 Yale’s Regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 10 Cornell is placed in No. 7 Colorado College’s Regional, the West Regional.
No. 11 New Hampshire is placed in No. 6 Boston College’s Regional, the East Regional.
No. 12 Vermont 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 Miami’s Regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 15 Massachusetts is sent to No. 2 Denver’s Regional, the West Regional.
No. 14 Michigan State is sent to No. 3 Wisconsin’s Regional, the East Regional.
No. 13 North Dakota is sent to No. 4 St. Cloud’s Regional, the Northeast Regional.

The brackets as we have set them up:

Northeast Regional:

Vermont vs. Bemidji State
North Dakota vs. St. Cloud State

Midwest Regional:

RIT vs. Miami
Minnesota-Duluth vs. Yale

East Regional:

Michigan State vs. Wisconsin
New Hampshire vs. Boston College

West Regional:

Massachusetts vs. Denver
Cornell vs. Colorado College

Our first concern is avoiding intra-conference matchups. We have North Dakota vs. St. Cloud and New Hampshire vs. Boston College.

The only place where North Dakota can go is to face Miami, since the other three No. 1 seeds are all WCHA teams. So we place North Dakota in that bracket. Then we switch RIT to the next highest seed, which is Denver. And we also adjust Michigan State and Massachusetts accordingly.

Therefore, Michigan State will play St. Cloud and Massachusetts will play Wisconsin.

Now we tackle New Hampshire. We can’t switch New Hampshire with Vermont, since that creates another Hockey East-Hockey East matchup. So we can switch with either Cornell or Minnesota-Duluth.

We can’t switch with UMD because that creates a WCHA-WCHA matchup. So we switch UNH with Cornell.

So our tournament now becomes:

Northeast Regional:

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

Midwest Regional:

North Dakota vs. Miami
Minnesota-Duluth vs. Yale

East Regional:

Massachusetts vs. Wisconsin
Cornell vs. Boston College

West Regional:

RIT vs. Denver
New Hampshire vs. Colorado College

Do we like the way this looks?

We have no intraconference matchups, so we are OK. Integrity also looks OK.

Do we have an attendance issue?

It looks great in Albany and pretty good in Fort Wayne.

Worcester and St. Paul will be problems.

Can we make it better?

Looking at it, St. Cloud, Bemidji and Michigan State might be better off in St. Paul.

So let’s switch the entire bracket geographies.

Now what do we have?

West Regional:

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

Midwest Regional:

North Dakota vs. Miami
Minnesota-Duluth vs. Yale

East Regional:

Massachusetts vs. Wisconsin
Cornell vs. Boston College

Northeast Regional:

RIT vs. Denver
New Hampshire vs. Colorado College

Let’s take a look.

Much better.

Can we make it any better?

There is one possibility that you can consider here. Because we have a four-way tie in the third band (seedings 9-12), we can move those teams around at will basically, without affecting bracket integrity.

Does this piece of information help us whatsoever?

Maybe switching Minnesota-Duluth and Vermont will help to boost St. Paul’s attendance even more. This gives us three Minnesota teams in St. Paul.

I am certainly for that. So I am going to make that switch.

Our new brackets:

West Regional:

Minnesota-Duluth vs. Bemidji State
Michigan State vs. St. Cloud State

Midwest Regional:

North Dakota vs. Miami
Vermont vs. Yale

East Regional:

Massachusetts vs. Wisconsin
Cornell vs. Boston College

Northeast Regional:

RIT vs. Denver
New Hampshire vs. Colorado College

Now there is outstanding attendance in Albany and St. Paul.

Worcester gets a boost from UNH and RIT.

Fort Wayne gets a boost from Miami and North Dakota.

So that’s where I’ll hang my hat this week.

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

Vermont Dismisses Milo

Vermont junior forward Justin Milo was dismissed from the team on Tuesday according to a representative of the Catamounts athletic department.

Milo, who was tied for second on the team in scoring this season, was let go for what head coach Kevin Sneddon said was “the best interest of the program.”

According to the Burlington Free Press, Milo called the dismissal unfair and said he was told he was “basically not committed to the team.

“What upsets me is the fact that’s the end of my hockey career potentially. Basically, I’m shocked.”

The Free Press story quoted Sneddon as saying, “We obviously spent a lot of time as a staff, with the support staff, and with the leadership and just felt it was in the best interest to move forward without him as part of our team. That’s pretty much it.”

Milo transferred to Vermont after playing just one season at Cornell. After sitting out a year, Milo returned to the ice last year with the Catamounts scoring 26 points in 39 games as Vermont advanced to the Frozen Four.

Last weekend, Vermont dropped three out of four points at home against Merrimack to fall to eighth place in Hockey East. Milo was not in the lineup for either game.

The Catamounts return to action this weekend with a two-game series at New Hampshire beginning Friday night at 7:30 p.m. on NESN.

Commentary: In Intensity, Blais is This Generation’s Brooks

Dean Blais is good for college hockey.

Having now broadcasted 11 of his games this season (between Team USA at the World Junior Championship and Nebraska-Omaha) I have come to appreciate what he is all about. I had a chance to get to know Herb Brooks a bit during my time at the Minnesota Hockey Camps and I see a lot of Brooks in Blais.

Brooks is best known for his ability to make a team believe in itself at his own expense. That was the 1980 Olympic Team, the one Brooks convinced was better than any other team in Lake Placid — or the world, for that matter. He never let them breathe, he intimidated them into being winners and he got them to buy into a team-first, high-octane style that carried them to a gold medal and into American immortality.

Blais did what Brooks did this past Christmas break. He coached a U.S. team to a gold medal in a major international hockey tourney, the World Junior Championship. That is the second-toughest gold medal to win in hockey after the Olympics, and the WJC is a yearly event that the whole hockey world watches.

His job performance in Saskatoon with the American entry to the WJC was nothing short of masterful. He went in with an attitude, a belief and a goal, and from day one of the evaluation camp in Lake Placid it was clear to everyone that this would be different.

Blais separated his players in Lake Placid into two teams and their paths never crossed. He created competition where friendships and bonding were once the norm. He made sure competition was emphasized and that players who had been there before were not guaranteed of being there again. He cut the fat, trimmed the candidates and brought them to Grand Forks in December with players still on the bubble. He took his type of players, sticking to the Bill Parcells theory of, “If I’m the chef I’d like to have a big say in what the ingredients are.”

The message was clear from the first line to the fourth: do your job, do it well, or be replaced. During the WJC he took Danny Kristo (North Dakota) off the big line and moved him to the fourth, which in 1980 terminology would have been like benching Mark Johnson. Kristo responded with a huge effort and reclaimed his spot and was phenomenal the rest of the way.

He demanded effort and execution but he also demanded belief. He made sure the players were accountable to the staff and to each other. He also created fear. Like he is doing at Nebraska-Omaha, he made sure that he was the thing most feared in his own dressing room, not that next opponent.

UNO’s players want to win and a lot of that has to do with not having to face Blais on the Monday morning after a bad weekend and there have been a few on those this season for the Mavs. That has changed drastically, and last weekend’s sweep of then-No. 19 Michigan has shown that UNO can get up and down with the big boys.

Following a win Friday night, Blais let the team have it on Saturday morning in a five-minute meeting. He explained to them in an emphatic manner that Friday was a win but that they would have to be even better Saturday because Michigan would be also. He pointed out several moments in the game where the Wolverines had come back and taken over the play. He mentioned that a few of the players that had big games on the score sheet Friday night were guilty of egregious puck mistakes in the game that could have cost them the vital three points they needed.

The bottom line was he preached accountability. He made sure every guy knew what was expected of them. It was a message that could not be mistaken.

That was vintage Brooks. Remember it was him who ripped into his players after beating the Soviet Union in their medal round semifinal of Feb. 22, 1980. As we near the 30th anniversary of that huge win, we also near the anniversary of the last practice that team had before it beat Finland to win the gold. The players always mention how Brooks laid into them, telling them not to get too overjoyed because a loss to Finland would render the whole experience meaningless.

Blais was right — Michigan was better for a good part of Saturday’s game, but UNO was better overall and swept the Wolverines. The old saying goes, the team who gets off the bus with the best players usually has the best chance of winning. Not last weekend. Michigan had the better players but Blais had the better team, and that is because of the job he and his staff have done creating that team. Michigan brought it, UNO had an answer. It looked like USA-Canada all over again.

Mike Kemp brought in this entire group and his recruitment of these kids has to be mentioned. He was the chef until stepping up to take a role in the new athletic department administration of Trev Alberts.

Blais took the job in mid summer and since then has been relentless in his effort to make the team relentless, and that’s what the Mavericks are. That step up in tempo and pace to their game, which also includes a healthy dose of mean, took a while. It’s in place now, and add in some timely goals and what seems to be much more consistent goaltending the past three weeks and Blais has a team that believes in itself and what it can do. Whether anyone else believes in them is irrelevant to them; they believe.

Blais took a USA Hockey program under fire and left a trail of scorched teams in his wake in Saskatoon. Now, with sweeps of Ohio State and Michigan and a split at Notre Dame in the last three weeks, UNO is a team to contend with. Credit goes to the players, a lunch pail gang that might be the hardest working team in college hockey.

They hit, skate, do the little things and make their own luck. Their captain, Jeric Agosta, is having a career year. Defenseman Eddie Delgrosso has become an effective and dependable two-way defenseman at the NCAA level. Terry Broadhurst has become a power-play threat and would remind you of a young Mike Bossy the way he is blasting away and scoring power-play goals lately.

However the head coach deserves a ton of credit here. He changed the culture of this team to one that is in constant movement, a 60-minute game of seek and destroy. They don’t stand around much on the forecheck because when they do, not much gets done. They stay in motion, flush out flat footed defensemen, stack the line so they don’t risk getting beaten wide on the rush and win a lot of battles.

Where UNO goes from here, we have no idea. Where the Mavericks are at now is pretty good. The coach made them believe, and in the process they have become an entertaining team to watch and a tough team to beat. That is great for college hockey.

So is the coach.

Niagara, Alabama-Huntsville Reschedule Game for Feb. 28

Niagara and Alabama-Huntsville will tack on another game to a previously scheduled series to make up for a game postponed last weekend after a shooting on the Huntsville campus.

The game that was postponed last Saturday will be made up at 4 p.m. Eastern on Sunday, Feb. 28. The teams were scheduled to play at Niagara on Feb. 26 and 27.

It’s the first time that Niagara has played three games in three days since beating Findlay twice and Fairfield once on the weekend of Nov. 22-24, 1996.

Tuesday Morning Quarterback: Feb. 16, 2010

Jim: Well, Todd, the season is winding down here quickly. To start this week, I will tip my cap to Miami, which clinched the CCHA regular season title on Friday night with a win over Bowling Green. The RedHawks are well on their way to locking up a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. On the other end of the spectrum, though, is an interesting scenario developing in Hockey East. Vermont dropped three of four points last weekend to Merrimack, shrinking its lead over the Warriors for the final playoff spot in Hockey East to just two points. But at the same time, the Catamounts are holding their position in the PairWise Rankings, making me want to ask the question: Could Vermont become the first team to miss its conference tournament altogether and still earn an NCAA bid?

Todd: My congrats to Miami as well, but the Vermont situation is truly puzzling. It looks like the Catamounts are really being helped by nonconference victories over the WCHA’s Denver and Minnesota-Duluth — those wins are helping to give them PairWise comparison victories over the WCHA’s St. Cloud State, Colorado College, UMD and North Dakota. But the margin for error is very small with Vermont right now, so if it manages to lose enough games the rest of the way to miss the Hockey East playoffs, I think their PairWise status will go down in kind. The last six games of the regular season are all against teams under consideration, so this could get interesting.

Jim: I’ve been saying the same thing about Vermont for nearly a month: There’s no way this team can hover around eighth place and still make the NCAA tournament. But thus far, the system has proven me wrong. I guess we’ll see what happens over the next few weekends. Hockey East, in general, is a pretty strange league this year. Boston College kept pace with New Hampshire, though, in getting just two of four points against Massachusetts-Lowell but missed the opportunity to climb within a point. That said, I still contest that the Hockey East title won’t be decided until the final weekend when BC and UNH square off. The remaining teams in Hockey East are as tightly packed as possible (which further makes you understand how Vermont is in eighth place yet on the NCAA bubble). Just five points separate third-place Maine from eighth-place Vermont, meaning that any weekend where a team takes four points could mean a major move up the ladder and, of course, conversely any weekend where a team doesn’t get points could mean immediate descent. I’ve been around this league for a long time and don’t remember many seasons with this tight of a logjam in the standings.

Todd: It’s a similar story in the WCHA, where, with three weeks to play, no one has officially clinched home ice for the first round of the playoffs. (Michigan Tech and Minnesota State, however, are guaranteed to be on the road.) Denver pulled back into first place with a sweep of Minnesota last weekend, and the Pioneers have a one-point lead and two games in hand on St. Cloud State, and a three-point lead on Minnesota-Duluth and Wisconsin. Fifth-place Colorado College has a four-point lead on North Dakota for the last home-ice spot. Now’s about the time of year when we start looking at teams’ remaining schedule, and that gives you a pretty good reason to think Denver is going to skate with the MacNaughton Cup this year. The Pioneers host 10th-place Michigan Tech, play at ninth-place Minnesota State and have a home-and-home series with CC. I think the real battle in the last three weeks is going to be for second place.

Jim: I have to agree with you about Denver. I think it has the easiest road map for the remainder of the season. If the Pioneers don’t win the regular season title, you’ll have to wonder why. Speaking of second place, what happened to second-place St. Cloud State on Saturday night? An 8-1 loss at home against North Dakota that included surrendering a six-spot in the second period. I know teams can have off nights, but how does a second-place club in what is arguably the most competitive league in the country lose by SEVEN goals at home?

Todd: I think it tells you a little bit that the sixth-place team in the WCHA isn’t all that far off the second-place team. But remember there was a lot of emotion coming into that series from the North Dakota side. The last time the Sioux played the Huskies, they lost captain Chay Genoway — more and more likely for the season — to a concussion caused by a hit from SCSU forward Aaron Marvin. North Dakota lost a close game on Friday, and I think Saturday was just one of those cathartic episodes. Does it provide a badly needed spark for the Sioux the rest of the way? Maybe. Does it hurt St. Cloud State for more than one night? I’m guessing not. It was a bad night. The Huskies will move on.

Jim: I agree that St. Cloud had nothing more than an off night on Saturday. Which was the case for many teams throughout the weekend. Defense wasn’t exactly on the forefront for Bowling Green, which surrendered 10 to Miami on Saturday; Maine, which allowed seven and five goals on back-to-back nights against BU; Western Michigan, which gave up seven on Friday against Northern Michigan and, of course, Minnesota State, which joined St. Cloud in surrendering an eight-spot (to Wisconsin) on Saturday. It’s almost like defense is thrown out the window for some of these teams.

Todd: I just ran a quick comparison, and goal scoring is indeed up slightly this season. Last year, games averaged 5.62 goals for both teams; that number is up to 5.87 so far this year. We’re told that Joe Fan doesn’t like defensive hockey, so I guess that’s a good sign. But when you’re the team giving up eight, it’s probably not that comforting. What’s on the docket this weekend?

Jim: Well, personally, my weekend begins a day late and runs two days long as I’ll be at Vermont-New Hampshire on Saturday night as the Catamounts look to pull things together on the road, then will be at BC on both Sunday afternoon and Tuesday evening as the Eagles take on Northeastern and Merrimack, respectively. As for the major tilts, Air Force and RIT will lock horns in a series that could either clinch the title for RIT or eliminate the Tigers breathing room in the standings. You also have Lowell and Maine locking horns for two in Orono as both teams look to come back from losses last weekend. Maine, though, should have the upper hand as Lowell has just one win in its last 16 in Orono. And nearly all of the ECAC games this weekend could have first-place implications as Yale, Cornell and Union are separated by just two points at the top of the league. How about out west?

Todd: Wisconsin hosts St. Cloud State in a matchup of top-five teams that’s especially important for the Huskies because it has only one regular season weekend remaining after this one, compared to two for most everyone else. If SCSU can’t put up some points, it risks sinking to fifth place by the time it gets to its final-weekend home-and-home series against Minnesota State. In the CCHA, Michigan State and Ferris State play a home-and-home series that could break their second-place deadlock. And Bemidji State can finally wrap up the CHA title when it closes down its long history in the John S. Glas Fieldhouse by hosting Niagara. Until next week …

Second-Half Surge Has Boston University Back in Rankings

Defending national champion Boston University was five games under .500 at the winter break, but the Terriers have turned things around in 2010.

With nine victories in 12 games since the break, they’re back in the hunt for a home-ice spot in the Hockey East playoffs and possibly an at-large spot in the NCAA tournament.

Related link: USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll — Feb. 15, 2010

And on Monday, they reappeared in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll at No. 19. It’s BU’s first national ranking since Nov. 9, when it was 17th.

The top four was unchanged, with Miami, Denver, Wisconsin and St. Cloud State holding those spots. Yale moved up a spot to No. 5.

Minnesota-Duluth, Colorado College, Boston College, Bemidji State and Cornell rounded out the top 10.

Boston University was second in the preseason poll but crashed out of the rankings after a 3-6 start. Despite a loss to No. 8 Boston College in last Monday’s Beanpot championship game, the Terriers have climbed to 20th in the RPI and a tie for 18th in the PairWise Rankings.

At No. 20, Alaska is back in the rankings for the first time since Jan. 4. The Nanooks are 2-2-5 in their last nine games.

Michigan, 19th last week, and Massachusetts-Lowell, 20th last week, dropped out of the rankings.

This week’s schedule features four series between ranked opponents, highlighted by No. 3 Wisconsin hosting No. 4 St. Cloud State.

Also, No. 11 North Dakota hosts No. 6 Minnesota-Duluth; No. 12 Michigan State hosts No. 14 Ferris State on Friday before the teams switch sites Saturday; and No. 13 New Hampshire hosts No. 17 Vermont.

Perfect 10: Oswego Tops in D-III Again

For the second straight week — and the 10th consecutive atop Division III overall — the Oswego Lakers are the unanimous choice as the best team in college hockey.

Teams two and three, Norwich and St. Norbert, remained unchanged.

Moving up to fourth was Plattsburgh, who defeated both Buffalo State and Fredonia to improve to 16-4-4 on the season.

After downing the University of Wisconsin-Superior, St. Scholastica lost to UW-Eau Claire, 3-2, falling one spot to fifth.

By extending their winning streak to four, Middlebury moved up three spots to sixth. The Panthers knocked off previously No. 6 Williams, 4-2, last Tuesday before downing both UMass-Boston and Babson over the weekend.

The Gusties from Gustavus Adolphus remained in seventh after splitting with then-No. 10 (and currently eighth ranked) Hamline in a home-and-home series.
The Ephs are now tied with the Pipers for eighth.

After getting swept on the road at unranked Neumann — their third loss in a row — the Elmira Soaring Eagles fell another two spots to No. 10.

Finally getting a modicum of respect from D-III voters, the 20-3-0 Adrian Bulldogs ascended one spot to No. 11.

The Bowdoin Polar Bears remained hot, jumping up three positions to No. 12, after defeating both Trinity and Wesleyan on the road. Amherst’s loss to St. Anselm cost the Lord Jeffs two spots in the poll.

After a home sweep of Utica, the Manhattanville Valiants returned to the national elite, reentering the poll at No. 14. UW-River Falls fell one spot to

No. 15 after beating in-state rival Stevens Point and getting blanked by third ranked St. Norbert., 4-0.

Wentworth dropped out of the top 15 after losing to both Suffolk and Becker.

What I Think: Week 19

Some random (and not-so-random) thoughts after the 19th week of the college hockey season:

* I didn’t think I’d ever have to invest this much thought into Minnesota’s future; it always seemed fairly solid. But when the Gophers’ present is as muddy as it is now, you can’t help but think about what’s ahead.

After dropping a pair of games at WCHA-leading Denver this weekend, the Gophers are 13-15-2 overall, in seventh place in the league at 8-12-2 (and seven points out of a home-ice playoff spot) and barely in the upper half of the nation in the RPI (27th). Don’t bother trying to find them in the PairWise — and I’ve been wondering how long it has been since that was the case this late in a season. Even in the years they haven’t made the tournament, they’ve usually been hanging around, anyway.

So this is where it gets ugly, right?

Our colleague at Inside College Hockey, Jess Myers, reported early this month that Minnesota athletic director Joel Maturi said coach Don Lucia will return next season “unless he chooses not to.” That should quiet things a little about Lucia’s future, but, really, who are we kidding? There’s no stopping to the questions and the speculation.

But let’s look ahead a little bit. Lucia’s contract expires after the 2012 season, but, given the nature of recruiting, it’s tough to imagine a coach actually working into the last season of his contract. That’s a big target for other schools in the negative recruiting game, and it’s tough to put a program in a position where it’s losing recruits because of valid questions about the coaching staff.

With that in mind, Minnesota and Lucia are looking at an action year in terms of the coach’s contract next season. It’s going to have to be a good 2010-11 season for the Gophers to have the administration’s hand not be forced.

* Is there a team this season having a good season in a quieter fashion than Colorado College?

Yeah, the Tigers got attention early because they were doing a lot better than expected, but there hasn’t been a whole lot of noise out of the Springs since. There they are, though, hanging onto a top-five spot in the WCHA and in position for a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament.

* Not only is Minnesota not listed in the PairWise Rankings, now Michigan is out, too. That combination has to be incredibly rare.

* Notice who’s starting to make its way into the NCAA picture?

I knew it was a bad idea to put Boston University on the back burner.

The Terriers went into the break five games under .500 both overall and in Hockey East, flirting with missing the playoffs altogether. Now, they’re one game above in both categories and in decent shape to have home ice in the first round.

It looks like the defending champs will be a factor down the stretch after all.

* Here’s how I voted in this week’s poll:

1. Miami

2. Denver

3. Wisconsin

4. St. Cloud State

5. Colorado College

6. Boston College

7. Bemidji State

8. Minnesota-Duluth

9. New Hampshire

10. Yale

11. North Dakota

12. Ferris State

13. Michigan State

14. Maine

15. Cornell

16. Vermont

17. Northeastern

18. Union

19. Massachusetts

20. Northern Michigan

Fun With Numbers, Part VI: The Defensemen

It should hardly be news to anyone reading this that things don’t always work out the way you plan. As I finish up my series of applying Ken Campbell’s “Campbellnomics” to the top contenders for the Hobey Baker Award (among skaters), it’s worked out a little differently than I planned.

This was originally supposed to be a five-part series, looking at five skaters each each of the “Big Four” conferences and five from Atlantic Hoeky and the CHA. Good idea, I think, if a bit time-consuming to go through 25 players’ game-by-game performances and look at when they scored their points. But as it turned out, the idea got a bit of tweaking, some necessary, and some, well…

The first big change was when I decided to look at defensemen separately from forwards, adding what would be five players to the list. No big deal, although it turned a five-part series into six. The night I decided to do that, I approached Boston University SID Brian Kelley and asked his opinion on which of the Terriers’ offensive defensemen I should include, Colby Cohen or Kevin Shattenkirk.

That question eventually became moot, though, as I decided to go beyond my five-player cutoff in the CCHA and WCHA, adding Miami’s Carter Camper and Wisconsin’s Blake Geoffrion to my list. If I could decide it was too close to cut those players off, then why not include both Shattenkirk and Cohen?

Finally, I had intended to get all of this done before Friday’s games, so that all the players would be on as even a playing field as posisble.

Yeah, that didn’t quite work out. As I sat down to total the Campbellnomics points for the six defensement on my list, Friday night’s games had been played. So, what to do? Well, as it turns out, five of the six defensemen went without a Campbellnomics point on Friday, and the one who did score didn’t affect his standing. So we’ll go with their pre-Friday averages, make it all nice and even.

We start with the defenseman who got me started on all this, Wisconsin’s Brendan Smith. Smith is the nation’s top scoring defenseman with 12 goals and 21 assists in 27 games, ranking 18th in the nation overall in scoring average with 1.22 PPG. Applying the Campbellnomics system, he checks in with 20.5 Campbellnomics points, giving him an average of .79 CPPG. It’s worth noting that while defensemen’s generally lower goal totals figure to hurt in a system that values goals twice as much as assists, Smith has a higher Campbellnomics average than any of the three Wisconsin forwards I looked at on Friday: Derek Stepan, Michael Davies and Blake Geoffrion.

On the other side of the country, New Hampshire sophomore Blake Kessel is also putting up some big numbers for the Wildcats, averaging 1.11 points per game on six goals and 24 assists in 27 games for the Wildcats. Applying the Campbellnomics system, Kessel checks in with a total of 19 points, just behind Smith, with an average of .73 CPPG (as of Friday morning).

Checking in right behind Smith and Kessel on the defensemen scoring list is Yale’s Thomas Dignard, who has five goals and 15 assists in 19 games for an average of 1.05 points per game. However, Dignard’s numbers take a stunning drop in Campbellnomics, with a total of just 6.5 Campbellnomics points and an average of .36 CPPG.

Now, we’re skipping three players to get to our next two, and I’ll explain that. Two are Canisius’ Carl Hudson and Bemidji State’s Brad Hunt, and I think history shows that it’s very tough for defensemen and forwards to get good Hobey buzz outside the Big Four conferences. The third is Maine’s Will O’Neill. The thing about O’Neill is that he hasn’t gathered much buzz on the national stage yet, and it’s also VERY clear who the Black Bears’ Hobey candidate is. So for the moment, we’ll skip O’Neill.

That brings us to the two BU defensemen, Kevin Shattenkirk and Colby Cohen. Cohen, of course, has the Campbellnomics goal of all Campbellnomics goals on his resumé, the OT goal in the NCAA title game last season, and has more goals than assists this season, with 12 goals and 10 assists to his credit for an average of .88 PPG, ranking seventh among defensemen. Meanwhile, Shattenkirk has four goals and 18 assists this season, tying for 11th among defensemen with .81 PPG. When the Campbellnomics system is applied, though, roles are reversed, as Shattenkirk has a total of 15 Campbellnomics point through 26 games (.58 CPPG), and Cohen totals 12 Campbellnomics points in his 24 games (.50 CPPG). For what it’s worth, Cohen’s assist on Ross Gaudet’s tying goal in last night’s BU win over Maine gives him another point and ups his average to .52 CPPG, but his standing doesn’t change, so we’ll stick with .50 for now.

Finally, early on in the season, UMass-Lowell’s Nick Schaus got a bit of Hobey buzz during the Rvier Hawks’ hot start, and while he’s faded a bit, he has just as many points as Shattenkirk. That said, however, Campbellnomics isn’t nearly as kind to Schaus, awarding him a total of 7.5 points, for an average of .29 CPPG.

So, that gives us a leaderboard as follows:

Brendan Smith, Wisconsin: .79 CPPG

Blake Kessel, New Hampshire: .73 CPPG

Kevin Shattenkirk, Boston University: .58 CPPG

Colby Cohen, Boston University: .50 CPPG

Thomas Dignard, Yale: .36 CPPG

Nick Schaus, UMass-Lowell: .29 CPPG

And, overall…

Player School CPPG Rank National Scoring Rank
Chase Polacek RPI 1.10 1 6
Corey Tropp Michigan State 1.03 2 19
Casey Wellman UMass 1.02 3 15
Blake Gallagher Cornell .98 4 14
Bobby Butler UNH .91 5 3t
Broc Little Yale .87 6 33
Tommy Wingels Miami .85 7 61t
Rhett Rakhshani Denver .82 8 16
Jacques Lamoureux Air Force .80 9 32
Brendan Smith Wisconsin .79 10 18
James Marcou UMass .78 11 3t
Austin Smith Colgate .78 12 30
Blake Kessel UNH .73 13 41
Matt Read Bemidji State .73 14 24
Mario Valery-Trabucco Union .71 15t 12
Cory Conacher Canisius .71 15t 1
Justin Fontaine Minn.-Duluth .71 15t 15
Gustav Nyquist Maine .69 18 2
Blake Geoffrion Wisconsin .65 19 24t
Mark Olver Northern Michigan .64 20 17
Carter Camper Miami .63 21 61t
Brian Gibbons Boston College .62 22 11
Kevin Shattenkirk Boston University .58 23 100+
Dave Jarman Sacred Heart .57 24 7
Jack Connolly Minn.-Duluth .55 25 10
Michael Davies Wisconsin .54 26 9
Derek Stepan Wisconsin .52 27 23
Colby Cohen Boston University .50 28 100
Carl Hagelin Michigan .50 29 49
Zac Dalpe Ohio State .46 30 46t
Thomas Dignard Yale .36 31 50
Nick Schaus UMass-Lowell .29 32 100+

You’ll note that Schaus and Shattenkirk’s national scoring rank listed as “100+,” I’m using collegehockeystats.net for my stats, and only the top 100 scorers in the nation are ranked.

In any event, I think I’ve given you all some food for thought as we go through the last couple of months of the season. I’ll check on this one more time, after the Hobey Finalists are announced.

All I can say is, 10 players will be much more manageable than 32.

Saturday’s Alabama-Huntsville Game at Niagara Postponed

Alabama-Huntsville’s game at Niagara on Saturday has been postponed after a fatal shooting on UAH’s campus Friday.

Three people were killed and three others were wounded in a school building. A biology professor is being held on murder charges.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the entire Alabama-Huntsville community,” Niagara athletic director Ed McLaughlin said.

No date has been announced for the game to be played. The teams played Friday’s game, with the Chargers earning a 3-2 victory.

This Week in D-III Women’s Hockey: February 12, 2010

New Kids On The Block

The Manhattanville women’s hockey team started off the 2008-2009 season much like every other season in the program’s history. The Valiants started the season 13-1 before going on to finish the season 7-6, including a loss in the ECAC East semifinal to Salve Regina.

Manhattanville coach Eric Lang wasted no time in orchestrating a dramatic overhaul of the team bringing in 13 freshmen after graduating just five players from last year’s squad.

So far the decision and large rookie class has been turning up roses for Manhattanville as the Valiants are 15-4-1 on the season and 13-2-1 in ECAC East play.

Most importantly, Manhattanville took two of three games from arch-rival Norwich this season and took a game from last year’s national runner-up Elmira early in the season.

“We have five of the top 20 rookie scorers in the country and they certainly haven’t been playing like freshmen during most of the season,” Lang said. “We’ve got some players in here who have won a lot of hockey games in their careers. We’ve tried to bring the freshmen in slowly here and we try not play three of them together so we basically try and play two freshmen to a line with an upperclassman.

“At times we have 10 or 11 freshmen in the line-up. They’ve just been very good this season and we’ve told them you’re here for a reason and you’re playing for a reason so don’t be a freshmen out there, play like a hockey player and they’ve certainly taken to that so far this year.”

Leading the way for Manhattanville’s super freshmen class has been Katie Little. The 5’11 power forward from Victoria, B.C., ranks fifth in the country with 32 points. Her 19 goals tie her for third in the country with Wisc.- Eau Claire’s Kristin Faber. She also has 13 assists and leads the country with five shorthanded goals on the year.

“She enjoys scoring goals as most good goal scorers do,” said Lang of Little. “Her eyes get big when she has the puck and she’s got a killer instinct around the net. We’ve paired her with Monique Rafferty since day one, who’s a senior 100-point scorer for us. They’ve had really good chemistry going where Katie works real well without the puck and Monique seems to find her. Katie considers herself a goal scorer and she’s scored some big goals for us this year.”

Sonia Occhionero (6-16-22), Lynsey Schill (10-11-21), Mary Rose Morrison (5-13-18), and Lauren Nutkevitch (6-9-15) have also had outstanding rookie campaigns for the Valiants.

Manhattanville cemented its claim to the ECAC East regular season crown by downing Norwich 7-2 last weekend.

After struggling through the first period and getting outshot 10-3 and down 1-0 on the scoreboard, the Valiants responded with the help of some veteran leadership for motivation during the first intermission.

“I thought in the first period Norwich was a lot more intense than us,” Lang said. “We went into the locker room and some of our upperclassmen stepped up and weren’t going to accept losing. It all comes down to battles and we started winning those in the second and third period. I thought the last 40 minutes of the game we’re the best we’ve played all season.

“That’s one of the big things we have going for us is that now we’re into the second semester and more of our rookies are starting to get more comfortable. I don’t think we’ve played our best game yet so it’s definitely exciting from that standpoint. We could surprise some people down the stretch.”

You may or may not have noticed that Manhattanville and Norwich played each other three teams in league play this season while playing all their other league opponents either twice or in some cases just once.

The reason?

With M.I.T. dropping its hockey program at the conclusion of last season, the ECAC East was left in limbo as far as scheduling. The conference left it up to each individual team to schedule a game against another team in the conference on its own.

“We had a game to book in our league and I said heck we might as well play the best team in the conference that won the championship last year so I called Mark [Bolding] up and we agreed that it was better for both of us to schedule each other.”

Along with last weekend’s win over Norwich, Lang thought that another turning point for Manhattanville was splitting with Elmira on Nov. 28 and 29.

“That was our first measuring stick and that three game stretch allowed our girls to realize that we belong,” Lang said. “We could have won all three of those games and we could have lost all three. They were that good of games and I think at that point our team started to realize that hey we’re a pretty good team too. Our girls felt good about that, especially getting the split at home.”

This weekend, Manhattanville will face another stern test as the Valiants will play three games in three days against two of the best teams on their schedule. Manhattanville faces St. Anselm on Friday and then travels to top-ranked Plattsburgh on Saturday and Sunday, who the Valiants have beaten just once in their program’s history. Plattsburgh currently holds the edge in the all-time series with a 9-1-3 record against the Valiants.

“We did this schedule by design,” Lang said. “We think that this will be our toughest stretch of the year including any playoff series we will be involved in. We’re going to go three straight and we do like our team depth. We’ll be able to insert some girls in and out of our lineup and get some rest that way, but it’s certainly going to be a challenge for our team and we’re looking forward to it.”

“We know who Plattsburgh is and we know they are a good team. They are well coached and if you’re going to beat them in their place, you better bring your A game. It will be interesting because we have some girls that lost in a national championship to Plattsburgh two years ago and we have some freshmen that have heard a lot of stories regarding Plattsburgh. These kinds of weeks are easy to get up for so we’ve been sharp in practice and have had a good week.”

In goal, Manhattanville has found solitude in splitting time between senior Sophia Kokkonis and Emy Cote between the pipes this season. Kokkonis is 7-1-1 on the season with 1.11 GGA and .941 save percentage. Cote is 7-3-0 with a 1.51 GGA and a .934 save percentage.

“Sophia has won a lot of big games in her career here,” Lang said. “We’ve been rotating them on Friday and Saturday most nights this season. Emy has usually been getting the starts on Friday but that will change this week with our senior night being Friday, so we’ll go with Sophia on Friday and Emy Saturday.

“They’ve both been really good for us this season and the team is equally confident with both of them in net. I don’t know if there is a better freshman goalie in the country then Emy Cote right now. She’s just been fantastic this season.”

Around The Country

Out west, Wisc.-River Falls and Lake Forest meet for a pair of games that will go a long towards determining how the NCHA standings might shake out. Adrian also travels to Wisc.-Stevens Point to try and keep its lead in the NCHA.

Adrian leads second place Lake Forest by one point 21-20, but the Bulldogs have played two more games than the Foresters. River Falls will be looking to made headway towards the top two in its series with Lake Forest, as the Falcons sit in third with 17 points. Stevens Point will be looking to try and distance themselves from the bottom half of the NCHA and still try and challenge River Falls for third place with the Pointers having 14 points and fifth place Eau Claire, Superior, and Concordia WI having 12 points each.

In the NESCAC, Amherst has an intriguing series with a dangerous Williams team with Sara Plunkett between the pipes, capable of stealing any game for the Ephs. The Lady Jeffs will close their season traveling to Williams to try and lock up the NESCAC crown and then they finish out the regular season by hosting Norwich on Feb. 20.

Fun With Numbers, Part V: The WCHA

For the record, despite my disappointing grade in freshman calculus once upon a time, I am perfectly capable of counting, so yes, I do know that I tracked six CCHA players instead of five. With a team like Miami, having been so dominant and so balanced this season, I thought it made sense to toss one more RedHawk into the mix, particularly since Carter Camper and Tommy Wingels have (for now) the same number of points.

The reason I bring this up is because in looking at another top team, Wisconsin, as I apply Ken Campbell’s “Campbellnomics” stats to the WCHA’s top-scoring forwards, I expanded one more time, and included not one, not two, but three Badgers in my analysis.

(Cue UHF line: “Badgers? Badgers? We don’t need no stinking Badgers!)

Actually, we do need them, sicne they’re one of the top teams in the country, and they have one of the top offenses in college hockey. Of course, it’s also an offense that has some balance to it, with four players with 28 points or more, including three 30-point scorers, and where the Badger forwards are concerned, that’s not a good thing in the Hobey race (we’ll get to Brendan Smith in our last installment). With a team that’s winning big – thanks to both that prolific offense and a stifling defense – and getting production from many different sources (seven players have five or more goals), the chances that a given player will be involved on the deciding goal(s) of the game are reduced. That’s trouble in the Campbellnomics system, which awards points only on six types of goals: first goal, go-ahead goal, tying goal, comeback goal, last lead, and overtime (you get one point per goal and half a point per assist for each category the goal falls into).

Applying the system to the Badgers’ top forwards, the fine seasons being enjoyed by Derek Stepan and Michael Davies take a hit. Davies, who’s 13th in the country with 1.28 points per game on 11 goals and 21 assists, totals just 13.5 Campbellnomics points, for an average of .54 CPPG. Derek Stepan, meanwhile, has 31 points (6g, 25a) in 25 games, and ranks 18th in the country with 1.24 points per game, but the digits get flipped in Campbellnomics, and he has 13 points for an averaged of .52 CPPG. The big impact man among Wisconsin’s forwards is Blake Geoffrion, which makes sense, since the system favors goals, and he’s the top goal scorer for Mike Eaves’ team. Geoffrion’s 18 goals and 10 assists in 26 games give him an average of 1.08 PPG (45th in the nation), and his Campbellnomics score is 17 points, good for .65 CPPG.

Meanwhile, at Minnesota Duluth, forwards Jack Connolly and Justin Fontaine have been having big years for the Bulldogs, ranking 10th and 17th, respectively, in the nation in points per game. Surprisingly, despite similar point breakdowns (16g, 23a for Connolly, 17g, 19a for Fontaine), Fontaine scores significantly higher in the Campbellnomics system, as his 20.5 Campbellnommics points average out to .71 CPPG, compared to 16.5 Campbellnomics poitns and .55 CPPG for Connolly.

The big winner in the WCHA, though, is Denver forward Rhett Rakhshani. Rakhshani – and how come no video game geek in Denver has nicknamed him “Prince of Persia?” – is 16th in the nation in scoring with 17 goals and 18 assists in 28 games for an average of 1.25 points per game, and when the Campbellnomics system, he leapfrogs the WCHA’s other top scoring forwards, for 23 Campbellnomics poitns and a .82 CPPG average.

Of course, through all of this, there’s an elephant in the room, since Brendan Smith is the one who got me started on all this. But that’s fine, because the defensemen are next.

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Feb. 11, 2010

Sweeps and Splits

With just three weekends left in the Atlantic Hockey regular season, it’s getting crucial. Air Force and Mercyhurst ventured out of conference for the final times this season, while the four AHA series resulted in two sweeps and two splits.

American International recorded its first four-point weekend of the season, and first in two years with a pair of victories over Bentley. In the first game, the Yellow Jackets built a 6-1 lead over the Falcons early in the second period and then held off a Bentley comeback attempt for the 6-5 win. On Saturday afternoon, Mike Little scored with 1:09 to play in overtime to give AIC the sweep.

“With the credit due to AIC, they outworked us and outplayed us all weekend,” said Bentley coach Ryan Soderquist. “That’s why they got four points and we didn’t. Hopefully it was a lesson learned by our guys.”

Canisius recorded the other sweep, taking four points from Connecticut. The Griffs won 3-1 on Friday and 5-2 on Saturday, when the Huskies’ third-period comeback attempt fell short.

“This group definitely doesn’t quit and they give themselves an opportunity [to win],” UConn coach Bruce Marshall said after the game. “But we’ve got to find a way to get it done.”

The splits were between Holy Cross and Army (Crusaders won Friday and the Black Knights on Saturday), and RIT and Sacred Heart. On Friday, the Tigers were just the second road team to earn a victory at the Milford Ice Pavillion this season, winning 5-2 and snapping the Pioneers’ 12-game unbeaten streak. But the Tigers could not get the sweep, falling 5-4 on Saturday.

The two points obtained by each team helped the Pioneers to move into third place in the standings, and reduced the Tigers’ magic number of points to clinch the regular season title to six.

“While we’re disappointed [with the loss on Saturday], we can’t lose sight of getting a win and say that the weekend wasn’t worthwhile,” said RIT coach Wayne Wilson. “[Sacred Heart] is not an easy place to play.

“There is a lot of tough hockey games left. Everyone’s in the same boat. I don’t think there’s anyone that look at their schedule and say, ‘Well, there’s two in the bank.’ Anyone can knock off anyone.”

The Scoop

Crunching the numbers going into weekend No. 20 of a 22-week season:

• RIT can finish no lower than sixth place and clinches the regular season title with a combination of six points in its last six games.

• Air Force can finish no lower than seventh place and needs six points in its last four games to clinch home ice in the quarterfinals. The Falcons need two points to avoid the play-in round.

• Sacred Heart can finish no lower than seventh place and needs 10 points in its last six games to clinch home ice.

• Mercyhurst can finish no lower than eighth place and needs eight points in its last six games to clinch home ice.

• Canisius can finish no lower than eighth place and needs 10 points in its last six games to clinch home ice.

• Army can finish no lower than ninth place and cannot finish higher than fifth without some help.

• Bentley cannot finish any higher than second place and any lower than ninth. The Falcons need help to finish higher than seventh.

• Holy Cross can finish as high as third and as low as 10th. The Crusaders need help to finish any higher than seventh.

• AIC can finish as high as sixth and as low as 10th. The Yellow Jackets need help to finish higher than ninth.

• Connecticut will finish between eighth and 10th and needs help to finish out of the basement.

We’ll run the numbers again next week.

Weekly Awards

Player of the Week for Feb. 8, 2010:
Andrew Favot — RIT

Favot chalked up a five-point weekend for the third time this season. The junior had three goals and two assists to help the Tigers to a split at Sacred Heart. Favot has a team-leading 30 points in 27 games to date.

Goalie of the Week for Feb. 8, 2010:
Andrew Loewen — Canisius

Loewen made 52 saves on 55 shots to post a pair of victories last weekend over Connecticut.

Rookie of the Week for Feb. 8, 2010:
Adam Pleskach — AIC

Pleskach had a goal and two assists to lead the Yellow Jackets to a sweep of Bentley. One of his assists was on the winning goal in overtime on Saturday.

Rocky Mountain Low

Air Force and Mercyhurst played travel partners last weekend, with the Lakers traveling west to join the Falcons in taking on No. 2 Denver and No. 10 Colorado College.

Each team came away 0-2, including a 2-1 Air Force loss to Denver in overtime at Cadet Ice Arena.

“Our guys played really well tonight,” Air Force coach Frank Serratore said after the game. “The difference in the game was [Denver goalie] Marc Cheverie. We had some terrific shots and he was great.

“The bad part about it is that at this point in season there are no moral victories. They are the No. 2 team in country and they found a way to get the job done. But I wouldn’t switch teams based on what I saw tonight. I really feel bad for our kids because they really gave it everything tonight. We have to bottle this recipe, rest up and hit those last four games on the sprint.”

The Falcons lost 2-0 at Colorado College, the first time Air Force had been shut out in 106 games.

Mercyhurst fared no better, with a 4-1 loss to Denver and a 5-3 loss at Colorado College. The Lakers finished the regular season 0-6 in non-conference games, but are 12-8-2 in league play, good four fourth place in the AHA.

Busy Weeks

Canisius’ Jason Weeks scored his 50th career goal on Saturday, making him the top goal-scorer in the school’s Division I era. Weeks passed David Deeves, who lit the lamp 49 times from 1998 to 2002.

“Those numbers represent a four-year commitment,” said Canisius coach Dave Smith. “He just keeps chipping away and it’s been fun to watch him get those numbers.”

Hobey Watch (and Listen)

Episode 3 of the USCHO.com Hobey Watch Podcast focuses on potential Hobey Baker candidates from Atlantic Hockey and features an interview with Canisius coach Dave Smith. Click here to listen.


Contributing: Erik Abell, Nate Owen

This Week in Hockey East: Feb. 11, 2010

Unlike My Counterpart…

There are a lot of things different between Dave Hendrickson and myself. Dave is married. I am not. Dave is an avid reader. I have a hard time getting to the end of reading my own column. Dave will eat anything and is a two- or three-plate guy at the free media buffets. I’m a picky eater and lucky to be able to fill one plate.

Dave also chose not to talk about the Beanpot anywhere in his column last week. I will not do that. Sure, I’ll talk about league play and the playoff races, but I’m not about to hold back coverage of what I still believe is the greatest college hockey event each year outside of the national tournament.

So let’s get things started there.

Northeastern’s Consolation

This year’s Beanpot title game was yet another memorable one for the annuls. But for the eventual champion, Boston College, the game didn’t carry with it the same weight that the Beanpot consolation game did for league mate Northeastern.

The Huskies, despite losing to BU, 2-1, in the Beanpot semifinals, have been playing extremely well of late. Since what was likely its most embarrassing game of the year, a 9-2 loss at Vermont, Northeastern has strung together a 4-1-0 record in its last five, including three straight league wins. The team still sits in the eighth and final playoff spot in Hockey East, but with 17 points, they’re a point from fifth place and just five points behind Massachusetts for the fourth and final home ice playoff spot.

Monday’s victory also catapulted Northeastern into the PairWise Rankings, placing it 24th, though still a ways away from earning an NCAA tournament spot.

That, then, magnified the importance of the Huskies’ consolation game matchup with Harvard. For the second straight week, Northeastern received a strong goaltending performance from rookie Chris Rawlings, who was barely edged out by BC’s John Muse for the Eberly Award, presented to the Beanpot goaltender with the highest save percentage.

Huskies coach Greg Cronin sang the praises of Rawlings, who has struggled at times this season but performed well on the team’s biggest regular-season stage.

“Brad Thiessen will go down as one of the best goaltenders in Northeastern history,” said Cronin. “Brad was known as a poised, level-headed goalie, and I really feel that Chris has made some incredible strides, especially after the Vermont game [the 9-2 loss], when he had his worst outing of the year and then went into the Beanpot.

“That first 8 p.m. game for a freshman — particularly against BU — with 17,000 people here is probably one of the most pressure-packed games a college hockey goalie will face, outside of the national championship. I thought his poise, his consistency, and his aggressiveness in the BU game was outstanding.”

Though Rawlings mustered just one victory in the two games — he finished the tournament with 60 saves on 63 shots — the consolation game victory was extremely important to springboard the Huskies into the final eight games of the regular season.

Though the NCAA playoff picture might not be front of mind, you could tell by Cronin’s comments on Monday, he’s hardly written off his team’s chances of making the tournament.

“I don’t follow [national rankings] much, but we’ve been popping in and out of those RPI and [PairWise] ratings,” said Cronin. “Prior to the BU loss [in the Beanpot semifinals], I think we were as high as 22, then we were bounced, and now we’re back in briefly. It’s very, very important for us to hang around the pack.

“We learned last year that if you can get yourself into striking distance of the top 16, then you get those quality points around playoff time, not only does it give you a chance to fight for home ice for the playoffs, but it puts you in position where if you have a couple of good weekends like Maine did against New Hampshire [this past weekend], you can really move yourself up that [PairWise] ratings ladder.

“I told them that this may be insignificant in the newspaper or to the championship game, but this is an important game for our season. I don’t know the last time Northeastern had back-to-back winning seasons, but that’s another important feather these seniors can put in their cap before they leave.”

‘Pot Survival

You can’t blame Boston College if it looked a tad bit nervous in the final half of the third period of Monday night’s Beanpot championship game. The Eagles held a 4-1 lead near the midway mark of the third and were on the power play with the chance to deliver the knockout blow. Then a beautiful move and backhander by David Warsofsky with exactly 11 minutes remaining resulted in a shorthanded goal for the Terriers.

It was almost as if those in attendance at the sold-out Garden knew they were watching a horror movie where they could predict the ending.

BU’s dominance in the Beanpot is marked. They have 29 titles in the first 57 years of the tournament. They are an absolute staple in the championship game — the only miss in recent memory was 2008.

Thus, when you play BU, as the opposition you understand well that regardless of the score, the Terriers always believe they can win.

When BU pulled within a goal with just under three minutes left — this time it was the 2009 NCAA Frozen Four hero, Colby Cohen, scoring — you could almost feel the BC fans in the Garden stop breathing.

“You never go into a championship game expecting it to be a cakewalk,” said Eagles forward Matt Price. “[Monday] was a case in point. You know it’s always going to be a battle and you gotta win all sorts of games.”

But a 4-1 lead with just over 11 minutes left. Could that lead really evaporate?

The answer, of course, is yes. Heck, this BU team erased a 3-1 deficit in the final minute against Miami in the national title game last year.

But for BC, this time the answer was no.

Credit to coach Jerry York. He called a timeout immediately after BU scored the third goal. Often times you see coaches hold off on calling their timeouts (see Indianapolis in Sunday’s Super Bowl). But York knew that he could settle his team, and settle he did. From that point on, despite BU pulling its goaltender for a sixth skater with about a minute and a half left, the only quality chance for BU was a wraparound bid by Nick Bonino in the waning seconds.

“You take the timeout to settle your team down a little bit,” said York. “Their eyes were focused pretty well on the prize, but I think at times it’s nice just to settle us down a bit. They handled it pretty well.”

The result was the return to the Beanpot winner’s circle for the Eagles, a small prize in comparison to, say, a national championship. But if history repeats itself, BC could be battling for the NCAA title come April. Each of the three previous BC Beanpot champions reached the Frozen Four, and two of those teams (2001, 2008), as you may know, came home with college hockey’s holy grail.

OK, Enough Beanpot, Let’s Talk Playoffs

From the tournament to the playoffs.

Hockey East’s playoff race went from lukewarm to scolding hot last week, thanks mostly in part to a two-game series in Orono, Maine.

The Maine Black Bears continued to be one of the league’s hottest teams, sweeping first-place New Hampshire to create a logjam at the top of Hockey East.

UNH knew entering the weekend that a road sweep of the Black Bears would open up at least a seven-point lead for first place as BC and UMass, which came into the weekend tied for second, five points back, faced one another in each team’s only game of the weekend.

But instead of gaining breathing room, UNH has choked itself with chasers. The two wins for the Black Bears pulled them into a tie with BC and both teams are just three points behind the Wildcats for the league’s top spot.

For UNH, possibly the most frustrating thing last weekend wasn’t the losses themselves but the nature of each loss. In both games, UNH jumped out to a 2-0 lead only to see Maine rally. On Friday, Maine scored the final three goals. Saturday was a bit worse with Maine outscoring UNH, 6-1, over the game’s final 33:14.

“We got beat,” UNH coach Dick Umile said after Saturday’s loss. “I’m not going to take anything away from [Maine]. They found a way to win the game. We went ahead twice and couldn’t hold onto it.”

The final impact of the two UNH losses on the standing is similar to a 2-ton truck running over a 6-inch-thick sandwich.

Not only has UNH’s lead over Boston College (and now Maine) shrunk to just three points, just 10 points now separate first place from eighth place (the spot held by Northeastern) with either seven or eight games remaining for each of those eight teams.

The Other End of the Spectrum

While UNH is worried about being caught, Providence sits at the other end of the standings wondering if it has any chance of catching up to Northeastern for the eighth and final playoff spot.

A year ago, Providence missed the Hockey East playoffs for the first time in the 25-year history of the league. One year later, the Friars are in an identical spot. Since beginning the year 7-4-1, Providence has just two wins in its last 15 games. What’s more difficult is the fact that 14 of those 15 games were in league play.

The Friars now have just 10 league points and will need to make up at least seven points on Northeastern — and in the process leapfrog ninth-place Merrimack — over the final seven games of the season.

“We’ve got seven games to go,” said Providence coach Tim Army. “I don’t want to focus on that we need the points [in the standings].”

Instead, heading into last Saturday’s game against Vermont, a night after the Catamounts hammered the Friars, 5-1, Army’s hope was just to keep his team in the game, having lost the previous three games by a combined total of 14-4.

“I just really wanted to be in a game,” said Army. “I wanted us to go compete and give us a chance to win it in the third period.”

The result was a 1-1 tie, which could be a step in the right direction, but at this late point in the season is probably one standings point less that Providence needs.

Things won’t get any easier for the Friars this weekend as they face UNH on the road for a single game on Friday night. Providence has won just three times at New Hampshire since the Whittemore Center opened in 1995.

The team Providence is pursuing, Northeastern, plays twice against UMass this weekend. Two wins for the Huskies combined with a Providence road loss would make the playoffs nearly impossible. But none of that is a given. Northeastern struggled with UMass at home this year losing, 4-1, while Providence lost a heartbreaker to UNH in overtime less than a month ago.

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

I often times find it sad that I come to learn good things about great people only after they’ve passed.

Such is the case with Brendan Burke, Miami’s student manager who was tragically killed in a car accident last Friday. Many people will associated Brendan with his father, Brian, who currently is the general manager of both the Toronto Maple Leafs and the U.S. Olympic team.

But in reading about Brendan in the days following his tragic death, I learned of a boy who was hardly a boy.

Brendan, who grew up about 20 minutes from my hometown, was courageous in coming out as a gay man in the sports world. Some of the top media in the sports world featured Brendan long before his passing. It’s so often these stories aren’t told while these people are alive. For Brendan that wasn’t the case.

Obviously, my heart and prayers go out to the Miami program as they mourn this loss. Having been a student manager myself through college, there is a strong bond that develops between the team, the coaches and the managers. His loss will most certainly be felt.


Contributing: Steven McCarthy

This Week in the NCHA-MCHA: Feb. 11, 2010

The dog days of winter are here and that means the end of the 2009-10 campaign is already looming on the horizon. Plenty of action remains to unfold, however, as MCHA and NCHA teams get one final chance to jockey for playoff position as both leagues wrap up their conference schedules this weekend.

Aside from bringing an end to the regular season for teams of both leagues, this week once again offered a new edition of the USCHO.com Division III men’s poll.

St. Norbert is again the top ranked team in the West Region and holds at No. 3 following a pair of ties in the Twin Ports. St. Scholastica holds at No. 4 after tying the Green Knights and dropping UW-Stevens Point. The Saints have made up some ground on St. Norbert and now sit only 10 spots behind the Knights.

UW-River Falls stays at No. 14 after a pair of wins while Adrian maintains its No. 12 ranking. The Bulldogs remain the only MCHA team to have received votes. In a rare case, no other NCHA teams land in the ‘others receiving votes’ category.

Another Year, Another Nominee

For the fourth consecutive season, this column is honored to feature yet another MCHA or NCHA nominee for the Hockey Humanitarian Award. First it was MSOE’s Brian Soik, then UW-Stout’s Jeff DeFrancesca, and last season it was Gregory Copeland of Marian.

This year, it’s Adrian junior forward Sam Kuzyk. As stated on their website, the Hockey Humanitarian Award seeks to “acknowledge the accomplishments of personal character, scholarship, and the giving of oneself off the ice to the larger community as well. The Humanitarian Award is meant to be seen as a true measure of a person’s worth, not just as an athlete, but as someone who embodies those values that merit our recognition.”

Kuzyk is enjoying a fine season on the ice as his 34 points make him the second leading scorer on the Bulldogs. It’s his off-the-ice endeavors that earned him the nomination, however.

In recent months, Kuzyk has volunteered at a local clinic for the disabled, volunteered to read to youngsters at a local school, organized a food drive, and organized sponsorship of a local needs family through the Salvation Army.

Kuzyk is one of 18 nominees in a field that will ultimately be narrowed to eight finalists. The winner will be announced in conjuction with the festivities surrounding the Division I Frozen Four in Detroit.

Like it was for Soik, DeFrancesca and Copeland ahead of him, it really doesn’t matter if Kuzyk goes on to win the award as while it certainly would be a truly honoring distinction, trying to win awards isn’t why these guys do what they do, and that is something we can all respect.

NCHA Playoff Picture

With a pair of ties in the Twin Ports a week ago, St. Norbert failed to wrap up the NCHA regular season title, but the Green Knights remain in sound position to claim their seventh NCHA title in the past eight seasons.

Two points ahead of St. Scholastica and in good position on tiebreakers, a win this weekend over River Falls or Stout locks up the league, and the first round playoff bye, for the Green Knights. St. Norbert must like its chances this weekend as it is 23-1 all time at the Cornerstone Community Center against the Blue Devils and Falcons.

The Green Knights also clinch the title with any St. Scholastica loss. The Saints currently sit two points back of St. Norbert and take on UW-Superior and UW-Eau Claire this weekend.

In all likelihood the Green Knights will score at least one home win and win the conference, which means St. Scholastica is locked into second as the Saints are currently six points clear, and beyond reach of, third place River Falls.

River Falls and Stout are locked into the third and fourth positions, but the Falcons currently stand two points clear of the Blue Devils. Both play at Stevens Point and St. Norbert this weekend and one win by River Falls will be enough to clinch third place for the Falcons as they are 8-6-2 in league play while Stout is 6-6-4.

The first tiebreaker is league wins so Stout is essentially forced to sweep and hope Falls gets no better than a tie on the weekend. Should most anything else happen, the Falcons finish third and the Blue Devils fourth. Both will host home playoff series regardless.

The fifth through seventh spots are a bit more convoluted. Stevens Point currently stands in fifth with 10 points, while Eau Claire and Superior sit a single point behind. The full picture is as follows:

5. Stevens Point (5-11-0), 10 pts.
6. Eau Claire (3-10-3), 9 pts.
7. Superior (3-10-3), 9 pts.

The comprehensive set of tiebreakers, which very well could come into play here are:

1. League wins
2. Goal differential among tied teams
3. Goal differential in all NCHA games
4. Coin flip

With two more league victories that Eau Claire and Superior, Stevens Point wraps up fifth with any win and single non-wins by Eau Claire and Superior, while a single tie by the Pointers forces Eau Claire or Superior to take at least three points on the weekend.

This likely won’t be settled until Saturday night when, naturally, Superior and Eau Claire close out the season with a tilt at Hobbs Ice Arena.

So how’s it going to shape up? I don’t think too much will change and your final NCHA standings will be:

1. St. Norbert
2. St. Scholastica
3. UW-River Falls
4. UW-Stout
5. UW-Stevens Point
6/7. Winner of Superior/Eau Claire game finishes sixth, loser seventh

Regardless of how it shakes down, one thing is for sure: this broke down a bit easier than in years past!

Raiders Quietly Surge

After opening the season with four straight conference victories, the Milwaukee School of Engineering Raiders proceeded to drop five of their next six league games.

In mid-January, it looked like MSOE would be facing the fight of their lives for a home playoff series, but the last three weeks have changed things significantly. Since a 5-2 loss to Adrian on January 16, the Raiders are 5-0-1 in their last six league games and need only a single point this weekend to finish third in the MCHA.

As such, they will likely host the sixth and final MCHA playoff qualifier in an opening round series, though the identity of their opponent will not be known until Saturday night.

“With a young team we feel very good about where we stand,” said Raiders’ head coach Mark Ostapina. “We knew this was going to be a work in progress and we looked at it as a journey and that journey is moving along.”

The Raiders are one of the youngest teams in the MCHA and routinely take the ice with upwards of 15 underclassmen. Their youth on the blueline was of utmost concern this preseason as the relatively inexperienced group not only was expected to perform, but had to find a way to fill the large skates of all-everything Jason Woll.

As it has turned out, however, team defense has been a strength of MSOE as the Raiders lead all MCHA teams in overall scoring defense and rank second only to Adrian in scoring defense in league games.

“I never thought we’d able to pick up that slack right away,” Ostapina said. “I think the fact we have done it is a tribute to all of the defensemen in the lineup. We didn’t look for one guy to pick it up, we looked to multiple guys.”

The Raiders have once again fell victim to injuries this year, the most notable coming to first line center Brock King who suffered a career-threatening injury earlier in the season.

Junior Michael Soik and sophomore Todd Krupa pace the Raiders with 21 and 18 points, respectively, but it’s the trio of freshman forwards that follow that have been the big surprise as Bradley Tierney, Nick Gorup and Jordan Keizer have combined for 47 points, eight power-play goals and four game winning goals already this season.

“It’s not easy to replace [our injured players], but some other guys have stepped up and played well and that’s something we are very happy about,” said Ostapina.

Though all focus is now on play within the MCHA, the Raiders had an opportunity to head East earlier this season as they were participants in the Oswego Pathfinder Classic, which is hosted by Oswego State in one of the premier Division III rinks in the nation.

“It is a beautiful facility,” Ostapina said. “There are probably 20 or 25 Division I programs that would die for that rink on campus. It’s an excellent rink and there is no question about that.”

The Raiders failed to score a win as they fell 4-2 to Elmira in the opener before suffering a 2-1 overtime setback to Connecticut College in the consolation game. Nonetheless, Ostapina considered it a great learning experience.

“It was an experience we took a lot away from. We didn’t win and that’s what we were able to take away from it. We came back and watched the tape and came away with a very positive effect.”

The effect certainly seems to be a positive one as MSOE is 6-2-1 since returning from New York. The most crucial wins in that stretch were likely 5-0 and 3-2 triumphs over Lawrence two weeks ago. At the time, the two were in a dogfight with Lake Forest for the final home playoff spot.

“We’re looking at every game being big and trying to set the mentality that every game is a playoff game,” said Ostapina of the Lawrence series. “We knew they would be very good. They have a team that never quits so being able to jump out to the early lead, have the power play do well, and to keep it up for 60 minutes was very important.”

MSOE wraps up conference action this weekend in a home and home series with Lake Forest, and a single point in their own right or any slip up by Lawrence will lock the Raiders into a third place MCHA finish.

From there, as playoffs prove time and time again, anything can happen, and if
the young Raiders get their way they will have a shot at becoming the first MCHA team to partake in the NCAA tournament.

“Adrian is the team to beat and everyone knew that going in,” Ostapina said. “I know it’s a cliché but from here our goal is to play each game, each period and each shift well and let the chips fall where they may. We’re going to be going up against a bunch of veteran teams down the stretch here, and we want to make sure we are in every game until the final seconds.”

MCHA Playoff Picture

Like the NCHA, the MCHA has one weekend of play remaining. Also like the NCHA, the MCHA playoff picture is fairly clear. Recall, however, that under the new MCHA playoff format only six teams qualify for the postseason, with the top two receiving byes to the semifinals.

Adrian and Marian have already locked up those byes. The Bulldogs have clinched their third consecutive MCHA regular season title and have claimed the top overall seed, while the Sabres have iced the second seed by virtue of winning the MCHA North Division.

MSOE is six points up on Lawrence for third, but Lawrence has three games with Marian this weekend. However, the best Lawrence can hope for is a three-game sweep over Marian in conjunction with a Lake Forest sweep of MSOE. Should this occur, MSOE still wins the tiebreaker as they are 2-0 against the Vikings this season. The Raiders are your third place team.

The final playoff spot, and sixth seed, will be claimed by Northland or Finlandia. The Lumberjacks are currently four points ahead of the Lions and hold a 2-0 advantage in head-to-head play so far this year. However, the Lumberjacks travel to Hancock this weekend for two more. A single point by Northland wraps up the sixth spot, while Finlandia must sweep to bring the tiebreakers into play. The MCHA tiebreakers are:

1. Head-to-head results
2. Head-to-head goal differential
3. Overall league goal differential

A Finlandia sweep evens the season series, but they must outscore Northland by three or more to sneak into sixth. It’s as simple as that.

What’s left is the 4/5 battle between Lawrence and Lake Forest. The two are currently tied but the Vikings have a game in hand on the Foresters. Lake Forest wins the tiebreaker on goal differential which means the Vikings need to attain more league points in their three weekend games than Lake Forest does in its two if they wish to host the Foresters in next weekend’s quarterfinals. Anything else and it’s the Foresters who will be at home.

So, what will it ultimately look like? Let’s try this:

1. Adrian
2. Marian
3. MSOE
4. Lawrence
5. Lake Forest
6. Northland

This Week in the CCHA: Feb. 11, 2010

Of Gays and Girls

Last week, the college hockey world lost a friend and pioneer. His youth — 21 years — doesn’t diminish what he did with one brave act.

Brendan Burke, son of Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Brian Burke and student assistant for the Miami hockey program, died Friday, Feb. 5, in a car crash in snowy conditions on the Hoosier side near the Indiana-Ohio border. His 18-year-old friend, Mark Reedy, also died in the crash. Reedy, a Bloomfield Hills, Mich., native, was a freshman at Michigan State.

Highway deaths are “so randomly bad,” e-mailed a long-time CCHA fan following the news. So random. So unfair.

By now, you’ve probably heard the story of what made Brendan a true ground-breaker in male athletics. In an
ESPN.com article
originally published Nov. 24, 2009, Brendan revealed that he was gay. I have friends who have told me that coming out to their own families and friends was the hardest thing they had ever had to do; I cannot imagine the courage it took for Brendan to tell the world — to tell the straight-male-identified sporting world — that he was gay.

The original ESPN.com article, written by John Buccigross, tells much of Brendan’s story and rightly discusses how difficult it was for this young man to tell his father, brothers, and everyone associated with the Miami hockey program, including young men his own age whom he feared would treat him differently.

In the end, his revelation didn’t make any difference to the people who loved Brendan. He came from a loving family. He had found very good people in Oxford, Ohio.

I can’t eulogize Brendan Burke here. I didn’t know him. I do know the Miami hockey program, though, and I know what I’ve seen in the aftermath of Brendan Burke’s death.

Clearly, Brendan taught the young men who play RedHawk hockey many lessons they will never forget, many that you and I will never know that have to do with him just being Brendan Burke, the incredibly likable, smart young man who managed the RedHawk team.

Brendan taught the team a specific lesson when he came out in November, one that is often difficult for young men — especially those in sports — to learn. It’s not OK to call each other “fag” in the locker room. It’s not OK to use “gay” as a slur. That young men (and probably not-so-young men) are expected to do this in locker rooms on a regular basis, expected to engage in banter that is considered emasculating, is what Brendan Burke said solidified his decision to stop playing hockey in his senior year of high school.

In November, Brendan taught these young men of the Miami hockey program that manning up, so to speak, has more to do with just one’s sexual orientation.

Last week, Brendan taught these young men about mortality and the transient nature of life. This week, Brendan taught them that manning up sometimes means breaking down. The RedHawks wore their jerseys to Brendan Burke’s funeral mass at St. John the Evangelist Church in Canton, Mass.

After the mass, they exited the church, weeping.

The message that Brendan Burke was trying to send by telling his personal story was a powerful one, but even the most powerful messages take some time to be heard, to be fully comprehended. In eulogizing Brendan, Buccigross talked about how instantly likable Burke was. “People liked Brendan 10 seconds after meeting him,” wrote Buccigross. “His wasn’t a flamboyant or self-serving gallop.”

Perhaps Buccigross, whose sexuality is no business of mine, is unaware of the connotations of the word “flamboyant” in this context. Perhaps Buccigross was taking into consideration his largely heterosexual male audience.

Brendan Burke was not flamboyant. In other words, he was an acceptable kind of gay.

The majority of stories following Brendan’s death focus on his homosexuality. This one is no exception. Because of his famous father, Brendan Burke’s death would have received a lot of attention anyway, but it’s only because of his coming out in November — a courageous act that shouldn’t even be news, according to Brian Burke himself — that there are thousands of stories related to this genuine tragedy.

It’s not just a man’s world, but a straight man’s world. That’s another part of Brendan Burke’s message, however unintentional. There will come a day when an openly gay professional male athlete won’t shock us, but at this point, an openly gay young man who works with male NCAA student-athletes is big news.

Even after the world ended, momentarily, for the Burke family and everyone who loved Brendan, there was college hockey still to be played. Last Saturday, they played it outdoors in Madison, Wis. Before the Wolverine men took the ice to lose to the Badgers, 3-2, in the second game of the day, the Wisconsin women routed Bemidji State, 6-1.

Something Darby Hendrickson said in the Big Ten Network’s “Opening Face-Off” show struck me in the same way that Buccigross’ use of the word “flamboyant” did. Bear with me, please. The connection may seem tenuous to you, but in the bigger picture, I can’t help but see it.

Hendrickson, a former Golden Gophers skater who played a decade in the NHL, talked about the ice and how “guys adjust to their skate-sharpening, how they feel out there.” He made mention of a feature that the Big Ten Network had just shown about creating the ice for this outdoor game and the importance of seasoning the ice so that it was game ready.

An integral part of that process, at least to Hendrickson, was the game played by “the girls” before the main event.

“The girls played tonight before the game, the Badgers and Bemidji State,” said Hendrickson, “so that’s a good thing that will get the ice ready.”

Ready for the guys, of course.

I am in no way equating the loss of Brendan Burke with a verbal slight made by a hockey announcer. What strikes me this week, though, is the casualness with which entire groups of people can be slighted.

Brendan Burke wasn’t flamboyant. The Badgers and Beavers were girls who played a hockey game to prepare the ice surface for the guys.

That the slights were unintentional — Buccigross was complimenting Brendan Burke, and I doubt that Hendrickson understood the message he was relaying — is even more disheartening in the 21st century.

To paraphrase Brian Burke, someday this won’t even be a story.

I am saddened, however, by the knowledge that Brendan Burke won’t be around to see that day.

And They’re Still Playing Hockey

With just one point or with a Ferris State loss, Miami will claim the regular-season CCHA title. The RedHawks and third-place Bulldogs have two games in hand on second-place Michigan State.

The RedHawks continued their dominance in CCHA play last weekend by shutting out Lake Superior State, 2-0, Friday before positively thumping the Lakers Saturday, 10-4.

With the wins, Miami is 17-1-4 in league play this season and now unbeaten in 20 consecutive conference games (16-0-4), dating to that sole loss to Michigan State Oct. 24.

In the 2-0 win, sophomore Cody Reichard recorded his fifth shutout, a new school single-season record — particularly impressive when you consider that Reichard has shared some time in net this season with classmate Connor Knapp. The previous record was set by David Burleigh in 2002-03; Burleigh’s fourth shutout of that season came in his 37th game played, while Reichard’s fifth came in his 16th this year.

In the 10-4 game, nine different RedHawks scored. Andy Miele scored twice.

So as the regular-season championship is all but over, the most interesting hockey left to be played is in the middle — where it is nearly every year, regardless of which teams are in the mix.

I will not go through all the possible permutations of final standings here (“Math class is tough!” said Barbie), but I will give my predicted order of finish … even though I know I’ll be completely wrong and that I’m opening myself up to even more ridicule, especially from Alaska fans, whose disgust with me this season borders on that of the fans of their soon-to-be-gone travel partner.

1. Miami. Duh. The RedHawks need a point. It’s not only statistically safe, but Miami has demonstrated near-complete dominance of the league and has shown that it may be the only team competitive at the national level this year.

2. Michigan State. I actually think this is a risky pick, given that Ferris State has two games in hand on MSU. The Spartans are idle this weekend, but MSU and FSU go head-to-head, home-and-home Feb. 19-20. That’s where I think the Spartans will prevail.

3. Michigan. This is a team that I thought wouldn’t make the NCAA tournament this year based on first-half play — and I was dumb enough to say so on the radio at some point. Currently in fourth place, three points behind Ferris State, Michigan has one more win than does FSU (league wins being the first tiebreaker) with the same number of games as do the Bulldogs. It’s an even riskier pick because UM’s remaining schedule is very tough: Nebraska-Omaha, Northern, Notre Dame. Still, I think Red Berenson possesses some kind of magic. I can’t bet against UM as long as he’s at the helm.

4. Ferris State. With a five-point lead and two games-in-hand over both fifth-place teams, I think the Bulldogs will finish fourth and sit out the first round of the CCHA playoffs.

5. Alaska. The Nanooks have four conference games left, two on the road against Ohio State and two at home against Lake Superior. They are tough at home (6-3-5) and play those last home games the weekend before everyone else concludes. That will test their maturity, whether they can determine as much of their own fate as possible in what is the second-to-last weekend of regular-season play for everyone else.

6. Northern Michigan. The Wildcats are 2-0-2 in the last four, against teams ahead of them in the standings. NMU has two games in hand over both UAF and UNO, who are tied for fifth, and the Wildcats are just two points behind the Nanooks and Mavericks.

7. Nebraska-Omaha. Another risky (and therefore probably incorrect) pick, as the Mavericks are two points ahead of NMU, tied with UAF in fifth place, and have two more wins than do either the Nanooks or the Wildcats. UNO, however, finishes its last regular-season CCHA calendar with two home games against Michigan and two on the road versus Miami. The Mavs could lose out, which is unlikely. They could win out, which is unlikelier.

8. Lake Superior State. The Lakers get the last spot for home ice in the first round of the CCHA playoffs by virtue of their wins; they have one more than Notre Dame, with whom they are tied in the standings. They also have two games in hand over the Irish.

9. Notre Dame. The Irish top the bottom tier — how this happened this season, given that I picked them to finish first (and I wasn’t alone), is beyond me. Currently tied with LSSU, Notre Dame plays two games in Bowling Green before a home-and-home series against Michigan to end the season. The Irish and Wolverines did split earlier this year, but that was to end the first half of the season. ND is 3-5-2 in conference play in the second half, UM 7-3-1.

10. Ohio State. I’ve seen some life out of the Buckeyes in the second half, but OSU’s last two games of the regular season are against Miami. For those of you keeping score at home, I picked OSU to finish fourth this season.

11. Western Michigan. Another team better than its record, the Broncos finish 11th in my standings because Bowling Green faces Miami, Notre Dame and Michigan State to end the year. WMU is one point ahead of BGSU in the standings, and the Broncos have one more win than do the Falcons.

12. Bowling Green. If BG finishes in last place and UAF in fifth, at least the Falcons know that they can beat the Nanooks, as they did so at home Nov. 11.

And It’s Valentine’s Day

Yes, I know that I usually provide a Valentine’s Day column about this time every year, another of my poor attempts at humor and another reason for legions of readers to beg me to step away from the computer for good.

This week, my heart isn’t in it. And for once, I’m not delivering another bad pun.

This Week in the ECAC West: Feb. 11, 2010

Middle of the Pack

The teams in the middle of the ECAC West standings re-exerted themselves this past weekend, demonstrating the depth of the league. In the Game of the Week highlighted in this column, third place Hobart went into the Thunderdomes last Saturday and handed Elmira its first conference loss, 5-3.

Special teams were key for the Statesmen as they used a shorthanded tally to get going in the first period and scored a trio of power-play goals. Elmira is still in the driver’s seat for the regular season title, but the margin has now been narrowed.

Fourth place Neumann also found success on the road, taking three of four point at Manhattanville. The near-sweep kept alive the Knights’ hopes for a second place finish in the standings.

“We had a pretty good weekend,” said Neumann head coach Dominick Dawes. “Anytime anyone can go into a lot of the places we go and come out with three points is a good thing.”

Friday night’s game was a true back-and-forth affair as each team held a lead but also had to battle back from a deficit during the contest. Neumann sophomore Marlon Gardner finally scored the game winner with just over five minutes remaining in the third period to give the Knights the 4-3 victory.

“Friday was very physical, very up tempo,” said Dawes. “Our guys rose to the occasion and played very hard. It was a good back-and-forth hockey game.”

Saturday’s rematch was an unusual game, ending in a 0-0 tie. My personal ECAC West records go all the way back to the 1993-94 season, and there has not been a 0-0 tie in a game involving an ECAC West team during that time.

“Saturday wasn’t as physical,” said Dawes. “Manhattanville came out very hungry, having lost Friday, and really took it to us in the first period. After that, we settled down and played a lot better. Both goaltenders played very well.”

The goaltenders really shone during the contest, as would be expected during a scoreless game. Manhattanville’s Pierre-Olivier Lemieux turned aside all 27 shots he faced, lowering his goals against average to 2.41.

In net for Neumann was newcomer Jonathan La Rose, starting only his second game since joining the team in January. He stopped the 39 shots on goal from Manhattanville during the game.

Manhattanville had a stellar opportunity to win the game when a flurry of penalties near the end of regulation resulted in the Valiants with three minutes of power play in overtime. Despite pouring 11 shots on net during the man advantage, Manhattanville couldn’t bury the puck and the game ended in a tie.

Limping Along

Utica took care of business this past weekend, sweeping its final home weekend of games against Lebanon Valley, but the games were not easy.

Despite being without a head coach, and the program holding on to its very existence by a thread, the Flying Dutchmen are playing strong, upholding the integrity of the game and themselves.

“They work hard and are playing disciplined hockey,” said Utica head coach Gary Heenan. “It is hard to imagine they haven’t won a game because they are doing a lot of good things.”

Utica held a 6-2 lead heading into the third period in Friday’s game, but as has happened too often this season, the Pioneers played terrible in the third. Lebanon Valley scored a trio of goals in the third period, including an extra attacker goal with 39 seconds remaining, but ran out of time and lost 6-5.

“We put a good 40 minutes together the first night,” said Heenan. “As we’ve been doing in third periods, we kind of collapsed. It was touch and go for the last minute of the hockey game. Fortunately, we held on.”

The Pioneers were a little steadier on Saturday. After rolling out to a 3-1 lead in the first period, Utica played a strong third, outshooting Lebanon Valley 21-2 and winning 4-1.

“We had a grasp on the game from the drop of the puck,” said Heenan. “Their goalie played extremely well on Saturday, extremely well. The third period, even though all we got was the empty netter, it was in their end the entire third period.”

Injuries have hit Utica like the plague all season long and have driven the story behind the Pioneers disappointing season. While goal scoring is up from previous years, and the Pioneers seem to have finally found the key to a successful power play, injuries have forced young players to have to step in to key roles much sooner than expected and it has led to problems late in games.

“It has been a weird year,” said Heenan. “We all as coaches have gone thru injuries before, but the extent of these, the longevity of these, and the key players it is hitting has been a blow to our team. It has forced us to put some young guys in key situations and it has led to some third period collapses. It has been a tough year and has affected us in a lot of different areas.”

It is hoped the unlooked for experience that the Utica underclassmen are getting this season will pay benefits over the course of their future collegiate careers.

Game of the Week

Utica hits the road this weekend travelling down to Manhattanville. When these two teams met three weeks ago, it was an even game until late in the third period when Utica collapsed. The Valiants ripped off three quick goals to seal a 6-3 victory.

That loss has left a bad taste for the Pioneers.

“Realistically, to host a playoff game we have to win three out of four,” said Heenan. “Up here against Manhattanville was a great hockey game, 3-3 with seven minutes to go and we let it slip away. Two teams that know each other well in a small barn should be tightly contested. Our power play didn’t perform extremely well the last two weekends. That has been a positive area for us throughout the year, so we have to get that back on track. We’re kind of in that we’ve got nothing to lose underdog role.”

Manhattanville also has something to prove this weekend. The Valiants had their ten game winning streak ended by Neumann last weekend. They need to get back on the horse if they want to be able to catch Elmira at the top of the standings.

This Week in SUNYAC: Feb. 11, 2010

Settling In

With just three games left in the regular season (except for Morrisville, who has four left), teams are starting to settle into certain positions. Of course, some of this is due to two teams not eligible for postseason play.

The two bye positions are virtually settled. Oswego still holds a five point lead for first place over Plattsburgh, so now the magic number is one point.

Plattsburgh also holds a five point lead over Fredonia for second place. A win by Plattsburgh over Buffalo State on Friday will make Saturday’s game moot. If not, a victory over Fredonia Saturday night will do the trick. If not, then Plattsburgh has other problems.

Last week’s Game of the Week lived up to its billing and importance in the standings. Brockport closed the gap to third place coming into Fredonia, and thus hoped to shrink the lead ever further. It was an exciting, back-and-forth, free skating game along with excellent goaltending.

Everytime Brockport took a one goal lead, Fredonia came back to tie it up. First it was Gregg Amato in the first followed by James Muscatello before the period ended. The second went by without a score. Then, it was Ray Tremblay 33 seconds into the third followed by Brett Mueller.

James Cody broke the tie just 1:28 later with 4:41 left in the game. It appeared the Golden Eagles would accomplish their mission, but with the goaltender pulled, Alex Morton forced overtime with 1:26 left. The tying goal nearly did not occur.

Just before, Brockport appeared to be clearing the zone, but a well-placed check allowed Fredonia to keep the puck in the zone. The resulting pressure meant a tie game.

“You go out on a limb when you get your goalie out,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “I figured that thing is coming our way and liable to be the end of it. Somehow we managed to keep that in and it got to the net and boom, boom, boom there it is.”

“Unfortunately, we had a major breakdown at the end of regulation, allowing them to tie it,” Brockport coach Brian Dickinson said.

Despite 11 total shots in overtime no one went home a winner. Brockport’s Todd Sheridan wound up with 45 saves while Kody Van Rentergem had 41.

“I thought it was a really good college hockey game with good chances both ways,” Dickinson said.

“I liked the way our guys battled,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said.

This was the second 3-3 tie for Fredonia on the weekend. The night before they tied Geneseo, but this time it was the opposition that scored the final late goal.

The road team once again took 1-0 and 2-1 leads. They traded goals in the first by Jake Yard and Bryan Ross. Ryan Bulach gave the Ice Knights the 2-1 lead early in the second before Mueller and Morton gave the Blue Devils the only lead for the weekend.

That lead held up for over 20 minutes before Clint Olson scored on the power play with 2:51 left in regulation. Adrian Rubeniuk had 38 saves for the visitors with Pat Street stopping 26.

“Right now we got two goaltenders who are playing really well,” Meredith said.

“Perseverance,” is how Meredith describes his team lately. “I’ve seen a lot of that in the last week or two, and that’s a quality they are going to need when we get into the playoffs.”

Fredonia is three points ahead of Brockport, putting the magic number at three points because Fredonia wins the tiebreaker.

Though Brockport is tied with Geneseo, they only have to worry about Potsdam and Cortland catching them for the last home ice spot. Being four points ahead of Potsdam and currently owning the tiebreaker makes that magic number two. They get to play Cortland in the last game of the season. Brockport’s magic number to clinch a playoff spot is one point since they claim the tiebreaker over Morrisville, despite the Mustangs’ game in hand.

Final Spots

Three teams are fighting it out for the remaining two playoff spots. Potsdam holds a one point lead over Cortland who holds a two point lead over Morrisville, who has a game in hand on both teams.

This tight trio was due to the Mustangs beating the Bears for the second time this year, 5-4, despite getting out shot, 38-19. The key in the game was a well-placed second period timeout called by Brian Grady as Potsdam was starting to take control of the play. Afterward, Morrisville got their act together, and were able to slow Potsdam down.

Throughout the game until the very end, Potsdam kept taking a one goal lead only to have Morrisville tie it up. In the first, Tyler Swan then Matt Salmon scored. For the second, it was Fraser Smith followed by three consecutive power-play goals: Andrew Alarie, Connor Treacy, and Bobby Cass. Thus, the teams entered the third at 3-3.

Colin MacLennan gave Potsdam their last lead, but Alarie tied it 1:25 later. Alarie completed the hat trick with the game winner on the power play at 11:33. Potsdam could not capitalize on a late power-play opportunity. Caylin Relkoff was the deciding factor in the game as he made 34 saves.

SUNYAC Short Shots

Todd Sheridan only needed 15 saves in Brockport’s 3-2 win over Buffalo State … Luke Moodie scored twice and despite goaltender Kyle Gunn-Taylor getting a game misconduct, Oswego beat Cortland, 5-2 … Danny Scagnelli and Stefan Decosse gave Geneseo the lead and then hung on for a 2-1 victory over Buffalo State … Plattsburgh and Morrisville entered the third period tied at one, but Phil Farrow’s two goals helped lead the Cardinals to the 4-1 win.

Oswego’s Eric Selleck leads the nation in points with 46 … His teammate, Justin Fox, is tied for second in assists (28) … Another Laker, Neil Musselwhite, continues to lead the nation in short-handed goals (five) … Yet another teammate, Jon Whitelaw, is third in rookie points with 31 … Their goaltender, Kyle Gunn-Taylor, has the country’s second best goals against average of 1.59 … Fredonia’s Steve Rizer is tied for the national lead for points by a defenseman at 30.

Game of the Week

Three games are worth mentioning, but only one gets the nod.

In a normal year, Geneseo at Brockport would be it. These teams are tied with 13 points each and could have been playing for the last home ice spot. Instead, they play for the rivalry and pride. And for Brockport, the goal to get closer to a home ice spot.

“We’re looking forward to playing a great game against a team who doesn’t really have much to play for except for pride,” Brockport coach Brian Dickinson said. “We know they are going to come in and want to spoil our chances of getting a little closer to a home playoff spot. It’s a great rivalry anyway. Hopefully, we can thrive off the crowd. I think it will be a big crowd. Looking forward to a great hockey game. A crucial two points on the line for us. But at the same time, we want to continue to get better, so we can enter the playoffs on a high note.”

The games up in the North Country mean a lot for three of the teams, with the possibility of the Fredonia at Plattsburgh game standing out the most. For Fredonia, it’s not a matter of setting a goal to maintain third place, but to ensure they continue to play their game.

“I know it’s important for us to keep playing our hockey,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “If we can do that, everything should take care of itself. It’s all more how we play than who we play.”

The Game of the Week goes to Cortland at Morrisville. Has there ever been a more important game between these two teams? Is there a more important game anywhere in the country that could decide whether one of the teams makes the playoffs?

“I don’t think there has been two points that are more important to these two teams,” Cortland coach Joe Baldarotta said. “Me and Coach Grady have the exact same approach. It’s playoff hockey right now and we got to win. Morrisville is a good team. We have a lot of respect for them. I love playing them. It’s set up to be a very big night.”

Baldarotta is realistic for the expectations in this game: “Do you honestly think we’re going to have a bad game? Do you honestly think they’re going to have a bad game? The way I’m approaching it personally is nothing bad can happen to the winner of the game, and nothing great can happen to the loser of the game.”

The coaches and the teams know exactly what this game means.

On the Periphery

My sister lives in Maryland and my uncle lives in Virginia, both in the D.C. region. As everyone knows, they, along with the entire Mid-Atlantic states, have been getting pounded by snow this year. More than most residents there have ever seen in their lifetime.

The interesting thing is, people in Upstate New York, especially the snow belt areas, have no sympathy for them. None. In fact, most of us are laughing about it. Perhaps, it’s a bit of revenge after all the years the rest of the country laughs at, or worse, completely ignores, all the snow we get each and every year thanks to Lake Erie and Lake Ontario.

Perhaps, it’s the way they handle it, or rather don’t handle it. When Rochester got 24 inches in one day and then 18 inches two days later, nobody canceled work. Heck, the very next day each time, all the major roads and airport were ready for use. My uncle, who works for the Department of Energy, has not had work all week.

Remember a few years ago when Oswego had 141+ inches of snow in a week or so timeframe? Was one single college hockey game canceled? No!

As one local radio DJ said, “Snowmageddon? Snowpocalypse? In Rochester, we call it Wednesday.”

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