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USCHO BETTOR’S EDGE: As playoffs begin for four leagues, it’s another week where picking the upsets will pay big

Ryan Fanti has been in net for 14 of Minnesota Duluth’s 16 wins this season (photo: Minnesota Duluth Athletics).

I said it last week in this space, that if you can pick the right upset, there is a lot of money to be made this time of year.

A week ago, Cornell, a team that pretty much most who follow the ECAC know is one of the top teams, knocked off Quinnipiac at a +220 underdog. Notre Dame swept Michigan and was +165 on Friday night. Pick just those two dogs in a parlay and $100 paid $748. If you nailed all five games (no one on our staff did), it paid nearly 40-to-1, or $4004.97 on a $100 bet.

That was the single biggest parlay payout from this column all season.

It shows that as we creep closer to the postseason, the sportsbooks know bettors want to pound the favorite and thus are cranking up the odds on the underdogs.

This week, four of the five underdogs are significant values, including Boston College and Penn State which are both +190 and No. 20 Omaha at +175.

I say that but from the other side of my mouth remind you that Vegas was built on winners. A lot of these lines are also made to entice. So do your research (I’ll help you along with some trends below) and bet wisely.

You can make your selections on the games listed below as well as others in USCHO Pick ‘Em. Go to social.uscho.com to join the fun!

As usual, a disclaimer:

Understand, this is for entertainment purposes only. USCHO.com is not a licensed gambling platform and no money may be wagered through this site or any subsidiary of USCHO.

All games are the first games when they occur in a two-game series, unless noted.

Enjoy and, if you bet, may you be successful.

(Games marked with an asterisks * have odds provided by DraftKings Sportsbook)

No. 9 Massachusetts (-245) at Boston College (+190) *

UMass needs just a single point to clinch at least a share of the Hockey East title, meaning plenty of motivation to wrap things up on Friday night against Boston College.

But the Eagles, fresh off a 3-1 upset on Boston University on Sunday, aren’t ready to roll over just yet. BC needs to take more points than New Hampshire this weekend to be able to host the first round of the Hockey East tournament. Otherwise, they’ll be traveling to New Hampshire for Wednesday’s playoff opener.

BC holds a massive advantage over UMass historically, but of late UMass has been pretty level with BC. The Eagles have won five of the last nine, but the Minutemen have won three of the last four meetings on the road vs. the Eagles.

Jim
Dan
Ed
Paula
John
Nate
Chris
Jack
Matt
Drew
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

No. 16 UMass Lowell (-190) at New Hampshire (+145)

Despite a non-conference win last weekend for UMass Lowell over LIU, the River Hawks watched as three teams passed them in the Hockey East standings. And while Lowell can still finish tied for first, the league standings are so jumbled that they could also drop to sixth and have to play a first-round game on Wednesday.

New Hampshire is actually an opponent that has given the River Hawks problems in recent years. UNH has won three straight including a 3-0 shutout on February 13. Lowell has just one win in the last eight (1-4-3).

This weekend, though, with a lot on the line, you’d like to think the River Hawks, one of the most successful teams in Hockey East in the month of March (33-20-4) in the last decade, will produce.

Jim
Dan
Ed
Paula
John
Nate
Chris
Jack
Matt
Drew
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

No. 10 St. Cloud State (-105) at No. 11 Minnesota Duluth (-125) *

Of the five series we preview this week, none is a close as this one between St. Cloud State and Minnesota Duluth. Neither team is exactly hot of late. Though St. Cloud swept Colorado College a week ago, they are 2-2-1 in their last five and 3-5-4 in their last 12. The Bulldogs are must better, posting a 1-3-1 mark in the last five and 3-6-2 in the last 11.

Both of these teams are crawling towards the NCHC finish line. So where lies the edge in this series?

Well, you should be able to count on a low-scoring game in this one, so I do like under 5.5 goals (-125 at DraftKings). But these two clubs battled to ties in each of their last two games (1-1 on Feb. 22, 2-2 on Feb. 8) and there isn’t a lot of trends to follow based on game location.

Honestly, other than the over-under, this feels like a game that I would actually avoid.

Jim
Dan
Ed
Paula
John
Nate
Chris
Jack
Matt
Drew
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

No. 4 North Dakota (-225) at No. 20 Omaha (+175) *

There is a good reason that North Dakota is a heavy favorite here as the Fighting Hawks have won six straight and are in position to clinch the NCHC title outright with a regulation win on Friday.

But how can we overlook Omaha. The Mavericks swept St. Cloud State two weeks ago and then split at home against Denver last weekend.

Add in the fact that the last team to beat North Dakota was Omaha, a 3-2 overtime win on February 5. It’s tough to bet against North Dakota right now, but I’ve certainly outlined a few reasons why you would.

Jim
Dan
Ed
Paula
John
Nate
Chris
Jack
Matt
Drew
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

Penn State (+190) at No. 12 Ohio State (-245) * Big Ten quarterfinal, game one

Ohio State went 3-1-0 in the regular season against Penn State and all three wins weren’t close (6-0, 4-1, 5-2). So it makes sense that bookmakers are making the Buckeyes a heavy favorite.

But the Buckeyes limped to the close of the Big Ten season, losing their last four (albeit to Michigan and Minnesota).

While I like Ohio State to come out on top over three games, I’m not shocked if Penn State is able to steal one of the three. The question we ponder here is will it back game one?

Jim
Dan
Ed
Paula
John
Nate
Chris
Jack
Matt
Drew
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
Nat'l
HEA
ECAC
AHA
CCHA
NCHC
B1G

Pick records to date:

Matthew Semisch – 53-28 (4-1)
Ed Trefzger – 51-30 (3-2)
Chris Lerch – 51=30 (3-2)
Jim Connelly – 50-31 (2-3)
Dan Rubin – 48-33 (3-2)
Drew Claussen – 47-34 (3-2)
Paula Weston – 45-36 (3-2)
John Doyle – 42-39 (0-5)
Nate Owen – 41-40 (4-1)
Jack Hittinger – 40-41 (1-4)

St. Norbert’s Bates collects NCHA men’s player of year honors, while Green Knights’ teammates Fraser top freshman, Adrian’s Krug repeats as best coach

Patrick Bates lit up the scoresheets this season for St. Norbert (photo: Patrick Ferron).

The NCHA men’s conference has announced the 2021-22 season award winners, including player of the year, coach of the year, freshman of the year, the all-conference team, and the all-freshman team.

The 2021-22 player of the year is Peter Bates, a senior forward at St. Norbert. He not only paced the conference in scoring but currently leads the NCAA Division III level in total points (55), points-per-game (2.04), and goals (27), while also sitting second in assists (28) and game-winning goals (6). In league play, Bates put together an 18-17-35 stat line that gave him the top point and goal numbers league-wide this winter.

“Peter has worked very hard on his game to become a complete 200-foot player,” SNC coach Tim Coghlin said in a statement. “He also led the league in scoring wire to wire. His commitment in the offseason is unmatched by any others in our room.”

This marks the second NCHA Player of the Year honor for Bates in his career, also claiming the award following the 2019-20 campaign (the St. Norbert program did not play last winter). It marks just the third time an NCHA player has earned the top league accolade twice in a career in league history, and the first since Zach Graham (Adrian) did so back in 2012 and 2013. He also earned NCHA Offensive Player of the Week four times this season, the first player with four weekly awards since 2010-11.

“Peter is a man of high character who leads by example daily,” Coghlin said. “We are proud of Peter, and he is very deserving of the honor that comes with the NCHA Player of the Year award.”

The league coaches also voted for freshman of the year, resulting in another Green Knight being honored with Liam Fraser earning the distinction. The newcomer burst onto the scene in a big way, finishing fourth in league play with 29 points (14 goals, 15 assists), while his offensive exploits also sit right behind Bates nationally in both points (45) and goals (22) in overall action.

The 2021-22 coach of the year is Adrian’s Adam Krug, a repeat winner from last season who has now earned the distinction four times in his career. He has led the Bulldogs to an amazing campaign, winning 26 straight contests following a loss in the season opener way back at the end of October.

Adrian has been the No. 1 team in the DCU/USCHO.com national poll since mid-December and has been the unanimous selection each of the past two weeks, as well as six of the last eight polls. Krug led AC to an unblemished 18-0-0 league ledger, earning the Peters Cup for the third consecutive winter. The team sits 26-1-0 overall and led the NCHA in scoring offense (6.89 GPG) and scoring defense (1.96 GPG) by wide margins.

2021-22 NCHA All-Conference Team
F: Peter Bates, St. Norbert, Sr.
F: Peyton Frantti, St. Norbert, Sr.
F: Josh Giacomin, Lake Forest, Sr.
F: Garrett Gintoli, MSOE, Gr.
F: Alessio Luciani, Adrian, Jr.
F: Sam Ruffin, Adrian, Sr.
D: Matt Eller, Adrian, Sr.
D: Kyle Gierman, Lawrence, So.
D: Hunter Payment, Trine, Sr.
D: Brayden Sampson, Aurora, Sr.
G: Josh Boyko, Aurora, Sr.
G: Cameron Gray, Adrian, Sr.

NCHA All-Freshman Team
F: Liam Fraser, St. Norbert
F: Bobby Price, Trine
F: Matt Weber, Aurora
D: Matt Couto, Adrian
D: Matteas Derraugh, Lake Forest
G: Darius Bell, MSOE

Trine’s Wilson garners NCHA women’s player of year honors, while Aurora’s Matson takes top rookie, Finlandia’s Macy wins coaching accolades

Brandi Wilson had a solid season offensively for Trine in 2021-22 (photo: Trine Athletics).

The NCHA women’s conference has announced the 2021-22 season award winners, including player of the year, coach of the year, freshman of the year, the all-conference team, and the all-freshman team.

The 2021-22 player of the year is Brandi Wilson, a senior forward at Trine. She not only paced the conference in scoring but currently checks in at ninth at the NCAA Division III level with 40 total points as well as seventh with her 21 total goals. In NCHA play, Wilson stood heads above her competition, with her 16-13-29 stat line the top total by over 50 percent (second place posted 18 points).

“Brandi has really shouldered the scoring burden for our team this year,” Trine coach Tom Hofman said in a news release. “She is always out there in those critical situations when your best player needs to be on the ice because of her ability to take the game over.”

This marks the first time a Thunder player has earned NCHA Player of the Year accolades and also just the second player to earn postseason laurels since Trine joined the NCHA in 2017-18. Wilson rang up 16 goals in 16 conference appearances, lighting the lamp five more times than any other player in the league. Her 13 assists also led the league, with the runner-up spot tallying 10. She enjoyed quite the breakthrough campaign, coming into the season with 23 points over the course of her first 56 career games.

Wilson was also the only NCHA player to record a pair of hat tricks in league play, picking up NCHA Offensive Player of the Week honors on a pair of occasions over the course of the 2021-22 campaign.

“Everyone can see what a great hockey player Brandi is, but we are the lucky ones who know what a great person she is as well,” Hofman said.

The league coaches also voted for freshman of the year, with Darci Matson of Aurora earning the distinction. The newcomer burst onto the scene in a big way, finishing tied for third in league play with 17 points (11 goals, 16 assists in just 13 games), while her overall offensive exploits (21-17-38) also sit tied for seventh nationally in goals as well as 14th in the NCAA in points.

The 2021-22 coach of the year is Finlandia’s Lindsay Macy, picking up the honors after leading the Lions to their best finish since the 2017-18 campaign. The second-year coach led FU to its first NCHA victory since Jan. 2019 and its first weekend sweep of an opponent in league play since Feb. 2018.

2021-22 NCHA All-Conference Team
F: Marissa Gebauer, Lake Forest, Jr.
F: Darci Matson, Aurora, Fr.
F: Morgan Olson, St. Norbert, So.
F: Emily Reimche, Concordia-Wisconsin, Sr.
F: Brooke Schmebri, Adrian, Gr.
F: Brandi Wilson, Trine, Sr.
D: Ava Jaschke, St. Norbert, Jr.
D: Olyvia Opsahl, Lake Forest, Sr.
D: Maya Roy, Adrian, So.
D: Kirsten Vandenheuvel, Trine, Sr.
G: Sophie Goldberg, Adrian, Jr.
G: Chiara Pfosi, Aurora, Sr.
G: Hannah Turnage, Lake Forest, Jr.

NCHA All-Freshman Team
F: Peyton Elliott, Aurora
F: Courtnie Hogan, St. Norbert
F: Darci Matson, Aurora
D: Sophia Chapman, Lake Forest
D: Maddux Federici, St. Norbert
D: Katie Rahilly, Concordia-Wisconsin
G: Ryleigh Furlong, Trine

Denver’s Brink named HCA men’s player of month; Minnesota’s Pitlick earns top rookie, Minnesota State’s McKay grabs goalie honors

From left. Bobby Brink, Rhett Pitlick, and Dryden McKay (photos: school’s athletic departments).

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced the men’s players of the month for Feb. 2022.

Denver’s Bobby Brink takes home player of the month honors, while Minnesota’s Rhett Pitlick is rookie of the month and Minnesota State netminder Dryden McKay has been named goalie of the month.

Brink put up strong numbers against a strong schedule in February. Much of his five goals and 10 assists came in six games against the likes of Minnesota Duluth, St. Cloud State and Western Michigan, all highly ranked teams.

Pitlick was a key reason the Gophers went 8-0 in February to clinch the Big Ten title. He had a line of five goals and 10 points in eight games, those five goals being his first of the season.

McKay was undefeated in February, as he was in December when he won national goalie of the month honors. This time, his numbers were 6-0, a .83 GAA, and a save percentage of .956. He did not allow more than a single goal in any game.

Minnesota’s Heise, Northeastern’s Murphy co-HCA women’s players of month; Saint Anselm’s Turner top rookie, Quinnipiac’s Schroeder cops goalie honors

From left, Taylor Heise, Maureen Murphy, Tyra Turner, and Corinne Schroeder (photos: school’s athletic departments).

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced the women’s players of the month for Feb. 2022.

Minnesota’s Taylor Heise and Northeastern’s Maureen Murphy share player of the month honors, while Saint Anselm’s Tyra Turner is rookie of the month and Quinnipiac netminder Corinne Schroeder has been named goalie of the month.

Heise continued her torrid pace with eight goals and 18 assists in eight games, locking up the WCHA regular-season scoring title. She averaged 2.25 PPG with five multi-point games and a plus-16 plus/minus rating.

Murphy had a monster month for the Huskies, recording 12 goals and 20 points in nine games. She had three hat tricks (including one in a playoff game) in a 7-1-1 month that saw Northeastern play six different Hockey East opponents.

Turner registered three two-goal games in February, ending the month with a line of 7-6-13 in seven games. She scored seven of her team’s 22 goals in the month.

Schroeder put up great numbers against a schedule that included four games against top-10 opponents. She went 6-1 with a GAA of .96 and a save percentage of .965. She allowed one goal or fewer in six appearances and had two shutouts.

NCAA women’s hockey scoring leader, Minnesota standout Heise tabbed WCHA player of year for ’21-22 season

Minnesota’s Taylor Heise leads the NCAA women’s hockey scoring race (photo: Wesley Dean).

The WCHA announced Thursday that Minnesota senior forward Taylor Heise is the 2021-22 WCHA Player of the Year.

Heise, who was named WCHA Offensive Player of the Year on Tuesday, was chosen for the overall honor by league head coaches and assistant coaches from among the All-WCHA First Team selections.

“Congratulations to Taylor Heise on her selection as our 2021-22 WCHA Player of the Year,” WCHA commissioner Jennifer Flowers said in a statement. “This award is well-deserved as Taylor has had an outstanding season leading the NCAA in scoring. The WCHA is home to many of the nation’s best collegiate women’s hockey players, which makes this award all the more impressive as Taylor continues to elevate her team and the WCHA.”

On her way to collecting three WCHA Forward of the Month honors, Heise registered 60 points in the regular season on 26 goals and 34 assists. She tallied a nation-leading four short-handed goals on the year and was recognized nationally as the Hockey Commissioners Association named her national player of the month for both November and February.

A native of Lake City, Minn., Heise became the first Gopher to score 60-plus points in a season since 2016-17 off of an impressive 194 shots on goal. While skating to a plus-38 rating on the ice, Heise scored a team-topping six game-winning goals and helped Minnesota find the twine first in 25 of the regular season’s 32 games by scoring seven opening goals this year. Two of Heise’s opening goals even came in the first 40 seconds after dropping the puck.

Recently surpassing 150 career points, Heise has also found success in the circle, winning 333 faceoffs in the regular season.

Heise is the seventh different Gopher to be honored as WCHA Player of the Year, earning the ninth title in school history, joining two-time winners Krissy Wendell (2004, 2005) and Hannah Brandt (2014, 2015), Courtney Kennedy (2001), Ronda Curtin (2002), Amanda Kessel (2013), and Sydney Baldwin (2018).

NCHC starts search for next full-time commissioner to run ‘the premier conference in men’s college hockey’

NCHC commissioner Josh Fenton speaks at the 2021 media day event Sept. 16 at Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, Minn. (photo: NCHC).

The NCHC announced Thursday that the conference has begun the search for its next commissioner, contracting with Parker Executive Search, who will facilitate the process to find the conference’s third full-time commissioner since being founded in 2011.

The NCHC search committee consists of representatives from all eight member institutions. It is co-chaired by North Dakota president Dr. Andy Armacost, who currently fills the role of the chair of the NCHC’s Board of Directors, and Minnesota Duluth athletic director Josh Berlo, a member of the NCHC Athletic Council.

In coordination with Parker Executive Search, the NCHC released the commissioner position profile on Thursday. Nominations and applications for NCHC commissioner should be directed to Grant Higgison at Parker Executive Search. He can be reached at [email protected] or 770-804-1996, x118.

Back in December, current NCHC commissioner Josh Fenton announced he would be leaving the NCHC for the same role with the Summit League full time beginning on April 11, 2022. Fenton, who will complete his ninth season as commissioner after joining the conference in July 2013, leaves having elevated the NCHC to a unique space as a “the premier conference in men’s college hockey,” according to an NCHC news release.

Fenton’s work on media rights, budget planning and the NCHC’s championship tournament (the Frozen Faceoff) have put the conference in a strong position for success for many years to come.

“The conference is seeking applications from the best and most passionate leaders in college hockey to fill the dedicated role of a single-sport commissioner,” Armacost said. “Josh Fenton’s remarkable guidance, commitment and vision has the NCHC well-positioned for continued leadership within NCAA hockey, on and off the ice. With significant changes happening in the landscape of Division I athletics, the next NCHC commissioner must bring a steady hand with a strategic plan for the future.”

Nominations and applications for the position of NCHC commissioner will be accepted through March 28, 2022.

NCHC SEARCH COMMITTEE MEMBERS
• Dr. Andy Armacost, President, University of North Dakota, Co-Chair
• Josh Berlo, Athletic Director, University of Minnesota Duluth, Co-Chair
• Dan Bartholomae, Athletic Director, Western Michigan University
• Karlton Creech, Athletic Director, University of Denver
• Dr. Michael Crowder, Faculty Athletics Representative, Miami University
• Lindsey Ekwerekwu, Sr. Associate AD & SWA, University of Nebraska Omaha
• Lesley Irvine, Athletic Director, Colorado College
• Dr. Bill Hudson, Faculty Athletics Representative, St. Cloud State University

Utica focused on a strong finish in the UCHC

Utica senior Sean Dickson is one of three goaltenders that have backstopped the Pioneers to a 24-win season with the UCHC championship game upcoming on Saturday (Photo by Jeff Pexton – Perfect Game Imaging)

Currently standing at No. 2 in the nation, the 24-2-1 (17-0-1 in conference play) Utica Pioneers have already established a new threshold for wins in a season but look to add so much more over the upcoming weeks. This Saturday, the Pioneers host the No. 8 ranked Wilkes Colonels for the UCHC championship – the only title in the east to be contested by top ten teams in the nation. While Utica has home ice advantage and likely already secured a spot in the NCAA tournament, this team wants to check off another significant goal on the way to what may be a special 2021-22 season.

“We had some special visitors on campus this week to spend some time with the team,” noted head coach Gary Heenan. “The guys that graduated from the 2020 team that was poised to play in the NCAA tournament before the COVID shutdown were here to remind this club that they want to finish it on the ice. They have a great opportunity in front of them in winning the conference tournament to follow-up on the regular season title. Those guys that had difficult circumstances take their national opportunity away wanted to make sure our guys this year knew they should take advantage of their opportunity starting with Wilkes on Saturday. I think our team heard the message loud and clear.”

Utica won’t have it easy against a strong Wilkes team that finished second to the Pioneers in the regular season. Utica won a close 3-2 game at home back in December before the two teams played a 1-1 overtime tie in February that saw Utica win a shootout to wrap-up the regular season title. Despite the success against the Colonels this season, Heenan and his staff are preparing for a very challenging opponent on Saturday night.

“It was great to see how the guys finished the game against Manhattanville in the semifinals,” said Heenan. “We had that 2-0 lead and could have sat on it but they stayed aggressive and scored a couple of more goals in the third period to put it out of reach. We are going to need the full effort from everyone on Saturday. Wilkes comes in with some super high-end talent that are likely to play at the next level and 17 seniors looking to win the league for the first time. They are built for this type of game and will challenge us to be at our very best to earn the win. We have been focused on keeping the guys sharp this week and will stay true to the gameplan that has worked for us all season. We roll four lines and six defensemen and get a lot out of the extra forward we dress too.”

While Wilkes does have some high-end talent, Utica boasts three 40-point scorers, five 30-point scorers and two 20-point scorers with players like Brett Everson and Mic Curran getting their games into high gear in the second half. Add in a mobile group of defenseman that can make the offense fly and Utica will present some matchup problems for Wilkes based on their depth and talent, especially on special teams.

“Everyone has played a role in our success this season including three goaltenders,” stated Heenan. “We have a D-corps that pairs up a stay-at-home guy with an offensive player so guys like Justin [Allen], Jayson [Dobay] and Brian [Scoville] can help generate some opportunities at the other end of the ice wit the talented group of forwards we have.”

Allen, who broke the points mark by a defenseman this season, has been dynamic with his skating and puck handling but also a bit surprising with his improved shot this year. Allen has eight goals and 30 assists for 38 points while posting an eye-popping +34 plus/minus stat.

“Justin just has this amazing deception in his game,” said Heenan. “He moves so well on the ice and has such great skating ability that he can shake lose from defenders creating numbers for our team. He keeps the puck on his stick a long time, which sometimes can drive a coach crazy, but makes great decisions with the puck when he decides to pass or shoot. He has worked really hard on his shot this season. I don’t think he would say he has a great shot, but it is much improved, and his eight goals reflect the work he has put into finding shooting lanes and putting pucks in spots.”

While both regular season games were low-scoring affairs, Heenan wouldn’t be surprised by anything on Saturday and the Pioneers will be ready for whatever style of game shows up on the ice.

“We have played tight games with them so far this year as both teams have great discipline and speed,” noted Heenan. “I kind of expect that pattern to continue but who knows, with the talent on the ice for both sides, a special teams game could be an 8-6 final.”

Utica hosts Wilkes at The Aud on Saturday night with a 7 PM puck drop to decide the UCHC champion and auto-bid to the NCAA tournament.

Brockport’s Romeo, Cortland’s Durante, Geneseo’s Morgan honored with top SUNYAC men’s hockey awards for 2021-22 season

Cortland goalie Luca Durante forged a successful season between the pipes this season (photo: Darl Zehr Photography).

The SUNYAC announced Thursday the 2022 men’s hockey top awards which are nominated and voted on by the conference coaches.

The honors include the Herb Hammond Player of the Year, defensive player of the year, goaltender of the year, and rookie of the year.

Brockport’s Ryan Romeo is a co-player of the year and defensive player of the year, while Cortland’s Luca Durante is co-player of the year and top goalie, and Geneseo’s Peter Morgan is the conference’s best rookie.

Romeo leads the league with 25 assists and is second with 37 points and added 13 blocks. He was honored as the SUNYAC player of the week twice this season. The Golden Eagles’ season came to an end with a loss against Geneseo in the SUNYAC semifinals to finish the season 14-11-2 overall.

Durante finished the season with a league-leading .941 save percentage and is third with a 2.09 GAA. He totaled the most saves in the league with 738 and had a season high of 45 saves at Brockport on Feb. 5. Cortland’s postseason came to an end after falling to Oswego in the SUNYAC men’s ice hockey semifinals on the road to finish the season 15-10-2 overall. Durante also earned SUNYAC goaltender of the week honors four times during the 2021-22 season.

Morgan will enter the SUNYAC final with 40 points, tallying 16 goals and 24 assists, including four game-winning goals. He also recorded his first hat trick at a non-conference game vs. Lebanon Valley on Jan. 14. Morgan was honored as the SUNYAC rookie of the week two times this season.

Morgan and the Knights will look to win their fourth-straight SUNYAC title Saturday as they host Oswego in the final at 7 p.m.

Division I Women’s Hockey: Conference tournament picks

The NCAA Selection Show is at 9 pm eastern on ESPNews. Before then, we have to find out who receives the conference auto-bids and how the Pairwise will shake out. The CHA already completed their tournament last weekend. Syracuse took the title and is waiting to find out where they’ll play. The NEWHA tournament finishes up this weekend, but they don’t yet have an auto-bid. Beyond finding the winners, there could be a decent amount of movement in the Pairwise, as just 0.0134 separates fourth spot Wisconsin from eighth place Minnesota Duluth. In practical terms, that’s the difference between hosting a quarterfinal and having to play in an opening-round game. That’s a lot at stake.

ECAC

Princeton vs. Yale

The Tigers are the Cinderella team in this bunch. They already pulled a massive upset on Harvard in the quarterfinals and are one of just two unranked teams still in the running for a title and the NCAA tournament. In Harvard’s defense, Princeton is likely the most talented eighth seed there’s ever been. The ECAC was incredibly deep this year.

Princeton suffered a bit this year with Sarah Fillier off becoming an international superstar at the Olympics. It took them some time to figure out who they were as a team and be confident in that and the ECAC was far too strong to allow for them to catch up. The Tigers have been building and seem to have hit their peak at the absolute perfect time. Rachel McQuigge has been a solid presence in net for them all year and gave the skaters the chance to get things right. Now the team seems to have combined the strong defense with creative offense and that makes them a tough matchup for Yale.

The Bulldogs were building to a season like this for the past few seasons, which made losing last season that much tougher to swallow. But they picked up where they left off and set a program record for wins this season. Everything has been elevated at Yale over the past few seasons and I don’t think their place in the national polls or among the best of the conference is a one-off here. I believe coach Mark Bolding has created a program that can continue to compete at a national level.

I love an underdog story and chaos, plus I think things look different for a team that can play with the freedom of having nothing to lose. I’m picking Princeton here, but I’m guessing it’ll be close.

Quinnipiac vs. Colgate

Quinnipiac cruised through the opening part of the season, getting as high as fourth in the rankings. The second half has been tougher for them and there have been some head-scratching stumbles, but they dispatched rivals Clarkson in convincing fashion in the quarterfinal and see to have shaken off what happened to close out the regular season.

Similarly, Colgate was among the best teams in the country through the new year. They were seemingly scoring goals at will and had a number of players among the scoring leaders in the country. They were averaging more than five goals a game and frankly, it’s hard to lose when you put up that much offense. Things have slowed down since then, but the same players that were leading the nation in scoring are the ones scoring in overtime and making big plays in tough games. Dara Grieg has been a huge gain for Raiders. The former Wisconsin skater was looking for more ice time and has absolutely made the most of the opportunity with the Raiders.

The Raiders are big and physical and I like how their style matches up against Quinnipiac’s quick transition and attempts to move the puck up the ice. I expect a tough game. Both teams need to be smart and disciplined so that special teams don’t decide the outcome.

I’m not sure who to pick here, but am going to lean on Colgate’s offensive firepower and size to take the win.

Hockey East

Connecticut vs. Northeastern

Connecticut easily dispatched Vermont 3-1 in the semifinal in a game that I thought would be much closer to make the title game. They’ve also defeated and tied Northeastern already this season. They know the other Huskies aren’t infallible and have done a good job of getting pucks past Aerin Frankel.

Northeastern took the final game against UConn on the last day of the regular season 5-0. When NU is on, they can be tough to defend. They had three women named to the Patty Kazmaier top-10 list and one of them wasn’t team leading scorer Maureen Murphy, who actually leads the nation in goals scored.

I was surprised to see a closer game than I thought we’d get from Northeastern and Maine in the semifinal and that leads me to think Connecticut has as much a chance to take this title game. NU is not unbeatable and I think UConn has a decent shot of doing it here. My gut says Northeastern picks it up in a championship game, so I’m picking them, but will ne completely unsurprised if Connecticut pulls it off. Can I just pick the Huskies and leave it at that?

NEWHA

Sacred Heart at Franklin Pierce

Franklin Pierce won three of the four games these teams played this season, but Sacred Heart’s win came just a week ago in the second-to-last game of the regular season. The Ravens needed to beat SHU in the final game to take the league championship and did so. Franklin Pierce had an 11 game win streak in the second half and is home to the conference Goalie of the Year in Suzette Faucher.

Sacred Heart had a backloaded schedule in the second half and weren’t as successful navigating it as they’d have liked. But they are an experienced team with a number of seniors who will be looking to go out on a high. They have NEWHA Player of the Year Anna Klein and will be looking to use a strong offense to out-gun the Ravens.

With the season-series win and strong showing in the second half, it’s hard to pick against Franklin Pierce here.

Saint Anselm vs. LIU

Saint Anselm started slow, but steadily climbed out of that hole as the season progressed to end up third in the conference. NEWHA Rookie of the Year Tyra Turner has 14 goals and 14 assists on the season and is always a thread to light the lamp.

LIU looked like the might have the conference sewn up early, not losing in their first ten games against NEWHA opponents, but ended the season tied with Franklin Pierce and lost on the tiebreaker. The Sharks bring a lot of experience, not just in seasons played, but in the postseason.

I think LIU’s offense strengths and postseason experience carry them to the finals.

WCHA

Wisconsin vs. Ohio State

On the one hand, Ohio State full on dominated the Badgers in Columbus just a couple of weeks ago. I’m not certain there’s a scarier team out there than the Buckeyes right now. The already stellar team really seems to have locked in as the postseason approached and have showcased a wide variety of offensive threats combined with very good goaltending to make them look virtually unbeatable. They feature some of the very best special teams in the country, making it even more difficult to find any advantage on them.

While OSU has had things come together even more in the closing weeks, it’s been much the opposite for Wisconsin. They have been playing with a thin bench for much of the year thanks to season-ending injuries to Kendra Nealey and Marianne Picard and put just 15 skaters on the ice when they visited Ohio State. But even that doesn’t account for how scrambled the Badgers looked. The team definitely looked more like the team from earlier in the season in their series with Bemidji State in the quarterfinals, but at this point it’s unclear with Wisconsin squad will take the ice on Saturday.

They are still a team who lost just six games this year – two to Ohio State, three to Minnesota and one to Minnesota Duluth. But they have a habit of starting slow, something Ohio State will not let them get away with unscathed, and the thin defense has become more of an issue as the season has worn on. The Badgers are simply giving up too many turnovers that turn into points and a team like Ohio State is going to expose that.

I think this will be closer than it might seem based on their series two weeks ago, but I do think Ohio State comes out the winner.

Minnesota Duluth vs. Minnesota

Minnesota gets to play at home and is on a nine-game winning streak. They seem to have returned to form as the kind of Gophers squad longtime women’s hockey fans are used to seeing in Minneapolis but hadn’t gotten a glimpse of in the past few seasons. Taylor Heise is a huge key to this game – in order to beat the Gophers, teams have to keep her contained, but not overcommit to only stopping her and her linemates. There are other scorers on this team, but there does seem to be some correlation to how well the team plays and how well Heise performs. She’s not just the offensive leader of the team – she’s the heart of it, as well.

Minnesota Duluth has been all over the polls this year, but their position has fluctuated. What the Bulldogs have is the x-factor in Elizabeth Giguere. That’s not to say that Gabbie Hughes, Anna Klein and the rest of the roster aren’t major factors in UMD’s run to this point, but there’s only a small handful of players that one would want to have the puck in a do or die situation and Giguere is one of them. Her calm but deadly handling of the puck to score the game winner in game three of the quarterfinals is the stuff of goalie nightmares

These two teams seem to match up evenly when they hit the ice, no matter what their respective records or stats say. It’s probably Minnesota’s game to lose, but there is no limit to the impact Giguere has in elimination games.

This Week in NCHC Hockey: Surging, confident Omaha squad readying for conference playoffs looking to make ‘special things happen’

Jack Randl and Omaha have won three of their last four games (photo: Mark Kuhlmann).

It was an unseasonably warm Wednesday afternoon in Omaha — 75 degrees, on March 2 — when Mavericks coach Mike Gabinet spoke about a UNO team that seems to be heating up.

Six points back in the NCHC standings from fourth-place Minnesota Duluth, UNO (20-14) is all but assured of a road trip for the first round of the conference playoffs. The Mavericks are also on the outside looking in with regards to the PairWise Rankings, listed 21st and in need of a significant push if they are to reach the NCAA tournament for a second-consecutive season.

They might be starting to peak at a good time, though. Two losses Feb. 11-12 at last-place Miami stung, but UNO then swept No. 8 St. Cloud State at home. After that, last weekend, the Mavericks split a home series with third-ranked Denver.

A three-goal first period Friday propelled UNO to a 5-1 win over the Pioneers. Ty Mueller scored twice in that first period, on the eve of his 19th birthday, to help secure a seventh 20-win season in the 25-year history of the Mavericks hockey program.

UNO lost Saturday’s rematch, 5-2. Joey Abate and Taylor Ward put the hosts up 2-0 before Denver scored five unanswered goals, including four in the third period.

“We were up 2-1 against Denver with 10 minutes left, and you can’t give that team those power-play chances,” Gabinet said, referencing three special-teams goals in a span of 9:54 from Denver’s Carter Savoie, Mike Benning and Cameron Wright.

“But our guys have been playing well. Even before last weekend, we weren’t getting the results, but we were really strong on the Friday in North Dakota and have been doing a lot of good things.”

Gabinet felt that a 4-1 loss to UND on Feb. 4 wasn’t indicative of how the Mavericks played, and the same went for the Mavericks’ two defeats at Miami. The RedHawks have had UNO’s number this season, though, taking three of the teams’ four meetings.

“I didn’t think we were terrible against Miami, and people have to give them some credit, too,” Gabinet said. “They’re in the NCHC, and if they’re in another conference, their record’s not what it is.

“That Friday night (a 5-4 Miami win) was like 42 minutes of special teams, and they had three power-play goals in a game that could’ve gone either way, and on the Saturday (a 4-2 Miami win), there were a couple of fluke goals, and anything could happen. It wasn’t so much a reset after Miami, but just sticking with it. We just had to keep believing, keep working and keep showing up.”

Two more opportunities come this Friday and Saturday, when UND visits Baxter Arena on the last weekend of the regular season. The Fighting Hawks only need a split from the series in order to clinch the NCHC’s regular-season title.

Gabinet isn’t thinking about that. Instead, he is eager to see his team finish its six-game homestand strong, in the latest installment of an always-eventful rivalry.

“(UND coach) Brad (Berry) and I have got to get together and maybe ask the league that we don’t have to play each other at the end of the season all the time because it’s usually a pretty physical series,” Gabinet said.

“Everyone wants to go into the playoffs on a good note, but we’re preparing like we do for any other week in the NCHC, just giving ourselves a chance for success. I like our team, and we’re just continuing to grow and get better.

“The belief in the locker room is apparent, and everyone’s committed to the program, to getting better and to accountability. The personal responsibility just continues to grow, and when you see the guys taking responsibility for themselves, that’s when special things happen, and that’s the direction I feel our group is going.”

Ten finalists, including 2021 winner Frankel, named for 2022 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award as top women’s D-I college hockey player

Northeastern goalie Aerin Frankel makes a save in the 2021 national championship game against Wisconsin (photo: Northeastern Athletics).

The USA Hockey Foundation unveiled Thursday the 10 finalists for the 2022 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award today.

The honor, which began 25 years ago in 1998, is presented annually to the top player in NCAA Division I women’s ice hockey.

The finalists (in alphabetical order) are as follows:

Skylar Fontaine Defense, Graduate Student, Northeastern
Aerin Frankel, Goaltender, Graduate Student, Northeastern
Élizabeth Giguére, Forward, Fifth-Year Senior, Minnesota Duluth
Taylor Heise, Forward, Senior, Minnesota
Gabbie Hughes, Forward, Senior, Minnesota Duluth
Sophie Jaques, Defense, Senior, Ohio State
Alina Mueller, Forward, Senior, Northeastern
Casey O’Brien, Forward, Sophomore, Wisconsin
Theresa Schafzahl, Forward, Senior, Vermont
Daryl Watts, Forward, Fifth-Year Senior, Wisconsin

The selection process commenced earlier this month when NCAA Division I women’s ice hockey coaches were asked to nominate players for the award. Players who were nominated by multiple coaches were then placed on an official ballot, which was returned to the coaches to vote for the 10 finalists.

The three finalists, including the recipient of the 2022 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, will be chosen by a 13-person selection committee made up of NCAA Division I women’s ice hockey coaches, representatives of print and broadcast media, and an at-large member and representative of USA Hockey, the national governing body for the sport of ice hockey in the United States. The top-three finalists are expected to be announced on Thursday, March 17.

The presentation of the award is scheduled for Saturday, March 26. More details around the unveiling will be available soon.

Frankel won the 2021 Kazmaier Award.

St. Lawrence’s Morgan wins second straight ECAC Hockey women’s goalie of the year award

St. Lawrence goalie Lucy Morgan is now a two-time goalie of the year winner in ECAC Hockey (photo: C A Hill Photo).

ECAC Hockey announced Thursday that the women’s goalie of the year is St. Lawrence junior Lucy Morgan.

This is the second straight season that Morgan has earned this honor, making her the first back-to-back recipient since 2012-13 when Clarkson’s Erica Howe accomplished the feat.

“Lucy works so hard at being the best goalie she can be,” said SLU coach Chris Wells in a statement. “She constantly evaluates her play and makes adjustments. She is one of the main reasons for our team’s success this year and belongs in the conversation as the best goalie in college hockey.”

Morgan was the anchor of a St. Lawrence squad that earned the No. 7 seed in the league playoffs, boasting a 10-7-4 record in ECAC Hockey games she started. She ranked in the top five in several statistical categories, including save percentage (.948, first), GAA (1.48, fifth), saves (568, second), and wins (10, fourth).

Of her 31 total starts, five were shutouts and 17 were outings where she allowed one goal or less.

Morgan was tested often in 2021-22, making 20 or more saves 31 times, 30 or more nine times, and 40 or more three times. She also had one 50-save outing, stopping 50 of 53 shots against nationally-ranked Harvard on Feb. 14 to lead the Saints to a 3-3 tie.

Morgan is also a finalist for the 2022 ECAC Hockey Player of the Year award, which will be announced tomorrow.

College Hockey America unanimously reinstates Robert Morris women’s team for 2023-24 season

The College Hockey America Board of Directors has voted unanimously to reinstate former member Robert Morris.

Robert Morris’ reinstatement as a full member is effective immediately. The Colonials will return to competition in the CHA at the start of the 2023-24 season.

“On behalf of the College Hockey America Board of Directors, I want to welcome Robert Morris University back to the CHA,” CHA commissioner Robert DeGregorio said in a statement. “We’re excited to have RMU back in the conference and look forward to seeing the Colonials on the ice competing in the CHA in 2023-24.”

The reinstatement follows a Dec. 17, 2021 decision by Robert Morris administration and the school’s board of trustees to reverse a previous announcement on May 26, 2021 that it was eliminating its men’s and women’s hockey programs. Following the reinstatement of its program, RMU applied for readmittance to the CHA earlier this year and that request was granted with the board’s recent vote.

“We couldn’t be more excited to be rejoining a conference in the CHA that we’re both familiar with and have had success in,” RMU VP and director of athletics Chris King noted. “I’d like to thank CHA commissioner Robert DeGregorio for providing us the opportunity to rejoin the league as well as for his support throughout the last year. His leadership and vision for the league made it natural for us when we reinstated our programs and were looking for a conference home. We’re looking forward to reigniting the rivalries we established when we originally competed in the CHA.”

Robert Morris will use the 2022-23 season to prepare for returning to the ice in 2023-24. The school has already announced the hiring of former RMU associate head coach Logan Bittle as the program’s next head coach. The process of hiring of assistant coaches and support staff and recruitment of student-athletes is ongoing.

“It’s great to be back in the CHA,” Bittle said. “It has been home to our program since our inception. We’ve seen the league grow to where it is today and we’re excited to jump back in and help continue to grow the league well into the future.”

Robert Morris was a member of the CHA from 2005 to 2021, compiling an overall record of 239-248-57 (.492) and a CHA mark of 124-117-34 (.513) during that span. The Colonials won three CHA regular-season titles (2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19) and three CHA postseason titles (2012, 2017, 2021) during their first run in the conference.

This Week in Big Ten Hockey: Looking at why each Big Ten team will win the postseason tournament, and why each team won’t

Drew DeRidder has been a workhorse in the Michigan State net this season (photo: Rich Gagnon).

The Big Ten playoffs start this weekend, and here are reasons for and against each team winning the championship and getting the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.

Michigan

Why the Wolverines will win the tournament: Michigan failed to take its name off the list of teams to never win a Big Ten regular season title, but the Wolverines are still one of, if not the most, talented teams in the country. Even though they missed out on the first-round bye and could have to travel for a championship game, the Wolverines are still a strong pick.

Why they won’t: Erik Portillo has been very good this year, but there’s been games where Michigan has forced him to be very good. Notre Dame showed last weekend that Michigan is a beatable team when you can frustrate its offense. The same can be said for most teams, but playoffs tend to bring closer and lower-scoring games that don’t exactly suit Michigan’s style of play.

Michigan State

Why the Spartans will win the tournament: Anything can happen, right? With the 50th-ranked offense in the country, Michigan State probably isn’t going to outgun anyone at this point. Both Drew DeRidder and Pierce Charleson have played well at points this season in goal, so for Michigan State to shock the college hockey world whoever is in net will probably have to steal four games.

Why they won’t: The Spartans may have won their last game, but they dropped the 13 before that. It’s possible for an underdog to catch fire in a win-or-go-home tournament, but to get to that stage Michigan state needs to take two of three games from Michigan on the road. The Wolverines blew out MSU in three of the four contests between the two this season, winning 7-2, 3-2, 6-2 and 7-3.

Minnesota

Why the Gophers will win the tournament: Minnesota manufactured an eight-game winning streak to end the regular season, so the Gophers definitely deserve the first-round bye. After splitting most of their series in the first half of the season the Gophers seemed to have found another gear in the second half and are truly playing their best hockey at the most opportune time of the season.

Why they won’t: Justen Close has been more than solid for the Gophers since taking over when Jack LaFontaine departed, but will that continue when teams get their second look at the junior goaltender? With video from 14 starts now out there for opponents to view, opponents may be able to able to spot a few different ways to potentially beat Minnesota’s new starter.

Notre Dame

Why the Fighting Irish will win the tournament: There’s been a blip here and there, but Notre Dame has been one of the stronger teams in the conference and country in the second half. The Irish capped things off by denying Michigan a conference title last weekend. Notre Dame has always posted solid defensive numbers but the addition of a top-10 offense this year has added another element to its game.

Why they won’t: Those blips can’t happen in a tournament. Losses to RIT, Niagara, Michigan State and Wisconsin show that Notre Dame can have some off nights. For their success against Michigan this year, going 4-0, the Irish struggled with Minnesota and went 1-3 against the Gophers.

Ohio State

Why the Buckeyes will win the tournament: Ohio State might be better than the team that dropped its final four games. Finishing fourth might seem like a letdown after being near the top not that long ago, but the Buckeyes still over-achieved this season. If they were able to get healthy and regroup during the off week, I don’t think anyone would be surprised to see Ohio State win the tournament.

Why they won’t: The Buckeyes might just be the team that dropped their final four game. Sitting 13th in the Pairwise and needing to win more games to get into a NCAA tournament position could weigh on a team that’s on the younger side, too.

Penn State

Why the Nittany Lions will win the tournament: The season obviously didn’t go as planned for Penn State, but it can still point to some impressive wins over North Dakota and Minnesota. Confidence is a funny thing and with a team that likes to get up and down the ice, a little bit of success could snowball into something bigger.

Why they won’t: It’s a tall order for Penn State and, looking back at the regular season, there’s not a lot of reason for hope. Ohio State went 3-0-1 against the Nittany Lions this year and outscored them 17-5 in those contests. If PSU does get past the Buckeyes the likely opponents would be Minnesota, Michigan or Notre Dame, who it went 1-11 against this year.

Wisconsin

Why the Badgers will win the tournament: There’s a few key names missing, but there’s still a lot of players on this team that won the Big Ten regular season crown last year and made it to the conference tournament championship game. Experience doesn’t necessarily mean that they have a shot at making another run this year, but it’s something.

Why they won’t: You shouldn’t base an entire perception of a team off its most recent performance, but the Badgers didn’t look like a team that was primed for any sort of playoff run last weekend in Minneapolis.

Previewing No. 4 North Dakota at No. 20 Omaha with Fighting Hawks’ head coach Brad Berry: Game of the Week college hockey podcast Season 4 Episode 18

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by North Dakota head coach Brad Berry to preview the No. 4 Fighting Hawks at No. 20 Omaha.

Also previewed are four other matchups to be featured in USCHO’s Bettor’s Edge column this week:

• No. 10 St. Cloud State at No. 11 Minnesota Duluth

• No. 9 UMass at Boston College

• No. 16 UMass Lowell at New Hampshire

• Penn State at No. 12 Ohio State

This podcast is sponsored by DCU – Digital Federal Credit Union – at dcu.org.

Subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Oles, Auggies advance to MIAC hockey tournament championship game

St. Olaf is headed to its first MIAC title game in a decade. Photo courtesy of Hannah Robb, St. Olaf Athletics

Augsburg is exactly where it expected to be, headed to the MIAC tournament final for the fifth time in the last six seasons.

The top-seeded Auggies clinched their spot with a 7-0 win over Bethel Wednesday night.

St. Olaf, meanwhile, seemed like the unlikely team to reach the title game, especially being the seventh seed in the tourney. But the Oles will get their championship shot for the first time in a decade after winning 3-1 over Saint John’s Wednesday.

The Auggies, ranked fourth in the nation in the DCU/USCHO NCAA Division III men’s poll, and Oles, now meet Saturday night at Augsburg for the right to punch an automatic ticket to the NCAA tournament.

Auggies dominate Royals

Augsburg (24-3) scored the first five goals of the game, including three in the second period, and never looked back against the Royals (15-11-1). Fritz Belisle fueled the attack as he scored four goals, the first three coming in the first 23 minutes of the game. He scored two of those goals off the power play and finished with three power-play goals in all.

Belisle pushed his season total to 16 and Wednesday’s game was his fourth multi-goal game of the year. It’s his first collegiate hat trick.

The Auggies outshot the Royals 42-7 and Keenan Lund dished out three assists. Samuel Vyletelka recorded the fifth shutout of his career and won his 10th game of the the year. 

Augsburg swept St. Olaf in the regular season, winning 3-2 in overtime and 7-1. If it were to get upset by the Oles, the Auggies would still have a shot at an at-large bid based on its position (No. 2) in the latest D-III PairWise rankings.

Oles pull off another upset

After taking down second-seeded Concordia over the weekend, the Oles took care of business against the third-seeded Johnnies and now aim for their first MIAC title since 2006. This is only the second time the Oles have played for the MIAC crown.

Tyler Cooper scored the game-winning goal at the 7:20 mark of the third period as the Oles (10-14-3) punched their ticket to the final for the first time since 2012.

Cooper scored off the power play less than two minutes after the Johnnies tied the game at 1-1. Noah Heisler’s empty-net goal finished off the night for the Oles. Jonathan Young also scored a goal for St. Olaf.

Luke Haugen came through with 33 saves.

Interestingly enough, the last time the Oles won a MIAC title, they beat Saint John’s 3-2 in the semifinal round. Wednesday’s win over the Johnnies (17-8-2) comes exactly 16 years later.

Endicott’s O’Brien a dual CCC winner, picking up conference player, goalie of year awards for ’21-22 campaign

Conor O’Brien was a wall in the Endicott crease this season (photo: Endicott Athletics).

The Commonwealth Coast Conference recently announced its 2021-22 all-conference teams and major award winners.

Voting for the all-CCC teams and major awards was conducted by the eight CCC men’s head coaches following the conclusion of the regular season.

Endicott goaltender Conor O’Brien took home two major awards as he was voted both CCC Player of the Year and CCC Goaltender of the Year. His teammate Andrew Kurapov earned rookie of the year recognition. Meanwhile, Suffolk’s Joe Feeney was selected as the CCC Scholar-Athlete. University of New England’s Kevin Swallow was named CCC Coach of the Year and Western New England won the team sportsmanship award.

O’Brien was nearly unbeatable for Endicott this season going 17-5-1 in goal, including a 14-4-1 mark in conference play. He was one of the best goaltenders in all of NCAA Division III, leading the nation in save percentage at .949 and finishing the regular season with the division’s second-lowest GAA at 1.38. The first-time CCC Player of the Year honoree and second-time CCC Goaltender of the Year posted four shutouts this season and allowed more than two goals only twice. He also had six games with 30-plus saves. During the regular season O’Brien was recognized as the CCC Goaltender of the Week six times (weeks ending Nov. 14, Nov. 28 Dec. 5, Jan. 16, Feb. 6, and Feb. 13).

Kurapov made quite an impact in his rookie season for Endicott, becoming the team’s leading scorer with 12 goals, 12 assists, and 24 points. His goal total ranked him third in the conference. Kurapov also had a flare for timely goalscoring, recording four game-winners to rank second in the conference. There were only six games this season in which the Gulls forward failed to register a point. He was honored by the conference during the week ending Feb. 20 as he was selected as the CCC Rookie of the Week.

Feeney is a graduate student working towards his MBA after completing his bachelor’s in finance last May with a 3.936 GPA. He has been a staple on Suffolk’s team, serving as a two-time captain. Throughout his career Feeney has collected a number of academic accolades including being named an ACHA Krampade All-American Scholar three times and being named to the CCC and NEHC All-Academic Teams. He was also a member of Suffolk’s 4.0 Club in the Spring of 2019 and is a seven-time AD Honor Roll selection.

Swallow was selected as the CCC Coach of the Year for the first time after leading the University of New England to the CCC regular-season championship with a 17-3-1 (1-0 OT, 1-0 SO) conference record and an 18-3-1 record overall. His Nor’easters currently sit at No. 11 nationally in the DCU/USCHO Division III Men’s Poll. Swallow’s team featured one of the top offensive units in the division, ranking seventh at 4.36 goals per game. UNE’s power play unit was also the best in the conference, taking advantage of 25 percent of their man-up opportunities. The team also was strong on the penalty kill, ranking second with an 89.2 kill percentage.

FIRST TEAM ALL-CCC
F – Jake Fuss, Jr., University of New England
F – Timmy Kent, Jr., Curry
F – Mitch Walinski, Jr., Salve Regina
D – Liam Darcy, Sr., University of New England
D – Spencer Stanley, Jr., Salve Regina
G – Conor O’Brien, Sr., Endicott

SECOND TEAM ALL-CCC
F – Andrew Kurapov, So., Endicott
F – Austin Morgan, Sr., University of New England
F – Kevin Obssuth, Jr., Wentworth
D – Eric Manoukian, Jr., Endicott
D – Kalle Sundell, Sr., Curry
G – Nicholas Latinovich, Gr., Salve Regina

THIRD TEAM ALL-CCC
F – Seth Benson, So., Salve Regina
F – Curtis Carlson, Sr., Nichols
F – Jared Christy, Jr., University of New England
F – Zach Mazur, Jr., Endicott
D – Chris Jones, Gr., University of New England
D – Shane Miller, So., Western New England
G – Billy Girard IV, So., University of New England

This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Previewing the opening round of AHA conference tournament

RIT captain Will Calverley looks to get a shot past Air Force goalie Alex Schilling in the Tigers’ 3-2 overtime win Feb. 25 in Colorado Springs (photo: Air Force Athletics).

When the dust settled on the 2021-22 Atlantic Hockey regular season, we were left with the following seedings for the upcoming AHA tournament:

1. American International
2. Canisius
3. Army West Point
4. Rochester Institute of Technology
5. Sacred Heart
6. Air Force
7. Mercyhurst
8. Niagara
9. Bentley
10. Holy Cross

Army West Point and RIT tied for third in points, but the Black Knights get the higher seed due to a 2-1-1 head-to-head record against the Tigers.

The top six seeds receive a bye into the quarterfinals; the top four will host those quarterfinals.

That means the Atlantic Hockey tournament looks like this:

First Round
Best-of-three series
March 4-6
No. 10 Holy Cross at No. 7 Mercyhurst
No. 9 Bentley at No. 8 Niagara

Quarterfinal Round
Best-of-three series
March 11-13
No. 5 Sacred Heart at No. 4 RIT
No. 6 Air Force at No. 3 Army West Point
Lowest surviving seed from the first round at No. 1 American International
Other surviving seed from the first round at No. 2 Canisius

Championship
March 18-19 at Adirondack Bank Center, Utica, N.Y.
March 18
Semifinals
March 19
Championship

The highest level of drama was supplied by Sacred Heart and Army West Point last Saturday. The Pioneers staged a ferocious comeback to erase a 6-2 Black Knights lead in the third period. Tied at 6-6 and needing a regulation win to have a chance at fourth place and home ice in the quarterfinals, Sacred Heart coach C.J. Marottolo pulled goalie Josh Benson for an extra attacker in the closing minutes.

Neither team scored again in regulation or overtime, and SHU prevailed in the shootout, but it was not enough to lift the Pioneers into fourth place. They’ll travel to RIT for the quarterfinals.

Previewing the first round

Holy Cross at Mercyhurst
This matchup features two of the hottest teams in the conference. The Lakers (12-18-4) have won five of their last six games, including last weekend’s sweep of Canisius.

Holy Cross (12-21-2) is playing its best hockey of the season, with six of its 12 wins this season coming in the final month of the season.

The teams met four times in the regular season, with Mercyhurst holding a 2-1-1 advantage.

Bentley at Niagara
It’s been a tale of two seasons for the Falcons (12-18-2), who were 10-7 in the 2021 portion of the schedule, but 2-11-2 so far in 2022. Bentley is winless in its last 11 games.

Niagara (11-20-3) is winless in its last five outings but is coming off a weekend series with AIC that saw the Purple Eagles take three points from the regular season champs with a shootout victory and an overtime loss. Those points were important because they moved Niagara one point ahead of Bentley in the standings, and that’s why these games are at Niagara as opposed to Bentley.

The teams previously met in early February, with Niagara taking both games.

Awards season

It’s that time of the year where the league hands out awards and announces its all-league and all-rookie teams. We’ll be handing out our kudos as well over our final three columns of the season.

Let’s start with the rookies. He are our picks:

F: Clayton Cosentino, Air Force
F: Shane Ott, Niagara
F: Carter Wilkie, RIT
D: Mitchell Digby, Air Force
D: Luis Linder, AIC
G: Tommy Scarfone, RIT

An honorable mention goes to Army West Point goaltender Gavin Abric, who is technically a sophomore but saw zero action his rookie season, backing up All-American Trevin Kozlowski. Abric won the starting job early this season and has posted a league-best .927 save percentage.

Former St. Scholastica hockey coach Moore cited for major NCAA infractions

MOORE

Former St. Scholastica men’s hockey head coach Kevin Moore committed NCAA violations when he provided impermissible benefits consisting of loans for off-campus housing accommodations and a meal to multiple student-athletes, the NCAA announced Wednesday, though Moore was not cited by name but was coach of the Saints during the time frame of the violations.

The now-former head coach also engaged in impermissible out-of-season activity by attending voluntary athletic activities and discussing hockey strategy in out-of-season meetings. The Division III Committee on Infractions determined that these were major violations and further support the agreed-upon head coach responsibility violation.

Moore resigned as Saints coach in August 2021.

This case was resolved through the cooperative summary disposition process, in which all involved parties agree to the facts and violations set forth. St. Scholastica and the former head coach accepted the penalties, and neither party may appeal.

The committee prescribed the following penalties and corrective measures: two years of probation, a $2,500 fine, and a one-year show-cause order for Moore. During that period, any NCAA member school employing him must require him to attend the 2022 NCAA Regional Rules Seminar at his own expense.

The school must undergo an outside audit of its athletics policies and procedures, with emphasis on policies relating to international student-athlete matriculation.

St. Scholastica self-imposed the following penalties: suspended Moore for three games during the 2020-21 season, suspended Moore from eight practices during the remaining segment of the 2020-21 academic year and before the end of the regular season and prohibited Moore from being present in the arena during open ice sessions.

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