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CCHA Adds Game to Ferris State Player’s Suspension

The CCHA has doubled the automatic one-game suspension issued to Ferris State center Travis Ouellette following a game disqualification for checking from behind last Sunday.

Ouellette was punished for a check on Notre Dame defenseman Teddy Ruth, a play that ignited an incident that also resulted in a major penalty and DQ to Ruth for grasping the facemask.

Ouellette, a freshman, will miss this weekend’s games against Miami.

He is tied for third on the Bulldogs roster with six goals.

Tuesday Morning Quarterback: Jan. 12, 2010

Jim: Well, first off Todd, Happy New Year. It feels like forever since our last edition of TMQ, and plenty has happened since then. Let’s start with Miami. Things seemed splendid heading into the holiday break on a four-game winning streak. But that came to an end when the RedHawks last TWICE last weekend in a home-and-home series against Robert Morris, a team that had just three wins coming in. I’ve been around the game for years and this is hardly the first time we’ve seen a top-rated team lay a goose egg against what should be a massively inferior opponent. But as many times as I see it happen, I still can’t explain how.

Todd: Happy New Year to you, too, and to all of our readers. The thing that puzzled me about the series was that, even after Miami lost on the road (I guess, technically, it was a neutral-site game because it was in Pittsburgh, not Moon Township) on Friday and had a day to stew about it, the RedHawks couldn’t muster enough back home to beat a team well below them in the RPI. One game, I can understand. It happens. But two? It makes me wonder about the long layoff the RedHawks had, and whether it was too long.

Jim: Looking back, Miami had a pretty bad start to the second half last season as well, dropping five straight to start the New Year in 2009. We all know how things went after that, though. With two road series against Ferris State and Alaska over the next two weekends, it’s quite possible that 2010 could be an ugly beginning for the RedHawks as well. Certainly, the next two weeks will be solid measuring sticks to see just what kind of a team Miami is at this point. Speaking of teams finding an identity, one club that has surprised me this season and certainly come into its own in recent weeks is Union. Nate Leaman certainly has had this team headed in the right direction in recent years and right now that has led to holding first place in the ECAC standings. The Dutchmen are 6-0-3 in league play and have a one-point lead over Quinnipiac along with four games in hand on the Bobcats. It’s early to start speculating, but could this FINALLY be Union’s breakout year?

Todd: For their sake, I’m sure they’d get a tremendous boost from being rewarded for the efforts of the last three seasons. The Dutchmen seemed on the periphery over the last two season, even as they were over .500 overall. Now, at 13th in the RPI, they’re right in the mix for an NCAA spot. Union is fourth in the country in scoring, but it has shown it can win close games, too — it has five one-goal wins to its credit. It should be interesting to see how the ECAC plays out, with Quinnipiac opening the second half with four straight losses.

Jim: Quinnipiac’s slide has certainly been a shocker. The Bobcats were white hot early in the season but their 12-1-0 record heading into December is now just a pedestrian 13-7-1 mark. The good news for Quinnipiac is that a few more wins along the way will compliment that 12-for-13 start and likely get it into the NCAA field. But it’s certainly not as much a lock as it seemed on Dec. 1. One team that seems to be doing all it can to return to the NCAA tournament is Maine. The Black Bears are 8-4-1 in league play and 11-7-2 overall. Might this be the season for the boys from Orono to right the ship? Many Maine faithful called for coach Tim Whitehead’s head after two straight disappointing seasons. A decent year and maybe an NCAA tournament appearance might settle the natives, no?

Todd: I don’t mean to bash all fans here — and I’m not talking about Maine specifically — but there certainly are some who not be happy until the current regime is out. Something has rubbed them the wrong way about the coaching staff, and they won’t let it go, even if the team is doing well. So, yeah, things might quiet down a little with Maine, but I’m sure the talk will come up again the next time the Black Bears hit a rough patch. They play at Boston College on Friday, and the Eagles need to put some wins together to even out a three-game losing streak. Any thoughts on how that one might play out?

Jim: If momentum means anything, this should be all Maine. BC has struggled since the break, losing twice after grabbing leads out at the Denver Cup and falling behind 3-0 on Friday night at Fenway Park against Boston University before rallying only to come up short, 3-2. The Eagles don’t seem like the team that closed out 2009. Maine is playing extremely well since the break and has momentum. So while logic would say this one should be Maine’s, I’ll take the truly logical approach and say BC wins. How about out west? What’s news these days in the WCHA?

Todd: I think Minnesota-Duluth opened some more eyes by sweeping Colorado College last weekend. The Bulldogs just keep chugging along even though few had very high expectations for them this season. Jack Connolly and Justin Fontaine sit fourth and fifth, respectively, in the nation in scoring, and UMD is getting enough goals to win most nights. The Bulldogs are 14-0-1 this season when scoring at least three goals and 0-7 when scoring two or less. Denver is atop the WCHA standings, but UMD is just two points back. I noticed the other day that six of the top 10 teams in the RPI are from the WCHA, so I think it’s safe to say there’s a lot of strength there this season. Anything we should be looking for this weekend?

Jim: I was having a discussion about the PairWise and RPI last week and also realized that the WCHA is dominating both. A part of me thinks that Hockey East could have teams of equal strength but that parity top to bottom means that all of the 10 teams are beating one another up in league play. I guess the answer won’t be determined until tournament time, though. As for this week, there are a couple of games to keep an eye on including the ice hockey version of college sport’s greatest rivalry, Harvard and Yale. Another rivalry game in the ECAC will pit red-hot Union against Capital District rival Rensselaer. A major series in Hockey East will be the battle of Massachusetts state schools as Lowell and UMass square off in a home-and-home beginning Friday in Amherst. How about out west? What are the big games to watch this week?

Todd: Ferris State hosts Miami, with the teams tied for first place in the CCHA. The Bulldogs are making a major charge this season, and I think it’s finally impossible to ignore their potential. There’s the always-anticipated Minnesota-North Dakota series, this one at Mariucci Arena after the Sioux took three points at home in the WCHA-season-opening series in October. The Gophers need points badly, and they have to get better at home — they’re just 2-5 at Mariucci in league play, compared to 4-2-1 on the road. And Wisconsin goes to Colorado College, which took three points from the Badgers at the Kohl Center in October. The Tigers are just 1-4-2 in their last seven league games, taking some of the shine off a solid start. Until next week …

Consensus At Last: Oswego Unanimous No. 1

Fickle and divided Division III college hockey voters finally are in agreement — at least about who should be No. 1.

In a poll where only four schools are in the same place as they were a week ago, the Oswego Lakers — much as they have been all season — remained the only constant, garnering all 20 first place votes after downing upstart Adrian 5-2 in the most anticipated game of the season. They are now a robust 16-1 on the year.

Somewhat under the radar, Norwich continues to impress. Now the only undefeated team in the land, the Cadets soundly beat then-second ranked Plattsburgh at home before going on the road to best Bowdoin and skate to a 1-1 draw with Colby to move up a slot to second. The St. Norbert Green Knights, also hot as of late, used two victories to secure the third position.

The Cardinals, who bounced back to rally for a tie on the road against sixth ranked Elmira, fell two spots to fourth. The St. Scholastica Saints and the Soaring Eagles remained in fifth and sixth, respectively.

Middlebury’s 3-1 win over Hamilton and deadlock with new-No. 9 Amherst bumped the Panthers up one slot to seventh. After their gigantic sweep of Adrian last weekend, the Hamline Pipers went in the other direction, falling one rung after getting blanked by St. Scholastica and skating to a 4-4 tie with the University of Wisconsin-Superior.

By virtue of their deadlock with the Panthers and sound defeat of previously undefeated (and tenth ranked) Williams, the Lord Jeffs jumped up an impressive five spots to ninth. The aforementioned Ephs stay in the same spot and round out the top 10.

Teams 11 through 15 illustrate the volatile nature of the current D-III campaign.

Suddenly struggling Adrian fell two spots to No. 11 while the Gusties from Gustavus Adolphus dropped one poll position after losing to St. Olaf before upending UW-Stout the next evening.

UW-River Falls remains at No. 13 after a successful road trip, featuring wins over St. Thomas (5-3) and St. Mary’s (4-3 in OT). Wentworth’s nonconference road sweep of MASCAC’s Plymouth State buoyed ECAC Northeast’s reputation and upped the Leopards one spot to No. 14.

The Manhattanville Valiants, long a staple of the Division III poll, return this week at No. 15.

Curry’s 6-4 loss to Bowdoin and 4-2 defeat at the hands of Hobart resulted in the then-No. 12 Colonels to fall out of the national rankings.

2010 NHL Entry Draft Midterm Rankings

Players with college ties -- playing in college or committed to a school
-- listed in the mid-term rankings for the 2010 NHL Entry Draft:

SKATERS
Rank Name                 Pos   Current Team                      Committed To
  5  Riley Sheahan        C     Notre Dame (CCHA)     
 11  Derek Forbort        D     U.S. NTDP                         North Dakota
 12  Nick Bjugstad        C     Blaine (Minn. HS)                 Minnesota
 17  Brock Nelson         C     Warroad (Minn. HS)                North Dakota
 18  Kevin Hayes          RW    Nobles (Mass. HS)                 Boston College
 19  Charlie Coyle        C,RW  South Shore (EJHL)                Boston University
 20  Jonathon Merrill     D     U.S. NTDP                         Michigan
 21  Tyler Pitlick        C     Minnesota State (WCHA)     
 28  Stephen Johns        D     U.S. NTDP                         Notre Dame
 30  Billy Arnold         C     U.S. NTDP                         Boston College
 31  Danny Biega          D     Harvard (ECAC)     
 32  Kevin Lind           D     Chicago (USHL)                    Notre Dame
 36  Max Gardiner         C     Minnetonka (Minn. HS)             Minnesota
 37  Mark Alt             D     Cretin-Derham Hall (Minn. HS)     Minnesota
 39  Joe Basaraba         RW    Shattuck-St. Mary's (Minn. HS)    Minnesota-Duluth
 40  Justin Faulk         D     U.S. NTDP                         Minnesota-Duluth
 41  Jaden Schwartz       C     Tri-City (USHL)                   Colorado College
 42  Jarred Tinordi       D     U.S. NTDP                         Notre Dame
 48  Beau Bennett         RW    Penticton (BCHL)                  Denver
 49  Connor Brickley      C     Des Moines (USHL)                 Vermont
 50  Jacob Fallon         C     U.S. NTDP                         Michigan
 54  Justin Holl          D     Minnetonka (Minn. HS)             Minnesota
 55  Jason Zucker         LW    U.S. NTDP                         Denver
 60  Kevin Gravel         D     Sioux City (USHL)                 St. Cloud State
 61  Julian Melchiori     D     Newmarket (CCHL)                  Massachusetts-Lowell
 71  Michael Parks        RW    Cedar Rapids (USHL)               North Dakota
 75  Luke Moffatt         C     U.S. NTDP                         Michigan
 76  Bryan Rust           RW    U.S. NTDP                         Notre Dame
 77  Mike Pereira         LW    Avon Old Farms (Conn. HS)         Massachusetts
 79  Kenny Agostino       LW    Delbarton (N.J. HS)               Yale
 83  Yasin Cisse          RW    Des Moines (USHL)                 Boston University
 86  Aaron Harstad        D     Green Bay (USHL)                  Colorado College
 91  Brian Ward           C     Governor's Academy (Mass. HS)     Dartmouth
 95  Nick Mattson         D     Indiana (USHL)                    North Dakota
 97  Casey Thrush         LW    Team Maryland AAA (USMAAAE)       New Hampshire
 98  Alex Guptill         LW    Orangeville (CCHL)                Michigan
100  Caleb Herbert        C     Bloomington Jefferson (Minn. HS)  Minnesota-Duluth
107  Eamonn Mcdermott     D     Fargo (USHL)                      Colorado College
109  Joe Faust            D     Bloomington Jefferson (Minn. HS)  Princeton
110  Grayson Downing      C     Westside (BCHL)                   New Hampshire
112  Christian Isackson   RW    St. Thomas (Minn. HS)             Minnesota
113  Luke Curadi          D     Penticton (BCHL)                  Rensselaer
119  Patrick Brown        C     Cranbrook Kingswood (Mich. HS)    Boston College
122  Brian Ferlin         RW    Indiana (USHL)                    Cornell
126  Ryan Daugherty       RW    Omaha (USHL)                      Northern Michigan
130  Nick Sorkin          LW    Waterloo (USHL)                   New Hampshire
132  Kevin Clare          D     U.S. NTDP                         Michigan
133  Isaac Macleod        D     Penticton (BCHL)                  Boston College
136  Brett Stern          D     Centennial (Minn. HS)             Minnesota State
144  Max Gaede            RW    Woodbury (Minn. HS)               Minnesota State
147  James Polk           RW    Shattuck-St. Mary's (Minn. HS)    Nebraska-Omaha
148  Thomas O'Regan       LW    St. Sebastian (Mass. HS)          Harvard
153  Colin Campbell       LW    Vaughan (OJAHL)                   Lake Superior State
155  Andrew Prochno       D     Minnetonka (Minn. HS)             St. Cloud State
159  Tim Daly             D     Langley (BCHL)                    St. Cloud State
170  Derek Deblois        RW    Cedar Rapids (USHL)               Michigan
172  Alex Lippincott      C     Fargo (USHL)                      Ohio State
174  Scott Wamsganz       LW    Waterloo (USHL)                   Colorado College
175  Zach Hyman           C     Hamilton (CCHL)                   Princeton
177  Mathieu Brisson      D     Omaha (USHL)                      Cornell
178  Christopher Wagner   RW    South Shore (EJHL)                Colgate
185  Garrett Hendrickson  C     Virginia (Minn. HS)               St. Cloud State
187  John Ramage          D     Wisconsin (WCHA)     
193  Andrew Huff          LW    Traverse City (NAHL)              Ferris State
195  Brendan O'Donnell    C     Winnipeg South (MJHL)             North Dakota
196  Chris Crane          RW    Green Bay (USHL)                  Ohio State
197  Dan Linell           C;RW  NY Bobcats (ATLH)                 Harvard
199  Adam Krause          C     Hermantown (Minn. HS)             Minnesota-Duluth
201  Benjamin Marshall    D     Mahtomedi (Minn. HS)              Minnesota
202  Rudy Sulmonte        C     NJ Rockets (ATLH)                 Mercyhurst
Lim  Charles Orzetti      LW    New Jersey Hitmen (EJHL)          Yale

GOALTENDERS
Rank Name                 Pos   Current Team                      Committed To
  5  Zane Gothberg        G     Thief River Falls (Minn. HS)      North Dakota
  6  Sam Brittain         G     Canmore (AJHL)                    Denver
 12  Willie Yanakeff      G     Sioux City (USHL)                 Michigan State
 15  Jared Coreau         G     Lincoln (USHL)                    Northern Michigan
 19  Clay Witt            G     Sioux Falls (USHL)                Northeastern
 21  Sean Bonar           G     Penticton (BCHL)                  Princeton
 25  Brian Billett        G     Jr. Monarchs (EJHL)               Boston College

Former MSU, Michigan Tech Coach Bessone Passes Away

Amo Bessone, who coached Michigan State to the 1966 national championship as part of 28 years leading the Spartans, has died in New Mexico. He was 93.

He coached 814 games behind the Michigan State bench, second only to Ron Mason’s 974. He started in 1951 and retired in 1979 with a 367-427-20 record at MSU.

Related link: Amo Bessone coaching history

In 1966, the Spartans were 4-9 at midseason but went 12-4 in their last 16 games, beating Michigan and Michigan Tech in the postseason for an NCAA spot. MSU beat Clarkson 6-1 in the title game.

“I’m saddened by Amo’s passing for sure, but I was thrilled to know him as a young coach and continue that relationship as I joined the Michigan State program,” Michigan State coach Rick Comley said in a statement. “Amo is part of that group of coaches who made NCAA hockey what it is today … he, Murray Armstrong, John MacInnes, John Mariucci. He also impacted the Michigan State program in so many ways, not the least of which is a commitment to being involved in the community, which continues today. He is a legend, and he will be missed.”

Bessone is credited with helping the Greater Lansing Amateur Hockey Association get off the ground by donating used MSU equipment and encouraging his players to help coach youth hockey.

“We are saddened by the loss of a true Spartan,” Michigan State athletic director Mark Hollis said. “Amo Bessone was a part of the fabric not only of the Michigan State athletics program, but also the surrounding community. He was dedicated to our athletes as well as growing the sport he loved so much. His influence on the game of college hockey and on the Michigan State hockey program is one we cherish, and will continue to honor.”

Said Mason: “This is a big loss for all of us connected to him. Our thoughts go out to his family, and we are all greatly saddened by this loss. He is the true father of MSU hockey — he built this program, making the best of what he had when he first got here. Even after he left, he continued to support it after he retired.”

Before joining the Spartans, Bessone coached Michigan Tech for three seasons, posting a 20-31-2 record.

Born Nov. 22, 1916, Bessone was raised in West Springfield, Mass. He attended West Springfield High School and played at Hebron Academy and the Kent Hills School in Maine. He earned his undergraduate degree at Illinois in 1943, where he lettered in baseball in addition to hockey.

He moved onto an AHL career, but that was cut short due to his service in World War II.

He began his coaching career at Westfield (Mass.) High in 1946, and made his move into the college ranks at Michigan Tech two years later. He spent three seasons at the helm of the Husky program (1948-51) before signing on at Michigan State in the fall of 1951.

Bessone was inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame and Michigan State’s Hall of Fame in 1992.

Arrangements are pending.

Denver Ousts Miami From Poll’s Top Spot

For the first time since the first week of the season, Miami is not listed atop the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

Related link: USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll: Jan. 11

Denver supplanted the RedHawks in the No. 1 spot Monday, earning 45 of the 50 first-place votes after Miami lost twice to Robert Morris last weekend.

The RedHawks’ run at the top lasted 13 weeks. The Pioneers were also the last team to own first place; they were No. 1 in the preseason poll released Oct. 5.

At 14-5-3, Denver is also tops in the PairWise Rankings and the RPI.

Miami fell to second, with Wisconsin, North Dakota and Yale rounding out the top five. Yale’s ranking matches its best position in the poll, a height also reached toward the end of last season.

Ferris State moved up five spots to No. 6, cracking the top 10 for the first time this season. The Bulldogs host Miami in Big Rapids, Mich., on Friday and Saturday in a matchup of the CCHA co-leaders.

Boston College fell out of the top 10, dropping give spots to 12th after seeing its losing streak run to three games with a loss to Boston University in the Frozen Fenway game last Friday.

Colorado College (to No. 8) and Quinnipiac (to No. 17) each also fell five spots.

New Hampshire rejoined the rankings at No. 20, replacing Alaska.

Including the Miami-Ferris State showdown, there are eight games this week between ranked teams. Wisconsin plays at Colorado College Friday and Saturday; Boston College hosts No. 16 Maine on Friday; No. 14 St. Cloud State plays at Quinnipiac on Friday and Saturday; and No. 15 Massachusetts-Lowell and No. 19 Massachusetts square off in a home-and-home series Friday and Saturday. Friday’s game is in Amherst; Saturday’s is in Lowell.

Notre Dame’s Sheahan Leads Collegians in Mid-Term Draft Rankings

Four current college players are ranked in NHL Central Scouting’s mid-term rankings for the 2010 entry draft.

Notre Dame center Riley Sheahan heads the list, released Monday, at fifth among North American skaters.

Minnesota State center Tyler Pitlick (21st), Harvard defenseman Danny Biega (31st) and Wisconsin defenseman John Ramage (187th) also appeared on the rankings.

In terms of players who are listed by recruiting analyst Chris Heisenberg as having committed to a school, Minnesota, Michigan and North Dakota each have six recruits in the rankings.

Sioux recruit Derek Forbort, a defenseman with the USA Hockey National Team Development Program, is ranked 11th, one spot ahead of Minnesota recruit Nick Bjugstad, a center from Blaine (Minn.) High School.

Among goaltenders, North Dakota recruit Zane Gothberg is ranked fifth in North America, with Denver recruit Sam Brittain sixth.

Here is the full list of players with college ties — either playing in college or having committed to a school — in the mid-term rankings (click here to view at full size).

SKATERS
Rank Name Pos Current Team Committed To

5 Riley Sheahan C Notre Dame (CCHA)
11 Derek Forbort D U.S. NTDP North Dakota
12 Nick Bjugstad C Blaine (Minn. HS) Minnesota
17 Brock Nelson C Warroad (Minn. HS) North Dakota
18 Kevin Hayes RW Nobles (Mass. HS) Boston College
19 Charlie Coyle C,RW South Shore (EJHL) Boston University
20 Jonathon Merrill D U.S. NTDP Michigan
21 Tyler Pitlick C Minnesota State (WCHA)
28 Stephen Johns D U.S. NTDP Notre Dame
30 Billy Arnold C U.S. NTDP Boston College
31 Danny Biega D Harvard (ECAC)
32 Kevin Lind D Chicago (USHL) Notre Dame
36 Max Gardiner C Minnetonka (Minn. HS) Minnesota
37 Mark Alt D Cretin-Derham Hall (Minn. HS) Minnesota
39 Joe Basaraba RW Shattuck-St. Mary's (Minn. HS) Minnesota-Duluth
40 Justin Faulk D U.S. NTDP Minnesota-Duluth
41 Jaden Schwartz C Tri-City (USHL) Colorado College
42 Jarred Tinordi D U.S. NTDP Notre Dame
48 Beau Bennett RW Penticton (BCHL) Denver
49 Connor Brickley C Des Moines (USHL) Vermont
50 Jacob Fallon C U.S. NTDP Michigan
54 Justin Holl D Minnetonka (Minn. HS) Minnesota
55 Jason Zucker LW U.S. NTDP Denver
60 Kevin Gravel D Sioux City (USHL) St. Cloud State
61 Julian Melchiori D Newmarket (CCHL) Mass.-Lowell
71 Michael Parks RW Cedar Rapids (USHL) North Dakota
75 Luke Moffatt C U.S. NTDP Michigan
76 Bryan Rust RW U.S. NTDP Notre Dame
77 Mike Pereira LW Avon Old Farms (Conn. HS) Massachusetts
79 Kenny Agostino LW Delbarton (N.J. HS) Yale
83 Yasin Cisse RW Des Moines (USHL) Boston University
86 Aaron Harstad D Green Bay (USHL) Colorado College
91 Brian Ward C Governor's Academy (Mass. HS) Dartmouth
95 Nick Mattson D Indiana (USHL) North Dakota
97 Casey Thrush LW Team Maryland AAA (USMAAAE) New Hampshire
98 Alex Guptill LW Orangeville (CCHL) Michigan
100 Caleb Herbert C Bloomington Jefferson (Minn. HS) Minnesota-Duluth
107 Eamonn Mcdermott D Fargo (USHL) Colorado College
109 Joe Faust D Bloomington Jefferson (Minn. HS) Princeton
110 Grayson Downing C Westside (BCHL) New Hampshire
112 Christian Isackson RW St. Thomas (Minn. HS) Minnesota
113 Luke Curadi D Penticton (BCHL) Rensselaer
119 Patrick Brown C Cranbrook Kingswood (Mich. HS) Boston College
122 Brian Ferlin RW Indiana (USHL) Cornell
126 Ryan Daugherty RW Omaha (USHL) Northern Michigan
130 Nick Sorkin LW Waterloo (USHL) New Hampshire
132 Kevin Clare D U.S. NTDP Michigan
133 Isaac Macleod D Penticton (BCHL) Boston College
136 Brett Stern D Centennial (Minn. HS) Minnesota State
144 Max Gaede RW Woodbury (Minn. HS) Minnesota State
147 James Polk RW Shattuck-St. Mary's (Minn. HS) Nebraska-Omaha
148 Thomas O'Regan LW St. Sebastian (Mass. HS) Harvard
153 Colin Campbell LW Vaughan (OJAHL) Lake Superior
155 Andrew Prochno D Minnetonka (Minn. HS) St. Cloud State
159 Tim Daly D Langley (BCHL) St. Cloud State
170 Derek Deblois RW Cedar Rapids (USHL) Michigan
172 Alex Lippincott C Fargo (USHL) Ohio State
174 Scott Wamsganz LW Waterloo (USHL) Colorado College
175 Zach Hyman C Hamilton (CCHL) Princeton
177 Mathieu Brisson D Omaha (USHL) Cornell
178 Christopher Wagner RW South Shore (EJHL) Colgate
185 Garrett Hendrickson C Virginia (Minn. HS) St. Cloud State
187 John Ramage D Wisconsin (WCHA)
193 Andrew Huff LW Traverse City (NAHL) Ferris State
195 Brendan O'Donnell C Winnipeg South (MJHL) North Dakota
196 Chris Crane RW Green Bay (USHL) Ohio State
197 Dan Linell C;RW NY Bobcats (ATLH) Harvard
199 Adam Krause C Hermantown (Minn. HS) Minnesota-Duluth
201 Benjamin Marshall D Mahtomedi (Minn. HS) Minnesota
202 Rudy Sulmonte C NJ Rockets (ATLH) Mercyhurst
Lim Charles Orzetti LW New Jersey Hitmen (EJHL) Yale

GOALTENDERS
Rank Name Pos Current Team Committed To

5 Zane Gothberg G Thief River Falls (Minn. HS) North Dakota
6 Sam Brittain G Canmore (AJHL) Denver
12 Willie Yanakeff G Sioux City (USHL) Michigan State
15 Jared Coreau G Lincoln (USHL) Northern Michigan
19 Clay Witt G Sioux Falls (USHL) Northeastern
21 Sean Bonar G Penticton (BCHL) Princeton
25 Brian Billett G Jr. Monarchs (EJHL) Boston College

What I Think: Week 14

Some random (and not-so-random) thoughts after the 14th week of the season:

* I think it’s time for a new No. 1. I just wish, for the sake of further believing in my poll ballot, that Denver had stepped up and emphatically taken that top spot instead of just moving up by not losing.

Robert Morris’ stunning weekend sweep of top-ranked Miami should end the RedHawks’ reign at 13 weeks when the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll is released on Monday. It has been a good run for Miami, and I don’t think this is the last we’ve seen of the RedHawks atop the poll.

But losing twice to a team that is in the lower third of the RPI even after the results doesn’t seem No. 1-ly. Full credit to the Colonials, though, for a potential season-defining weekend that followed just three wins in their first 18 games.

Denver will be on top of my ballot this week, but the Pioneers didn’t exactly wow anyone in getting three points from a home series against Alaska-Anchorage. They were outplayed in a 1-1 tie on Friday and needed a last-minute goal for a 3-2 victory on Saturday, a game that featured 103 minutes worth of penalties assessed after the game thanks to a postgame brawl.

Still, Denver is the top team in the RPI, and, to me, that carries some weight.

* I had to double check to make sure the stat I had in my head was right. Ferris State now is alone atop the Division I wins list this season with 16.

And how’s this for a setup? The Bulldogs host Miami next weekend with the teams tied for first in the CCHA.

Ferris had a good start to a tough start to the second half of the CCHA schedule with a pair of wins at Notre Dame this weekend. We’ll reassess in a couple more weeks, after the Bulldogs play the RedHawks and a home-and-home series with a Michigan team that might be slowly finding its legs.

* Anyone who watched Tuesday night’s World Junior Championship title game should be pretty appreciative of the partnership USA Hockey and the NHL Network have put together to get that event on American TV.

After all, it wasn’t too long ago that you had to scour the satellite dish to get the Canadian broadcast.

* Was it just my imagination, or did it look like Boston University, not Boston College, that was the top-10 team for much of the Frozen Fenway game?

No one knows where BU is headed in the second half, but it would be a mistake to rule them out.

* Six of the top 10 teams in the RPI are from the WCHA. I’m not sure it was ever gone, but I think it would be fair to say that the WCHA is back. That, of course, doesn’t mean anything when it comes to national tournament time. You still have to win the one-off games, where the league has taken its lumps recently.

* Here’s my top 20 for the week:

1. Denver

2. Miami

3. Ferris State

4. North Dakota

5. Wisconsin

6. Michigan State

7. Minnesota-Duluth

8. Bemidji State

9. Boston College

10. Colorado College

11. Yale

12. St. Cloud State

13. Cornell

14. Vermont

15. Quinnipiac

16. Union

17. Maine

18. Massachusetts

19. Massachusetts-Lowell

20. New Hampshire

First-Half Recap: D-III Women

We’re now solidly into the new year with Christmas, New Year’s (and Boxing Day for all you Canadians) in the rearview mirror. The first half of the Division III women’s hockey season was filled some great story lines.

How about the Lake Forest Foresters with an 8-0-2 record at the break and leading the NCHA. Carisa Zaban, now in her fifth year at the helm of the Lake Forest program, has the Foresters primed for their first run at the NCHA crown and on pace to shatter their single-season record for wins of 14, set back in the 2002-2003 season.

Kim Herring has become a household name around the D-III women’s hockey world as the sophomore forward from Dover, New Hampshire leads the nation in points (22) and is tied for the lead in goals (14).

Staying out West, St. Catherine leads the MIAC with a 7-1 record. The Wildcats’ lone blemish of the season came at the hands of St. Mary’s in a 2-0 loss. St. Catherine has yet to face the meat of its schedule however, with showdowns looming against Wis.-River Falls, and twice each against Gustavus Adolphus, St. Thomas, Bethel and St. Olaf.

In the East, perennial powerhouse Plattsburgh has answered all critics so far after losing Danielle Blanchard and the Cardinals’ outstanding senior class from 2009. The Cardinals lead the ECAC West with a perfect 7-0 overall and league play record. They also defeated defending ECAC West champion and NCAA runner-up Elmira twice already this season.

The Cardinals will join arch-rival Elmira in representing the ECAC West in the annual Panther-Cardinal Classic taking place this year in Middlebury. Defending national champion Amherst rounds out the star-studded four team field. USCHO Game of the Week’s Brian Schulz will have audio and video coverage on Sunday, Jan. 3 and Monday, Jan. 4 for all four games of the tournament. (I’ll have full tournament coverage including interviews with all four coaches later in the week with my weekly This Week in D-III column).

The ECAC East has been tough to judge so far this season. Norwich and Manhattanville have once again emerged as the favorites, but it’s hard to determine who has had the better first half so far. Norwich has only lost once, but their loss came to Manhattanville as the Valiants pounded the Cadets 7-0.
Manhattanville on the other hand has lost three times this season. Although none of the losses are anything to shake your fist at as the Valiants dropped two games to Elmira and one to D-I Holy Cross. Norwich tied Holy Cross on the other hand the night before they got trounced by Manhattanville. The Valiants have also beaten Elmira for their signature win so far this season.

Manhattanville’s highly touted freshman class has been turning up roses so far as six of its top eight scorers are rookies. Leading the way has been Katie Little, who might remind some fans of last year’s Laura Hurd Award winner, Elmira’s Kayla Coady. The 5’11 forward from Victoria, British Columbia has sniped 14 goals and added five assists on the season for 19 points, ranking her third in the nation behind only Herring and R.I.T.’s Katie Stack. Manhattanville and Norwich will meet again on Jan. 16, which will more than likely decide the ECAC East regular season crown.

The NESCAC looks like once again it will come down to perennial powers Middlebury and Amherst. Both teams are unbeaten so far with the Panthers holding a perfect 5-0-0 record and Amherst at 5-0-2. The Lady Jeffs however have faced the tougher schedule, picking up two wins against RIT and Trinity and then tying a game with each as well.

Trinity, Williams, and Bowdoin are three teams looking to try and bridge the gap to the top two teams. Trinity probably has the best chance with the always tough Isabel Iwachiw between the pipes for the Bantams still.
Twenty Predictions

Predictions

Judging from my bold predictions segment of my column, you should look the opposite of what I predict here for the second half of the season.

20. Chatham beats Plymouth State at the St. Michael’s Tournament leaving the Panthers and Wesleyan as the only winless D-III teams

19. Plattsburgh wins the Panther-Cardinal Classic

18. Trinity hands Lake Forest its first loss of the season at the Codfish Bowl

17. Oswego wins the Rutland-Herald Invitational

16. Manhattanville’s Katie Little wins the scoring title with over 50 points.

15. Elmira beats Amherst on Jan. 20 in a rematch of last year’s National Championship

14. Two of the Plattsburgh, Elmira, RIT, Amherst, or Middlebury combo lose to unranked teams

13. St. Catherine gets ranked in the USCHO.com Poll

12. Holy Cross beats Middlebury on Jan. 26 and goes unbeaten.

11. Trinity’s Isabelle Iwachiw wins the Laura Hurd Award.

10. Adrian makes the NCHA Championship game

9. Norwich wins the ECAC East

8. Wis.-River Falls comes back to win the NCHA

7. St. Thomas wins the MIAC

6. RIT wins the ECAC West

5. Amherst wins the NESCAC

4. Plattsburgh and Middlebury get at-large bids

3. The West hosts the Frozen Four despite the conspiracy theorists thinking it’s headed East again.

2. Middlebury, Wis.-River Falls, Plattsburgh, Norwich make it to the Frozen Four

1. Middlebury wins the National Championship

I’m Confused

I guess I didn’t get the memo.

My destination for a January game between Boston College and Boston University should have been Agganis Arena or Conte Forum, but I was told to go to Fenway Park, so here I am.

I make my way to the press room, where framed photographs of Ted Williams and Carl Yastrzemski festoon the walls. I frown. No offense to the Splendid Splinter and Yaz, but what the heck have they ever done for college hockey?

Word arrives that the wind chill outside is 11 degrees, snow showers are predicted, and BU will be skating into the wind two out of three periods.

I feel like Alice in a Winter Wonderland, having fallen down a rabbit hole into a world I don’t understand.

But I am (allegedly) a professional, so I’ll do my best to make some sense of this for you, dear reader.

BU is skating from third base to first and BC from first to third. This could mean that all BU runs will be invalidated due to running the bases backwards. How can that be? I look for either Hockey East Commissioner Joe Bertagna or NESN Red Sox commentator Jerry Remy for an explanation, but find neither.

Well, the puck is dropping so we’ll do our best.

In the first inning, John Muse stops Joe Pereira on a partial breakaway up the middle, but Tommy Cross is whistled for cross-checking. Forced to play without their third baseman, BC gives up a run when Muse pulls a Julio Lugo on David Warsofsky’s shot from the point and it trickles over the line. In a scoring change, Warsofsky’s goal is credited to Dustin Pedroia.

A couple innings later, Colby Cohen’s slap shot gets him to third base and Pereira knocks him in from the doorstep for a 2-0 BU lead.

Or something like that.

The game potentially turns in the fourth inning when BU must play without a shortstop, first baseman and designated hitter during a 1:56 five-on-three disadvantage, but the Eagles foul off a couple chances, Terriers’ backstop Kieran Millan strikes out Joe Whitney, and the BU defenders knock down the other hard-hit balls.

Although the temperature has dropped to 19 degrees with a seven-degree wind chill, the umpires won’t be calling this game. In this upside-down world, only a heat wave is cause for concern. A few fans have even taken off their shirts, displaying not only their chests but their frozen brain cells.

But I digress. (Of course, I digress. The game has hit the midway point and I still have yet to get a clue.)

Note to my editor: I swear I did not stop at the brewery before the game.

On a delayed penalty to BC one inning later, Millan skates to the dugout and a pinch runner races onto the field. In the resulting play, Wade Megan shows the hand-to-eye coordination of Kevin Youkilis, swatting the puck out of midair into the Green Monster nets, while freshman defenseman Sean Escobedo channels the goal-scoring prowess of Phil Esposito to record his first career RBI.

The game appears to be over, with BU holding a 3-0 lead. The Terriers’ bullpen seems unlikely to blow this one.

However, BC begins the comeback with a Paul Carey triple down the line and when Brian Gibbons knocks him home, the Eagles head into the seventh inning stretch with all the momentum.

The Eagles get two more opportunities with BU infielders in the penalty box, but can take no more advantage than David Ortiz against the Big Papi shift, and when one of their own goes into the box, the game appears over.

With a chance to put the game away, the BU power play pulls a Buckner, giving up a short-handed goal to Cam Atkinson to make it a 3-2 game.

The Terriers however, refuse to fold like the 1986 Red Sox. Defenders block shot after shot, and Millan shuts down BC like Jonathan Papelbon until the final buzzer sounds.

However, I’m still as befuddled as I was when the game started, if not more. So I head down to the press conferences, figuring that if coaches like Jerry York and Jack Parker can’t clarify things for me, no one can.

Instead, Jerry York throws me for a loop. Commenting on whether the outdoor ice was fast or not, perhaps playing into BU’s hands, he says, “It was more like a running-type game late in the football season in cold weather. The quarterback wasn’t going to make many plays. You need those big linemen and good backs. It was more that type of game.”

Football? Well, that explains it. I wasn’t supposed to go to Fenway Park; I was supposed to go to Gillette Stadium.

When it’s Jack Parker’s turn, he says, “This is something we’ll all remember.”

I sure hope not.

Hobey in the House: New York Rangers defenseman, Hobey Baker winner Matt Gilroy on hand to watch younger brother play for alma mater Boston University at Fenway Park

Greetings from the Fenway Park press box, where I am among several USCHO writers on hand for the “Frozen Fenway” battle between Boston College and Boston University.  It was also where we just got a visit from the 2009 Hobey Baker winner, BU alum Matt Gilroy.

Gilroy, whose younger brother, Kevin, is a sophomore forward for the Terriers, is in town with the New York Rangers for a Saturday afternoon game against the Bruins at TD Banknorth Garden (or as I still call it, the KurtCenter), and was at Fenway along with Rangers teammate and BC alum Brian Boyle, who took his share of smack talk in the Rangers locker room this week from Gilroy and fellow BU Hobey winner Chris Drury.

“We were giving it to Boyle, me and Dru,” Gilroy said. “All in good fun.”

And while the 2009 Hobey Baker winner – only the fifth to win the Hobey and an NCAA title in the same season – certainly authored a healthy share of memorable moments in his time as a Terrier, he couldn’t help but be a bit envious as a spectator Friday night.

“I wish it happened in my four years,” Gilroy said. “It was supposed to happen, everyone was talking about it, but it’s cool that it finally happened. I’m glad I’m in town for this, that I get to see this game, the rivalry, and that I get to see my brother play.”

And while both he and his brother are born-and-raised New Yorkers, the elder Gilroy wasn’t about to quarrel with the Terriers’ special jerseys, which went heavy on the Red Sox homages with special Red Sox-style lettering for “BOSTON” on the front, red numbers (with white outlines) on both sides, and a variation on the Sox logo (with skates) on the sleeves.

“Actually,” Gilroy said, “I think the jerseys look pretty cool. I’ll give it to them. BU did a good job with them. It’s cool to see it out there, and I can’t believe Fenway Park is a hockey rink in the middle of the winter.”

Low-Flying Offense (and Men of the Month)

Normally this season, when I go to see a Hobey Baker candidate, he’s held off the scoresheet, but his team wins. This weekend, I got the opposite.

Jacques Lamoureux’s candidacy for the Hobey Baker Award last season was one of the bigger stories of the year in the Hobey race (next to, of course, the winner, Matt Gilroy, who became only the fifth player to win the Hobey and an NCAA title in the same season). With his Air Force Falcons in my general vicinity for an Atlantic Hockey series against Sacred Heart last weekend, I braved the I-95 traffic (compounded by weather), and headed for the Milford Ice Pavilion on Sunday night.

Lamoureux was credited with an assist in a 5-1 Sacred Heart win, as the Pioneers completed a weekend sweep of the the Falcons, who still share the Atlantic Hockey lead with Mercyhurst (although RIT is just one point behind despite having played four fewer games). Overall, points have been harder to come by this season for the Air Force junior, who currently sits 33rd in the nation in points per game with 1.20 PPG on 11 goals and 13 assists. Those are respectable numbers, but hardly the torrid pace of last season, when he scored 33 goals and handed out 20 assists.

“I think a lot of people know who I am this year,” Lamoureux said. “That doesn’t matter. I’ve just got to do the little things. I think, to this point, I’ve had a fair amount of success. I’m not on the pace I was last year, but I think last year was a special season, but that’s in the rearview mirror, and I’m just focused on this season.”

Still, Lamoureux sees where he can improve.

“I’ve been able to create a lot of chances each game, and I just haven’t been able to put them in like I did last year, but it’s just one of those things. I’m not unhappy with the way things are going, I’ve just got to keep working hard.

All of that said, Lamoureux is Atlantic Hockey’s player of the month for December, averaging a goal and an assist per game. Air Force has struggled offensively overall, so the Falcons will be looking to pick things up as a whole in 2010, and you can expect Lamoureux to be a part of that.”

The adjustment has generally been tough following Hobey finalist seasons, as it’s very rare  to make it back to the top 10 twice in a row. Ryan Duncan won the award as a sophomore, and never sniffed the top 10 again. 2005 winner Marty Sertich made it back to the top 10 as a senior in 2006, as did his classmate, linemate, and fellow ’05 Hobey Hat Trick member Brett Sterling, but neither got back to the Hat Trick. Scott Parse at Nebraska-Omaha was also able to manage repeat finalist nods in 2006 and 2007, but it’s a very tall order, generally speaking.

Looking around at the other Player of the Month honorees for December, Hockey East has honored Gustav Nyquist of Maine. Nyquist notched nine points in five games last month on four goals and five assists, including two assists in Maine’s biggest win of the season, a win over No. 3 Colorado College at the Florida College Classic. Nyquist is the star of Maine’s comeback campaign in 2009-10, and should be a solid Hobey contender, as he sits second in the nation in points per game (1.58 PPG on 12 goals, 18 assists).

In the CCHA, the Player of the Month is Corey Tropp of Michigan State, whose seven goals and 10 points in the month led the nation.  The Spartans have also come back strong (though they sit in the shadow of Miami’s powerhouse campaign), and while Tropp may not have the numbers at No. 16 in the nation in scoring, he could get himself into the conversation as the season goes along.

But really, though, who knows what will happen? It’s a new month, a new year, and a new decade. All I know is, it’s about to get very exciting.

Some Intriguing Matchups

Some intriguing matchups this weekend:

#9 Adrian at #1 Oswego (1/8) – The Bulldogs come in for a single game. This would have been an even more anticipated game before last weekend, when Adrian was swept by Hamline for its first two losses of the season. The Bulldogs dropped from No. 4 to No. 9 as a result.

#2 Plattsburgh at #6 Elmira (1/9) – The Cardinals are coming off a loss on Tuesday to Norwich. One of the biggest non-conference rivalries in D-III.

#3 Norwich at Bowdoin (1/8) and Colby (1/9) – This trip is always a tough one, and will present one of the few remaining challenges for the Cadets (the Middlebury/Williams trip in early February being another).

#4 St. Norbert at Concordia (MN) (1/8) – It’s a ten hour bus ride from Green Bay to Moorhead, Minn. The Green Knights will play St. John’s on the way back on Saturday.

#5 St. Scholastica at #7 Hamline (1/8) – A nice matchup between a pair of teams having good seasons.

University of New England at New England College – Just because I can imagine how confusing this will be for the radio broadcasters.

This Week in the NCHA/MCHA: Jan 7, 2010

Welcome back from what I hope was a happy holiday slumber, everyone. This season finally ramps back up this weekend as the NCHA squares off with the MIAC in a full set of crossover games, while a handful of MCHA teams are in action, most notably Adrian as the Bulldogs travel to Oswego to take on the top-ranked Lakers.

Before I break out the crystal ball for the first time in two years and attempt to reset the NCHA and MCHA before the second half of the season kicks off, let’s take the standard look at the USCHO.com Division III men’s poll as Monday’s was the first new edition in a month.

St. Norbert reclaimed its spot as the highest ranked team in the NCHA and MCHA and the Green Knights moved up to No. 4 despite not playing a game over break. They replace Adrian, who previously were at No. 4, as the Bulldogs dropped to No. 9 following a pair of losses to Hamline.

Like St. Norbert, St. Scholastica was idle over break but it didn’t stop the Saints from moving up two spots to No. 5. UW-River Falls rounds out the NCHA teams in the poll as the Falcons landed at No. 13.

UW-Superior is the first team out of the top 15 and missed by all of three votes, while UW-Stout picked up a five tallies and UW-Stevens Point notched a single vote.

Quick Reset

A couple of familiar faces, St. Norbert and Adrian, currently stand atop their respective leagues. The Green Knights 7-1-0 start in the NCHA is currently good enough for a two point lead over 5-1-2 St. Scholastica, while Adrian’s 8-0-0 start has the Bulldogs six points clear of Lawrence and MSOE. Lawrence has played three fewer games than Adrian, however, and the Vikings are a perfect 5-0-0 of their own. The two have yet to meet this season.

Both leagues have yet to get through half of their league schedules which means both remain wide open. As such, and due to the fact that the month long layoff is enough to throw anyone out of the loop a bit, we once again break out the crystal ball not only to get a better picture of where things currently stand, but also to attempt to foresee what might transpire down the stretch.

NCHA

Who will win the league?

Last season’s fourth place NCHA finish and shutout loss at Superior in the league semifinals was enough to have people asking whether St. Norbert’s run of NCHA dominance might be in its twilight. Thus far, the Green Knights have done their part to prove that it likely is not. At 10-2-1 overall and 7-1 in the NCHA, St. Norbert has once again established itself as the team to beat. The Green Knights lead the offense in scoring offense (4.5 g/g) and defense (1.88 g/g) and junior goaltender B.J. O’Brien has provided a presence in net that did not exist a year ago.

St. Norbert also leads the league in net special teams and has already played St. Scholastica and Stout, its two closest challengers, twice.

The past four years have shown that the ball rarely conjures up anyone other than St. Norbert and this year is no exception. No one has yet to offer convincing evidence that St. Norbert will not win the NCHA regular season title and earn the first round bye in the NCHA playoffs.

If not St. Norbert, who?

St. Scholastica.

The 8-2-2 Saints put a very impressive first half of the season together and it included a win at St. Norbert. A NCAA tournament team a year ago the Saints have not regressed a bit despite losing significant contributors in terms of scoring and leadership from a season ago.

The maturation of senior forward Jordan Chong and sophomore forward Jeremy Dawes might actually provide the Saints with more quick-strike capability that last year’s team had, and the Saints are conceding only 2.25 goals per contest thanks to a stifling team defense and the goaltending of sophomore Brennan Poderzay and senior Zach Kleiman.

Dark Horse?

Since making the trip out East and getting shellacked by Norwich and Middlebury in the Primelink Tournament, Stout has largely fallen off the radar.

Sure the 6-5-3 overall record is a bit off-pace of where many expected this year’s Blue Devils to be at this point, but let’s not forget: This a team that was in Lake Placid a year ago, still possesses one of the top lines in the country and faced a healthy dose of injuries in the first half of the year.

The Blue Devils closed out the first half of the year with a gigantic road sweep over rival River Falls and if they can carry that momentum over to the second half and find a little bit of health, they are a team clearly capable of making a run.

Coach of the Year?

This is always a tough call, but I’m going to go with Mark Wick at St. Scholastica. The Saints are currently in the top five nationally and have overcome significant losses to graduation to remain as potent as threat as ever. To the leadership and scoring losses mentioned above, add in the fact they also had to replace an All-American goaltender and that through all of it they haven’t missed a beat, and the pick is Wick.

Player of the Year?

A guy that absolutely no one is talking about is Justin Brossman of River Falls. The sophomore forwards currently leads all NCHA players with 21 points this season and has posted 13 of them in the eight NCHA contests he has played. His 1.62 points/game leads all NCHA skaters.

Stout’s senior forward trio of Joel Gaulrapp, Scott Motz and Derek Hanson can’t be discounted, either. In ten NCHA contests they have 13, 10 and 9 points, respectively, though Gaulrapp as he seems to be the catalyst for that line. None would be poor choices, however.

Senior forwards Matt Boyd and Shane Wheeler from St. Norbert, along with junior defenseman Nick Tabisz also deserve mention. All have posted 11 points in the Green Knights’ eight NCHA contests.

All that said, time for a curveball. The ball could be malfunctioning here, but it says none of the above.

Though he only has seven points in eight NCHA games, senior forward Jordan Chong from St. Scholastica might be as dangerous as anyone in the league. Like most top players he fills a variety of rolls and he fills them well. Not only an explosive offensive threat, he has a knack for scoring big goals at big times (like at St. Norbert. Shorthanded. In overtime) and is a staple on the penalty kill.

Stylistic differences between teams often make it difficult to make comparative assessments based solely on numbers, so for a lot of reasons that go beyond numbers, the NCHA Player of the Year is the Saints’ Jordan Chong.

MCHA

Who will win the league?

Not many would make a case for anyone other than Adrian and neither is the ball. The Bulldogs still have only lost once MCHA game ever and remain perfect in league play this season. Even worse, the recent losses to Hamline and potential loss at Oswego this weekend will only serve to refocus the Bulldogs.

They are scoring over nine goals per contest in league play and are allowing just over two. MSOE and Lawrence have put up equal defensive efforts but neither whiff the offensive capabilities of Adrian…yet.

Though the Bulldogs have yet to play Lawrence or MSOE this year, they have already dispatched of Marian. Though they have fourgames remaining against MSOE and two with Lawrence, no one has yet to show they will be able to hang with Adrian over a 20 game schedule.

If not Adrian, who?

Lawrence.

The Vikings continue to make strides under Mike Skzodzinski and are a perfect 5-0 in MCHA play. Lawrence’s fundamentally sound team defense and the excellent goaltending of junior Evan Johnson make them the type of the team that has what the ball calls “high upset potential”.

This was demonstrated over Thanksgiving weekend as the Vikings’ took St. Norbert into a 0-0 second intermission tie before ultimately dropping the contest 2-1. Compared to the past few years, the Vikings also have a little more horsepower up front. While it might not happen this year, if anyone is going to take down Adrian it might just be Lawrence.

Dark Horse?

This is a very difficult call between Marian and MSOE but the ball gives the nod to Marian. The Sabres stand at 4-2 in league play and their only two blemishes came at the hands of Adrian on opening weekend.

Having moved to the MCHA North Division this season, Marian does not have to face Adrian again this season and also swept MSOE in the only two regular season meetings they will have with the Raiders.

Additionally, the Sabres have a fairly light schedule the rest of the way, sans four games with Lawrence, and last weekend’s close results against 11th ranked Gustavus Adolphus seem to indicate that the Sabres might not be hiding in fourth place in the league for long.

Coach of the Year

With all due respect to Ron Fogarty of likely eventual league champion Adrian, the crystal ball does not see this award in your future this year.

Rather, it’s narrowed it down to Lawrence’s Mike Szkodzinski, Marian’s Jasen Wise or MSOE’s Mark Ostapina, though the picture remains cloudy.

Szkodzinski gets a slight advantage based on to-date results, but the eventual winner with likely be determined by whether it’s MSOE, Marian or Lawrence that is able to put together the strongest second half of the season — and all three certainly have the potential.

When all is said and done, the ball says it will go to whoever finishes second behind Adrian, though at this time it’s impossible to project who that might be.

Player of the Year

Well, running the risk of looking at scoresheets alone, Adrian has the top seven scorers in the league, six of whom are scoring at least two points per game in league play.

Interestingly, the ball still thinks Bulldogs’ junior forward Shawn Skelly is the best player on the best team on the league, and the best choice from Adrian despite having posted the fewest points of the seven.

Adrian junior defenseman Jeremy Klaver is included in that group but the ball doesn’t foresee him getting the award, either.

Sophomore forward Ben DiMarco from Lawrence has hung 13 points in only five league games, while Vikings’ senior forward Marc Howe has posted 11.

Other contenders might include MSOE forward Michael Soik (8gp, 6-6-12), Finlandia defenseman Quinn McIntosh (8gp, 4-5-9) and Northland’s Kraig Wright (8gp, 4-7-11).

Goaltenders Evan Johnson of Lawrence and Connor Toomey of MSOE deserve a look as well, but when all is said and done, the MCHA Player of the Year is:

Shawn Skelly, Adrian

This Week in Hockey East: Jan. 7, 2010

Dave Hendrickson is probably writing a food column this week, based on his rhapsodizing on Facebook about key lime pie and angel hair carbonara in Key West. Jim Connelly is likely still unbundling after dressing for maximum warmth at Fenway Park last Friday. So feel free to start the “third-string sieve” chant as you read this week’s column.

Ice Field of Dreams

On Friday, Fenway Park will be filled to its ancient rafters with droves of hockey fans savoring college hockey in its hallowed setting. The players will be pumped full of adrenalin, as archrivals Boston College and Boston University fight for supremacy on the diamond.

On Wednesday, though, there was ample time for players from both teams to soak in the atmosphere and simply have fun when the Eagles and Terriers experienced their first al fresco practice as collegiate athletes. “Emotionally, it’s unbelievable,” Eagles captain Matt Price said. “It’s really exciting. The anticipation has been building slowly.”

“It’s a unique experience to be able to skate at Fenway Park,” BC assistant captain Matt Lombardi added. “We’ve all skated on ponds and outdoor rinks growing up, but to do something like this is something special.”

“It was a more upbeat practice,” Terriers assistant captain Eric Gryba said. “It was a lot of fun. It was like a bunch of 12-year-olds playing out there.”

Some of the BC players couldn’t resist taking a few shots toward the Green Monster.

“A couple of guys were talking about it out there,” Price said. “I may have seen a couple of guys sneak one out there, but I don’t think anyone got it close.”

“I think Pat Mullane did …” retorted Lombardi.

“He got one over it?” Price asked his teammate. “Oh, wow.”

“Not over, but he hit it at the bottom,” Lombardi said.

Price obviously found that much more believable.

“Catchable puck,” Eagles coach Jerry York quipped.

All coaches and players were fascinated to study the myriad variables of the venue. “Practice was pretty nice,” BU coach Jack Parker said. “It was certainly unique. We’ve never practiced outdoors let alone in Fenway Park, so that was something for us. I think the NHL and the Fenway Park people made the right decision by not putting stands anywhere near the field. When we’re out there, it looks like Fenway Park, and it’ll look like Fenway Park to the fans as well. The ice itself was pretty good. There was a soft spot because of the sun, but that won’t be a problem on Friday night. The overall atmosphere is just fabulous.”

“The wind is a little bit of a factor,” York said. “I didn’t realize that. That could be a factor. The lights weren’t a problem, though some of the players put black under their eyes like football guys do for the glare.”

“I think the biggest problem is the sightlines,” Parker said. “You’re looking up over the boards, and you don’t see fans. You see distance before you see anything else. It might be a problem for the goalies; we’ll have to see at the pre-game skate on Friday.”

Walking around the rink, it’s hard to believe that it’s a regulation NHL rink. Everyone agreed that it looks smaller — no doubt because of the vast surroundings. Yet the biggest issue could be the weather. With light snow and dropping temperatures in the forecast for Friday night, the weather very much could affect play. “The faster you skate out there, the colder you get, so we might be pretty cold out there on Friday,” Price said.

Soon enough, the players will put aside their revelry and focus on the game at hand. After an unusually long layoff over Christmas break, BU looked positively refreshed in last Saturday’s 7-3 romp over UMass. However, the Terriers have a great deal of ground to make up in the standings, so much is at stake there. According to York, BC played poorly in a 5-2 loss to St. Lawrence at the Denver Cup. The Eagles looked much better against host Denver the next night, but the upshot was another loss. “Denver is an excellent hockey team, and we were right with them,” York said. “They showed a little more hockey savvy late in the game and caught us and beat us. But probably right now most people feel the gold standard of this year’s season is Miami and Denver as the two top teams.”

So both teams are reminding themselves to not get too caught up in the hype with two valuable points at stake in what may well be the most intense Hockey East race in league history. “I think we enjoyed it,” York said after the practice. “But as the game approaches and the clock counts down, we’ll have laser-beam focus on the game. But right now, the kids are still buzzing about shooting the puck off the left-field wall and the wind being a factor. It was the hardest time we’ve had getting the kids off the ice.”

Future Prospects for Fenway

Given how hard it was for the coaches to get their guys off the ice — not to mention the fact that Friday’s doubleheader of women’s and men’s action sold out in just five and a half hours — one has to wonder about making it happen again. When we talk about future prospects for Fenway, we usually are referring to a pitcher who is currently throwing heat for the Portland Sea Dogs or an outfielder hitting .330 for the Greenville Drive. In this case, though, it seems as if there is a good argument for expanding college action at Fenway Park in the future.

In fact, there very well could have been more games played these year. Jack Parker acknowledged that a scenario involving more men’s hockey games definitely was proposed. He alluded to an option in which BU would’ve played Vermont while BC played Providence, and other ideas were on the table as well. However, Parker was adamant that it had to be a BU-BC matchup — something that he and York apparently had discussed ever since Michigan played Michigan State in an outdoor game in the “Cold War” at Spartan Stadium in 2001.

“I think a BU-BC rivalry is something special,” Parker said. “One of my great friends in college hockey, former assistant coach Don Cahoon, the coach at UMass-Amherst, called me up [after the decision was made] and said, ‘You said it had it be BC and BU or you were going to take your ball and go home! Is that what happened?’ And I said, ‘Yeah, Don, that’s exactly what happened.'”

Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna acknowledged that there were some hard feelings among the schools that were not included. “Those of you who know our community know that there were probably a few coaches who were not to be happy to be left out of the mix,” Bertagna said. “But to be candid, I don’t think anybody thought it was going to be a slam-dunk to sell out the building. The novelty of outdoor hockey has started to become a little more commonplace, and the feeling was that if we’re going to do this, let’s do it right. And if it’s going the be the only time, let’s put our best foot forward and move our schedule in an effort to deliver the last two national champions. It’s a great matchup in any event, but the fact that it’s the last two national champions gives it greater cache outside of the area.”

In retrospect, it seems obvious to me that the league could have sold out two or perhaps even three nights of college hockey at Fenway Park. The trick would be to include schools that have a good fan base. Everyone agrees that a future event would have to involve some different schools, so how about a holiday tournament featuring, say, Northeastern, Cornell, Michigan, and UMass? I also think three nights in which you had a women’s game early and a men’s game late could do very well. You could repeat a BU-BC slate, have another night for Northeastern-UNH, and another night for Cornell and Harvard. All six schools have ranked women’s teams.

“We did look at a couple different models, but you’ve got to allow ‘X’ number of days for each event,” Bertagna said. “You’ve got to extrapolate the make-up dates.”

Still, everyone is enthused about the possibilities. “I think in all probability Fenway would be crazy not to do this again — maybe with different teams, not BC-BU. Maybe it would be an invite for Vermont and New Hampshire to come down and play against UMass and Northeastern,” Parker said. “Or maybe it would be Northeastern and BU playing two western schools. I think you could guarantee yourself an attraction after what’s happened here this week.”

“I think it’s certainly feasible,” York agreed. “I was very surprised at how quickly it was sold out. For somebody thinking of revenue sources and thinking of sort of a college football bowl atmosphere, it certainly deserves looking at whether it’s just BU and BC doing it by themselves or someone else experiencing it, it’s a great venue to play at.”

At that point, York couldn’t resist giving me a playful dig, alluding to my recent book about BU’s championship season. “Would you put up some money from the proceeds of the book to pay for it?”

I can’t say I’ll be able to sponsor it to the degree that Sun Life has, but, hey, I’ll put up a few hundred bucks to help make it happen!

First, though, Fenway Sports Group President Sam Kennedy cautioned that we have to see the impact of the current event before debating when and if it will happen again. “The short answer is I think we would explore having hockey at Fenway in the future,” Kennedy said. “But it’s probably a bit premature. We need to see how the facility responds to some of the changes — the winterization that we had to put into the facility — see how the field responds on April 4 against the Yankees when we open up on Sunday night, see how our staff responds. We’ve had a lot of people working a lot of long hours. Personally, I would like to see hockey back at the Fenway, but we’ll have to see how all the constituencies respond.”

By the end of Friday’s game, I think a good 100,000 fans will be eagerly watching to see when these particular prospects are ready for the big stage.

That Was Then, This Is Now

I sat down on Monday with Northeastern coach Greg Cronin in his impressive new office at the renovated Matthews Arena, looking to catch up on the Huskies. The good news is that the Huskies returned to a .500 record for the first time since Nov. 20 last weekend, when they beat Dartmouth and Massachusetts-Lowell to claim the Ledyard Cup in Hanover, N.H. The bad news is that Cronin doesn’t believe that the team played very consistently during the weekend — an issue that has dogged the Huskies all season, and frankly quite a contrast to the team’s unbelievably steady play throughout the previous season. When you consider that BU lost only one game in league play after November and still could not nip the Huskies in the standings until the last day on the regular-season schedule, you get an appreciation for how good a year NU had. This year, though, it has been a different story thus far.

“If you get caught up in how good you are, people are just waiting to punch you in the nose,” Cronin said. “When you establish that level of credibility and prestige, you’re going to drown in your own confidence sometimes. That’s why I think last year our team was very, very consistent. We knew what we were. This year we don’t know what we are as a group. We flirt with being a real structured, reliable, patient team to being a team that gets caught being overly aggressive and overly passive.

“It’s a challenge, but it’s like what BU has gone through. The two of us have lost the most personnel. I think we graduated six or seven seniors and then we lost [star goaltender Brad] Thiessen, who was a big part of our team. They lose some guys early in [Brian] Strait and [Colin] Wilson. But then our problem got compounded by [Steve] Quailer going out for the year, [Randy] Guzior going out for the year, and [J.P.] Maley — who’s been out all year and then finally played three games. He’s out for the year again: He tore his ACL two nights ago [against Dartmouth]. You take that number of people out of your lineup, and you’re basically gutted. That’s one of the things that I’ve gone through this year.”

This is a new experience for Cronin, whose early years on Huntington Avenue were marked by enormous numbers of freshmen and sophomores with only a smattering of upperclassmen. “It’s the first time I’ve had a real tremendous turnover,” Cronin admitted. “And we’re products of our past, so I go back to the ’93 team at Maine [where Cronin was an assistant coach], where we lost all those players, and then we lost the Ferraros [Peter and Chris], [Paul] Kariya, and [Chris] Imes to the Olympic team as undergraduates, and that team had to be replaced by 10 or 11 freshmen. I don’t know what it was, but we kept winning, even with that turnover. You just don’t know how to measure how people are going to respond to playing quality minutes in college hockey when there’s not that support around them — that strength from the veterans. That’s what we’re going through right now.”

While injuries and departures are one culprit, Cronin remains vexed by the erratic play of his squad. “The whole thing with us is consistency. This is my theory: The power play is a manifestation of talent on your roster. That’s where talented people create visibility for that unit. There’s more talent on the ice for Northeastern than there was last year. The problem is that the strength behind that talent, the commitment to provide structure behind that talent, comes and goes. From the goaltender up to the first-line centerman, it just comes and goes. I can only go from last year because that’s the year when we had the most success: The talent wasn’t visible most of the time, but the structure and strength and rhythm that we played with were visible all of the time.

“I had a great comment from a pro scout who’s watched this program go from the basement to almost the penthouse last year. After one of the games, he spoke to one of my players who was injured, and his comment was, ‘Where’d your team go? Why aren’t you pursuing pucks and attacking like you did before?’ I don’t know.”

Last weekend was symptomatic of the team’s roller-coaster approach. “We [pursued pucks and attacked] for four periods up in Dartmouth and then we just looked like we were playing pond hockey in the second and third periods against Lowell,” Cronin said. “We were lucky to win the game. They took a lot of penalties, so they never really got into a rhythm, but we had a good grasp on the game, and then we loosened the grip. Lowell’s a really good team, and they play with a grip in every game. They’re structured; they’re mature. They play high-percentage hockey. We failed to execute the same type of image. And that’s what goes on with this team.”

Goaltender Chris Rawlings pulled the team through the weekend, shutting out Dartmouth 7-0 on Saturday before leading NU to a 2-1 win on Sunday. The freshman stopped 60 of 61 shots over the weekend. “He faced a lot of shots that first night,” Cronin said. “That could’ve been a 12-5 game. These holiday games … you’re off for three weeks and then you roll the dice; you don’t know what you’re going to get. You think you’re ready to go, but one of the strangest things about college hockey is having that long break.”

Cronin knows that it will be a battle royale across the league the rest of the way. “The teams that were at the bottom of the league are moving up the food chain,” he said. “Now you’ve got even more intense competition. That’s why I think this year it’s going to be an absolute dogfight — I don’t care if it’s from eight to seven or five to four [in the league standings]. It’s going to be tough.”

The Catamount Cup Runneth Over

Along with Northeastern and Maine, which won the Florida College Classic, Vermont came away with a holiday tournament championship of its own, defeating Alabama-Huntsville and Minnesota-Duluth to claim the Catamount Cup. Vermont coach Kevin Sneddon was delighted with the win, especially over a ranked opponent in the Bulldogs.

“I’m just so pleased with our team, aside from picking up the 4-on-4 goal at the end there,” Sneddon said. “I thought we executed our game plan to a ‘T’ and I’m really proud of the way our guys competed against a great team. You know Duluth’s got a ton of skill and I think we did a great job at taking time and space away from them in their zone. We wanted to work them low; I think our guys did a great job on the cycle. They obviously created a lot of great plays down low and more importantly we kept them out of the neutral zone and offensive zone as much as possible.

“It was a good college hockey game and obviously we were on the positive side.”

Curiously, the Catamounts are getting the shaft in the USCHO poll, where they are ranked just No. 19. In the PairWise Rankings, UVM is ninth. Given the choice, though, I’m sure Sneddon is much happier than he would be if those numbers were reversed.

Critical Mass

After starting out the season with an eyebrow-raising 9-2 record, UMass has gone through a rough stretch, going just 2-5 in its last seven games since the torrid start.

The downturn began with a tough 5-4 overtime loss to Quinnipiac on Nov. 28, followed by losses to two other ranked opponents in Boston College and UMass-Lowell. The Minutemen then won convincingly against Merrimack and looked to be a prohibitive favorite in the UConn Toyota Classic last week. They eked out a win over Union, only to get stunned by three third-period goals against Bentley in a 4-1 loss. Playing their third game in just five days against BU on Saturday, the Minutemen saw the Terriers ultimately run away with it, 7-3.

All of which led me to quiz UMass coach Don “Toot” Cahoon about the team’s recent slide. While he found the Bentley loss to be a deceptive anomaly for the most part, he acknowledged that the team has consistency issues. “First of all, let’s go to the Bentley game for a second,” Cahoon said. “We blitzed them for two periods — did everything but put pucks in the net — and we probably skated ourselves dead in period three. I’m very disappointed with how we played in the third period. We just didn’t negotiate what we needed to do with expending ourselves the way we did. We tried to put that to bed: It wasn’t what we wanted, the result was bad, but it wasn’t a bad effort.”

In contrast, Cahoon’s reflections on the team’s woes sound very similar to what BU’s Parker often had to say about his team a few months ago. “My assessment is that we haven’t played three good periods for six or seven games now,” Cahoon said. “We had one outing at home against Merrimack where we played three great periods and controlled the game from start to finish. Other than that, we’ve struggled for a period or in some cases for two periods in each contest. That’s the difference between winning and losing. We’re fundamentally not executing, whether it be breakdowns in defensive-zone coverage or someone not applying the pressure as frequently as we need to on the PK. And on the PK, your goalie needs to be your best penalty killer. If he’s not on any particular night, that lends itself to some problems.”

Cahoon believed that his team was no match for BU in terms of “physicality and tenaciousness.” Given that Hockey East is arguably in the midst of its most competitive season ever, there is no question that the winning team on a given night will often be the team who can persist in winning every possible puck battle or faceoff. “So everybody has to take a little bit of responsibility in this. But getting back to fundamentals and playing with more of an edge are two things that I think need to be injected into this team immediately.”

With road games against UNH and Northeastern this weekend, UMass will need to be ready to battle.

Three-Man disadvantage?

In case you missed it, I wrote this article a few weeks ago, in which Parker predicted that, if the circumstances were right, he might pull his goalie during the first or second period to enjoy a three-man advantage when an opponent has two men in the penalty box. One of the arguments for the tactic is that the lopsided numbers would result in the defending team being unable to even touch the puck while on the penalty kill.

Last Saturday, though, BU had the skate on the other foot when UMass pulled goalie Paul Dainton late in the game to try a three-man advantage of its own. Ironically, though, Gryba hustled over to a loose puck on the boards and fired the puck a good 175 feet into the open net to seal the win.

So much for the three-man advantage. Amusingly, Parker didn’t even notice that the situation had arisen. “I didn’t know they pulled the goalie,” Parker said. “I didn’t even see it. I don’t know if they knew that they pulled the goalie. I don’t know if they practiced 6-on-3. The puck went in the corner, and we just threw it out, and all of a sudden I heard cheering and thought, ‘What’s that all about?’ Then I thought the goalie flubbed it because I didn’t even notice he was out of the net.”

Actually, the unlikely shorthanded goal reinforced a few points that Parker and Denver coach George Gwozdecky made in that article. First, like anything, you have to practice the 6-on-3 power play in order to reap the benefit of the extra skater as fully as possible. Second, if you try the tactic, you need to accept the fact that you are going to surrender the occasional goal. The real question remains as to whether the significantly increased probability of scoring a power-play goal outweighs the slim chance of giving up a goal such as Gryba’s. It will be a long time before we have enough data to evaluate that, but in the meantime it makes for a great debate.

Trivia Contest

My brief cameo as guest columnist gives me an opportunity to showcase an endangered species in this space: the long-lost trivia question. Those who remember my columns from years past know that I can’t resist seeing who has made the biggest deposit in their memory bank of college hockey lore. So here’s one that I think is a very nice challenge.

Earlier this year, former BU star Colin Wilson scored his first — and, thus far, only — NHL goal while playing for the Nashville Predators in a road game that his team ultimately lost to the Boston Bruins. But what former Hockey East player also scored his first — and, yes, only — NHL goal while playing on a visiting team that also lost against the Bruins that day … and in the same building?

E-mail me with your answer. If the link in that last sentence doesn’t work for you, just e-mail to [email protected] to reach me. The winner will be notified by Monday night; if you haven’t heard by then you either had the wrong answer or someone else beat you to it.

Yada, Yada, Yada

Congratulations to Chris Kreider of Boston College and David Warsofsky of Boston University for helping to win the gold medal for Team USA in the World Junior Championship in Saskatchewan this week. The championship game was a real thriller. When Canada tied it with two late goals, I wondered if Warsofsky would get a taste of what Miami experienced against BU in last season’s championship game. However, the young Americans regrouped during intermission and won an absolute classic.

Speaking of that memorable championship game in Washington, D.C., I want to take this opportunity to thank everyone who has made my book, Burn the Boats: A Seven-Championship Season for Boston University Hockey a great success thus far. The project was definitely a labor of love, and the reaction from readers, players, and their families has been extremely gratifying. For those still interested in ordering the book online, follow that link above and note that you can get your book personally inscribed if so desired.

Speaking of books, I recently read The Trouble With Heroes, an anthology of original stories. It includes Dave Hendrickson’s short story, “Beloved.” Wow! What a fun read as well as a great bargain buy. The book’s authors ask us to consider alternative views of various mythical and historical heroes. Some I would call fractured fairy tales, while others put a contemporary spin on a classic story such as Cinderella. Dave’s story is a comical retelling of the David and Goliath bible story, and it’s excellent. He pulls off quite a few feats in a small number of pages: female narrator, historical context, and plenty of laughs to boot. My other favorites from the anthology include: “Geeks Bearing Gifts,” in which a Greek god tries out a present-day dating service; “If The Shoe Fits” (imagine Cinderella as a modern day businesswoman in search of a networking opportunity); and “Honey, I’m Home,” where Odysseus returns at last from his 20-year odyssey, only to be chewed out by his wife for, among other things, being a typical male who failed to ask for directions. Most of the book is a high-spirited romp, and I highly recommend it.

You’ll find it the Science Fiction/Fantasy section (perhaps under new releases) under the editor’s name, Denise Little, or order it through Amazon.


Thanks to Diana Giunta for providing quotes for this column.

This Week in the CCHA: Jan. 7, 2010

Happy Golden New Year!

What a week this has been for hockey in the United States, and what a way to kick off 2010. Congratulations to Team USA for a thrilling overtime gold-medal victory over Canada Jan. 5. What a game. What a tournament. What a bright glimpse into the future of American hockey.

Congratulations to all the U.S. collegians on the team: Matt Donovan (DU), Jerry D’Amigo (RPI), Jake Gardiner (UW), Chris Kreider (BC), Danny Kristo (UND), Mike Lee (SCSU), Kyle Palmieri (ND), John Ramage (UW), Jordan Schroeder (Minnesota), Derek Stepan (UW) and David Warsofsky (BU).

Congratulations also to the coaching staff of Dean Blais, Joe Exter, Mark Osiecki and Tom Ward. It’s thrilling that a current CCHA head coach was the driving force behind the team that broke Canada’s five-year stranglehold on the gold medal. Exter is the former Merrimack goaltender who overcame a fractured skull to return to hockey as a player and coach. Osiecki is an assistant at Wisconsin; Ward the director of hockey at Shattuck-St. Mary’s prep school in Minnesota.

It just doesn’t get any more American than that.

Congratulations, too, to the U.S. U-17 team, which also captured gold this week by defeating Canada-Ontario.

Not Even Close to a Silver Lining

There were several players on both the U.S. and Canadian teams who were impossible not to watch. D’Amigo was one of them, as was Kristo. I liked Palmieri’s contributions — solid and often understated — and not just because I’m a CCHA homer.

The one player, however, who impressed me the most was 17-year-old Jack Campbell, the goaltender from Port Huron, Mich., who was in net when John Carlson scored the game-winner at 4:31 in OT. Campbell was excellent in Team USA’s first game against Canada, which resulted in Canada’s shootout victory, and he was superb in relief of Lee, who allowed the first three goals of the gold-medal game.

Campbell was also the goaltender who earned a shutout in the gold medal game of the 2009 U-18 tournament, when the U.S. beat Russia, 5-0.

Campbell, a product of the USA Hockey National Team Development Program in Ann Arbor, was also the guy who was supposed to join Michigan in the 2010-11 season.

It became clear last fall that something was afoot with Campbell. When the rest of the UM recruits signed their letters of intent, Campbell did not. Then in late November, the Windsor Spitfires of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) announced that Campbell decided to forgo his college education — he had been offered a full ride at UM — by signing with the Spitfires.

Instead of playing for the Maize and Blue next season, he’ll be playing for the green — or rather, the loonies and twonies — 75 kilometers to the east.

In the Spitfires’ release dated Nov. 25, Campbell said the decision was a difficult one. I hate to think of a young kid exaggerating the truth, but how difficult could the decision have been with coaching from current Spitfires Cam Fowler and Kenny Ryan?

Fowler is the defenseman that had committed to Notre Dame as a scholarship player when he was just 15 years old. In mid-November 2009, Fowler told the Irish that the deal was off. The Farmington Hills, Mich., native said that he listened to his family and “advisors” to make his decision. He’s expected to be a first-round pick in this year’s NHL entry draft.

Ryan, a second-round pick of Toronto in 2009, walked away from Boston College Oct. 15, 2009, less than a month after his rookie season had begun. Ryan’s departure took BC coach Jerry York completely by surprise and prompted Spitfires vice president Warren Rychel to comment to The Windsor Star that the situation was “interesting” and that the Spitfires had “no comment.”

(In 24 games this season, Ryan has six goals and 10 assists, requiring no comment whatsoever.)

What Campbell, Fowler and Ryan have in common — aside from a lack of life experience, expectations of ease and entitlement currently endemic among young Americans and an excess of advisors — is an alarming proximity to the OHL. Campbell’s hometown of Port Huron is literally across the river from Ontario and 65 miles from Windsor. Fowler’s hometown of Farmington Hills is a suburb of Detroit and 26 miles from Windsor; Ryan is from Franklin, a stone’s throw from Farmington and 23 miles from all that Windsor apparently has to offer.

It’s fairly certain that Austin Czarnik, a forward from Washington, Mich. (distance to Windsor: 37 miles), will go from high school to no school soon enough. Czarnik, who plays with the NTDP, had committed to Michigan State for 2011-12 but withdrew that commitment in the fall of 2009. He was drafted by the Spitfires, by the way.

Of course, Wolverine fans know the pain of losing players early, as the success of that program does draw a lot of attention. Robbie Czarnik, Austin’s cousin, left UM this season for another OHL team, the Plymouth Whalers. Plymouth’s location — 38 miles west of Czarnik’s hometown of Roseville, Mich. — is far more convenient for his family and advisors, who don’t need to cross an international boundary to reap the benefits of his decision.

These are just a few of the examples of the excellent talent U.S. colleges are losing in battle to the OHL. Oh, yes, it’s a U.S.-Canadian border war. The OHL fired the first shots and has been waging an active campaign ever since. And we are losing so many that it’s hard to keep up.

The OHL is actively targeting and aggressively pursuing top U.S. (and Canadian) players who have committed to NCAA teams or who are likely to do so. In this war, the OHL is promising what it calls “The Best of Both Worlds,” an allegedly faster track to the NHL and the opportunity to go to college, paid. After all, why should young men with talent be bothered with the requirement to go to college while playing hockey when money can be had for an education in the abstract of the future? The OHL commits to providing one year of post-secondary education for every year a player plays in its league, in theory. The players live the hockey life now and return to school later. In theory.

It’s nice, in theory. The problem is that it doesn’t always work this way. According to Jeff Hicks’ Dec. 17, 2009, article in The Record.com, an Ontario-based online newspaper, the OHL is having to pay out for players’ education at a rate of about 18 percent, and Hicks writes that many players never will be able to take advantage of “The Best of Both Worlds” because of injury and many eligibility requirements in their contracts.

Hicks also asserts — rightly so — that the OHL is counting on star players like Fowler to abstain from tapping into the education package, which theoretically could cost the league and various NHL teams many millions of dollars should every eligible player take advantage of the promised funds.

Not surprisingly, Joe Birch, the OHL’s director of recruitment and education services, disputes Hicks’ findings; however, he did concede to Hicks that “very, very few” current OHL players are enrolled in college.

Last November, the NCAA hired Paul Kelly, a 1977 BC grad and the former executive director of the National Hockey League Players Association, to serve as the executive director of College Hockey, Inc., an entity designed to engage in battle directly with the Canadian major junior leagues for NCAA-eligible players. Wednesday, former Brown player, Kevin Lovitt (1977-1981), joined College Hockey, Inc., as its senior director of business affairs.

In an article by Roy MacGregor this week in the online version of The Globe and Mail, the former head of the Canada Safety Council Emile Therien, who played hockey for St. Lawrence from 1964 to 1966, was quoted as saying that young men would benefit more by playing hockey for NCAA schools than they would by going the Canadian major junior route.

Obviously, Team USA’s gold medal victory over Canada has triggered a debate that has been too long quiet on this side of the border. While I’m happy for all of the players on Team USA, I would have liked to have been able to congratulate collegians A.J. Jenks, Jeremy Morin, Philip McRae as well. I can’t because all three opted for the OHL, all before they were old enough to vote. Morin and McRae are veterans of the NTDP.

Jenks committed to Michigan but instead went to the Plymouth Whalers. He’s in his fourth season with the Whalers, where he’s been since 2006-07. That’s some fast track.

At least he’s closer to home in Plymouth. Jenks is from Wolverine Lake, Mich., a mere 20 miles from Plymouth. Sure beats the 38-mile trip from Wolverine Lake to Ann Arbor.

New Year, New Season

I love how hockey players and coaches sometimes refer to the second half of the college season as a new season. I love it because they do the same of the playoffs.

This kind of optimism, this unwavering faith in the potential, is addictive. After hearing Red Berenson profess his faith in junior goaltender Bryan Hogan after Michigan’s 5-3 victory over Michigan Tech in that tournament’s consolation game Dec. 30, I too became a believer. After all, the days do get longer in January, and we in Michigan haven’t yet tired of the snow.

What I mean to say is that, well, it isn’t March yet.

With this dizzying optimism, many people make resolutions at the beginning of the year, and sports writers are fond of providing resolutions for the teams they cover. Instead of making resolutions — so boring, so predictable, so unattainable — I thought this week would be a good time to look at a few things that holiday hockey taught us.

Red Berenson Is a Loyal Man

I admire Berenson for his public loyalty to his players he perceives as working hard. He’s the first to call a guy out when said guy is slacking, but he’s also the last to stand by a man who needs a little support. Such is the case with Hogan, whose current numbers (2.35 goals-against average, .898 save percentage) and inconsistency are not going to get Michigan to Joe Louis Arena in March, let alone the NCAA tournament.

“Hoagy’s our goalie, and he’s good,” said Berenson, shooting a look at certain members of the press after UM’s 5-3 win over Michigan Tech in the GLI consolation game.

I don’t dispute that he can be. Toward the end of the first half of the season, Hogan stopped fighting the puck so much and began to possess his space better. He stopped leaving so much real estate between himself and the net when he played the puck. His concentration seemed better.

In UM’s 4-3 loss to Rensselaer in its first game at the GLI, Hogan fought the puck, showed a lot of real estate, seemed to have trouble concentrating. He gave up three goals on nine shots before being replaced by Shawn Hunwick, who stopped one of the four shots he faced in his first action since the 2008-09 season.

The next night was better for Hogan, who stopped 20 of 23 in the win. The Wolverines outshot opponents 91-36 in the GLI.

The Quantum Bulldog Theory of Badger Showdown, Busted

In 2003-04, the Ferris State Bulldogs went 15-20-3 overall. Two of their wins came in the Badger Showdown, where they beat the hosts to win the title.

In 2004-05, with a record of 13-22-4, the Bulldogs did it again.

Imagine my giddiness when I learned that the Bulldogs would participate in this year’s Showdown as well, what would (sadly) turn out to be the last holiday tournament hosted by Wisconsin.

Imagine my dismay, then, when FSU let me down, losing 6-1 to Yale in the opening round, allowing four third-period goals in the process.

It was Denny Kearney’s power-play goal early in the third, when the Bulldogs were down 2-1, that changed the game, said Bulldogs coach Bob Daniels, who said he was “disappointed” in FSU’s “response to that goal.” Three goals later, I can see why.

That FSU went on to beat Merrimack 5-1 the following day is no consolation.

Fire Rick Comley!

OK, I’m kidding. It’s funny because I received so many e-mails from MSU fans early in Comley’s tenure in East Lansing, demanding his demise. Then a win in April 2007 silenced his detractors.

Until last season. Sure, the 2008-09 Michigan State season was painful — literally. (It’s officially called “The Year of the Glass Shoulder” now in MSU hockey yearbooks. You should look it up.)

Last season, the Spartans managed all of 62 total goals. MSU surpassed that total en route to the GLI championship, a two-game series in which 13 different Spartans scored a total of 16 goals.

That’s four more goals than MSU scored in the entire month of November 2008.

And the Spartans were the first team in the country to reach 14 wins this season. I guess that means that last year was the anomaly, and we can keep Comley for a while.

Under the Radar

Lake Superior State has quietly put together a pretty good first half. With two wins over Robert Morris last weekend, the Lakers extended their win streak to six and their unbeaten streak to eight.

They are fifth in the CCHA right now, but their second-half schedule includes Miami, Michigan State, Ferris State and Alaska — the four teams ahead of LSSU.

Some Things Are Obvious

Western Michigan needs something to break — offensively speaking. The Broncos’ scoring offense is No. 54 in the country, averaging 2.10 goals per game.

In three of their last four games, however, the Broncos would have loved those two little goals. After being shut out at home twice by Bemidji State last weekend — an 0-0 OT tie and a 3-0 loss — the Broncos have now scored three goals in their last four contests dating back to Dec. 11, when they were blanked 3-0 by Ferris State. WMU has been shut out four times this season.

A Second-Half Team?

Northern Michigan has a very interesting relationship with the second half of the season. Much of that — and this is just a theory, mind you — is tied to senior goaltender Brian Stewart, who comes alive in the home stretch.

Last weekend, the Wildcats captured the Dodge Holiday Classic in Minneapolis, beating Clarkson 4-0 and Minnesota 4-2. NMU ended the first half of the season with a 2-1 win over Michigan Tech. In those three games (obviously), the ‘Cats allowed just three goals. Stewart was in net for all three wins.

In their two-game series against LSSU to end the first half of the season, the Wildcats allowed 11 goals. Six of those belonged to Stewart, two to Reid Ellingson in relief of Stewart in the second game and three were empty-netters.

Last season, NMU had four wins at the midseason break and ended up with a 19-17-5 record. In 2007-08, the Wildcats had seven wins after the first half and were 20-20-4 at the end of it all.

Before this season’s break, Northern Michigan had seven wins and it now rides a three-game win streak into Tuesday’s game against Michigan Tech.

I’m not sure what’s at work here other than Stewart. I’m just saying that it will be interesting to watch.

Not Exactly the Rodney Dangerfields of College Hockey, but …

In the last USCHO.com poll before the break, Notre Dame was ranked No. 20. In the Shillelagh Tournament, the Irish beat Colgate 5-2 Jan. 2 and the following night tied then-No. 6 North Dakota before beating the Sioux in a shootout for the tournament title.

This week, NoDak moves up to No. 5 and Notre Dame is out of the poll.

After a 4-1 loss to Michigan Dec. 11, Irish coach Jeff Jackson talked to me about his injured defense and the slow start for his team’s offense this year. Then he told me that Notre Dame will be back — not next season, but this one.

While I’m having a difficult time imagining Jackson as The Terminator — a name lovingly bestowed upon yours truly by one of her writing classes last winter, by the way — I do believe Jackson when he says that the sixth-place Fighting Irish will somehow emerge and surge before the end of this campaign.

It is January, after all.

This Week in the ECAC Northeast-MASCAC: Jan. 7, 2010

A Fresh Slate

The start of the new year not only brings heaps of unfilled resolutions, but also signals the rebirth of Division III college hockey after a three week slumber. With most of the MASCAC idle last weekend and the ECAC Northeast and NESCAC engaging in mostly non-conference games, the true grind has yet to begin. But before that starts, let’s take a look at four teams that certainly enjoyed the latter part of 2009.

With all but one team boasting a .500 overall record, the NESCAC has been tightly packed for the opening months of the season, nicely evidenced by Williams and Bowdoin currently tied for first with eight points a piece.

Williams (4-0-1 in conference play, 6-0-1 overall) is ranked No. 10 in the latest USCHO.com Division III poll, but things are just getting started for head coach Bill Kangas.

“We just got together Saturday night after being off for a while,” Kangas said. “We’re excited about getting back intro practice and playing again. We realize there’s a lot coming up.”

The Ephs have ridden the strong goaltending duo of sophomore Ryan Purdy (1.74 goals against average) and senior Marc Pulde (0.74) thus far. With each netminder playing well, it’s led to a timeshare situation for Kangas, something he didn’t seem to mind.

“It goes day to day,” he said of making a decision on who to start. “We make sure they are healthy and just communicate with them. It’s worked out pretty well to this point.”

With each goalie playing so well, it’s no surprise that Williams boasts the top ranked defense in the conference, along with the second ranked penalty kill. While there’s still a lot of games left, Kangas isn’t in any rush to look too far ahead.

“Honestly, we’re just focusing on tomorrow’s practice,” he said. “We don’t get to high or too low. Even the practices coming back from break, the first was OK, and during the double session [Sunday] we were better at the end of the day.”

Bowdoin starts the new year tied with Williams after finishing sixth with an 8-9-2 conference mark (11-12-2 overall) last season.

The Polar Bears have gotten a boost offensively from freshman Daniel Weiniger, who leads the team in scoring and is the second leading scorer (seven goals, three assists, 10 points) in NESCAC play. Four of those tallies have come on Bowdoin’s fourth ranked power play, which places the freshman second in the conference. Junior Kyle Shearer-Hardy leads all NESCAC defenseman with a 4-6-10 line.

Like their counterparts atop the NESCAC standings, the Polar Bears have enjoyed solid goaltending up to this point. Sophomore Richard Nerland (2.49 GAA) has seen the majority of the time in net.

A short drive across New England reveals another tightly contested conference race in the MASCAC, where Salem State holds a one point lead over Westfield State.

The Vikings jumped out to a 5-1-1 start, its best in six years, highlighted by a strong showing at the College of St. Scholastica Tournament on Nov. 27 and 28.

In the opening game, Salem State took then-eighth ranked St. Scholastica to overtime before falling, 4-3. However, they closed the tournament with a 3-0 whitewashing over the 2008 national champions and previously top ranked St. Norbert Green Knights.

“We were strong in both games,” Salem State coach Bill O’Neill said. “[In the] overtime loss we played really and well and the second night it was a solid game all over.”

The Vikings play in the tournament earned praise from Green Knights head coach Tim Coghlin.

“They blocked a ton of shots and they are a good team,” Coghlin told USCHO.com after the game. “[O’Neill] has been doing this for a long time and there some things that are very unique to the way they play. They were playing with a real level of enthusiasm and that showed today. I thought they were the better team.”

When describing his team’s style, O’Neill called it “up tempo.”

“We try to pressure the puck really hard and play good defense,” he said. “We pressure the puck in all the zone with a good forecheck and good pursuit. If there’s an opportunity to stretch the ice, we’re looking to take that.”

But Salem State has gotten solid goaltending from Ryan Lacour as well.

After spending two seasons as a backup behind All-Conference goalie Ryan Hatch, Lacour has provided the Vikings with a more then adequate replacement for the league’s top goaltender a year ago. The junior turned away all 31 shots in the win over St. Norbert and his 2.82 GAA ranks second in the conference.

“James is a hard worker and a solid competitor,” O’Neill said. “He’s come in and taken the job over and played virtually every game, until getting hurt a few games ago.”

While he isn’t sure how long Lacour will be out, O’Neill said the Viking are trying to solidify the goaltending spot.

“We’re looking for a goalie, so if someone is interested, call me,” he said laughing.

Westfield State is in second year in existence as a varsity program after a 20 year hiatus.

They posted a more than respectable 11-9-4 overall record a year ago, but first year head coach Bob Miele has the Owls in the thick of things this season.

“Guys are really buying in, it’s kind of a continuation of last year,” Miele said of the groundwork laid by last season’s coach Jerry Keefe, who helped bring the program back to varsity level before joining Brown as an assistant coach last fall.

Balanced scoring and solid goaltending have been the keys to success for the Owls.

“We’re very well balanced,” Miele said, pointing to the fact that the Owls’ top three lines have scorers ranging between six and 13 points. “It’s a team effort and guys understand that. That’s why we’re so successful. You have to look out for the whole team or the other line is going to hurt you.”

Keeping with the theme of teamwork, the Owls have had a virtual split in net time between sophomore Ian Wilson (50.6 percent) and junior Ray Monroe (49.4).

“It’s been unreal,” Miele said. “It’s been a good problem to have, having to great goaltenders. It’s a friendly competition but on the same note, they are team guys.”

The Owls, who Miele described as playing a puck possession type of game, are looking to avoid a repeat to the conclusion of last season.

“Last year, we had a great start as well,” Miele said. “We didn’t finish like we would have like too. We’re well aware of that and we know we have to keep working harder to hit our peak at the end of the season.”

NESCAC Jumble

While the MASCAC has another week until conference play starts up, the tightly bunched NESCAC gets back at it this weekend.

Bowdoin will host St. Michael’s and Norwich, while third place Tufts hosts Babson and UMass-Boston. Williams will host rival Amherst and then Hamilton to close out the weekend.

“Amherst beat us last year, so this is kind of a payback game,” Kangas said. “Every game becomes big,” he said. “Head-to-head is factor, so it almost becomes an eight point weekend.”

As for his schedule next weekend, Kangas is sticking to his day by day approach. Literally.

“I know we have two away games, but honestly, I couldn’t tell you who we are playing.”

Loose Pucks

Time to wrap it up with some non-Division III thoughts. Feel bad for Wes Welker — it’s got to kill him to sit the playoffs out … Bill Hall will be a sneaky good addition for the Red Sox. Good week for Northeastern, my alma mater. Men’s hockey knocked off Dartmouth and the University of Massachusetts-Lowell to capture a tournament trophy (No, not that one.) And men’s basketball has won five straight, including knocking off VCU at home for the second straight year. The Rams might want to consider shipping up to Boston a bit more, as the Huskies are the only team to win at Richmond in VCU’s last 23 games. NU hosts George Mason Thursday, who was Bemijdii State before anyone knew who Bemijdii State was. And don’t forget women’s hockey, who shutout Princeton Tuesday and is ranked ninth in the country heading into Friday’s outdoor showdown at Fenway Park with UNH.

Chirping

Finally, any suggestions, comments, or “Where’s your Beanpot?” chants can be directed to [email protected].

This Week in the ECAC East-NESCAC: Jan. 7, 2010

A Happy New Year to all!

The second half of the season has begun and there are New Year’s resolutions abounding amongst the coaches and players as we start 2010. Some teams have already started with a holiday tournament while others are tasting their first competitive action in over two weeks this weekend. What are teams looking for in the second half? Here’s a breakdown by conference of resolutions that, if kept, should provide consistency for better hockey ahead.

ECAC East

Norwich

Who needs resolutions when you are unbeaten in regulation this season and just beat second ranked Plattsburgh on home ice this past Tuesday? The offense is clicking at over five goals per game while the defense and goaltending are holding teams to just over one goal a game. Special teams are excelling on both the power play and shorthanded situations and the freshmen are contributing in a big way already.

If anything, if it’s not broken leave it alone and the Cadets are already in midseason form and playing very good hockey. Six players are in double digit points with freshman Kyle Thomas leading the way in goals with 10. With Ryan Kligensmith playing lights out behind a solid group of defensemen, the Cadets should have visions of playing late into March.

Babson

Having started the new year at the Middlebury Classic last weekend, the Beavers lost to the hosts 4-0 and came back to win the consolation game against Salve Regina by a 5-1 score. In the first 10 games the team is averaging just over three goals per game so the resolution here seems to be finding some other scorers to help senior Chris Wood (seven goals, three assists, 10 points) and junior Terry Woods (3-5-8) who lead the team in points.

If senior Jason Schneider can return to form after missing six games to date, the Beavers get back a legitimate scoring threat to support both the even strength offense as well as the power play.

Skidmore

The Thoroughbreds are 3-2-0 in the conference but just 4-6-0 overall following two lopsided losses at the Cardinal Classic in Plattsburgh over New Year’s. While the scoring has been balanced with 10 players having two goals or more, the three goal per game output isn’t enough for the high-paced style employed by coach Neil Sinclair.

The resolution here is for more scoring especially from juniors Alex Mykolenko (2-9-11) and senior Matt Czerkowicz (2-4-6). That covers the front end but a second resolution would see sophomore Colin Bessey improve on his overall numbers in the second half and help this team advance in the standings and playoffs.

University of Massachusetts-Boston

While the Beacons are off to one of their best starts in years at 5-3-1 through the end of 2009, they need to be resolute about playing more consistent hockey in 2010 if they want to stay near the top of the conference standings. Forwards Kris Kransky and Eric Tufman need to be bigger offensive threats and the penalty killing unit backstopped by four year starter Ryan Donovan in goal will need to cut down on the 19% success rate the opposition has posted through the first nine games.

Defenseman Wayne Sands who has had some injury problems in the first half will be a key for the Beacons in 2010 both on the blueline and quarterbacking the power play.

Southern Maine

The Huskies had a three game winning streak straddling 2009 into 2010 but lost in the final of the Middlebury classic to the Panthers by a 5-2 score. The “Battle of the Beaneys” has gone the Vermont way recently but Southern Maine has a lot to play for in the second half where they usually turn up the intensity and level of consistent play.

Senior Chris Travis (4-10-14) and junior Zach Joy (11-1-12) have been as advertised offensively for the Huskies who could really use some other players to resolve to produce more scoring in the second half of the season. Look for defenseman Paul Conter to be a contributor offensively and better goaltending from the sophomore combination of Koray Celik and Mason St. Hillaire.

St. Anselm’s

Ed Seney’s Hawks spent most of the first half integrating a lot of younger players into the college game and have five freshman among the top 10 in team points through their first eight games of the season. Goaltending from Alex Wyse and Kevin Fairweather has been consistent so far and the Hawks have scored at an average of over four goals per game.

St A’s resolution has to be focused on being as successful on the penalty kill as they have been on the power play. Cutting the opponents’ 19% success rate with the man advantage will certainly help the Hawks stay in the thick of the conference race and prep them well for the NCAA tournament at the end of the season.

New England College

The Pilgrims find themselves looking up in the standings at the break but with a nice two game win streak in the new year against two solid teams in Curry and Salem State. All the pieces are there for the Pilgrims with experience, depth, and skilled players on both ends of the ice. Getting some key points this weekend against UNE and USM will help to jump start the Pilgrims in the second half of league play.

As expected several key seniors are leading NEC offensively and will need to carry that burden in the second half. Look for Mark Ehl (6-5-11) and Alex Muse (6-8-14) along with Trevor Turner (1-5-6) to provide both the production and leadership for this team to play its best moving into the most important part of the season.

St. Michael’s

Head coach Chris Davidson knew he had a lot of moving pieces entering the season with the need to replace significant offensive players that graduated as well as a goaltender who played virtually every game. At 2-7-0 at the break, the Purple Knights need to reverse their current stats of scoring just three goals per game and giving up four goals per game.

One key area to resolve the problem could be found on special teams where the power play is very good at 23% but the penalty kill gives it up at almost the same rate. Look for senior Dave Vorosilchak (0-9-9) to keep his team focused on playing well in the league having this team ready for the D-II tournament come March.

Castleton

Head coach Alex Todd has his work cut out for him with this team entering the new year and there is room for improvement in virtually every category. At 2-6-2, the Spartans have had trouble scoring goals while giving them up in bunches. They start a three game home stand this weekend so hopefully the dawn of a new year will bring a fresh focus to their game and a much more consistent effort.

Two areas that the Spartans need to stick to a resolution on will be better goaltending and vastly improved penalty kill efficiency. The PK unit has surrendered 20 goals of the 43 scored against the team so far this season. Goaltenders Seth McNary and Arthur Hollinger will need to step up as their team’s best penalty killers in the second half.

University of New England

Head coach Brad Holt’s Nor’easters are already ringing in the new year having won their first game of the season with a 2-1 win over Plymouth State last Saturday night. The first year varsity team has been competitive to date and comes to play every night but needs to find some offense and play better hockey in the third period where they have been outshot and outscored significantly by opponents to date.

Freshman goalie Dallas Ungurian (3.69 goals against average, .918 save percentage) has been a bright spot along with the team’s leading scorer Jack Nolin (2-3-5) but they will need the supporting cast to build off the experience of the first nine games and battle with the best that interlock play has to offer.

NESCAC

Williams

Undefeated in the conference and 6-0-1 overall, the Ephs are playing well and should be resolving to keep leading scorer Alex Smigelski (7-4-11) healthy for the remainder of the season. Head coach Bill Kangas’ team is doing it in all aspects of the game with great goaltending, a solid and maturing defensive unit and a very balanced offense.

If there is an area where the Ephs could improve it is the same spot where they have struggled the past couple of years — the man advantage. At just 14% the Williams power play unit has just five goals this season. Conversely, they have excelled on the penalty kill where they have surrendered just three goals through their first seven games. The first four games of 2010 are all against NESCAC opponents so Williams will have a great idea of where they stack up against the conference’s best.

Bowdoin

After opening 5-0, the Polar Bears ran into a hot Colby team who swept them in a home-and-home series just before the break. They beat Curry by a score of 6-4 on Wednesday night and start out 2010 at 6-2-0 overall. Two players who need to resolve to continue their excellent play to date are freshmen Daniel Weininger (7-4-11) and Robert Toczylowski (1-6-7). Senior Colin MacCormack (1-2-3) needs to resolve to contribute his consistent 20 points per season in support of the offense.

Last season the Polar Bears struggled to score. So far this season the output has been productive and the defensive end of the ice and goaltending tandem of Richard Nerland and Chris Rossi has been very consistent. Look for more from the supporting cast including junior defenseman Kyle Shearer-Hardy (4-6-10) in the second half.

Tufts

Head coach Brian Murphy has to be delighted with the first half of the season for his Jumbos who have ridden strong performances from sophomore goaltender Scott Barchard (2.23, .952) to a five game win streak ending 2009. While the offense could improve, the Jumbos are giving up very little based on good team defense and Barchard’s outstanding netminding.

Junior Tom Derosa (2-9-11) leads the team in scoring and will need some help for the rest of the forwards if Tufts wants to stay in the top half of the conference and fight for a home-ice berth in the playoffs.

Middlebury

Very quietly Bill Beaney’s squad has been playing some very good hockey including last weekend’s wins in the Middlebury Invitational that has them at 5-1-2 overall. The “French Connection” of Martin Drolet (7-11-18) and freshman Mathieu Dubuc (7-8 15) is leading the team offensively while sophomore transfer Nick Resor (4-1-5) seems to be finding his stride in the Panthers 3-2 system.

Beaney’s teams always have a resolution to be playing their best hockey at the right time of the season and the good start suggests they are headed in the right direction. If the goaltending of Max Kennedy and John Yanchek holds up, this team has the firepower to compete with anyone.

Colby

After starting out 0-2, the Mules have won seven in a row including the recent 5-3 win over Salem State to open 2010. As always coach Jim Tortorella’s teams are focused on a disciplined style with great goaltending and special teams leading the way. This year’s team is no exception as junior goaltender Cody McKinney (1.90, .937) is playing outstanding hockey to backstop the Mules through the first half.

Junior Wil Hartigan (6-6-12) leads the team and scoring and has five power-play goals for a unit that is successful 30% of the time. If the team’s new year’s resolution is to build on the last few weeks, the Mules will not only be back in the conference playoffs this season but will be making some noise in them as well.

Trinity

The Bantams are 1-1 in the new year and go on the road this weekend to face Skidmore and Castleton. Head coach Dave Cataruzolo’s team is still looking for consistency in front of junior goaltender Wes Vesprini (2.84, .919). Bigger offensive contributions will be needed from Paul Jaskot (1-3-4), Richard Hollstein (1-3-4) and sophomore defenseman Mike DeMayo (0-4-4).

One area where the Bantams can resolve to be improved in the second half is the special team units. While the penalty kill has given up 10 goals (over one-third of the total goals against) the power play unit has found the back of the net just six times so far this season. Trinity has always been a tough team and if the offense can get going they are sure to make second half difficult for their opponents.

Amherst

Last year’s conference champs have a lot of new players on the blueline but still have one of the nation’s best in goal in junior Cole Anderson (1.99, .912). This team doesn’t give up much and their special teams are among the best in the country so the formula that was so successful last year is continuing this season for the Lord Jeffs who are 2-0 in 2010 and headed to a challenging weekend on the road against Williams and Middlebury.

While overall scoring has been balanced with 14 players having tallied goals so far this season, look for captain Keith Nelson (1-6-7) to have a big second half in his role as an offensive regular as well as a key player on special teams.

Hamilton

After ending the semester break with two tough losses to Norwich and Oswego, the Continentals opened 2010 by winning the St. Michael’s Holiday Tournament last weekend with wins over Wentworth and Morrisville. This year’s team under second year coach Norm Bazin is already at 5-3-1 and looking to show their style to the rest of the league starting this weekend at Middlebury and Williams.

The Continentals need to make a resolution regarding their penalty kill and coming up with more consistent play from their goaltending tandem of Scott Heffernan and Calvin Bartel. Teams are connecting at a 26% success rate with the man advantage so Hamilton will need to tighten up their defensive zone on the penalty kill.

Wesleyan

After starting out at 1-4, the Cardinals have won three in a row including the championship of the Nichols New Year’s Tournament by defeating Lebanon Valley and Saint Mary’s. Chris Potter’s team will need to improve on their 1-3 league record as they head out back on the road this weekend to Skidmore and Castleton.

To keep their winning ways going, the Cardinals will need to get some point production beyond sophomore Tom Salah (6-3-9) and freshman John Guay (3-7-10) along with more consistent goaltending from Tim Archibald and Matt Hadge. This team has played seven freshmen regularly so the experience gained in the first half should help to make the Cardinals a more consistent squad in 2010.

Connecticut College

Of all the teams in the first half this may be the biggest surprise based on the players coming back this season. At 2-8, the Camels hope to build off an overtime win last weekend in the consolation game of the Oswego Pathfinder Classic where they defeated the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE), 2-1, on a goal by sophomore JJ McGregor.

The formula for this team’s New Year’s resolution is an easy one as having senior Greg parker between the pipes will always give your team a chance to win.

All the Camels need to do is leverage their offensive talent and improve on their two goal per game output to start turning some of the losses into wins. While sophomore Julien Boutet (4-2-6) has been a bright spot, seniors Brett Moore (0-2-2) and Trevor Bradley (3-2-5) will need to be bigger factors in the Camels’ offense. Improving on a 10% power play success rate will be a quick way to help remedy the offensive output. This team has talent and will be looking to the back half of the season to show everyone what they can really do.

I certainly hope that everyone enjoyed the holidays and will stick to their own personal new year resolutions. Personally, I am already down four pounds in the first week of my semi-annual diet so I remain cautiously optimistic that I can meet this year’s goal — emphasis on the ‘cautiously’. For local hockey teams the new year like the new season represents an opportunity to get better and prove they can be contenders come February and March.

For those of you not watching Frozen Fenway on Friday, make sure you follow your team as during break is when the teams need their fans most. Round two starts tonight!

Drop the puck!

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Jan. 7, 2010

Bentley’s Best

Teams at the top of the Atlantic Hockey standings struggled over the holiday break (see below), but the news wasn’t all bad. The brightest spot for the league was at the Toyota UConn Classic, where Bentley defeated the host Huskies and then No. 15 Massachusetts to take the title.

It doesn’t get much better than taking two points in AHA play (the game against UConn counts in the standings) and then beating a ranked team for a tournament title.

“I thought we came out and executed our plan,” coach Ryan Soderquist said after the victory over the Minutemen. “We allowed them to have a little space outside the dots and let them cycle the puck. They had a lot of shots on net, but they weren’t a lot of Grade ‘A’ chances.”

Sophomore goaltender Kyle Rank was outstanding, allowing only two goals in the tournament while turning away 65 shots, including 42 in the championship game.

“This meant a lot to us,” Rank said. “We earned a lot of respect this weekend with winning this tournament. I think it’s the first tournament we’ve won since becoming Division I. Getting the two points from UConn was huge and beating UMass was just a bonus. We’re going to use this momentum going forward to hopefully get a home playoff spot, which is our goal.”

Forward Marc Menzione (goal, two assists) and defenseman Bobby Preece (goal, assist) were named to the all-tournament team.

Weekly Awards

Player of the Week for Jan. 4, 2010:
Dave Jarman — Sacred Heart

The senior had four points (two goals and two assists) to help the Pioneers to their first-ever sweep of Air Force. Jarman is fifth in the conference with 21 points.

Goalie of the Week for Jan. 4, 2010:
Kyle Rank — Bentley

Rank was MVP of the Toyota UConn Classic, making 65 saves, including 42 in the championship game, a 4-1 win over No. 15 UMass.

Rookie of the Week for Jan. 4, 2010:
Steven Legatto — Sacred Heart

The freshman goaltender stopped 63 of 65 shots to lead the Pioneers to a home sweep over Air Force.

Monthly Awards

Player of the Month for December 2009:
Jacques Lamoureux — Air Force

The senior had eight points in four games in December, including four in a 5-3 win over AIC on Dec. 4.

Other players nominated: Carl Hudson, Canisius

Goalie of the Month for December 2009:
Ryan Zapolski — Mercyhurst

Zapolski stopped 135 of 140 shots in December, posting a 3-0-1 record. He recorded back-to-back shutouts, the first Lakers goalie to accomplish that feat.

Other goalies nominated: Jay Clark, Army; Kyle Rank, Bentley

Rookie of the Month for December 2009:
Thomas Tysowsky — Holy Cross

The Amherst, N.Y., native had a 1.55 goals-against average and a .937 save percentage in December. On the season, Tysowsky is tops in the AHA in GAA (2.24) and third in save percentage (.914)

Other rookies nominated: Preston Shupe, Canisius.

Tough at the Top

At the holiday break, three AHA teams began to distance themselves from the pack: Air Force, Mercyhurst and RIT. But all three started the New Year winless, each getting swept in convincing fashion.

Mercyhurst dropped both its games at the Catamount Cup at Vermont, getting outscored 10-1 in the process. RIT was swept at Minnesota State, outscored 9-1 by the Mavericks. A 6-1 loss last Friday was the second-worst for the Tigers since moving to Division I, and the shutout on Saturday was the first time RIT had been blanked in 42 games.

But the hardest hit was Air Force, since those losses count in the standings. The Falcons were swept at Sacred Heart 4-1 and 5-1, and while they remain tied for first in Atlantic Hockey, eight other teams in the conference have at least two games in hand, including RIT, which trails Air Force by a point but has played four fewer league games.

“We have about two months to right the ship before the playoffs,” Air Force coach Frank Serratore said after Saturday’s game. “We’ll find out where we are come playoff time. We have to fight and scrap and do our best to get enough points to have home ice the in playoffs. We aren’t a great team right now, but that doesn’t mean we can’t be a good team at playoff time. We have to check our egos at the door and find 18 guys that will leave their blood and sweat on the ice every night.”

For the Pioneers, the weekend was an indication that they’ve turned a corner. Sacred Heart was just 2-6-1 in league play before sweeping Air Force, the first time ever the Pioneers had taken four points from the Falcons.

“We took advantage of our chances,” coach C.J. Marottolo said. “Our goaltender played very well. He made key saves in key moments.”

Freshman netminder Steven Legatto stopped 63 of 65 shots on the weekend, and senior forward Dave Jarman had a pair of goals and a pair of assists.

Sacred Heart had gone into the winter break on a winning note, defeating Dartmouth 4-1. The Pioneers had been winless in their previous eight games.

“At the time, I wish we didn’t have the break,” Marottolo said. “I was wondering how we were going to respond. We had started to play really well. We were at Army the weekend before and on that Friday night (2-1 loss) I thought we played some of our best hockey of the season. But on Saturday, we lost and I think that was a turning point for us. We talked as a team about the lessons learned and how we could apply them.”

The Pioneers are two games into an eight-game homestand, hoping to gain more points and move to the middle of the standings.

“I wish we had more of these games when the [students] are here, but we’ll make the best of it,” said Marottolo, who is in his first year as a head coach after a 13-year stint as an assistant at Yale.

“I’ve loved every minute [of being a head coach],” he said. “Every facet: the guys on the team, the school. It’s everything I’d envisioned it would be.”


Nate Owen contributed to this week’s column.

This Week in the ECAC West: Jan. 7, 2010

Better Effort

Elmira returned from the holiday break and jumped right into the fire at Oswego’s Pathfinder Classic tournament last weekend. The Soaring Eagles last game was an 8-1 thrashing of Utica way back on Dec. 5 and the long layoff showed as Elmira opened up against the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE) in the first round of the tourney.

“We took three and half weeks off, basically, and the first game back was sloppy,” said Elmira head coach Aaron Saul.

The Soaring Eagles had to withstand three straight MSOE power plays in the third period, but held on for a 4-2 victory to advance to the championship game. While winning is good, it also meant that Elmira had to face No. 1 ranked Oswego for the third time this year. The teams split a pair of hard fought contests in a home-and-home weekend series to start the season.

Oswego set the tone early in this past Sunday’s game, scoring a shorthanded goal just five minutes into the contest. The Lakers added a power-play goal late in the first period, but were answered by Elmira’s leading scorer Darcy Vaillancourt just before the period ended.

Unfortunately that was as close as Elmira could get and Oswego held on for a 3-1 victory.

“Sunday’s game was a good game,” said Saul. “Oswego played extremely well. Not that we played terrible, but we needed a better effort. We got outworked a little bit. Oswego had a good game plan against us and did a good job on the penalty kill. We didn’t help ourselves. Our power play wasn’t clicking like it was.”

Prior to last weekend, Elmira’s power play was converting at an impressive 28.4% clip, tied for fifth best in the nation. But the holiday break threw a wrench into the finally honed machine and the Soaring Eagles were held scoreless on their nine man advantages last weekend.

“When you take that much time off, the first thing to go is your timing, whether you are a forward, defenseman, or goaltender,” said Saul. “We were playing so well down the stretch in the first half. Then you take some time off and your timing, your legs, are the first two things to go. Usually that takes a week or two to get back to the level we were at the first half.”

Practice at the Thunderdomes this week has been intense as Elmira tries to get its timing back and start the power play rolling again. Adding urgency for the Soaring Eagles is their sole game this weekend, a Saturday afternoon game against second ranked Plattsburgh

Returning from a month layoff to play back to back games against the top two teams in the nation certainly is a wakeup call to the players, reminding them that the stretch run to the playoffs is just around the corner.

“We are first with strength of schedule,” said Saul. “There aren’t too many teams in the country that play the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the country in the same week. We are looking forward to the challenge. If you want to be on top, you have to play the best teams well and beat them. Oswego was a close game and we are looking for a better effort against Plattsburgh.”

Tournament Frenzy

Elmira wasn’t the only team in action over the holidays as a pair of other ECAC West teams also saw action last week.

Manhattanville kicked off the festive season in the Assumption Holiday Tournament. In some unusual scheduling, the tournament was held on the Monday and Wednesday of the last week of December.

The Valiants opened up against Becker, who proved to be a little more pesky than expected. Manhattanville built a 3-0 lead by the end of the second period only to see Becker come storming back with a pair of goals in the third.

But Becker’s Mark Lotito was sent packing with a major penalty just 17 seconds after the Hawks had scored to make the game 3-2, and the Valiants tallied a pair of goals on the ensuing power play to seal the 5-2 victory.

Manhattanville finished off the tournament sweep on Wednesday with a 6-1 victory over host Assumption. The Ice Dogs scored first midway through the second period, but the Valiants exploded with four goals of their own to end the period in command, 4-1.

Mickey Lang finished off his hat trick for Manhattanville late in the third period when he scored his second power-play goal of the game.

Lebanon Valley also saw tournament action in Nichols’ New Year’s Tournament, playing perhaps its strongest pair of games so far this season. The Flying Dutchmen gave Wesleyan all it could handle in the first round, outshooting the Cardinals 42-33. Lebanon Valley climbed back from deficits twice but still fell to Wesleyan, 4-2.

On Sunday, Lebanon Valley played host Nichols in the consolation game, again outshooting its opponent, this time by a 36-24 margin. The Flying Dutchmen held a pair of leads in the game and played tenaciously in the third period to send the game to overtime. But Nichols scored just 1:08 into the extra stanza to dash Lebanon Valley’s hopes of a win.

The Flying Dutchmen penalty killers had a particularly strong tournament, limiting their opponents to only one power play goal in nine chances.

Game of the Week

There is never any love lost between Elmira and Plattsburgh, and with both currently ranked in the top six in the nation Saturday’s game should be another barn burner in the Thunderdomes.

“Playing games like that makes you better at the end,” said Saul. “Whether you win or lose the games, hopefully you can take things away from playing top teams. Hopefully we will win this weekend.”

Elmira has defeated Plattsburgh each of the last two times the Cardinals have traveled to the Southern Tier and hope to extend that streak again this weekend.

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