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This Week in the ECAC: October 24, 1997

In Boston, ECAC preseason conference favorite RPI was shellacked by the Hockey East preseason number-one, Boston University, by a score of 6-0.

This week, more teams get into the swing of things, including the first "real" games for St. Lawrence and Union.

J.C. Penney Classic St. Lawrence (0-0-0) vs. Colorado College (0-0-0) Friday, 5 pm, Alfond Arena, Orono, ME St. Lawrence (0-0-0) vs. Maine (1-1-0)/St. Thomas (0-0-0) Saturday, 4/7 pm, Alfond Arena, Orono, ME

The Saints have a great forward in Paul DiFrancesco, one of the early favorites for ECAC Player of the Year. "He brings everything on can ask," said head coach Joe Marsh. "He can put points on the board, and he’s a great leader."

"DiFran," as he is known, returns as the leading scorer for the Saints, and has some great linemates in Derek Ladouceur and Bob Prier. That combination should be good for upwards of 100 points this season.

On defense, the Saints have some holes to fill between the pipes. Clint Owen’s departure for Nashville of the Central League leaves junior walk-on Eric Heffler as the only SLU netminder with collegiate experience.

Therefore, Marsh will look to one of his freshmen — Jeremy Symington or Sean Coakley — to fill the void, or to platoon with Heffler.

On the other side of the ice, the Colorado College Tigers have one of the preseason favorites for WCHA Player of the Year in Brian Swanson, one of the best in the nation who is undoubtedly itching to get going in the regular season.

Joining him up front will be Toby Peterson, Darren Clark and Stewart Bodtker. On defense, Brian’s brother Scott, along with Calvin Elfring, will be the guys to look for. Meanwhile, in goal Jason Cugnet should see full-time duty.

For more on Colorado College, see USCHO’s WCHA preview.

The matchup in the Penney Classic is just the beginning of the schedule for the Saints, one which has them on the road for their first seven games. Following this tournament is a trip for two games at Miami, then a jaunt through Princeton and Yale to open the ECAC season, and a trip to crosstown rival Clarkson before the Saints open at home against RPI on Nov. 21.

"Hopefully we haven’t bitten off more than we can chew," said Marsh. "With this schedule, we’re faced with a tough road to begin the season."

PICK: St. Lawrence is headed there, but not yet. Nonetheless, the Saints pick up a third-place finish. Colorado College 5, St. Lawrence 3, and then St. Lawrence 6, St. Thomas 3

Clarkson (0-0-0) at Bowling Green (0-3-0) Friday – Saturday, 7 pm, BGSU Ice Arena, Bowling Green, OH

There are a lot of questions in Bowling Green these days. Buddy Powers is in the midst of a rough start to the season, and two losses this past weekend made it rougher.

There are trouble spots all over for Powers. Dave Faulkner, Dan Price and Doug Schueller were the offensive weapons this weekend, but otherwise there wasn’t much. To make matters worse, Marc Savard does not seem to be the answer in goal.

For more on Bowling Green, refer to the CCHA preview.

Clarkson lost a pair at the Ice Breaker two weeks ago, and the two weeks off have had the Golden Knights working on plenty of things. The offense did not play particularly well, the defense gave up a lot of goals, and the goaltender was less than stellar. That’s a lot of things.

The players who were expected to score produced in the second game against Boston University, players such as Chris Clark, Buddy Wallace and Yan Turgeon. The Knights need to find scoring from other places, though; perhaps freshman Erik Cole’s debut this weekend will give the them another scoring dimension.

The defense — Clarkson’s strongest suit — should continue to persevere.

"We’re big on defense," said head coach Mark Morris. "We certainly have some intelligent puckhandlers."

Dan Murphy will have to rebound from the peppering he received from Wisconsin, because he is one of the keys to the Knights’ season, and he’s expected to take the Knights to the next level.

PICK: Clarkson’s firepower is too much for the Falcons, even on the road. The Knights rebound and the Falcons remain winless. Clarkson sweeps, 6-2 and 5-1

Union (0-0-0) at Providence (0-0-0) Saturday, 7 pm, Schneider Arena, Providence, RI

They have been referred to as the "Dirty Dozen," the 13 returnees for the Union Skating Dutchmen. They begin life anew this weekend in Providence. The Dutchmen lost 13 players as well, producing a team that will likely look totally different from last season.

"There’s a potential for 75 percent of our forwards to be freshmen right now," said head coach Stan Moore. "And you have the hope of two defensemen catching on, and doing well to replace four seniors. So, yes, there’s very little time for them to ease into the situation."

Moore continues to preach his "process," and with so many new faces, it’s important that they catch on quickly.

"We’re trying to do a lot of the little things that we did last year with our returners," said Moore. "We’re hoping that some of the adrenaline, and some of the youthful exuberance comes to the forefront and gets them to the things we want them to do right away. We hope they’re going to answer the bell…they need to play like sophomores."

One of his key returnees is goaltender Trevor Koenig, the leader in the nation last year in goals-against average (2.03) and save percentage (.931). Koenig is more than capable of winning the Dutchmen games, but Moore does not rely solely on that.

"It takes more than goaltending to win games," he said. "[Koenig is] one facet of our team, and he happens to be exceptional. We need to have the other things come into play to at least give him the chance to be exceptional."

The Dutchmen will take on Providence this weekend. The Friars have a lot of holes to fill, especially up front. Mike Omicioli leads the charge up front.

In goal, Mike Kane should be the netminder, but even after taking over midway through last season, he is a little inexperienced. The Friars are one of those rare teams that only has two seniors. Maybe next year will be a little better for them.

For more on Providence, refer to the Hockey East preview.

PICK: This is a tough call, but Koenig comes through for the youngsters. Union 2, Providence 1

Colgate (1-1-0) at Army (2-0-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Tate Rink, West Point, NY

The Red Raiders of Colgate pulled the upset of the young season by going into Yost Ice Arena and ending Michigan’s 36-game home unbeaten streak with a 2-1 victory. Colgate played tough the next evening: midway through the second period the game was tied 3-3, before Michigan took over to win 6-4.

"We came in with a game plan and stuck with it," said head coach Don Vaughn. "We really tried to plug up the middle of the rink. We were concerned about letting them freewheel. It was a great effort by our guys."

Sophomore Andy McDonald picked up ECAC Player of the Week honors for his game winning goal on Friday, and the first goal of the game on Saturday. In fact, all of the ECAC honors this week went to Red Raiders — Cory Murphy snared Rookie of the Week honors, and Dan Brenzavich was named Goaltender of the Week.

Brenzavich scored points in his bid for the number-one netminder’s spot with 23 saves in the win. Shep Harder played the next night and gave up six goals in a tough loss.

Vaughn was expecting his team to "take the ball and run with it" in terms of scoring, and his Raiders certainly did that. Five different players had goals and nine different players had points for Colgate this past weekend.

Meanwhile, the Cadets started their season last week with two victories over Findlay, 11-2 and 3-2. This week, the limited major Division I schedule begins for the Cadets.

Army will count on Greg Buckmeier to spark the offense. He had a career-high 44 points last season (17-27). But the junior will be missing his partner, Andy Lundbohm, the second leading scorer on the team last year with 19-27–46. Lundbohm is recovering from a wrist injury and is due back towards the end of November.

In goal, the Cadets have a solid senior in Daryl Chamberlai, who holds the Army record for most shutouts in a career with 13, and has a career 2.95 GAA to go with his 41 career wins.

The keys for the Cadets will be their offense, most notably the special teams, and the infusion of young players into the system.

"The improvement of our special teams, along with the development of our many young players will be the key to success this year," said head coach Rob Riley. "Many of our former junior varsity players and freshmen will have the opportunity to make an impact."

PICK: Colgate wins, but in a closer contest than some expect. Colgate 4, Army 3

No. 3 Boston University (1-0-0) at Vermont (0-1-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Gutterson Fieldhouse, Burlington, VT

Boston University looked like a team that could do no wrong against Rensselaer last weekend, and the Terriers took home the 6-0 victory.

Chris Drury added another goal and two assists to his numbers, as his line (with Tommi Degerman and Mike Sylvia) combined for nine points. Tom Poti added two more goals to his resume, showing why he is a legitimate All-America candidate.

Michel Larocque should get the nod this week in Burlington, and he hopes to match the performance that Tom Noble put up against Rensselaer.

For more on Boston University, refer to the Hockey East preview.

The Vermont Catamounts tried in vain to mount offense against UNH in their 5-1 loss last weekend, but could only manage a B.J. Kilbourne power-play goal with less than two minutes left in the game.

"It’s my third concern in terms of priority," said head coach Mike Gilligan about his forwards in the Vermont season preview. "We’ve got some good forwards coming up; we’re young, but we’ll be okay."

Judging by last weekend, perhaps the forwards should become a priority. Granted, the Catamounts were facing a national power in New Hampshire, but they only generated five shots in the second period and four shots in the third.

James Tierney got the call last weekend between the pipes, so one can expect to see either Andrew Allen or Marty Phillips in net against the Terriers this weekend.

Special teams is another area where the Cats look to improve. Vermont was shorthanded nine times, and allowed two power-play goals to UNH.

PICK: The Terriers looked unbeatable last weekend, and there’s no reason why their team speed shouldn’t do as well this week. Vermont is not the same team that it was last year. There’s work to be done in Burlington. Boston University 6, Vermont 2

UMass-Lowell (0-0-0) at RPI (0-1-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Houston Fieldhouse, Troy, NY

The Engineers had it handed to them at Walter Brown Arena last Friday evening, suffering a shutout, 6-0. Head coach Dan Fridgen made no excuses, but pointed to the two extra games that BU played in the Ice Breaker Invitational.

"You can practice for three months, but there’s nothing like playing in a game," he said. "And it certainly showed.

"We weren’t in game shape," he added. "It’s a tough situation to be in, rotating three lines in the first game of the season, and we could have used the extra bodies. It was tough on the guys. We didn’t have any game conditioning yet. As a coach there’s a real fine line [between] being a well-conditioned athlete and being a well-conditioned athlete in a game. The intensity in practice is not the same as being in a game.

"It’s not an excuse," he added. "We got outplayed, plain and simple."

The Engineers hope that another week of practice and some game conditioning will help them this week. The biggest factor is that RPI got to hit opponents instead of themselves. That’s a key to the Engineer team, what Fridgen calls "dictatin’ and inititatin’."

"You’ve got to take the body," he said. "We can’t be caught watching the puck instead of taking the body."

"We didn’t show up to play (against BU)," said Engineer forward Mark Murphy. "We’ve got a lot of work to do."

The object of the work is a game against the River Hawks of UMass-Lowell, who have won the last three contests between the two teams.

Greg Koehler, Chris Bell and Shannon Basaraba lead the offense for the ‘Hawks; Bell had two goals in last year’s 3-0 victory over the Engineers.

On defense, Mike Nicholishen is an All-America candidate and leads the charge in front of Martin Fillion, Lowell’s outstanding goaltender.

For more on UMass-Lowell, refer to the Hockey East preview.

PICK: RPI will rebound, and get the River Hawks coming off a Hockey East game. With the home opener coming for RPI, they get Dan Fridgen’s 50th career win. RPI 5, UMass-Lowell 2

ECAC exhibitions this weekend: Ryerson at Cornell Nothing secret here. Cornell in a 7-1 romp. Elmira at Princeton A Division III school at a Division I school, a good Division I school at that. Princeton rolls, 6-1.

Things heat up some more next weekend, with other ECAC teams getting into the action. Here is the schedule:

Friday, Oct. 31 Ohio State at Clarkson Vermont at Lake Superior State St. Lawrence at Miami (OH) Princeton at Nebraska-Omaha New Hampshire at RPI Northeastern at Colgate Dartmouth at Army

Saturday, Nov. 1 Ohio State at Clarkson Vermont at Lake Superior State St. Lawrence at Miami Princeton at Nebraska-Omaha RPI at Army Air Force at Yale Northeastern at Cornell Union at Merrimack

Sunday, Nov. 2 Union at UMass-Lowell

Thanks to Ken Schott of the Schenectady (N.Y.) Gazette for help on this article.

This Week in Hockey East: October 24, 1997

Except for two Friday night games — UMass-Lowell hosting UMass-Amherst and Northeastern traveling to Providence — the nonconference fare continues, led by the J.C. Penney Classic, which potentially pits No. 5 Colorado College and No. 6 Maine in the championship game.

Last week’s record in picks: 8-2 Season’s record in picks: 10-2

J.C. Penney Classic

No. 5 Colorado College (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) vs. St. Lawrence (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC)

No. 6 Maine (1-1-0, 0-0-0 HE) vs. St. Thomas University All games at Alfond Arena, Orono, ME Colorado College – St. Lawrence: Friday, 5:00 p.m. Maine – St. Thomas: Friday, 8:00 p.m. Consolation/Championship: Saturday, 4:00/7:00 p.m.

Last week, the visiting Maine Black Bears shocked Minnesota 6-1 in the opener of a two-game set. Although the Golden Gophers came back to salvage a split with a 3-2 win, Maine served notice that it is again one of the nation’s top teams.

"It’s a tough place to play," said Maine coach Shawn Walsh. "I’m just very pleased that we won one and put ourselves in a position to actually tie that second one late and just couldn’t get it done."

In the preseason, Walsh felt that Maine’s biggest question marks were on the blue line, following the departures of Jason Mansoff and Jeff Libby.

"We went with six [defensemen]: Shawn Mansoff and Brian White, David Cullen and Robert Ek, and Jason Price and Adam Tate," said Walsh. "They played very well. Adam Tate is just a terrific freshman defenseman. He’s playing the point on the power play, is killing penalties and taking a regular shift.

"And obviously, Alfie Michaud was terrific [in goal] all weekend. He’s started out where he left off last year."

Michaud earned Hockey East’s Karhu Player of the Week honors for his performance, particularly his 16 second-period saves in the Friday night win. And in the Garth Snow tradition of offense-minded goaltenders, Michaud assisted on two goals.

On the darker side, the extent of a knee injury to Shawn Wansborough won’t be known until later in the week.

"It looks like it could be a little while," said Walsh. "He got hurt midway through the first period of the first night, so it put an exclamation point on how we played, because we did it without him."

This week, Maine hosts the J.C. Penney Classic, starting out with St. Thomas University, a Canadian Final Four team two years ago, while No. 5 Colorado College and St. Lawrence clash.

The Saints graduated a lot of bodies last year, but return All-America candidate Paul DiFrancesco and talented junior defenseman John Poapst. After losing their top two goaltenders, however, they are suspect between the pipes with junior Eric Heffler and two freshmen, Jeremy Symington and Sean Coakley.

"St. Lawrence has improved dramatically in the last couple years," said Walsh. "They’ve recruited better and have a quicker team."

Colorado College lost WCHA Defensive Player of the Year Eric Rud and top goaltender Judd Lambert from last year’s team, but returns most of its offense, led by All-WCHA selection Brian Swanson (51 points) and All-Rookie pick Toby Peterson (38 points).

"Colorado College’s record speaks for itself," said Walsh. "They’ve been in the Final Four each of the last two years, so we’re excited to have that kind of field."

(For a more detailed look at St. Lawrence and Colorado College from their own conferences’ perspectives, check out this week’s ECAC Preview and WCHA Preview. For a more detailed look at St. Thomas University, you’re out of luck.)

PICK: Maine should have its way with St. Thomas, 6-1. Colorado College will have a tougher time with St. Lawrence, but will still prevail 5-3. The Black Bears then will take the championship game, 4-3, with Alfie Michaud and the Alfond crowd the deciding factors.

Northeastern (1-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at

Providence College (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Schneider Arena, Providence, RI

Northeastern raised some eyebrows with a 6-3 win over Bowling Green last weekend. When one considers a Husky lineup that included only three upperclassmen — among them David Dupont, who received a game disqualification in the first period, the win becomes doubly impressive.

"We’ve got a long way to go," said coach Bruce Crowder, "but it definitely was a nice start. To have that kind of youth in the lineup and see what they have the possibility of doing was really encouraging for us here."

In last week’s preview, Crowder discussed his displeasure with the strength and conditioning he found in last year’s team and the resolve to change that situation.

"Last year, we didn’t win a single game in the third period," he said. "Unless we were already winning, we failed to win even once."

The Huskies now are one for one in that department. They entered the third tied 2-2, after weathering almost two full minutes of a five-on-three combined with Dupont’s five-minute major, the type of adversity that often causes young teams to falter. In that period, they scored three times, plus an open-netter.

"All in all, it’s nice to see," said Crowder. "Maybe the commitment of the kids in the offseason with the weight training and conditioning showed some immediate signs of working. I thought we played well and stuck to our system."

The Huskies travel down Route 95 to Providence on Friday in one of the two Hockey East clashes this week.

"They were a team that had our number last year," said Crowder. The Friars took all three league games from Northeastern. "They’ve got a lot of new guys in their lineup, too, so I don’t really know anything about what Paul [Pooley] is doing. We’re just going to have to play hockey in a way that whatever they throw at us, we can execute and eliminate our mistakes."

Although the Friars became the only league team to drop an exhibition game to a visiting Canadian team — 6-3 to Guelph — that dubious honor deserves a king-sized asterisk. Not only is Guelph the defending Canadian university champion, it also tied second-ranked Michigan State.

"We started off okay, but we looked like we were playing our first game," said PC coach Paul Pooley. "We outshot them quite badly" — 39-17 — "but just made some mistakes. Their goalie [Mark Gowan] played great. I think he’ll sign an NHL contract. He’s that good."

An 0-for-7 power play didn’t help.

"We had a couple good puck possessions and got some shots away, but I wasn’t totally happy," said Pooley. "Our power play has got to be good this year and we’re going to have to find ways to do it. I wasn’t totally pleased with what was going on out there."

What had to be especially displeasing, however, was the goaltending in the Guelph game. Mark Kane struggled in the second period, allowing five goals on just nine shots. Friar fans have to hope that performance was simply one bad period in a meaningless exhibition game and not an omen of things to come. After last year’s erratic goaltending, however, that might be akin to convincing Sigmund Freud that sometimes a dream is just a dream.

On the plus side, freshman Boyd Ballard turned away all the third-period shots he faced in relief of Kane. Both of them. Two for two is a good start, but Ballard’s prowess remains an open question.

"I’ll have to see who plays well in practice before I decide who plays on Friday," said Pooley. PICK: With both teams very young, goaltending could prove decisive. Northeastern’s Marc Robitaille is rock-solid; Providence’s Mark Kane, Scott Swanjord and Boyd Ballard are still question marks. Northeastern 3-2.

UMass-Amherst (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at UMass-Lowell (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE)

Friday, 7 p.m., Tully Forum, Lowell, MA

The UMass-Lowell River Hawks downed Dalhousie last week 4-2 in an exhibition.

"It was a good first step for us," said coach Tim Whitehead. "There were some things we did well, and some things we didn’t do so well. But it’s very early and we’re a very young team. It’s going to take us quite a while to really get where we want to be as far as our systems, and playing defense first and all the little things that go along with that.

"Guys were thinking defense first, but they had to think about it instead of reacting, so it’s going to take us some time."

Still, for the most part, Whitehead liked what he saw.

"Especially the work ethic," he said. "Guys were really hungry and stuck together as a team. There were a lot of positives, but it was just one step. We’ve got a long way to go. There’s a lot of teaching that we have to do, and a lot of practice to get where we want to be."

With a team consisting of two-thirds freshmen and sophomores, Whitehead needs some young forwards to step up and contribute immediately. Two such candidates distinguished themselves against Dalhousie.

"I thought Brad Rooney and Nick Carso played well," said Whitehead. "Both were pleasant surprises. For their first game, they had an impact."

Meanwhile, late recruit Mark Fontas still awaits NCAA Clearinghouse approval. As such, he cannot practice or play with the team.

As has become an emerging tradition, UMass-Lowell hosts sister school UMass-Amherst for its home opener.

"It should be a good opening night," said Whitehead. "It’s becoming a good rivalry. We’re going to have our hands full. They’re an experienced team that I’m sure is ready to make the next step, so it’s a real big challenge for us.

"They’ve got a good, strong defense and goaltending. They’ve got a lot of talent up front. They’re a well-balanced team.

"I actually picked them to finish much higher than I guess the other coaches did [8th in the preseason poll]. I have a lot of respect for where that team is now. They’ve beaten us two out of three two years in a row, so we’ll certainly have our hands full."

UMass-Lowell proved better hosts for Dalhousie than UMass-Amherst. While the Lowell score was a respectable 4-2, the Minutemen whitewashed the Canadian school 7-0.

"It certainly was a nice start for us, but we realize it’s only an exhibition game," said coach Joe Mallen. "We had a variety of scorers, you certainly can’t do any better than not allowing any goals, and we saw some very positive signs.

"Tim Lovell looked very good. It was his first game back after not playing for a year. As the rust comes off, I think he’s going to be doing some great things for us."

While Kris Wallis, Nick Stephens and the injured Jeff Turner have gotten most of the ink regarding the freshmen class, two other important rookies got off to good starts against Dalhousie.

Matt Smith, a 6-6 defenseman from Brampton, Ont., played well, continuing a tradition of beef on the Minuteman blue line. Smith joins, among others, Brad Norton (6-5, 235), Dean Stork (6-3, 210), Kevin Tucker (6-5, 223) and the relatively diminutive Tom O’Connor (6-2, 205) and Mike Gaffney (6-1, 205). Apparently, cross-training sessions for this group involves playing line for the UMass football team.

The other significant rookie performance came from 6-4 Finnish goaltender Marcus Helanen, who played one period and is likely the heir apparent to Brian Regan’s job after Regan graduates this year.

"Brian Regan looked good," added Mallen. "He only had 10 or 12 saves, but he played very well."

Like Whitehead, Mallen admires his state school rival.

"I think they’re a good team," said Mallen. "They’re real strong in the goal with Marty Fillion. With Mike Nicholishen and Chris Libett they have two really outstanding defensemen. And they’ve got some good firepower up front with Greg Koehler and Shannon Basaraba and some of those guys. I think it’s really going to be a tight game."

PICK: Fillion – Regan, Nicholishen – Gaffney and Koehler – Lovell is a wash. The supporting cast decides it for Lowell, 3-2.

Boston College (1-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at Notre Dame (3-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA)

Friday, 7 p.m., Joyce Athletic and Convention Center, South Bend, IN

Boston College opened its season with a 3-2 win over visiting Bowling Green. Even more impressive than the win, however, was the list of significant contributors.

Third-stringer Andy McLaughlin tended the nets well. He hopes to interject himself into the mix along with still-injured Mike Correia (out several more weeks with a popped hamstring) and freshman Scott Clemmensen, who broke his foot on Oct. 1, but got two strong practices under his belt before backing up McLaughlin for the BG game.

Fourth-liner Andy Powers scored one goal while freshmen defenseman Bobby Allen and Marty Hughes scored the others.

"That’s the thing that’s been missing in our program," said BC coach Jerry York. "We’ve always had some quality players, but we’ve never had the kind of depth you need in Hockey East."

Allen, in particular, played a very strong game both offensively and defensively. Just one game into the season, he already looks like a cinch for the All-Rookie team. Hughes also showed his offensive flair with the game-winning goal, which earned him Hockey East Rookie of the Week honors.

"That adds such a dimension to your team when you can add an offensive threat from the blue line," said York. "They both have had a history of scoring goals. They’re dangerous players. I’ve always felt that good teams can strike in a lot of different ways."

Although he didn’t score like his two freshmen defensive brethren, Rob Scuderi also showed a flair for hitting the home run pass and, aside from getting turned once, solid play in his own zone.

The transformation on the BC blue line is dramatic. The three freshmen are already playing better than the three of last year’s seniors that they replace. Not only did the rookies play well offensively, the entire BC defense allowed not a single breakaway, a statement all too rare last year.

Of course, before their enshrinement in the BC Hall of Fame is complete, they’ll need to duplicate last weekend’s efforts against better offensive teams than Bowling Green. But watching Bobby Allen, in particular, play just the one game reminds you of Nomar Garciaparra scooping up his first ground ball in spring training. He has the look…

In the Don’t Stop the Presses Department, Marty Reasoner and Brian Gionta looked dynamite together even though they didn’t score a point. It’s easy to see how they lit up Ottawa one week earlier. This duo will be tough to stop.

Notre Dame is one of the biggest early Western surprises. At the beginning of the season, coach Dave Poulin talked about the need to develop a winning mentality to take their fair share of the 12 one-goal losses the Fighting Irish sustained last year. So far, at least, that seems to be developing in light of a 4-3, 4-1 sweep over St. Cloud last weekend. They now stand 3-0-0, including, as do all CCHA teams, wins over Canadian teams.

Will they stick with Powlus at quarterback this week? Whoops, wrong Boston College-Notre Dame game.

The Fighting Irish had trouble scoring last year, averaging only 2.6 goals a game, but return six defensemen and starting goaltender Matt Eisler.

(For a more detailed look at Notre Dame from a CCHA perspective, check out this week’s CCHA Preview.)

PICK: Notre Dame wins the pigskin battle 28-27 when the Eagles go for two. But BC wins the important Clash of the Catholics this weekend, 4-2.

No. 4 New Hampshire (1-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at Alaska-Anchorage (0-2-1, 0-0-0 WCHA) Friday, Saturday, 7 p.m., Sullivan Arena, Anchorage, Alaska

New Hampshire beat a rebuilding Vermont team 5-1 in UNH’s home opener, but coach Dick Umile fell far short of a ringing endorsement of his team’s play.

"After watching the film, I don’t think we played as bad as I might originally have thought," he said. "We just gave up more shots than I would have liked to in the first period. Sean Matile had to come up with two or three really good saves because we turned it over, but after that we settled down and played well in the second and third period."

In the two combined, UNH held the Catamounts to only 10 shots.

The second line of Mike Souza centering Derek Bekar and John Sadowski continued to shine, with Souza scoring twice to repeat the number one star honors he earned the previous week.

"He’s a goal-scorer, and he’s playing very well right now," said Umile. "That whole line is playing well."

Umile intends to play it by ear as far as his goaltending is concerned this weekend against Alaska-Anchorage. Matile is the starter, but freshman Matt Carney could see action either in relief or as a starter in one game.

An even greater unknown is how the team will react to the marathon road trip.

"I don’t know if there’s much we can do," said Umile. "We’re only going out the day before because of classes, obviously. We get out there sometime around two o’clock on Thursday. We’ll have a skate and hopefully by seven o’clock the next night, they’re ready to play.

"I’ve never taken a team out to Anchorage so I really don’t know how it will affect them, but it’s probably no worse than having to go out and play in Denver with the altitude changes. So we just have to find a way to get comfortable and get ready to play."

As for Alaska-Anchorage, this much is known. In Alaska, it can get pretty cold.

(For a more detailed look at them from a WCHA perspective, check out this week’s WCHA Preview.)

Okay, okay. Maybe you’d like a little more information from this column.

In short, Alaska-Anchorage is a touch football team playing amongst Purple People Eaters. Last year, under new coach Dean Talafous, the Seawolves committed a scant 90 penalties for 191 minutes in 32 league games, a mind-boggling average of less than three penalties a game. To put that in perspective, North Dakota, league runner-up for least penalty minutes, totaled 222 penalties for 534 minutes. Stunning numbers.

Whether through lack of aggressiveness or talent or both, however, the Seawolves had trouble scoring, averaging only 2.4 goals a game. Based on their two losses and a tie this year — 4-2 to Alberta and 5-5, 4-0 to Alaska-Fairbanks — that remains a problem.

On the plus side, Doug Teskey in goal is a strength.

PICK: Alaska Anchorage wins the battle of least PIMs, 4-18 amd 8-14, but UNH wins the war of W’s and L’s, 4-2, 6-1.

Merrimack (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at Ohio State (1-1-0, 0-1-0 CCHA)

Friday, 7 p.m., Sunday, 2 p.m., OSU Ice Rink, Columbus, Ohio

Based purely on Merrimack’s performance against Guelph last weekend, the Warriors look like a legitimate dark horse in Hockey East this year. Two weeks earlier, Guelph tied No. 2 Michigan State and one night later it beat Providence 6-3. Merrimack, however, humbled Guelph, holding a 9-1 lead at one point before the game slopped its way to a 10-5 finish.

"It looks like we have some guys who can score some goals," said Merrimack coach Ron Anderson. "But since we gave up five, we’re still not settled on our team defense."

In past years, the Warriors played tighter to the vest than they did down the stretch last season and in the Guelph exhibition. Is a change in playing style taking root at Merrimack?

"Your personnel has a lot to do with how you’re going to play," said Anderson. "We’re still not so sure that we don’t have good team defense. It’s something we work awfully hard on. Ideally, you have both, some offense and good team defense.

"We’re certainly not going to become a run-and-gun team. We’re going to become a team that still works hard on defense, but we’ve been trying for years to get some improved firepower up front. Hopefully, we’re getting closer to that stage."

The Guelph contest did little to clear the muddied goaltending waters, since the Warriors faced so few shots early and finished in a sloppy cruise control. Nonetheless, Cris Classen started and played about 30 minutes, recording seven saves while allowing one goal. Tom Welby played roughly 20 minutes in relief, stopping 12 shots and giving up two goals. Tim Thompson stopped three of five shots in the closing minutes.

"We saw pretty much what we thought we were going to see out of them," said Anderson. "That being the case, we’re still not settled on who we think are our best or who we’re going to play."

Looking ahead to Ohio State, Anderson noted that the Buckeyes already have an official game under their belt — a 3-0 loss to No. 7 Miami — in addition to a Canadian exhibition game, while his own squad has only played the Guelph exhibition.

"It’s early in the season for us," he said. "They’re a little further along than we are in their preparation for the season, so we expect to have two tough games out there."

Prior to Ohio State’s 3-0 loss to Miami, it defeated Toronto 5-0 one week earlier. The Buckeyes are led by sophomore goaltender Ray Aho, an honorable mention for the CCHA All-Rookie team. Fellow sophomores Hugo Boisvert (11-27–38) and Eric Meloche (12-11–23) lead the offense along with senior blueliner Ryan Root, who scored 35 points last year and was a force on the power play.

PICK: Ohio State does have a "real" game under its belt, a potential concern for the traditionally slow starting Merrimack. The Warriors also have nagging questions about their defense and goaltending. Still, this vote goes to the Warrior offense. They sweep this weekend, 5-4 and 5-3.

No. 3 Boston University (1-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at Vermont (0-1-0, 0-0-0 ECAC)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Gutterson Fieldhouse, Burlington, VT

Entering his 25th season at the BU helm, coach Jack Parker reflected on his position prior to last Saturday’s home opener.

"I was thinking before the game, I’m a pretty lucky guy," he said. "This is a nice way to make a living, getting jacked up for another college hockey season with a bunch of good guys to hang around and the prospects of a pretty good team."

His Terriers then did nothing to dampen the mood, dominating last week’s No. 10 team, Rensselaer, 6-0. Tom Noble tossed a shutout, while Chris Drury and defenseman Tom Poti continued to be the big guns in the Terrier offense. Still, Parker felt far from complacent following the win.

"We could go and get beat 5-1 by Vermont next week," he said after the game. "Sometimes it’s bad to have things go so easy in your first game. You pay the price for a while.

"Our whole philosophy here is progress, not perfection. We’d just like to make some progress game-to-game and see if we can get better during the early months of the season.

"I’ll go to practice tomorrow and tell the guys, ‘We’re not going to remain the same. We’re either going to get better, or we’re going to get worse.’

"It isn’t automatic that we’re going to play like we did tonight."

This year’s squad displays greater speed than past editions, but less size.

"That’s a big question mark with this team," said Parker. "We don’t have the look up front that we’ve had in the past. Last year we had Danny LaCouture, Billy Pierce and Matt Wright, who are all 200-pounders, fast skaters, and can really bang guys.

"Pete Donatelli will fill that role for us this year, and he’s done a good job so far for us, but we still don’t have those 6-2 guys. Therefore, we’ll play through guys, but we won’t be as physical a team.

"But we might be a little quicker than we’ve been the last few years, so that’s going to help."

Six freshmen got their first taste of official Division I action and performed well. The four new forwards were distributed over all but the top line, and Joe DiPenta and Colin Sheen saw time on the blue line.

"All the freshmen played extremely well," said Parker. "In particular, I thought Joe DiPenta looked like a junior or senior out there…. And Colin Sheen played very well considering that he’s a roverback out there playing with Poti."

Vermont lost to UNH last week 5-1. After the first period, the Catamounts were held to only 10 total shots. Look for more of the same this week.

Where have you gone, Martin St. Louis? Cat nation turns its lonely eyes to you (and Eric Perrin and Tim Thomas). Woo-woo-woo.

(For a more detailed look at Vermont from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICK: In a mere shadow of last year’s Battle of the Titans, Drury outscores UVM 2-1 and BU wins 5-1.

UMass-Lowell (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at Rensselaer (0-1-0, 0-0-0 ECAC)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Houston Fieldhouse, Troy, NY

Against BU last week, the Rensselaer Engineers didn’t skate, didn’t hit and didn’t come close to winning the game. Without a game under their belts, compared to BU’s two, they had none of the game conditioning they needed.

It’s now a week later and the tables are turned. They’ve completed a "real" game against an elite team while Lowell played an exhibition against Dalhousie.

This week, the Engineers get a shot at proving why they were the ECAC coaches’ pick to win their league. Their defensemen get to prove they are not, in fact, turnstiles. And Eric Healey, Matt Garver and Alain St.-Hilaire get to prove they’re not pretenders in the race for top Eastern line.

(For a more detailed look at Rensselaer from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICK: Lowell picked the wrong time to trek to Troy, New York. Rensselaer takes out frustrations pent up from last week’s embarrassment, 5-2.

Union (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at

Providence College (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE)

Saturday, 7 p.m., Schneider Arena, Providence, RI

After hosting Northeastern on Friday night, (see the preview above) Providence then welcomes Union on Saturday. Union was the surprise of the ECAC last year, earning first-year coach Stan Moore ECAC Coach of the Year honors. Moore instilled a stifling defensive system and as a result the Skating Dutchmen finished a surprising fifth place.

Credit for much of that success also went to goaltender Trevor Koenig. While Vermont’s Tim Thomas and Clarkson’s Dan Murphy were expected before the season started to collect all the netminding awards, Koenig led the nation in goals against average (2.03) and save percentage (.931). He won the Dryden Award for the most outstanding goaltender in the ECAC, and earned first team All-ECAC and All-America honors.

Koenig’s supporting cast this year, however, looks shaky. The returning "Dirty Dozen" — the Dutchmen lost 13 players and returned 13 — include three of their top six scorers from last year: Brent Ozarowski (29 points), Ryan Campbell (20), and Mark Szucs (20). However, nine other forwards graduated as did four defensemen.

That adds up to a lot of holes in the dike for the Dutchmen to fill.

PICK: Koenig can’t do it all. Providence wins 4-2.

This Week in the CCHA: October 24, 1997

 …

This Week in the CCHA: October 17, 1997

After a week of nonconference play, it’s difficult to say who’s at the top of the CCHA heap, but because Michigan State won the Ice Breaker Invitational, the Spartans get the honors. The Spartans beat Boston University 3-1 and Wisconsin 2-1 to take the first tournament of the season, and the first tournament title of these Spartan seniors’ college careers. This week Michigan State has a home-home series with tough in-state rivals Western Michigan.

Western Michigan has three points in its overall standings, tying with Western Ontario in the season opener in Grand Rapids, and shutting out Bowling Green at home in a nonconference game.

Michigan is also 2-0 at the start of this season, rallying from a two-goal deficit to beat Minnesota in Minneapolis, and then coming home to beat up on the University of Toronto. This week, the Wolverines host Colgate for two games at Yost.

The Miami RedHawks shelled Waterloo 10-2 in their lone game last weekend. They host Ohio State, which blanked the University of Toronto 5-0 in its only game so far this season.

Northern Michigan plays a home-home series with Michigan Tech this weekend. In their first game of the season, the Wildcats posted a 10-1 win over Laurentian at home.

Notre Dame travels to St. Cloud for two games to continue that friendly interconference rivalry this weekend. The Irish beat Western Ontario 5-1 last weekend.

Bowling Green split its games last weekend, beating Waterloo 9-2 at home, but losing in nonconference play to Western Michigan on the road. The Falcons head to Massachusetts this weekend, where they’ll play Boston College on Friday, and Northeastern on Saturday.

Alaska-Fairbanks plays a pair of games against its only in-state rival this weekend, meeting Alaska-Anchorage in a home-home series. The Nanooks dropped their home opener to Alberta, 3-1.

Ferris State travels to the Soo to take on the Lakers for one game Saturday. Windsor got the better of both teams last weekend, beating Ferris 3-2 and Lake State 5-4 in overtime.

Let the prognosticating begin!

Western Michigan (1-0-1, 0-0-0 CCHA) at No. 2 Michigan State (2-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Friday, October 17, 7 p.m., Munn Ice Arena, East Lansing, MI No. 2 Michigan State at Western Michigan Saturday, October 18, 7 p.m., Lawson Ice Arena, Kalamazoo, MI

Michigan State is flying high after winning the Ice Breaker Invitational. After all, it’s the first tourney title this group of Spartan seniors has ever won. "Until last week," says senior goaltender Chad Alban, "we hadn’t won a tournament.

"It’s been frustrating being so close."

The Spartans are hoping this preseason vote of confidence will propel them into CCHA play the way in which Michigan has been using the Great Lakes Invitational as a mid-season pick-me-up. Spartan coach Ron Mason is satisfied with what he saw from his team in Wisconsin.

"Both wins were close and were basically good hockey. The second night, Chad kept us in the game early and gave us the chance to win."

Mason expects nothing more than business as usual this weekend when his Spartans meet the Broncos — which between these two teams means tough, physical hockey. "I have a great deal of respect for Western, simply because Bill Wilkinson has done a great job of coaching. Every time we’ve played them in the last few years, it’s been a barnburner in terms of physical intensity."

There’s no doubt that Wilkinson has respect for the Spartans. "They’re probably the number-one team in the country right now, so we’re going over there to do the best job we can. We just want to keep it as close as possible for as long as possible, and do our jobs defensively."

This should be a defensive struggle, with good goaltending from each team. Alban is arguably the best goaltender in the CCHA, and Western’s Matt Barnes seems to find a way to get the job done, giving up just one goal last weekend in Western’s OT tie with Western Ontario.

Both coaches expressed some concern about where their goals are going to come from. "We didn’t give up an even-strength goal [last weekend]," says Wilkinson, "but we didn’t score an even-strength goal either."

Mason says that forwards are "an area we continue to work with." He’s happy with Kevin O’Keefe, who scored two goals in the Spartans’ first game, but with Mike Ford still injured, Mason says he’s been moving people around.

"We’ve moved Jon Gaskins forward [from defense], and he seems to be playing the best hockey of his career." Sean Berens has "been injured some," and Mason says he hasn’t been able to really test Berens this season.

Wilkinson says that Broncos are so deep defensively that they’ve moved two players — Jeff Lukasak and Chris Slater, a former Michigan State defenseman — from defense to forward to generate some offensive opportunities.

"The fact that it’s a home-home series is delicious for fans," says Mason. You said it, coach. What a great way to open up CCHA play. Don’t let these coaches deceive you — each has players capable of scoring goals. But this probably will be a trench war, one that may come down to goaltending.

PICKS: Michigan State 3-2, 3-2

Ohio State (1-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Miami (1-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Saturday, October 18, 7 p.m., Goggin Ice Arena, Oxford, OH

Miami ended Ohio State’s season last year, and don’t think the Buckeyes have forgotten. "Our guys know we can play with them," says OSU coach John Markell. "And the guy who beat us is gone."

That guy is — was — sophomore Randy Robitaille, who left the RedHawks for the Boston Bruins’ organization. Markell insists that without Robitaille in those playoff games, the outcome may have been different. But don’t think he doesn’t respect this current Miami team.

"They’re a very good hockey club," says Markell, who was hoping his team would have a good week of practice after their 5-0 victory over the University of Toronto. "They’re [the OSU players] well aware of what’s going to happen in Miami."

For Miami coach Mark Mazzoleni, the feeling is mutual. "We have tremendous respect for their program and what they’ve done there. They have a solid coaching staff, and their new rink is only going to help their cause. They have three classes they’ve brought in as a staff, and that makes a difference for them this year."

Mazzoleni says it’s too early in the season to tell what will happen in Saturday’s game, but he is pleased with what he’s seen from his team so far. "Our team is the best skating team that we’ve had here. We’ll be able to play more up-tempo. That was a goal of ours coming in years ago, and we think we’ve achieved that."

As always, look for strong goaltending and solid defense from the RedHawks. Although Mazzoleni admits the RedHawks will miss the kind of break-it-open capability of Robitaille, there’s still plenty of offensive talent on this team. Gregor Krajnc, Tim Leahy, Adam Copeland and Dan Boyle are just a few of the RedHawks capable of scoring goals.

Expect solid defense from the Buckeyes, who add two talented freshmen, Andre Signoretti and Jaisen Freeman, to a veteran core. Ray Aho, who stepped up for the Buckeyes the second half of last season, is the starting goaltender.

Plus, there’s something different for the Buckeyes this season: offensive potential. Junior Brian Morrison has been placed on line with sophomores Eric Meloche and Hugo Boisvert. Other Buckeyes who can produce offensive chances include Chris Richards, Dan Cousineau, Todd Compeau, Ryan Root, and freshman Vinnie Grant.

This Miami team has had OSU’s number for a couple of years now; it’s too early in the season to say otherwise.

PICK: Miami 4-3

Ferris State (0-0-1, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Lake Superior State (0-0-1, 0-0-0 CCHA) Saturday, October 18, 7 p.m. Taffy Abel Arena, Sault Ste. Marie, MI

Each of these teams lost to the University of Windsor last week, and each coach says that his team is still looking for answers.

"The game could be 9-8 or 2-1," says Lake Superior coach Scott Borek. "If it’s 2-1, we will probably both be happy, because then we’ll both know we have a goalie."

Lake Superior goaltender John Grahame gave up his last year of eligibility to join the Boston Bruins’ organization, leaving the Lakers with a big hole in net. The Lakers have three goaltenders on their roster: sophomore Jamie Kosecki and freshmen Rob Galatiuk and Jayme Platt. Galatiuk had 20 saves in the Lakers’ 5-4 OT loss to Windsor. "As of today [Wednesday], any one of those three kids could start in goal," says Borek.

"Our real question marks are our freshmen defensemen and our goaltending," says Ferris head coach Bob Daniels. "We’ve still got Jeff Blashill. His freshmen and sophomore years were really solid, but last year he really struggled."

Sophomore Mike Szkodzinski made 28 saves when the Bulldogs lost 3-2 to Windsor. The Bulldogs have two more goaltenders on their roster, sophomore Roger Wilsey and freshman Vince Owen. The buzz about Owen is good, but Daniels doesn’t know if he’ll start in net against the Lakers.

Ferris State has four freshman defensemen on its roster. Daniels says that two of them — Matt Golden and Scott Lewis — will have an immediate impact. They’ll have to; there isn’t much experience on this team defensively.

Both Ferris State and Lake Superior have lost an explosive offensive threat. Ferris State defenseman Andy Roach graduated, and Laker Bates Battaglia left to pursue professional hockey. Daniels says he’ll look to juniors Geoff Bennetts and Kenzie Homer to pick up some slack. Borek says he’s not sure that the team can make up for the loss of Battaglia.

"I have no way of gauging how that game will go," says Daniels. "[But] I firmly believe it will be a one-goal, two-goal game.

"They’ve got a great team. Sessa, Blaznek, Fuss — those guys can score. We don’t know a darn thing about the goaltending. We’re not going to underestimate them."

Experience may be the factor here, with all else being even this early in the season.

PICK: Lake Superior 4-3

Colgate (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at Michigan (2-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor, MI

Thank goodness the University of Toronto played at Yost last weekend. That gave the fans an opportunity both to vent the off-season steam and warm up their voices for Colgate’s first weekend of college hockey this season.

These two teams actually have a bit in common. Both have lost their top scorers, and each has able players who can now come out of the shadows of the departed players.

Is there anyone in college hockey who doesn’t know by now that Michigan lost nine players? Hmm? We’re all on the same page here, right? Well, what you may have forgotten (unless you’re a Michigan fan, of course) that Michigan was more than the sum of the Michigan Nine. Take senior right wing Bill Muckalt, for instance.

"He’s on a mission," says coach Red Berenson. "He came back, and he could have left. He’s kind of played in the shadow of Morrison and Botterill for three years."

The Wolverines beat Minnesota on the road last week, and Berenson says Muckalt was "outstanding. He was the best player in both games on all four teams last weekend." Muckalt had the game-winning goal in the Minnesota game, and two goals and an assist in the Toronto game.

For Colgate, Rob Mara and Tim Loftsgard are expected to fill the skates of the Red Raiders’ two top scorers, Hobey Baker Finalist Mike Harder and Dave DeBusschere. Coach Don Vaughn says that these two have "played in the shadows."

Berenson is a little concerned about his defense, having graduated four defensemen. For the first time in a long time, freshmen are going to have to make an immediate impact on the Wolverine team. Berenson is especially impressed with two rookie defensemen. "Mike VanRyn looks very comfortable right away. David Huntzicker — an Ann Arbor kid — has surprised people. He’s played both games and held his own."

Berenson like what he saw in both games last weekend, saying that the Minnesota game was a "huge" game. "It was a good game, because we were playing against a real good, top opponent. For the most part, I thought we had good vibes from our freshmen, playing in front of 16,000."

Vibrations or no vibrations, this Michigan team isn’t quite dead yet.

PICKS: Michigan 5-3, 6-3

Michigan Tech (1-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) at Northern Michigan (1-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Friday, 7 p.m., Marquette Lakeview Arena, Marquette, MI Northern Michigan at Michigan Tech Saturday, 7 p.m., MacInnes Student Ice Arena, Houghton, MI

This home-home series is one for the nostalgic. Northern Michigan — which started out in the CCHA, then moved to the WCHA, and now comes back to the CCHA — shares a bit of history with Michigan Tech. Eighty-three games worth of history. This series stands at 40-38-5 in favor of Northern Michigan.

Michigan Tech, picked eighth in the preseason WCHA coaches’ poll, has won its last six season- opening games. Northern Michigan, picked ninth in the preseason CCHA coaches’ poll, will probably be more comfortable playing this old friend than with any of its new CCHA playmates.

Tech brings a pair of goaltending brothers to the ice. Junior David Weninger and his rookie brother Todd will share time in the net.

Meanwhile, Northern returns its number-one scoring line this season, but its second line on the depth chart is a rookie one. That says a whole lot about Northern’s prospects offensively.

Each of these team destroyed the poor University of Laurentian last week. They seem relatively evenly matched, each with its own problems to address.

(For a second look at Michigan Tech, check out the WCHA conference preview.)

PICKS: Michigan Tech 5-4, 6-4

Notre Dame (1-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at St. Cloud State (1-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m., National Hockey Center, St. Cloud, MN

These two teams began their friendly rivalry last season, when they split two games in South Bend. Now, each is entering the second week of play with a win. In a game with a spectacular finish, Notre Dame downed Western Ontario 5-1 last week, while St. Cloud beat the University of Regina 4-2.

Last week’s game was a crowd-pleaser for Irish fans. Notre Dame outshot Western Ontario 55-15, but didn’t put the puck in the net for the first 48 shots on goal. (Give that Western Ontario goaltender a cookie and a gold star.) All of the Notre Dame goals came in the third period; the second, scored by senior center Lyle Andrusiak, turned out to be the game-winner.

Notre Dame scored four goals on its final seven attempts, three of which came in the final minute of the game.

And they only needed two goals to win.

Actually, this type of play could be symptomatic for the Irish, who last season lost 12 games by one goal. Twenty-four points lost because the Irish couldn’t generate offense. Perhaps Notre Dame was making up for lost goals in the final period of the Western Ontario game. Perhaps a great, cosmic, goal-generating switch has finally been turned "on" for the Irish.

Or, Notre Dame could be in for a long season, again.

Both of these teams were picked seventh in their respective conference’s preseason coaches’ polls. The Irish are fielding a sophomore-heavy team, and will rely on underclassmen to provide leadership. St. Cloud returns 18 lettermen, which looks like plenty of experience on paper; however, the Huskies’ top two scorers are gone this season.

Still, experience and the home crowd have to count for something.

(For a second look at St. Cloud, see this week’s WCHA preview.)

PICKS: St. Cloud 4-1, 4-3

Alaska-Fairbanks (0-1-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Alaska-Anchorage (0-1-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Friday, 7 p.m. AT, Sullivan Arena, Anchorage, AK Alaska-Anchorage at Alaska-Fairbanks Saturday, 7 p.m. AT, Carlson Center, Fairbanks, AK

The Nissan Governer’s Cup pits in-state rivals the UAF Nanooks and the UAA Seawolves. Both teams lost to visiting University of Alberta last week.

These two teams play dissimilar styles of hockey. The Seawolves are the least-penalized team in WCHA history. Last season, in 37 games played, the Seawolves had a total of 100 penalties for 211 minutes. Compare that to the 996 penalty minutes Fairbanks had last season, and a collective -60 for the team on plus/minus.

This disciplined style should benefit both teams, since a big question for each is goaltending. Last season, the Nanook goaltending was good but spotty. Sophomore Chris Marvel posted a 3.99 GAA last season after earning the starting position when junior Ian Perkins was injured. Perkins’ GAA was 5.08 on the season. Meanwhile, for the Seawolves, Doug Teskey is the main man in goal.

Neither team is explosive offensively, but with troubled defenses, these games could be high-scoring. Fairbanks coach Dave Laurion says that he wants his team to jump out to a good start this season, rather than having to play catch-up to make the playoffs after December. This series could be a reality check for the Nanooks.

(For another look at Anchorage, there’s this week’s WCHA preview.)

PICKS:Anchorage 6-4; Fairbanks 5-3

Bowling Green (1-1-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Boston College (0-0-0, 0-0-0 Hockey East) Friday, 7 p.m., Kelley Rink, Chestnut Hill, MA Bowling Green at Northeastern (0-0-0, 0-0-0 Hockey East) Saturday, 7 p.m., Matthews Arena, Boston, MA

Boston College leads its all-time series with Bowling Green 5-3, but those three Eagle losses were the last three games these teams played. Last year, the Falcons swept the Eagles in two games in Ohio. This year, BC may increase its lead.

Bowling Green is still plagued with injuries. Last year, Falcon players, coaches and fans had to endure a frustrating season that saw every key Bowling Green scorer in and out of the lineup because of injuries.

This year, Bowling Green coach Buddy Powers says, "I wish I had my full team going. [Adam] Edinger got a spearing penalty against Western, so he can’t play Friday. [Dan] Price still can’t play yet." Price was in an auto accident during the offseason that left him with a bruised knee. Edinger had 29 points for the Falcons last year; Price had 32.

Powers says that he’s looking to turn the loss of two key players into an advantage for a team that has nine freshmen. "We’ve got so many young guys in the line up that it’s good to throw them into spots. The biggest thing I want to see us do is pass the puck better and offensively generate some chances.

"We’ll see how are guys hold up against BC, which has more experience." Boston College returns lead scorer Marty Reasoner.

Bowling Green should have an easier time with Northeastern than with BC. The Huskies play 20 freshmen and sophomores, just four more than Bowling Green, but Bowling Green returns at least some offense this season. The Huskies return their top six scorers this year, but not one among them had more than 22 points last season.

Goaltending is probably not an issue for Northeastern. Sophomore goaltender Marc Robitaille had a respectable .884 save percentage in his rookie year. For the Falcons, Mike Savard is uneven.

PICKS: Boston College over Bowling Green, 6-4; BGSU over Northeastern, 5-1

Paula C. Weston is CCHA Correspondent for U.S. College Hockey Online.

Copyright 1997 Paula C. Weston. All rights reserved. U.S. College Hockey Online

This Week in the ECAC: October 17, 1997

The Red Raiders of Colgate travel to Ann Arbor to face the Wolverines of Michigan, the Catamounts of Vermont travel to take on the Wildcats of New Hampshire, and in the matchup of the week, two top-ten teams face off against each other in Boston.

The highlight of the young season will be the tenth-ranked Engineers of Rensselaer traveling to take on the number-four Terriers of Boston University at Walter Brown Arena.

No. 10 RPI (0-0-0) at No. 4 Boston University (0-0-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Walter Brown Arena, Boston, Mass.

There is something brewing near Commonwealth Avenue on Saturday evening. The preseason number-one in the ECAC, Rensselaer, and the preseason number-one in Hockey East, Boston University, take to the ice to kick off their regular seasons.

The Terriers headed west last week for the Ice Breaker Invitational, and finished third. After losing to Michigan State in the first round, the Terriers came back to defeat Clarkson in the consolation game.

The Terriers have Chris Drury to turn to when it comes to leading an offensive attack. The Hobey Baker favorite had three goals and an assist last weekend in the Ice Breaker. He is paired on a line with Mike Sylvia and Tommi Degerman, and those three could be the best line in all of Hockey East — possibly in all of the nation.

On defense, Tom Poti leads the charge, both offensively and defensively. He had four points (2-2–4) last weekend, and played a solid defensive game.

With either Michel Larocque or Tom Noble in goal, the Terriers should be solid.

(For more information on Boston University, refer to the Hockey East Preview.)

Meanwhile the Engineers have yet to play a game, and a lot hinges on practices. While they are not game situations, head coach Dan Fridgen likes what he sees so far.

"The guys are back to having fun and they’ve done an outstanding job," he said. "They’ve gone out and they’ve worked hard. They’ve developed an outstanding work ethic as a team."

The Engineers have a Hobey Baker candidate in their own right in Eric Healey. Healey was a second team All-American last season, and a second team All-ECAC member behind the likes of Martin St. Louis, Mike Harder, and Todd White — all Hobey Baker finalists.

"Very few players have the vision of an Eric Healey," said Fridgen.

"But I feel like I’ve got a lot of good offensive players," he added. "I think there are skilled forwards on this team who know what it takes to work hard and are not afraid to mix it up and be physical, and that’s what we’re going to need."

Let’s also not forget that the Engineers return every single player from last year’s squad, something that has never happened at Rensselaer.

This was the team that lost 5-3 last year to this BU squad, with Bill Pierce and Shawn Bates scoring three of the five goals. Luckily for the Engineers, those two Terriers are no longer on the team.

The one difference between last year’s squad and this year’s Engineer squad is that the two freshmen added give the Engineers something that they sorely needed — depth.

Brad Tapper gives RPI depth and four solid lines, while Glenn Coupal adds depth on the blueline.

This one will be a humdinger.

PICK: The Engineers are strong, deep and fast, and can score from every position. The Terriers need someone besides Drury and Poti to score. Expect to see Danny Riva out there when Drury is out there, and if he can shut Drury down, the Engineers will take care of the rest. RPI 5 Boston University 4

Colgate (0-0-0) at No. 5 Michigan (0-0-0) Friday – Saturday, 7:30 p.m. – 7 p.m., Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor, Mich.

The Wolverines have been in a game situation already this year with their 3-2 win over Minnesota in the Hall of Fame Game.

Despite losing nine players from last years squad, the Wolverines still have a wealth of scoring with Bill Muckalt, Greg Crozier and Matt Herr.

On defense Michigan is a little green, but the Blue have a solid goaltending in senior Marty Turco. Turco is All-American material, and is one player that will not only keep you in games, but will also win you a few.

(For more on Michigan, refer to the CCHA Preview.)

The Red Raiders have to deal with the loss of their top two scorers, Hobey Baker Finalist Mike Harder and Dave DeBusschere.

The good news is that the Red Raiders return Rob Mara and Tim Loftsgard, the next two leading scorers on the team.

"We’ve got a number of guys in the program," said head coach Don Vaughn referring to scorers. "Some of the guys have played in the shadows."

The abovementioned will no longer be playing in the shadows because they will become the centerpiece of the Colgate offense.

On defense the Red Raiders are very green. The most experienced defenseman, Mark Holdridge, has played only 29 games in the last two seasons. The Red Raider defense will have to learn a lot on the ice, and they will have to learn it in a hurry.

In goal, the Red Raiders should split the series between senior Dan Brenzavich and sophomore Shep Harder. Vaughn acknowledges that a golatending battle is taking place.

"That’s the way we’re going to approach it," he said in Colgate’s season preview. "Danny is coming off of what people would consider a season below his standards, and Shep is also approching it differently.

"I’d like to go with one guy, though," he added.

This weekend could make the decision for Vaughn easier, or it can make it harder (no pun intended).

PICK: Even though Michigan has lost a lot, the Wolverine forwards should run around the inexperienced Red Raider defense, and Brenzavich and Harder will not have a fun time. A Michigan sweep, 7-2 and 5-1

Vermont (0-0-0) at No. 6 New Hampshire (0-0-0) Saturday, 7 p.m., Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

Two teams from last year’s NCAA tournament meet here, one slightly different, the other drastically different.

UNH returns the top line of Mark Mowers-Jason Krog-Tom Nolan, all of whom are offensive powerhouses. But wait, so are the rest of the Wildcat forwards.

There are some holes for the Wildcats to fill on defense, but the goaltending situation should be all set for the Wildcats with Sean Matile leading the way.

(For more on UNH, refer to the Hockey East Preview.)

Vermont has changed a lot on offense, defense, goaltending and behind the bench.

Martin St. Louis, Eric Perrin, J.C. Ruid and Matt Stelljes are gone, and so is a lot of the Catamount offense from the last four years.

Eric Hallman, Pavel Navrat, Jon Sorg and Jan Kloboucek, four of the six Cat defensive starters, are also gone.

In the net, Tim Thomas is no longer there providing the support. Roger Grillo, Vermont’s top assistant coach, is also gone.

"This is the biggest class we’ve graduated in a long time," said head coach Mike Gilligan in Vermont’s season preview. "[Grillo] was my biggest loss, because I gave him so much responsibility. [On the ice] the toughest loss might be in the net."

The young Catamount defense will certainly be tested against the high powered Wildcat offense Simon Tremblay will certainly get a lot of ice time in the first game of the season.

"We’re looking for more balance," said Gilligan about the offense. After relying heavily on the French Connection over the last four years, many more Catamounts will be expected to step up and score. The onus will fall on Stephane Piche to lead the scoring barrage.

In net, it’s going to be a battle. Andrew Allen is leading the way in the goaltender battle and expect to see him in the nets to begin the game. Whether he plays the entire game is up in the air. Marty Phillips or James Tierney might see some time as well in the goaltending battle.

PICK: The changes are too drastic right now to expect a lot out of the Catamounts. They may have it together, but the Wildcats have more experience right now. New Hampshire 6 Vermont 2

Things begin to heat up in earnest next week in the ECAC, with half of the teams in action

Friday-Saturday, October 24-25, Clarkson at Bowling Green Friday-Saturday, October 24-25, St. Lawrence (J.C. Penney Classic) Saturday, October 25, UMass-Lowell at RPI Saturday, October 25, Boston University at Vermont Saturday, October 25, Union at Providence Saturday, October 25, Colgate at Army

Jayson Moy is ECAC Correspondent for U.S. College Hockey Online.

Copyright 1997 Jayson Moy. All rights reserved. U.S. College Hockey Online

This Week in the WCHA: October 17, 1997

For the rest, it’s game time once again as the first (near-)full weekend of play is finally upon us. Four of the eight — North Dakota, Denver, Colorado College and Minnesota-Duluth — hit the ice for the first time this season (though UND, CC and DU’s games are exhibitions against Canadian schools).

The rest — St. Cloud, Minnesota, Alaska-Anchorage and Michigan Tech — all have a game under their belts: Minnesota an exhibition loss to Michigan, UAA a defeat at the hands of Alberta, Tech a convincing victory over Laurentian and SCSU a win versus Regina.

The weekend features some intriguing early-season matchups, including the continuation of in-state rivalries between UAA and UAF, Tech and Northern Michigan — and St. Cloud’s reception for Notre Dame, which split a pair last season with the Huskies in South Bend.

The premier game this weekend, however, is USCHO’s Game of the Week: eighth-ranked Maine’s visit to number-seven Minnesota.

With no further delays, then — the previews:

Game of the Week No. 8 Maine (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at No. 7 Minnesota (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Friday-Saturday, 7:30-7:00 p.m. CT, Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis, MN

The Minnesota Golden Gophers skate into their home opener — indeed, their "real" opener — stinging just a little bit.

The Gophers were toppled 3-2 by Michigan at last weekend’s U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame exhibition at Target Center in Minneapolis. Minnesota ran up a 2-0 lead in the first period, then gave it back, plus one. After the game, Gopher players and coaches alike played it cool.

"I was happy with the way we played," asserted co-captain Casey Hankinson, who assisted on the second Gopher goal during a first-period power play. "We play them again at mid-season, and I think you’ll see a different game."

Gopher head coach Doug Woog seconded his captain, noting that the HOF game is, after all, an exhibition, and that he had tried some line changes and other moves one might not have seen in a regular matchup. Meanwhile, Michigan head man Red Berenson played it to the hilt, even leaving in first-string goaltender Marty Turco for the full 60 minutes in an all-out attempt to win.

So. Is it that simple — Michigan was trying real hard and Minnesota just wasn’t?

Don’t bet on it. Exhibition or not, the Gophers wanted to win, especially against the team that sent them home from last year’s NCAA West Regional. Blowing a two-goal lead couldn’t have helped, either — though the decisive goals came against backups Willy Marvin and Erik Day, and not regular Steve DeBus (25-12-1, 3.15 GAA, .888 SV% last season), who will be Maine’s target this weekend.

Perennial all-star Mike Crowley is gone, but sophomore Dave Spehar (20-17–37) made his presence felt with a goal less than a minute into the game, and Hankinson’s (17-24–41) assist was certainly a good start. Also, the Gophers took on Michigan with the benefit of only five defensemen, as sophomore Ryan Trebil and freshman Dylan Mills were held out of the game, punishment for a scuffle earlier in practice.

Look for both of those two to play significant roles against the Black Bears, winners of 12 of their last 13 games in 1996-97. Sophomore Alfie Michaud (17-8-1, 3.09 GAA, .864 SV%) is the main man in nets for Maine, who also feature the scoring of Steve Kariya (19-31–50), Shawn Wansborough (18-21–39) and Cory LaRose (10-27–37) up front and David Cullen (5-25–30) from the blue line.

(For another look at Maine, see this week’s Hockey East preview.)

Picks: No one really knows what to expect from the Black Bears, who are just returning from a spell in the NCAA’s doghouse. Maine played exceptionally well after the mid-season return of head coach Shawn Walsh, despite (or maybe because of?) the Bears’ postseason ban.

Minnesota, for its part, has a game in hand and is anxious to prove that it doesn’t need Crowley, the WCHA Player of the Year last season, to succeed. Minnesota 4-2, 4-3

Notre Dame (1-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at St. Cloud (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m. CT, National Hockey Center, St. Cloud, MN

This series, which is only two games old, already has some interesting history. Last year, Notre Dame hosted St. Cloud for a series in late January and shocked the 14-7-3 Huskies by winning the first game convincingly, 5-2. St. Cloud got out to a 2-0 lead in the return matchup the next day, but barely hung on for a 2-1 win.

That pair of games came amidst a 7-7-2 stretch for SCSU which did considerable damage to their NCAA hopes. Oddly enough, Notre Dame’s success against the Huskies preceded a dismal 1-9-0 CCHA finish which left the Fighting Irish in the basement of the conference, and out of the playoffs.

Notre Dame’s last-place standing had to come as a severe disappoinment to the team’s fans, many of whom had expected improvement last season under then-second-year head coach Dave Poulin.

St. Cloud, for its part, finished third in the WCHA but missed out on the NCAAs after losing the consolation game at the WCHA Final Five to Colorado College. Adding insult to injury, sophomores Matt Cullen (15-30–45 last season), the team’s leading scorer a year ago, and Mark Parrish (27-15–42), its top goal-scorer, both departed for pro careers.

Brian Leitza (19-8-1, 3.21 GAA, .886 SV%) is back to cover the pipes, as is Sacha Molin (18-25–43) at forward, but the Huskies may face a down year. At least, the WCHA’s coaches seem to think so, voting St. Cloud seventh of nine in this year’s preseason poll.

(For another look at Notre Dame, see this week’s CCHA preview.)

Picks: St. Cloud may be down, but the Huskies are at home, and Notre Dame, despite a 5-1 victory over Western Ontario last weekend, doesn’t seem to have the requisite firepower. St. Cloud 3-2, 4-2

Alaska-Anchorage (0-1-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) vs. Alaska-Fairbanks (0-1-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Friday, 7:05 p.m. AT, Sullivan Arena, Anchorage, AK Saturday, 7:00 p.m. AT, Carlson Center, Fairbanks, AK

The Seawolves make their annual trek to Fairbanks Saturday, one day after entertaining the Nanooks at Sullivan Arena in the series for the Nissan Governor’s Cup.

Alaska-Anchorage is coming off a disappointing 4-2 loss to Canadian university Alberta, a game played at Eagle River, Alas. That’s bad news for the Seawolves, but the good news is that Fairbanks also was beaten by Alberta, 3-1, the very next day.

The ‘Wolves can be expected to continue head coach Dean Talafous’ commitment to discipline, having set a WCHA record for fewest penalties last season. Also, UAA received a big boost when second-leading scorer Stacy Prevost (9-17–26) was awarded an extra year of eligibility by the NCAA, meaning the Seawolf captain will try to bolster an offense that ranked last in the WCHA (75 goals) last season.

Meanwhile, the Nanooks have the opposite problem with penalties — they commit a bunch of ’em. Dave Laurion’s gang is spotty on defense, but has solid Chris Marvel (9-13-1, 3.99 GAA last season), a CCHA all-rookie pick, in goal. Junior forward Jeff Trembecky (24-17–41) leads the charge.

(For another look at UAF, see this week’s CCHA preview.)

Picks: Neither team began its season auspiciously, but the Nanooks, who reached the CCHA playoffs by the skin of their proverbial teeth last year — may be on the rise.

Consequently, UAF is a bit better thought of than the Seawolves, who were picked last in this year’s WCHA preseason coaches’ poll. Still, a split seems in order. UAA 3-2, UAF 4-2

Michigan Tech (1-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) vs. Northern Michigan (1-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) Friday, 7:30 p.m. ET, Lakeview Arena, Marquette, MI Saturday, 7:35 p.m. CT, MacInnes Student Ice Arena, Houghton, MI

The Huskies of Michigan Tech, who suffered through a school-record 19-game losing streak last year, guaranteed that they wouldn’t start the 1997-98 season the same way by thrashing Laurentian 9-3 last weekend. Much like the UAA-UAF series detailed above, Tech now takes on its intrastate (but now interconference) rival Northern Michigan in a home-and-home series.

Also much like the Alaska series, both teams in this one played and beat the same opponent last week. That’s right: Laurentian took its licks from NMU too, and the result — a 10-1 Wildcat victory — was even more lopsided than the MTU-Laurentian result.

All-WCHA selection Andre Savage (18-20–38 last season) is the Huskies’ top returning scorer, and two-time captain Jason Prokopetz is back after missing several games due to injury last year. Tech has some scoring, but not a lot of defense beyond Kevin Mulligan (2-18–20).

The Huskies also lost number-one goaltender Luciano Caravaggio after last season, leaving a gigantic hole in net which backup David Weninger (1-13-0, 4.14 GAA, .881 SV%) and a newcomer, Weninger’s brother Todd, will try to fill.

For its part, Northern Michigan brings back intact its top-scoring line from last season: junior center Buddy Smith (13-20–33), sophomore left wing Roger Trudeau and sophomore right wing J.P. Vigier. Smith led the ‘Cats in scoring last year, and his line combined for 35 goals.

To top it off, Saturday’s game is the annual Michigan Tech Sports Hall of Fame game, which means that seven new members are to be enshrined in Tech’s pantheon of athletic greats.

Included in that group is a defenseman who skated pretty well for MTU a few years back, winning All-America distinction in 1981 and leading his team to a third-place finish at the NCAA tournament that year. Congratulations to Husky head coach Tim Watters.

(For another look at Northern Michigan, see this week’s CCHA preview.)

Picks: Neither team looks terribly strong, but Northern may have a slight edge in experience and scoring. But count on the Huskies to ride the emotional wave Saturday. NMU 5-3, MTU 3-2

Mankato State (1-0-0) at Minnesota-Duluth (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Friday-Saturday, 7:05 p.m. CT, Duluth Entertainment and Convocation Center, Duluth, MN

Minnesota-Duluth fans have good reason to be excited. The Bulldogs are on their way up, especially considering the dropoff in store this season for WCHA rivals St. Cloud and Denver. The Bulldogs make their season debut with a pair against intrastate opponents Mankato State this weekend at the DECC.

The Bulldogs return senior leadership in Mike Peluso (20-20–40 last season) and Ken Dzikowski (15-20–35), who should help to make up for the premature loss of defenseman Rick Mrozik to the pros. Another primary strength is in net, where WCHA Rookie of the Year Brant Nicklin (18-15-4, 3.25 GAA, .897 SV%) plies his trade.

Their opponents, the Mavericks, went 17-14-3 last season with a schedule variegated enough to include both CCHA powerhouse Miami and small-college Gustavus Adolphus. Mankato beat both Ferris State (twice) and Notre Dame on its swing through the CCHA, so there’s some talent growing in southwest Minnesota.

Mankato is a pseudo-member of the conference this season, playing a predominantly WCHA schedule and filling the ten-spot (vacated by Northern Michigan’s return to the CCHA) in the WCHA’s playoffs.

The Mavericks return their top five scorers from last year’s squad, led by junior right wing Tyler Deis (30-20–50 last season) and senior center Ryan Rintoul. In net are senior Des Christopher and sophomore Brian Nelson. Jason Krug heads up the blueline corps for Mankato, which is young in back.

Picks: Mankato is a strong independent, and may well be voted membership in the WCHA next season. Nonetheless, the Mavericks are playing a full-fledged WCHA opponent in Minnesota-Duluth, and a strong one at that. UMD 5-2, 4-1

Calgary at No. 3 Colorado College (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Exhibition Friday, 7:35 p.m. MT, AFA Cadet Ice Arena, Colorado Springs, CO

Calgary at Denver (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Exhibition Saturday, 7:35 p.m. MT, Denver Coliseum, Denver, CO

Manitoba at No. 1 North Dakota (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Exhibition Sunday, 2:05 p.m. CT, Ralph Engelstad Arena, Grand Forks, ND

Three of the WCHA’s four representatives to last season’s NCAA tourney begin their seasons with exhibitions against Canadian universities. All three are coming off highly successful years, with Denver winning its first-round tournament contest, Colorado College reaching the Final Four and North Dakota — as everyone knows by now — winning it all in Milwaukee.

Coming into this season, UND seems in the best shape, returning most of its offense and defense alike. CC loses WCHA Defensive Player of the Year Eric Rud and senior netminder Judd Lambert, but retains virtually all of its offense.

Denver, though, lost quite a bit to graduation, including forwards Erik Andersson and Antti Laaksonen and goaltender Jim Mullin. The Pioneers may find this go-round a bit rockier than the last.

Nonetheless, these will almost certainly be tuneups for the WCHA teams involved, so expect to see plenty of youngsters on the ice in each of the three games.

Picks: North Dakota and Colorado College overwhelm their northern neighbors, while Denver has only a little more trouble. CC 6-2, DU 5-3, UND 6-1

Scott Brown is chief editor for U.S. College Hockey Online.

Copyright 1997 Scott Brown . All Rights Reserved.

Return to U.S. College Hockey Online

This Week in Hockey East: October 17, 1997

Although the season has barely begun, injuries to BU’s Chris Heron and both of Boston College’s goalies could have a significant impact on both teams’ chances this week.

And be sure to check out the Northeastern preview for some interesting developments in Husky-land.

Last week’s record in picks: 2-0 Season record in picks: 2-0

No. 8 Maine (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) at No. 7 Minnesota (0-0-0, 0-0-0 WCHA) Friday, 7:30 p.m. CT, Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis, MN MSC, WABI-TV5 Saturday, 7:00 p.m. CT, Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis, MN MSC

Maine opens its season with a road trip to Minnesota, where the Golden Gophers lost to the forget-the-rebuilding-let’s-reload Michigan Wolverines in the annual Hall of Fame game. The Gophers led 2-0 before the Wolverines came back to win, 3-2.

"I’m concerned about the fact that they’ve played a game," said Maine coach Shawn Walsh. "Much like Michigan State had an advantage over BU [in the Ice Breaker tournament], I see a similar advantage for Minnesota. They know a lot more about their team than we know about ours right now.

"They also have terrific speed up front and that concerns me."

The Gophers do return four of their top five scorers in forwards Ryan Kraft (25-21–46), Casey Hankinson (17-24–41), all-rookie selection Dave Spehar (20-17–37) and Reggie Berg (11-26–37).

However, they lost WCHA Player of the Year Mike Crowley, the defenseman who made their offense go. They also lost number two defenseman Brian LaFleur. Although the Black Bears also lost their top two defensemen, Jason Mansoff and Jeff Libby, the Minnesota blue line losses cut deeper. All-rookie pick Ben Clymer (7-13–20) is expected to pick up much of the slack.

Minnesota’s Steve ("Warm Up") DeBus (25-12-1, 3.15 GAA, .888 SV%) earned first-team All-WCHA honors and could be a critical advantage over Alfie Michaud (17-8-1, 3.09 GAA, .864 SV%), who is expected to get the nod both games.

"I’m fairly pleased with how we’ve come through camp," said Walsh. "We’re still not where we really need to be, though. Our freshmen especially are thinking a lot. Until they can start to play naturally it’s going to hurt us. We’re probably going to rely on six of them, although I’m not sure all six will play the first game."

Penalties could prove the decisive factor. Last year, Minnesota led the WCHA in penalty minutes (26.4 per game); Maine finished last in Hockey East (15.71 per game) and first in the nation in power-play efficiency (30.2 percent). If those tendencies haven’t changed with the the personnel, Maine could reap the benefits.

(For a more detailed look at Minnesota from a WCHA perspective, check out this week’s WCHA Preview.)

PICK: The safe pick would be a split, especially with already battled-tested Minnesota taking the opener, while Maine scrapes off the rust. But when your editor is a Minnesota fan, it pays to go for the jugular. Maine sweeps 4-3, 4-2.

No. 10 Rensselaer (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at No. 4 Boston University (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Saturday, 7 p.m., Walter Brown Arena, Boston, MA WABU-TV68

BU split its games last weekend in the inaugural Ice Breaker Invitational. The Terriers lost, 3-1, to a Michigan State team that had already played a tune-up game, and then beat Clarkson, 5-4.

What created a lot of attention, however, was not the on-ice action, but the off-ice discussions over whether the games should be treated as exhibitions or not. As noted here last week, BU coach Jack Parker left no doubt about where he stood on the matter.

"We only have six days of practice before we play those games," he said at the time. "They’re definitely not going to count."

Clarkson coach Mark Morris seconded that sentiment. "We entered into the agreement to participate under the notion that it was going to be two exhibition games," he said. "All the coaches agreed at dinner that that was the case. That was the notion that all the coaches were under going into the tournament."

Nonetheless, controversy erupted. Soon NCAA officials were being consulted.

"The fact is that the NCAA allows us to play X amount of games," said Parker. "If they’re going to give us more games, we can play more. At any time, we can call them exhibitions.

"For example, we play 34 games every year. If we would like to play an exhibition game, we could call RPI in the middle of the summertime and say, ‘Instead of playing that first game as a real game, let’s play it as an exhibition game. We’ll only play 33 real games and one exhibition.’ As far as the NCAA is concerned, we still played 34 games. Only 33 of them are going to count. We can do that any time we want….

"We didn’t decide the day before that we were going to play exhibitions. We decided last spring when we signed the contract that we were going to play exhibitions.

"Where people thought the NCAA would get involved in this, I have no idea. The NCAA doesn’t get involved in this. It’s not the NCAA’s business. They said we could play 36 games. We could play 30 of them as real games and six as exhibitions if we wanted to."

One the ice, the Terriers met with predictable results — in fact, almost the exact results picked here last week. They faced a Michigan State team that, like BU, had been picked to win its conference, but had also been on ice for two weeks to the Terriers five days and already had played a game against Canadian university champion Guelph.

"I thought we all played much better the second night after having the first game under our belts," said Parker. "I thought we were kind of lethargic and legless the first night, but that’s expected. We only had five days of practice.

"I thought Drury played extremely well and most of our defensemen played well, especially Tom Poti and freshman Joe DiPenta."

Drury scored three goals and added an assist, earning him the first of what is certain to be many Player of the Week honors.

Poti totaled two goals and two assists. Unlike some offensive defensemen who give back almost as many in their own zone as they create in the opponent’s, Poti was not on the ice for a single goal.

Unfortunately, Chris Heron fractured his shoulder and will be out six to eight weeks. Heron came on strong last year and was expected to be a key contributor up front.

This week, the Terriers host Rensselaer, the team picked first in the ECAC’s preseason coaches’ poll.

"We had all we could handle with Clarkson and RPI was picked higher than Clarkson," said Parker. "They didn’t have a senior last year, so they have everybody back from last year’s squad. They’ll be an experienced team.

"We have the advantage of playing at home, obviously, and hopefully we’ll take advantage of that."

Rensselaer features All-American Eric Healey, who scored 30 goals and 56 points last year while teamed up with Matt Garver (44 points) and center Alain St.-Hilaire (40 points).

Partisans of the two leagues may debate the merits of those three compared to Drury and any two warm bodies, or UNH’s Jason Krog, Mark Mowers and Tom Nolan. Whatever the outcome of that debate, Rensselaer clearly has a formidable weapon in its three big guns.

Additionally, the Engineers rely on a experienced defense and two sophomore goaltenders, Scott Prekaski and Joel Laing, who split time equally.

(For a more detailed look at Rensselaer from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICK: BU pulls out a 4-3 thriller.

Bowling Green (0-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Boston College (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Friday, 7 p.m., Conte Forum, Chestnut Hill, MA

My kingdom for a goalie.

No doubt, that is what BC coach Jerry York is thinking. Freshman goaltender Scott Clemmensen fractured a bone in his right foot on Oct. 1 catching a football as part of a preseason workout. Although initially expected to return to practice last Friday and play against Bowling Green, that estimate has proven too optimistic. He will miss the Bowling Green game and is questionable against Notre Dame the following weekend.

Returning goaltender Mike Correia popped his left hamstring during an intrasquad scrimmage and is expected out four to five weeks.

"They’re just barely walking around," said a rueful York.

Which leaves no one but Andy McLaughlin between the pipes. Literally. In BC’s 10-0 exhibition thumping of Ottawa, McLaughlin, BC’s third-stringer, was the only netminder dressed.

"We did not have a backup," said York. "If Andy had gone down, I don’t know what we’d have done."

The BC staff is hoping to receive NCAA Clearinghouse approval for George Barker, a freshman who played some high school hockey but had expected only to play intramurals so had never submitted the paperwork. Early in the week, he had been cleared to practice, but not yet to play. Old-timers will be fumbling through their cerebral cobwebs to remember the last time a team suited up only one goalie for a Division I contest.

Otherwise, the Eagles look primed to take off after having whipped the same Ottawa squad that held Northeastern to a 3-3 tie one night earlier.

"Ottawa was probably tired after playing Northeastern the night before," said York. "But given that context, we moved the puck exceptionally well for early in the season. Our special teams were very good and we got steady goaltending from Andy McLaughlin."

Much of the Eagles’ hopes this year ride on the shoulders of their three freshman defensemen: Bobby Allen, Marty Hughes and Rob Scuderi.

"All three stepped in and really pleased the coaching staff with their performance," said York. "They all collectively moved the puck from the zone very well. That’s a key to college hockey. If you can move the puck, it prevents the long forecheck."

Freshman forward Brian Gionta earned Rookie of the Week honors with five points against Ottawa. The 5′ 7" dynamo played on Marty Reasoner’s line, a pairing that should create headaches for opposing defensemen all year long.

Getting the job done against an overmatched Canadian team, however, is a far cry from beating the Hockey East iron.

Bowling Green doesn’t fit the iron category either, though. The Falcons graduated the potential All-Americans — Curtis Fry, Mike Johnson and Kelly Perrault — that York recruited before coming East. Defenseman Peter Ratchuk also unexpectedly turned pro.

Tragically, Dan Price, a 17-goal scorer last year, is also unavailable. He was the driver in an automobile accident that killed a passenger and also injured Price’s knee. Police say that alcohol was a factor.

Small wonder, then, that they lost 3-0 last weekend to Western Michigan. BG coach Buddy Powers must be shaking his head, wondering what can go wrong next.

"[The losses] change their whole complexion," said York. "They were more of a senior-oriented team last year. I’m sure Buddy will have a good group of players. I’m just not as familiar with them as last year. But I think it’ll be a good test for both teams."

(For a more detailed look at Bowling Green from a CCHA perspective, check out this week’s CCHA Preview.)

PICK: BC passes the test with flying colors, 5-2. If this were the NHL, third-stringer Andy McLaughlin would be renegotiating his contract.

Vermont (0-0-0, 0-0-0 ECAC) at No. 6 New Hampshire (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Saturday, 7 p.m., Whittemore Center, Durham, NH

Last weekend, UNH beat New Brunswick 6-1, in a game coach Dick Umile used primarily to evaluate talent and prepare for the season opener against Vermont. As a result, he got to see his three freshmen defensemen — Eric Lind, Sean Austin and Mark White — play a fair number of minutes, freshman native son Corey-Joe Ficek score a goal, and backup netminder Matt Carney stop what little third-period action came his way.

"Lind, Austin, and White are going to help us," said Umile. "They’re good, strong kids. Carney handled himself fine and the local kid, Ficek, played real well. We were pleased with the kids. We were looking to see what they could bring to the table."

The first line of Mark Mowers, Jason Krog and Tom Nolan should be unstoppable. All three had over 50 points last year and deserved All-Hockey East berths, though injury and ballot-splitting kept Nolan off the team. Against Ottawa, the line generated one glittering chance after another but failed to capitalize until the final five minutes.

So, Coach, were you thinking of benching them for the Vermont game?

"They were driving me crazy," said a laughing Umile. "Instead of little, short passes, they were trying to hit home runs. They were driving me nuts."

Count on Nolan, Mowers and Krog to drive Vermont nuts this week.

The second line of Derek Bekar, Mike Souza and John Sadowski was the best surprise of the Ottawa game. Brad English also delivered two solid hits on his first shift and could be an important physical role player on the fourth line. Although the third line consisted of Rob Gagnon, Jason Shipulski and Dylan Dellezay, it wouldn’t be a shock to see Ficek replace Dellezay there before long.

"The third line looked like the third line last year," said Umile, referring to last year’s "S line" of Souza, Shipulski and Sadowski. That pairing provided effective counterpunching to teams worn down trying to defend Boguniecki & Company on the top two lines.

Souza, a sophomore, provided the best assessment after the Ottawa game.

"This wasn’t Maine, and it wasn’t Boston University, and, more importantly, it wasn’t Vermont, who we’re playing next week," he said. "These guys were okay, but I think Vermont will be tougher in the offensive zone, so we’ll have to bear down a little more."

Vermont somehow won’t look the same without The Elves — Martin St. Louis and Eric Perrin — darting this way and that up ice, not to mention Tim Thomas, a brick wall in the nets for most of four years. The three graduated All-Americans leave King Kong-sized skates to fill.

Stephane Piche, who played both with and against St. Louis and Perrin as a youngster, will be looked upon the make the biggest step up offensively. Three untested faces — James Tierney, Andrew Allen and Marty Phillips — will be looking to replace Thomas in the Catamount nets. Simon Tremblay and Jason Reid are the only sure-fire returning blueliners.

Looks like a lot of holes for the UNH snipers to draw their cross hairs on.

(For a more detailed look at Vermont from an ECAC perspective, check out this week’s ECAC Preview.)

PICK: UNH in a first-round TKO, 5-1.

Bowling Green (0-0-0, 0-0-0 CCHA) at Northeastern (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Saturday, 7 p.m., Matthews Arena, Boston, MA

The times, they are a-changin’.

"I had three kids among my better players last year show up and do the two-mile run in 17 1/2 minutes, one in 16 3/4 and one in 16 1/2," said Northeastern coach Bruce Crowder. "In a two-mile run! And they’re supposed to be Division I athletes! By the time you get them in shape, the season’s half over."

Crowder determined that this season would not be a repeat.

"This year, we put a lot of accountability into the kids coming back," said Crowder. "They had to send us every month what they were doing. We’ve seen some great improvements in kids. You can see some kids have an extra quicker step."

The noticeable improvements, however, were not universal. Eric Kaminski, the fourth-leading Husky scorer last year, has temporarily left the team.

"Eric is looking to get himself in shape before he’s allowed to come back," said Crowder. "He’s no different than anyone else. It’s basically in Eric’s hands right now."

One player who surprisingly will not be back is Brian Addesa, one of only two Husky defensemen who played in more than 20 games last season. Addesa, who was involved in 31, was cut.

"We told everybody coming back from last year’s team that it was going to be a dogfight," said Crowder. "We were going to have kids coming in that were going to push kids. If kids weren’t ready for it, or didn’t come up a step, [they’d be in trouble.]

"We felt that Brian needed to take it up a step anyways. We just felt looking at him that that didn’t really happen. In all honesty, any time you get into a rebuilding situation, if you’re going to be successful, you have to get in the habit of recruiting better than what you have. It’s just the nature of the beast."

Northeastern tied an Ottawa squad, 3-3, that BC would shellack 10-0 the following night. Even so, the Huskies dominated all but the second period despite playing only two juniors or seniors.

The line of Roger Holeczy, Todd Barclay and Billy Newson looked particularly good. So, too, did the new faces on the blue line: freshmen John Peterman, who looks like the power-play quarterback the Huskies lacked last year, Mike Jozefowicz and Arik Engbrecht, along with junior transfer David Dupont.

"We have to clean up our neutral zone defense," cautioned Crowder. "There were a lot of situations that we gave up opportunities where our defense was pinching. We also have to clean up our discipline after the whistle. And we’ve got to take care of finishing. We had opportunities, we just didn’t finish."

(Bowling Green is profiled above in its game with Boston College. For a more detailed look at Bowling Green from a CCHA perspective, check out this week’s CCHA Preview.)

PICK: Northeastern gets a feel-good start to its season, 3-2.

Guelph at Merrimack (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Exhibition Friday, 7 p.m., Volpe Center, North Andover, MA

Canadian university champion Guelph takes on Merrimack and Providence in exhibition games this weekend. Guelph will be no pushover. Although outshot by third-ranked Michigan State 49-12, it still held on for a 3-3 tie.

For Merrimack, this will be the first chance to sort out its goaltending puzzle. Although Cris Classen was considered the heir apparent to the job, he’s had mixed results in intrasquad scrimmages. Tim Thompson looked exceptional in one, but ordinary in the other. Such competitions, however, must be taken with a grain of salt.

The same is true for the Merrimack defense. Andrew Fox, Tony White and Mike Rodrigues must make the step from bit players to significant contributors. Otherwise, it will be a long year for whoever is in the Warrior nets.

One new defenseman who has looked outstanding is Steve Moon. Moon, however, is ineligible to play this year because he played in three major junior exhibitions a few years ago. Next year, after sitting out the first three games, he will begin play as a sophomore. "John Jakopin in his junior year" and "monster" are just some of the phrases used by salivating Merrimack followers to describe his play. As Red Sox fans are wont to say, wait till next year.

Based on the scrimmages, the offense won’t have to wait for anything. It looks like run-and-gun time in North Andover this year. The first line of Rejean Stringer, Kris Porter and Chris Halecki poured in 12 goals in the two scrimmages. The second line of captain Martin Laroche, Casey Kesselring and Sandy Cohen totaled seven, with five for Laroche.

A potential third line shapes up of bull-in-a-china-shop Jayson Philbin and long-time prep school linemates Vince Clevenger and Ron Mongeau, who look to prove that the total can indeed be more than the sum of its parts.

Of course, while the intrasquad scrimmages point to giddy offensive prospects, they don’t exactly provide ringing endorsements for the defense and goaltending, Merrimack’s potential Achilles’ heels.

PICK: Merrimack wins 4-3.

Guelph at Providence College (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Exhibition Saturday, 7 p.m., Schneider Arena, Providence, RI

Providence fans will be looking to see how freshman goalie Boyd Ballard performs. The early returns are good, but at this point we’re only talking about the Dixville Notch votes. Ballard, or returnees Mark Kane and Scott Swanjord, will need to be more consistent than Dan Dennis was last year for the Friars to return to the FleetCenter.

Captain Mike Mader, one of only two seniors, likes what he’s seen of the freshmen.

"Boyd Ballard has been a pleasant surprise," he said. "The rest of the freshmen are all big. Everyone is over six feet. Jay Leach is a big defenseman. He’s 6-4, 210. He’s a mobile defenseman for a big kid.

"Heath Gordon looks pretty good. They all look good. They’re all big and physical. They’ll add a lot to our team.

"I don’t think we were physical enough last year. We got beat up at times. We ended on a sour note when we didn’t make the FleetCenter in Hockey East, so that drove us this summer to get back to the FleetCenter and see what we can do from there.

"We’ve got to own the boards and own the corners. That’s huge for us. With these guys being so big, I think we can overpower teams with our strength and with our speed."

PICK: Providence wins 2-1.

Dalhousie at UMass-Lowell (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Exhibition Saturday, 7 p.m., Tully Forum, Lowell, MA

UMass-Lowell opens its schedule with an exhibition against Dalhousie. The River Hawks will be moving into the Tsongas Arena later this season, but will be staying put in the Tully Forum until the new facility is ready.

At present, the target opening date is Dec. 6 against UNH. If that schedule slips, the school would seem likely to opt for Jan. 23, when it hosts Providence. That would be the first home game following the return of students for the spring semester.

Coach Tim Whitehead will be looking to see who will fill the nets following the graduation of Neil Donovan, Ryan Sandholm and Marc Salsman. The obvious answer is Hockey East Rookie of the Year Greg Koehler. Beyond Koehler, however, the returning forwards will have to step it up a notch and the incoming freshmen will need to contribute right away.

The River Hawk power play will also bear watching in this game, since the departed trio were all members of the top unit. During Lowell’s successful first-half run last year, their special teams ranked among the best in the league.

PICK: Lowell 4-1.

Dalhousie at UMass-Amherst (0-0-0, 0-0-0 HE) Exhibition Sunday, 2 p.m., Mullins Center, Amherst, MA

In Amherst, the Minutemen encountered tough luck when premier recruit Jeff Turner broke his leg at the end of the first practice. He is expected out until at least January. Although this is a significant blow, coach Joe Mallen likes what he sees so far out of two other forward recruits, Kris Wallis and Nick Stephens.

Will Tim Lovell show some rust after sitting out all of last year? He’ll need to contribute right away for the Minutemen since they follow this exhibition with eight league games. How quickly the team gets out of the chute will go a long way to determining its ultimate fate in the league standings.

PICK: UMass-Amherst 4-2.

Dave Hendrickson is the Hockey East Correspondent for U.S. College Hockey Online.

Copyright 1997 Dave Hendrickson . All Rights Reserved.

Return to U.S. College Hockey Online

Minnesota Women Get Started

Hockey in Minnesota just took a step forward.

Oct. 13, 1997, marked the first day of official practice for the new Minnesota women’s hockey team. Women have been playing hockey on the East coast for years, and with the sudden growth spurt in girls’ hockey in Minnesota area high schools, the time seemed right to add a varsity women’s team to the rich tradition that is Minnesota hockey.

Not that the occasion was somber. The women, in their pre-practice workout pads and equipment, looked like rollerball players. The large initials “GWH” — short for “Gopher Women’s Hockey” — emblazoned the practice jerseys, and excitement and fun were in the air.

“I’m trying to go with the flow,” said head coach Laura Halldorson.

Media people were everywhere, tape recorders and notepads at the ready. Camera crews got set up in the stands, and there were constant demands to speak with players.

With the media fanfare, did she get distracted from the task at hand? “I’m just trying to get the team ready for their first game on Nov. 2,” she laughed. Halldorson comes to Minnesota after being head coach of the women’s program at Colby College, in Waterville, Me.

“There are no TV cameras in Waterville,” she noted.

The other Eastern transplant is senior captain Julie Otto, who transfered from Northeastern University in Boston — one of the top programs for women’s hockey in the nation — to play near her home in Buffalo, Minn.

“This has more tradition, more nostalgia. Northeastern was not my dream. Hockey was, but not the school.” Otto is the only senior on the team, along with five sophomores and a whopping 17 freshmen.

Even though practice just officially started, the women on the team have already started to form their own bonds. One of those experiences came when Coach Halldorson introduced them to their locker room.

“It used to be the visitor’s locker room, but we’ve made it our own,” Halldorson said. The coach didn’t let anyone into the room until after the team was announced — there was to be no preferential treatment for some girls over others, and a feeling of awe and respect was nurtured in them all. The team was led in, all at once, after the final cuts had been announced.

“I didn’t want them in there there before that. I had 31 people try out. I didn’t want those I recruited in there, to form divisions in the team.”

Otto thought it was a special moment. “You just got that big, circular butterfly feeling in your chest. We wanted to get our equipment on and play right then.”

Brittny Ralph had her own reasons for being excited. “My senior year [in high school], I played for boys’ hockey at Brooklyn Center. We didn’t have a locker room, so this is very special for me.

“It took me a moment to realize just what it meant. The anticipation grew every day. I graduated in 1996. I have been waiting a year for this, and it has been worth it.

“When we walked in, it was all of us. We were a team.”

Halldorson thought it was important that they go in together. “I said ‘Remember this moment. You’re making history.’ Now we have a home.”

And it is important to keep that home clean. Halldorson has special ‘Reminder Skates’ prepared for anyone leaving their equipment out of place in the room. “It helps develop a sense of pride, for the room and for the program.”

Unlike the men’s team, not all of the players on the women’s team are from Minnesota. There are players from North Dakota, Wisconsin, Alaska and — gasp — even one from Canada. Nadine Muzerall is from Mississauga, Ont. Forward Ambria Thomas, from Fairbanks, Alas., attended the USA Hockey Olympic camp, along with Ralph and Jenny Schmidgall, the first woman to sign a letter of intent with Minnesota.

While Schmidgall is the only one still with the Olympic team, the others aren’t taking it easy. Standing just a few feet away from the nine-thousand-plus seats in Mariucci Arena, Thomas said, “We want to play in front of a lot of people. That’s one of the reasons I came here.”

Another reason? The coach.

“I had my school all picked, but [Halldorson] convinced me to come here instead, and I’m glad I did. She was my coach at junior camp, and I never thought I would have the chance to be on her team for real.”

Minnesota has received a lot of press, new equipment, and the team gets to play in a fabulous, history-rich arena. But despite all the hype, what chance does a start-up program have in the first year? Shouldn’t the older, longer-existing teams roll right over them, while Minnesota continues on with developing the fledgling program?

None of the team members think so. “I think we’ll be competitive right away. Everyone’s working hard,” Thomas says.

Otto agrees. “I think people will want to beat us early, because we are a new team. So we want to go out and show them that we’re good.

“I think we’ll do great. I think we have a good chance of being at the nationals at the end of the season.”

Halldorson also likes their chances. “I think we’ll have more depth than some teams out East do. They have maybe two lines that are really stong, but we will have three or four. I think we’ll be able to wear some teams down.”

She adds with a grin, “I think they’re a little nervous out East.”

Judging from Minnesota’s first day of practice, they should be.

Ice Breaker Invitational Preview

This weekend sees the debut of college hockey’s new season-opening tourney, the Ice Breaker Invitational, at the Dane County Coliseum in Madison, Wis.

The tourney, originally announced at the NCAA championships last March, brings together one team each from the CCHA, WCHA, ECAC and Hockey East for a two-day event. This year, the invitees are national runner-up Boston University, CCHA preseason favorite Michigan State, defending ECAC regular-season champion Clarkson, and host Wisconsin.

Friday’s games pit Boston University against Michigan State in the early contest; then it’s Clarkson versus Wisconsin. On Saturday, the losers meet in a consolation game, followed by the tournament championship.

(Last season’s records in parentheses)

First game: No. 2 Boston University (26-9-6, 16-4-4 Hockey East, T-1st) vs. No. 3 Michigan State (23-13-4, 16-7-4 CCHA, 3rd)
Friday, Oct. 10, 5 p.m. CT, Dane County Coliseum, Madison, Wis.

Last Saturday, at one minute past midnight, the Terriers officially took to the ice for the first time, climaxing BU’s Midnight Madness.Later that same day, Michigan State took on Guelph, the defending Canadian university champion, and — despite outshooting them 46-9 — settled for a 3-3 overtime tie.

Clearly, the Spartans should be a more cohesive unit than BU, since they’ve been on the ice much longer than the Terriers and have some game action under their belts.

“We only have six days of practice before we play those games,” said BU coach Jack Parker, explaining the rationale behind BU opting to consider the Ice Breaker games exhibitions in terms of NCAA tournament consideration. “They’re definitely not going to count. Last year, we played Minnesota [in the Hall of Fame Game] and that didn’t count either.”

However, while most teams treat exhibitions as opportunities to give the recruits and underclassmen extra ice time to show the coaches what they can do, BU will be playing the games as if they’re for keeps.

“Actually, it wouldn’t make much difference to us whether they called it a real game or not,” said Parker.”We’ll play it like a real game because in a week we do play real games.It’s not like this is a tryout situation.

“This will be our real team.We’re not going to dress extra players or sit down a couple guys that we know are on the club just so we can take a good look at somebody else. It’s such a short time between when you start practice and get into real games, that everybody’s got to understand that we’re making a guesstimate of what the team will be early.

“If you’re not in the lineup early, it’s not because we gave you a fair look.We didn’t give you a fair look yet.We understand that, but there’s plenty of time to get into the lineup.

“So we’ll probably go more with upperclassmen and see how they go.”

This means Hobey Baker Award runner up Chris Drury, Mike Sylvia, Tommi Degerman, Albie O’Connell and Chris Heron will be the mainstays on offense. On the blue line, All-American Chris Kelleher will team with either Dan Ronan or Jeff Kealty in one pairing, and Hockey East All-Rookie team selection Tom Poti will play with the other.

“If Chris Kelleher isn’t going to be the best defenseman in college hockey, then Tom Poti might be,” said Parker in BU’s season preview. “We’re going to make sure they get plenty of ice time.”

Michel Larocque and Tom Noble, an embarrassment of riches between the Terrier pipes, will split the tournament duties.Larocque won Hockey East’s Top Goaltender award for having the league’s best goals-against average, while Noble earned All-Hockey East honors.

Meanwhile, game experience or not, the Spartans can’t be happy. Tying a Canadian university team — even the defending Canadian champion — is undoubtedly not the way Ron Mason, college hockey’s all-time leader in coaching victories with 775, envisioned the start of his season.

Making that tie even more painful is the fact that the Spartans led 3-1 with under four minutes to go before consecutive power-play goals by Guelph’s James Boyd and Mike Van Volsen knotted it up.The game-tying tallies were scored in a span of 31 seconds on Chad Alban, as the Spartan netminder, arguably the top goalie in the CCHA, made only nine saves the entire evening.

Perhaps the only bright spot in the Spartans’ performance was the play of Mike York, who scored two of the three State goals, including an unassisted shorthander early in the third period to put his team up by two. Sean Berens, York’s All-CCHA linemate, assisted on the first.

Nonetheless, the greatest good that can come out of the embarrassing Michigan State performance is perhaps a renewed sense of pressure on the Spartans, the CCHA’s preseason favorites according to both coaches and media, who have at times failed to live up to their potential. BU’s concern must be that MSU is out to avenge itself on the Terriers Friday.

Pick: Despite the Spartans’ weak turnout in their opener, look for the team that’s been on the ice almost twice as long to play like it. It’s almost a shame these two teams aren’t playing at midseason instead, with all pistons firing.With both picked to finish first in their respective league polls, this could be a preview of a Final Four matchup. Michigan State 3, Boston University 2

Second game: Wisconsin 15-21-2, 15-15-2 WCHA (7th) vs. Clarkson 27-10-0, 17-5-0 ECAC (1st)
Friday, Oct. 10, 8:00 p.m. CT, Dane County Coliseum, Madison, Wis.

The host Badgers are probably the least-heralded team in this tournament — which could make them dangerous, especially before a partisan crowd at the Dane.Head coach Jeff Sauer probably danced a jig around his office when he learned that the powers that be hadmoved the Ice Breaker from its original venue, the Rosemont Horizon in suburban Chicago.

That move alone stands to give the Badgers a good shot at Clarkson, the defending ECAC regular-season champions. Although UW lost steady goalie Kirk Daubenspeck at the end of last season, the Badgers still have a lot to be optimistic about — starting with seniors Brad Englehart (17-19–36 last season) and Joe Bianchi (16-17–33), the team’s leading scorers of a year ago, and returning team captain Eric Raygor (13-17–30 in 1996-96), who missed virtually the whole 1996-97 season with a knee injury.

“You look to your older players for strength and leadership,” Sauer told the Badger hockey website. “We have a lot of guys up front who have experience and we obviously will look to those guys to score goals and lead the team offensively.”

WCHA coaches seem to like this Badger squad — Wisconsin is picked fourth after the triumvirate of North Dakota, Colorado College and Minnesota in the conference’s preseason poll. But the closest parallel to what Wisconsin faces Friday and Saturday might have been last year’s Badger Hockey Showdown in Milwaukee, another tournament hosted by UW in which the Badgers squared off against higher-ranked opponents. At that one, Wisconsin lost a frantic 9-7 battle against New Hampshire in the first round, then bowed out of the consolation match with a 5-2 loss to Vermont.

Clarkson, for its part, has something to prove as well. Although the Golden Knights won the ECAC title handily in the regular season, they were stifled by Cornell in the tournament championship, and then dropped a shocker to Colorado College in the first round of the NCAAs.

A lot of the front-line players are gone from last year’s team — including Hobey Baker finalist Todd White — but the ones that remain remember, you can be sure. That list includes captain Chris Clark, the sparkplug up front.

“His aggressive style is invaluable to the success of our club,” said head coach Mark Morris in Clarkson’s season preview. “But the other guys we are counting on are Guillaume Besse, Ben Maidment, Dana Mulvihill and Buddy Wallace.” Wallace is moving up to a forward position after playing at the blue line last season. Also back is Dan Murphy, one of the top goaltenders in all of college hockey.

For that group, what better way to start a new year than by winning a brand-new tourney title?

But Morris is keeping a level head.”It’ll be an interesting tournament for college hockey. It’s something we’d like to be associated with,” he said. “It’ll be an interesting test for our team.

“It’s a nice bonus for a small school like ours to be there with the big [ones],” he added.

And it’s not just the veteran Knights who might benefit, according to the coach.

“Our newcomers will have an eye-opener,” Morris noted.”With the place full of rabid fans, it’s quite the way to get an intro to college hockey.”

Pick: The Badger fans at the Dane will be sure to give Morris’ freshman a good introduction, but Clarkson’s all-around strength should still overpower the hosts. Clarkson 4, Wisconsin 2

Consolation/Championship Saturday, Oct. 11, 5/8 p.m. CT, Dane County Coliseum, Madison, Wis.

Consolation pick: Boston U.’s going to be upset after losing to the Spartans. The Terriers take out their righteous indignation on Wisconsin. Boston University 5, Wisconsin 3

Championship pick: The Spartans complete their vengeance, winning the inaugural Ice Breaker Invitational thanks to York, Berens and Alban. Michigan State 3, Clarkson 1

Grande and Raeder Named to SportsChannel Broadcast Team

SportsChannel New England announced today that Sean Grande and Cap Raeder will serve as play-by-play announcer and color commentator, respectively, for its Hockey East broadcasts.

Grande has broadcast hockey and other collegiate sports on radio and television for the past ten years, as well as hosting the Stanley Cup playoffs on NHL Radio. He is Sports Director at Boston’s WEEI Sports Radio.

In addition, Grande will be one of two Hockey East media representatives in the U.S. College Hockey Online poll, carried weekly by the Associated Press.

Raeder earned All-America honors as a player at New Hamphshire, where he returned as an assistant coach after a professional career with the New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association. After serving as an assistant coach at both New Hampshire and Clarkson University, he was named head coach at Clarkson in 1985. After three years at the Clarkson helm, he spent eight seasons as an NHL assistant coach: six with the Los Angeles Kings, and the last two with the Boston Bruins.

The 1997-98 season is the first in a three-year agreement between Hockey East and SportsChannel New England that will provide approximately 45 televised games over that period.

New NMU Arena Given Go-Ahead

The Northern Michigan University Board of Control has approved a plan calling for the construction of a new campus event center, slated to go up by mid-1999. Construction will begin on the $9.5 million project next spring.

Of the new arena, Mike Roy, vice president for finance and administration, said, “It will offer individual seating for approximately 4,000 for hockey games and up to 5,000 for other events, such as concerts and student activities.”

The hockey surface will be a sheet of Olympic-size ice which can be covered with temporary flooring for other events.

NMU athletic director and hockey head coach Rick Comley said the Events Center will help the university compete with CCHA rivals. The Wildcats make their return to CCHA competition this year after several seasons in the WCHA.

The Commish, Part 1

In many ways, Joe Bertagna was ECAC hockey.

Over the course of 15 years, he ran the full gamut of positions in the conference, going from tournament director to public relations coordinator to sports information director to its first hockey commissioner. His footprints surrounded everything from the ECAC television packages to its corporate sponsorships to its playoff home in Lake Placid, N.Y.

On February 26, all that changed.

Hockey East announced that Bertagna would become its fourth commissioner and its first to serve in essentially a full-time capacity.

“They’re looking at me as the first full-time commissioner even though I’m full-time in hockey, but not necessarily for the league,” he says. “I do a lot of things.”

Such as running his popular goaltending schools and serving as Executive Director of the American Hockey Coaches Association, a position he’s held since 1984. In the latter role, he has recently helped develop an eye-catching “college hockey calling card” that espouses the virtues of the game for mailings to potential sponsors and players who might be considering forfeiting their NCAA eligibility to play in Canadian major junior leagues.

Despite these sidelines, he still ranks as a significant departure from his Hockey East predecessors. Lou Lamoriello and Bob DeGregorio both were full-time athletic directors at member schools, and Stu Haskell doubled as commissioner of the North Atlantic Conference. Bertagna becomes the league’s first commissioner for whom the job draws unquestioned top billing.

“Everybody involved in our sport feels passionately about what the quality of our product is,” Bertagna says. “We don’t think we have to spend a lot of time justifying how exciting college hockey is. Certainly, if you go to a BU-Maine game or Clarkson-St. Lawrence, it’s quite an evening. We like our product. We feel it’s just a matter of getting people exposed to it.”

The SportsChannel Package

The importance of a commissioner struck home for Hockey East schools last year when New England Sports Network abruptly canceled its television contract, a shocker that some felt might have been avoided if not for the year-long void in the commissioner’s office.

“It was during my interview process that NESN dropped Hockey East,” Bertagna says. “One of the attractive things for me here had been the TV package. With the ECAC, we always had to pay to get on. The irony was that I was going to take the job, but we weren’t going to have TV. It was a PR blow, so I knew one of the first priorities was to get television back.

“I’d like to be able to say that my ingenuity and creativity did it, but the thing is that the Hartford Whalers leaving Hartford clicked a switch. I was out in Milwaukee and was watching SportsChannel. There was Peter Karmanos having his press conference announcing they were leaving Hartford.

“I said, ‘Bingo! There’s the opening!’ I called Steve Regan at SportsChannel from my hotel and said, ‘Hey, looks like you’ll be looking for some programming. What about college hockey?'”

Although past ECAC negotiations with SportsChannel had proved fruitless, Bertagna hit pay dirt this time. The cable station needed the programming and liked the idea of taking Hockey East away from its primary rival. Hockey East was also a more attractive package than the ECAC.

“In my first meeting, I tried to sell them on a college hockey game of the week with both leagues,” Bertagna says. “It was part of what I’ve told the athletic directors here. I want to do things in general for both sides. Every once in a while they remind me that I’m not working for those other guys anymore. ‘Don’t worry about doing things for all of college hockey. Remember who’s paying you.’

“But I did what I thought was right. Personally, I believe a college package with as many games for both leagues would be terrific, but SportsChannel was quite blunt. ‘With all due respect to your old league,’ they said, ‘we’re interested in Hockey East because it’s a definable package. It’s all in our audience’s geography. We’re not interested in the other guys.’ Having done that, I could take the dual hats off and zoom in.”

The deal, however, received an initially-lukewarm response among member schools. It contained only nine regular season games — six of which were specified, with the remaining three left as wild cards — compared to NESN’s 16. And while NESN’s more expansive coverage afforded each team at least one turn in the limelight, the SportsChannel package shut out both Merrimack and UMass-Amherst, at least until the wild card games are decided.

“I had to turn to my athletic directors and explain something that’s a little new to them,” Bertagna says. “From my background, I think it’s a great package, because I always had to pay to get on television with the other league. These guys have had 13 years of being on TV and having 16 games as opposed to nine. So for some of them, it’s been a little bit of an adjustment to take fewer games.

“We didn’t have a lot of leverage coming out of the situation we were in with NESN. I think given the reality of the marketplace, we should be very happy that this happened. Yeah, we got fewer games, but more viewers. SportsChannel is going to have something like two million homes compared to half a million for NESN. SportsChannel is in the process of changing over to basic cable, so for most of their viewership it’s free. That’s a great thing for us.”

Although the pact is cable-exclusive, meaning that a purely cable station such as NESN cannot broadcast Hockey East games, there are no limits to how many games over-the-air stations can pick up. Their only restriction is that they cannot go head-to-head with SportsChannel broadcasts.

Already some stations have moved to fill gaps in the package, most notably WABU-68, which now lists 13 games on its schedule. WMUR-TV9 has added a single UNH game, while WNDS-TV50 at one point appeared interested in a combined Hockey East and ECAC package. Unfortunately, that package never materialized.

Bertagna also notes that member schools could conceivably pay SportsChannel to carry additional games that they consider exceptional exposure.

“Let’s say that Lowell wants to put the opening of their new facility on,” he says. “They could go to SportsChannel and say, ‘If you’re not doing a Celtics game that night, if you have an open window, we’d like to pay to put the game on.

“That’s a possibility. Down the line, I would like to think that if our league was financially sound, we could subsidize that so the burden wouldn’t fall on teams to do it. The league would subsidize games for schools that aren’t getting as much as the others.”

Bertagna and SportsChannel programming director Norm Schraeder picked the games by comparing the Hockey East schedule with that of the Celtics and the Fox network. (Fox, which has purchased SportsChannel, requires it to carry considerable Fox national programming, especially on the weekend.) After determining the open dates, Bertagna helped identify the most attractive games, which then was combined with SportsChannel’s preference for the Greater Boston area and for certain facilities.

“We had a meeting with the athletic directors where I told them I would be very sensitive to those schools that weren’t on,” he says. “I’ll be asking SportsChannel that when they come down to picking those three wild card games, if they’re looking between two games and it doesn’t make a lot of difference to them, could they please give some extra attention to the schools that haven’t been on yet.

“And then when we go into year two, I’d almost like to make it a priority that anyone that doesn’t get on the first year gets guaranteed to be on the first six games, because the first six are going to get more exposure. Even though you might eventually get on games seven, eight or nine, you’re not going to get the year-long exposure of being on that TV schedule.”

Still, the spread-the-wealth philosophy can only go so far in Bertagna’s eyes.

“I don’t think it’s in the league’s best interest to put certain games on,” he says. “If there’s a rink that comes across dark, or if it’s a rink that traditionally doesn’t draw well, or if the game has no particular meaning in the standings at a certain time, it’s not only in SportsChannel’s interest to stay away from the game, I think it’s in our interest.

“Now, it’s not in [every school’s] individual interest. I’ve got AD’s that will say, ‘My school’s not on. I want my school on.’ But you’ve got to go with your best. You’ve got to put your best individuals up front and your best teams up front.

“At the same time, you have to be sensitive to a potentially growing gap between the traditionally stronger programs and the traditionally weak programs. You have to take care of everybody.”

Those competing desires to showcase the league’s best while also spreading the wealth also translate into other tough decisions for Bertagna and newly appointed Director of Media Relations Ed Saunders. After every weekend, the two will choose Hockey East’s Player of the Week and Rookie of the Week. The choices will then be announced in the league’s press release. Inevitably, somebody will be displeased.

“I used to get this problem with the ECAC,” Bertagna says. “Coaches would call up and ask, ‘Why did you pick that guy? What about my guy?’ You almost want to say, ‘Don’t you have other things to do today? I didn’t call you and tell you your power play looked brutal.’

“This weekly release is a league public relations tool. Certainly if some guy gets five goals, whether he was Player of the Week two weeks in a row or not, he’s the Player of the Week. But most weeks, two or three guys have done something unique. What I’ll be saying to Ed will be, ‘Who haven’t we done anything for lately? If you’ve got three schools each with a pretty good candidate, and one school looks like it’s in for a long season, let’s pick that guy now because we may not get the chance to pick him for another month or two.

“So there is a little bit of a spread-the-wealth mentality in the things that we do, but at the same time you’ve got to go with your best whether it’s the TV package or the cover of the media guide or when a writer calls and asks for some feature ideas. If you’ve got a Chris Drury and you have a chance to put him out there in some way or another, you should do it.”

A National TV Contract?

The premise of putting your best foot forward could be taken to another level in future years if Bertagna has his way.

“I’ve been part of an effort with WCHA Commissioner Bruce McLeod to go down to the National Hockey League and try to enlist them as a resource to create a national game of the week,” he says. “To put a national TV package together, however, the college hockey community would have to produce some really attractive games.

“One of our problems is that some of our traditionally strong programs are small, Division III, northern colleges that don’t have national recognition. We know that a Clarkson-RPI game would be a great game, but if you go to a sponsor on a national level and you have 16 games like that or Lake Superior-Miami — ‘they play hockey down in Miami?’ — you’d have trouble.

“We’d be under pressure to put the Minnesota-Wisconsin game, and the BU-BC game, or maybe BU-Minnesota on. Ironically, there are some games, in reverse, that we know aren’t necessarily marquee hockey games, like Army-Notre Dame. Some sponsor might think that one is great. Or to a sponsor with certain demographics, Harvard-Yale is a great game.

“If three out of the 20 were Clarkson-RPI, then fine. But 16 or 17 of the 20 would have to be big package-able games.”

Although such an opportunity might seem like a pipe dream, Bertagna and McLeod have already cleared many hurdles. The NHL’s promotion of The Coolest Game on Earth could soon encompass college hockey.

“It’s foolish to be publicly optimistic about these things because you only get slapped,” Bertagna says. “But the last meeting we had with the NHL was very positive. I came away with the sense that we didn’t have to sell ourselves. The people to whom we spoke knew college hockey.

“They all but said, ‘You go back to your campuses and put together an inventory of everything you have to offer, from how many rinks you could do between-period promotions to how many rinks you could have sign ads to print ads to TV spots. Come up with all the things you can offer. If what you show us is substantial, we’ll go out and try to put something together.’

“One of the issues we’ve been dealing with as commissioners is who should be knocking on doors? Should the four commissioners be doing it? Should we hire some sort of pro who goes around and knocks on doors on behalf of us, and we give that person a commission?

“When that specific question was asked, the NHL people said, ‘You get your act together, and we’ll knock on the doors. We know how to do that.’

“I felt like tap-dancing on the table. On the outside I was trying to look professional, while inside I was giddy, thinking, Oooooh, This sounds great!

“So Bruce and I got our walking orders and we went back to the CCHA and ECAC, the coaches’ association, and the NCAA. Now we’ve got to put a combined inventory together, school-by-school and league-by-league, in a professional presentation form and schedule another meeting with the NHL.”


(In the next installment, Bertagna talks about the ECAC, expansion both for Hockey East and the NCAA tournament, officiating, and an Internet presence for the league.)

The Commish, Part 2

(In the first installment, new Hockey East Commissioner Joe Bertagna talked about the league’s SportsChannel contract and a potential national TV package.)

The ECAC vs. Hockey East

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As ECAC commissioner, Bertagna oversaw not just the 12 Division I schools under the ECAC umbrella, but all the Division II and III programs competing in ECAC-sponsored leagues. Eventually, this grew to over 90 schools.

“It was one of those jobs that grew horizontally,” Bertagna says. “I wasn’t gaining in authority. I was just gaining work to do. And, in a perverse way, I was creating the work. I was actively trying to create a women’s league, and I was actively trying to create an alliance.

“At the same time that I got permission to start these things and considered it a victory, I stepped back and said, ‘Oh, geez, now I’ve got to create a schedule for these people.’ After 15 years, I had 90 some-odd programs. Even though there was support help at the ECAC office, I was the hockey guy. So a call to the ECAC, meant to call Joe.

“Some of it was comical. I’d get a call from an athletic director complaining, ‘it was a rough game and we thought we handled it pretty well, but the PA announcer out there said, “And that’s the end of this fiasco!”‘ So I’d have to call an AD, and call a coach, and find an observer that watched the game, and find the PA guy. I’d have to write a letter to the PA guy and copy everybody saying that it’s unprofessional to say, ‘And that’s the end of this fiasco!’ Next thing you know, it’s one o’clock and I had all this other stuff I had to do.”

Eventually, the job just became too much.

“I asked the ECAC for a full-time assistant or to absolutely change things,” he says. “I was a little naive. I thought that I’d established myself so much that I would get a lot of the things that I asked for.

“But they did an internal study of how we did things, and concluded that the problem wasn’t that I didn’t have any help. The problem was that we had two offices. If I moved down on the Cape and used their staffing, the problems would go away. Well I wasn’t going to move after 15 years.

“And to be very blunt, they had this huge office, but some of the people there were not assets. They didn’t know hockey. They were upset that hockey was getting preferential treatment. I said, ‘It’s because it’s the only sport that raises the ECAC flag at a national level and makes money for you. You guys should bow down and give hockey the extra attention. No one else cuts you a check like the hockey tournament in Lake Placid does.'”

Instead, they criticized Bertagna’s creation of a hockey-specific ECAC logo, wondering why his sport couldn’t use the generic ECAC one, even though the three competing conferences all sported logos clearly identified with hockey.

At the same time that his unhappiness with his working conditions grew, the Hockey East position opened. He knew the league had an attractive TV contract — at least it did at the time — and that it had a full-time assistant.

“I can’t say this clearly enough,” Bertagna says. “It was a personal decision for a better job. It was not a statement on which league is better than the other. I’m forty-five years old, and my wife and I started a family last year. I have a one-year old son and another one on the way. I got a health plan for my family as opposed to just for myself. There were a lot of things on a personal level that the ECAC just wouldn’t offer.

“My gripes were never with the schools of the ECAC, the coaches, or the hockey programs. It was really a matter of my working conditions and finding a better job. I would hate after 15 years to have anything I say reflect ill on the league’s hockey operations, because I had great relations with all the schools.”

His change in allegiances will initially challenge the instinctive reactions Bertagna built during his long ECAC career.

“I’ve spent the last 15 years trying to have a winning record against Hockey East. Last year the ECAC did it. Given the way I’ve been thinking for so long, when I’ve picked up a paper or called a press box, I’ve always wanted the ECAC team to win. Now I’ve got to do an about-face.

“So now when I go out to speak to teams, I’ve got two messages. One, I want the league to have the reputation for being a tough, but clean, league. The other message is,” — and here Bertagna laughs — “‘you guys have to beat up on the ECAC.’

“When I was with the ECAC, there were a lot of things I was proud of, but there was that feeling of looking at the other guys for on-ice success. It’s nice to have people looking at us now. The strength of our best programs is a real strong suit. The top 20 comes out and we have three teams in the top seven. Some of our coaches have 500 wins and are still coaching, and there are a lot of guys in the National Hockey League that played in Hockey East. So there are a lot of things that we can sell.”

Expansion

One advantage that the ECAC holds over Hockey East, at least in Bertagna’s mind, is its 12-team composition.

“It’s really tough to schedule an odd number of teams,” he says. “Look down the stretch and it’s a shame that on a Saturday night in February, there are Hockey East teams that can’t play because non-league opportunities dry up. Everybody is into their conference schedule from Beanpot time on.

“Down the line, there’s the new league that has just been announced, but they have an even number of teams, so near the end of their schedule they’ll all be busy. If they expand, and they probably will, if they expand by an odd number, my first phone call would be, ‘let’s try to match our odd number with your odd number and make sure everybody is playing every weekend.’ But they’re a few years away from being competitive on the ice.”

Ideally, Bertagna would like to see not only a tenth team added, but also an eleventh and twelfth if the teams are a good fit.

“I think most people who follow hockey know that 10 works better than nine, and, in some cases, 12 works better than 10,” he says. “If you can get to playing each other fewer times, I think it makes every single game more important. I like the ECAC schedule. If you missed Harvard this time, that’s it. They’re not coming back until next year.

“If you’re going to play somebody three times in your schedule, once in the Governors’ Cup, maybe once in the Beanpot, maybe three times in the quarterfinals, then all of sudden at the end of the year you’ve played somebody seven times and two of those games were televised. The importance of getting to that single game has been diminished.”

The catch, of course, is finding teams that are a good fit. Teams like Niagara and Alabama-Huntsville might be interested, but pose geographical problems.

“Part of the attraction for SportsChannel to Hockey East was that we weren’t spread out,” Bertagna says. “We were all in their market. The fact that we weren’t too spread out made us more attractive.”

Finding teams within the region to add won’t be easy, pointing to an immediate future stuck at nine teams.

“One thing I personally won’t do is knock on the doors of the ECAC schools,” he says. “I don’t think that’s appropriate. I didn’t think it was appropriate when I was on the other side. I’m not going to do an about face now. I think some of the athletic directors might have hoped that I would do it, but I won’t.” Laughing, Bertagna then looks at Saunders and adds, “I’ll have Ed do it instead.”

The MAAC and the NCAA Tournament

The introduction of a fifth Division I conference, the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC), affects Hockey East in ways beyond simply providing for additional interleague foes or potential expansion candidates. Over time, it could have a major impact on the structuring of the sport’s NCAA tournament.

“The presence of that league requires a lot of us in college hockey to think differently,” Bertagna says. “We’ve been thinking about Division I hockey as these four conferences. You can argue about which league is stronger, but for the most part, they’re pretty competitive.

“But look at basketball. When basketball announces its 64 teams for the national tournament, no one thinks that the Ivy League teams top-to-bottom are as strong as the ACC. But the basketball people understand that there are a lot of Division I leagues and they all get invited to the party in March. Nobody thinks that they are all at the same level, but so what? We’ve got to get used to that.

“I hope there’s a sixth conference some day. I hope Syracuse and maybe Penn State — large, well-known schools that have club hockey — look at this new league and say, ‘Hey, there is another way of doing it. I don’t have to go from nothing to BU or Michigan State. There’s a half-step; there’s something else we can do.'”

This growth has fueled speculation that the NCAA tournament could soon grow to 16 teams to accommodate an automatic berth for the new league. The NCAA looks for a six-to-one ratio between the number of D-I teams playing a sport and the size of the tournament field. Until now, that ratio has prevented the move from 12 to 16 teams.

“A lot of the average fans are getting too excited, too early about this,” Bertagna says. “They’re thinking, ‘Oh good, there are eight new teams.’ Unfortunately, most of these teams have already been counted in that formula. Only three make a difference. Sacred Heart and Quinnipiac are moving up their entire athletic programs, and AIC is playing up in hockey. So we’ve added three teams to that formula, but it’s still a ratio that’s troublesome to people in the NCAA that watch that stuff.”

Even so, the NCAA has recently restructured itself in a way that each sport has its own specific committees, such as one for the tournament and one for rules changes. Additionally, there are NCAA-wide councils that establish policies that all the committees have to follow. So, for example, if the rules committee passes something that affects either finance or safety, the overall NCAA can veto it.

In a similar fashion, the tournament committee, which is presumably more familiar with hockey’s specific needs than the general NCAA population, could vote to expand to a 16-team draw. Although this still would be subject to an overall veto, this route to a larger tournament appears to be an easier path than in past years.

“The committee has already voted not to do anything for at least two years to give the new league a chance to get its act together,” Bertagna says. “But let’s say three or four years from now, they can make a case to get an automatic bid. And somebody else makes a case that it shouldn’t come from the 12, it should be in addition to the 12. You’d start moving to 16.

“The sport, right now, can support a 16-team tournament. I don’t think anybody knowledgeable will suggest that if you added a team from each conference, that all of a sudden the tournament would be diluted. Just look at who got selected in March, and then look at who just missed. You’d still have a good tournament.

“And from the fans’ point of view, you’d have a much better tournament, knowing that there were four regionals, each producing a winner as opposed to the six-team thing that we all have trouble explaining to people: ‘Who won the East regional?’ ‘Well, nobody won it.’ It just would make so much more sense.”

Additionally, the larger draw would also eliminate the enormous advantage given to bye teams that can advance to the Final Four with only one win over a team that has played the previous night.

“I don’t think anything is going to happen in the next two or three years,” Bertagna says. “But I can’t see that this new league isn’t going to help somewhere down the line. They’re going to demand, and legitimately so, that they have to be recognized. Why shouldn’t they be?”

Referees and “Calling the Book”

As both a member of the NCAA Rules Committee and the Hockey East Commissioner, Bertagna is in a unique position to affect the way games are officiated.

“I’ve had the opportunity to speak to our coaches and to our refs, both separately and in the room together,” he says. “I have one clarification that I always have to make. When I tell a referee that I expect him to call the book, some people will invariably ask, ‘Are you telling them to call penalties?’

“No. There’s a difference. Some nights there are no penalties to call. You tell a ref that he has to call penalties, and he’s going to be looking to call penalties. If he’s doing a game where the players are doing their job, the coaches are doing their job, it’s a great hockey game, and there are no penalties to call, then don’t make things up.

“But I think we all know what it’s like to go to a game as fans where all of a sudden you realize that it’s starting to get a little out of hand. I’m not going to be involved too much directly, because we have a supervisor of officials who is good.

“But the one referee who should feel nervous about my input is the guy who has the reputation for not calling the book. If over a ten-game period, [the other officials each] call 120 penalties and another guy calls 40, that’s the pattern that somebody should not want to get hung on them, that they just don’t call things, or that the assistant is calling eight or nine penalties that the ref saw but didn’t call. Those are the things that bother me.”

Hockey East and the Internet

“On college campuses, Internet and computer usage is so great that it’s a perfect match for college hockey,” says Saunders, a recent UNH export. “Especially if we want to increase our visibility and on-campus presence with the students, the Internet is where they are and where they’re hanging out, so it’s a great place to reach them.”

The two Western conferences, however, have been quicker not only to realize this, but to act on it as well. Both the WCHA and CCHA provide official websites for their fans.

“As a league, we’ve been slow to catch on,” Bertagna says. “We have to catch up to the WCHA and CCHA. But let’s not only try to catch up, let’s try to be creative. We should create some contests that fans can play and win tickets to the tournament and do some things that are fun. That’s what we should be doing. We don’t identify fun as a priority a lot of the time.”

Luckily, fun happens all by itself in college hockey. And with all the potential goodies on the horizon — a national TV contract, an expanded NCAA tournament and a Hockey East presence on the Web — fans may soon be having more fun than they know what to do with.

Rensselaer Tops ECAC Coaches’ Poll

The 1997-98 ECAC Men’s Division I Ice Hockey Poll was released today, and the Rensselaer Engineers were voted the top school this season.

“We’ve gotten a lot of respect from the coaches,” said RPI head coach Dan Fridgen. “And it’s reflected in this preseason poll.”

RPI received nine of 12 first-place votes, as it did in the 1993-94 poll. That year, RPI finished third in the standings and in the ECAC tournament.

“RPI has everyone back,” said Princeton head coach Don Cahoon. “And on paper they should be the team to beat.”

“I was so impressed with that RPI team last year,” said Dartmouth head coach Bob Gaudet. “And with everyone back they should make a run.”

“RPI is the consensus team,” said St. Lawrence head coach Joe Marsh. “They will probably be first in the poll and with every right.”

“RPI has got to be one of the teams to beat,” said Clarkson head coach Mark Morris. “They’ve got firepower and great goaltending.”

“You’re going to see how good RPI is,” added Vermont head coach Mike Gilligan.

Clarkson received the remaining three first-place votes to finish second.

“You have to start with Clarkson,” said Harvard head coach Ronn Tomassoni. “They have got a great nucleus coming back.”

“Clarkson is impressive,” said Gaudet. “They’re a team that will knock your lights out.”

“Clarkson has a great defense,” said Cahoon. “And it starts with their goaltending.”

Cornell, the defending two-time ECAC champions, finished third in the voting, while Princeton received its highest-ever preseason ranking — fourth. The highest the Tigers had previously been voted was seventh in 1988-89.

“Cornell has superior goaltending,” said Morris. “That is a great start.”

“Princeton will be there as well,” said Gilligan. “They were tough last year.”

“Our league is as tough as any league out there,” said Brown head coach Roger Grillo. “And anyone can finish anywhere from first place to last place.”

ECAC To Alter Playoff Format

Though an official announcement has yet to be made, it appears that the ECAC will change the format of its Division I ice hockey playoffs.

Under the new arrangement, 10 of 12 teams still qualify for the playoffs, but the ECAC will go to five quarterfinal series, with the winner of the five-six series advancing to Lake Placid for the ECAC Championship Round.

In previous years, two first-round games were played on the Tuesday night following the end of the regular season. The winners of those games then advanced to the quarterfinals, along with the remaining six playoff teams.

“This is something that I have been pushing hard for, and not because [Colgate] lost in it last year,” said Colgate head coach Don Vaughn. “I’m excited about it; the Tuesday game was just not working.”

“I’m certainly for it,” said Vermont head coach Mike Gilligan. “It was a way to eliminate the Tuesday game.”

“I don’t think anyone was in favor of the Tuesday game,” said Harvard head coach Ronn Tomassoni. “It’ll be interesting to see how it plays out.”

The Tuesday first-round games have been criticized for many reasons, including lack of gate attendance, travel, and interruption of academics. The move to five quarterfinal series is designed to allay these criticisms.

“We have great fans,” said Gilligan. “But if we can’t sell out a Tuesday game, who can? These games had no crowd, and it was an interruption to the student-athlete in their studies.”

“It just wasn’t beneficial to the student-athlete,” said Vaughn. “Coming off a weekend of play and then perhaps having to travel to get to a game on Tuesday night is too much of a distraction.”

The five quarterfinal series will remain a first-to-three-points format, and the winners advance to Lake Placid. The two lowest remaining seeds would play each other on Thursday, March 19. The winner of that game faces the highest remaining seed the next day, while the two other seeds play one another that same day.

While the switch of formats has eliminated some of the criticisms of the Tuesday game, it has raised others.

“The only advantage now is finishing in the top three,” said Princeton head coach Don Cahoon. “I would hate to advance and have to play the Thursday game.”

“It certainly makes it tough to have to win three games in Placid,” said Vaughn. “To win on Thursday, and then come back and have to win Friday, and then again Saturday, it’s a lot to ask.”

“It puts a lot of pressure on the four and five teams,” said Gilligan. “You have to win three games.”

Another criticism has been that the idea is to get as many ECAC teams as possible into the NCAA Championships, and giving the top seed a supposedly easier path almost eliminates the possibility of the fourth- or fifth-place team getting into the Championships.

“Shouldn’t the top seed have every advantage to earn the bye in the NCAA Tournament to have an easier path to the Final Four?” counters ECAC Commissioner Jeff Fanter. “It may be right that the goal is to get as many teams to the NCAAs, but it is not only to get teams there, but to win a championship.”

While there are criticisms, it seems that the plusses outpoll the minuses.

“One more school gets to experience Lake Placid,” said Vaughn. “It only lends to the great college hockey experience. And if you get the right combination of teams there, the place will be overflowing.”

“It brings another team to Lake Placid,” said Tomassoni, “and that team’s fan base.”

Cahoon agreed.

“That helps the ECAC and Lake Placid.”

Doneghey Named Head Coach At Fairfield

Michael Doneghey has been named head coach of Fairfield, replacing Peter LaVigne, who stepped down after one season.

“I am very excited about coming to Fairfield University,” said Doneghey. “Fairfield is an established program and I hope to keep building on the school’s hockey tradition.”

Doneghey, a 1993 graduate of Merrimack, comes to Fairfield after spending last season as an assistant coach with New Hampshire. He helped the Wildcats earn a share of the Hockey East regular-season championship and a bid to the NCAA tournament. Previously, he served as an assistant coach with Division III Hamilton College for one season after playing professionally in France from 1993 to 1995.

“I feel fortunate to have a coach with Michael’s experience take over our ice hockey program,” said Eugene Doris, Fairfield’s Director of Athletics. “He has achieved success as a player and as a coach both on the collegiate and international levels. His experience will be a valuable asset to our student-athletes.”

Fairfield, a Division I Independent playing in the ECAC South, will join the newly-established Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference next season. The Stags were 13-12-1 last season, including 9-4-1 in ECAC South play.

Spartans Lead CCHA Preseason Polls

The Michigan State Spartans, coming off a third-place, 23-13-4 season and a first-round NCAA tournament loss, have been anointed the team to beat by CCHA coaches and media.

“It’s nice to know going in that you are among the group that has a chance to win the league,” said MSU head coach Ron Mason. “But I have been in the league a long enough time to know that no two points come easily and it takes a lot of work.”

In the coaches’ poll, for which each CCHA coach ranks the other 10 conference schools, the Spartans received nine first-place votes and 99 points overall out of a possible 100 to lead the pack. Miami received the remaining two first-place votes to finish second, followed by Michigan, Lake Superior State and Western Michigan.

The media poll ranked Michigan State (with 20 of 36 first-place votes) first and Michigan second, followed by Miami, Lake Superior and Bowling Green.

It’s Official: MAAC Hockey To Begin Play Next Season

Confirming a story USCHO reported in August, the nation’s fifth Division I hockey conference was officially born Thursday as the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference announced the formation of an eight-team league to begin play in 1998-99.

The new league includes Quinnipiac, Fairfield, Connecticut, Sacred Heart, Holy Cross, Iona, Canisius and American International, all northeastern schools currently competing in leagues sponsored by the ECAC.

Several additional schools have expressed interest in joining the new league.

The MAAC anticipates having a 28-game conference schedule, with each team playing every conference opponent twice at home and twice on the road. The league’s playoffs are expected to include all eight teams.

BGSU’s Price Injured, Another Dead in Auto Accident

Dan Price, a forward for the Bowling Green Falcons, was injured and another passenger killed Saturday night in an automobile accident near Marysville, Ohio, north of Columbus.

The Columbus Dispatch reported Monday that Price was driving when the car struck a ditch along Route 38, just south of Marysville, and flipped over. Neither Price nor the vehicle’s owner, Ryan Bernthisel, 26, of Bowling Green, was wearing a seat belt, and both were thrown from the car.

Bernthisel died of his injuries, while Price was treated at Union Memorial Hospital in Marysville.

Investigators have told the Dispatch that alcohol was a factor in the crash. The investigation is ongoing.

BGSU’s Ratchuk To Depart For Pros

According to the Bowling Green Sentinel-Tribune, Falcon defenseman Peter Ratchuk has renounced his three remaining years of NCAA eligibility to sign with the NHL’s Colorado Avalanche.

Ratchuk, a 6-foot, 175-pound native of Buffalo, N.Y., scored nine goals and added 12 assists for Bowling Green in his rookie campaign last season, garnering honorable mention designation on the CCHA all-rookie team. He was selected in the first round (25th overall) by Colorado in the 1996 NHL draft.

Terms of the contract were not available, but Ratchuk’s signing bonus was believed to be around $500,000.

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