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New Hampshire getting offense from high-end blueliners, but no huge emphasis on creating balanced pairings

DURHAM, NH - NOVEMBER 1: Anthony Wyse #21 of the New Hampshire Wildcats. The Boston College Eagles visit the New Hampshire Wildcats during NCAA men's hockey at the Whittemore Center on November 1, 2019 in Durham, New Hampshire. The Wildcats won 1-0 in overtime. (Photo by Rich Gagnon/USCHO) (Rich Gagnon)
New Hampshire senior captain Anthony Wyse is tied for the team lead with a plus-5 rating through eight games for the Wildcats (photo: Rich Gagnon).

If you have watched college hockey – or any elite level of hockey – over the past decade or so, you understand that using the term “defenseman” to describe the two players on each shift who help protect the front of the net is probably selling the efforts of those players a little short.

In reality, the defenseman position has become one of the most complex on the ice. Sure, you’re expected to be in position and be moving backwards towards your net as your opposition attacks.

But at the same, defensemen are responsible for moving the puck quickly and transitioning from defense to offense. Simultaneously, those same players are become relied upon more and more to help create offense.

Gone are the days where offensive defensemen had the chance to shine on the power play. Each and every shift, the blueliners are expected to jump into the offense, help create chances and, ultimately, score goals.

New Hampshire, under second-year head coach Michael Souza, has been executing that in spades.

Through eight games, his team has scored 24 goals. Seven of those goals, or just about 30 percent of total offense, have come from defensemen, a number that places UNH among the nation’s leaders in offense coming from the blueline.

For Souza, he understands that backend scoring is part of the lifeblood of any modern college hockey team. His recruiting efforts have paid dividends in bringing in talented, puck-handling defensemen who can skate and all of whom feel a level of comfort become part of the offensive attack.

“I think the game today is one in which mobility on the back end leads to being able to play in transition,” said Souza. “I think it’s something that we’ve targeted, that our ‘D’ corps skates well. If you look at the teams that have been successful the last couple of years, UMass immediately comes to mind. A real mobile ‘D’ corps. Providence, players like Jacob Bryson. BC and BU have always had mobile ‘D’ corps.”

Souza calls it a four-man attack, knowing that every time his team skates up ice that his three forwards always have the support of at least one defenseman in trying to create offense. Certainly, that creates pressure and responsibility to ensure that if the puck gets turned over that either both defensemen can immediately be in a position to defend or that one of the forwards reacts and immediately changes to a backcheck mode.

When creating defensive pairings, it isn’t always about making sure that there is one offensive defenseman paired with a more defensive-minded partner. Instead, Souza tries to look at his forward group to make sure the front men with an offensive posture are supported by a back end that willing jump into the rush.

“We’ve moved guys around; it’s not something we sit there and overanalyze,” said Souza. “There’s not a huge emphasis on creating balanced pairings. If we have a more offensive-minded defenseman, we try to get them out there with our more offensive minded forward group.”

The ability to skate well on the attack led Maine head coach Red Gendron to refer to New Hampshire as a skating team in his weekly radio show in advance of a two-game series this weekend at Alfond Arena. Souza feels that is an accurate summation of his team’s abilities to date.

“We’re clearly not as heavy [as Maine],” said Souza. “I like to think we can play against them and I think we can skate, so that’s probably a fair characterization.”

All that said, New Hampshire will likely insert one of its heaviest players this weekend in Filip Engaras is finally eligible to begin his college career. The redshirt sophomore sat out all of last season and the first eight game of this year after the team he played for in Sweden was ruled as professional by NCAA standards. Engaras is listed on the UNH roster at 6-foot and 190 pounds, but is built solid and will be one of the most physical players that the Wildcats can insert.

He enters at a near perfect time as UNH will faceoff against its ultimate rival on the road this weekend. Unlike many of the recent seasons where either New Hampshire or Maine were in the middle of down seasons, each team has been more-than-competitive to date. That, says, Souza, is good for one of college hockey’s best rivalries.

“I think it’s great for college hockey if UNH and Maine are having great seasons,” Souza said. “It’s exciting for kids on both teams. There’s some great history there.

“I know that Maine beating UNH in the national title game in 1999 is the moment most people think about, but there’s been a lot of great games through the years and a lot of great players on both sides.”

In the faceoff dot

There is always talk around hockey at all levels – college, obviously, is no exception – as to the importance of faceoffs. Or maybe to the lack thereof.

The statistic might not be very accurately tracked from building to building around college hockey (just like, say, shots on goal). But taking a look at the data to this point in the season (for most teams, we’re about a quarter of the way through the schedule, if not further), there seems to be a clear benefit to winning faceoffs.

The top team in faceoffs thus far is UMass Lowell (winning 55.3% percent of the draws), followed by Boston College (53.8%), Providence (53.3%) and UMass (51.3%).

Looking at those four teams, they represent four of the five teams from Hockey East currently ranked in the USCHO.com poll (Northeastern is the fifth Hockey East team, though they are sixth in faceoffs and slightly below 50%).

You can’t draw a direct correlation between the ability of a team to win faceoffs and ultimate success. There are simply too many other elements to consider.

But in today’s game where puck possession is such a critical part of the game for most teams, winning draws certainly can go a long way.

Diggin’ Dugan

If you’re not a fan of Providence and anyone asked you who holds – far and away – the lead for points in NCAA men’s division I hockey, would your answer be Jack Dugan?

Put down your hand because you know you didn’t know that.

Providence has played more games than most teams, but Dugan’s 24 points (five goals, 19 assists) is eight more than his teammate Tyce Thompson, who is second in the nation in points.

Even if you want to move to the more accepted stat of points per game, Dugan’s 2.4 PPG is second only to Cornell’s Morgan Barron who has five goals and five assists thus far in four games (2.5 PPG).

Dugan’s rookie campaign was impressive recording 39 points in 41 games. But this year, Dugan’s offensive play has moved to a new level.

After Saturday’s crazy 6-5 win over Boston University, Dugan added four assists to his point total. His ability to set up plays is unmatched, but his head coach is happy to see other parts of his game improving as well.

“What I was happiest about is he was shooting the puck in the third period. He didn’t pass up his shots,” said Providence coach Nate Leaman after Saturday’s game. “We had him out last minute of the game, too [with BU’s goaltender pulled]. I thought he was good in that situation.”

Friendship Four to air again on NESN

Though there hasn’t been a formal announcement, Hockey East sources have confirmed that NESN will once again air all four games of the Friendship Four tournament played in Belfast, Northern Ireland, over Thanksgiving weekend.

Northeastern and New Hampshire will represent Hockey East while Colgate and Princeton represent the ECAC.

Once again, Aaron Murphy, a Canadian-born broadcaster who has become synonymous with televised hockey in Europe, will have the calls of the games. Murphy has called every game of the Friendship Four since its inception in 2015.

This is the final year where Hockey East will be guaranteed two teams in the field.

In 2020, the tournament will be opened up to Atlantic Hockey, as well. The field announced for that year’s men’s tournament includes Quinnipiac from the ECAC alongside Mercyhurst, Sacred Heart and Army West Point from Atlantic Hockey.

Albertus Magnus: Falcons making progress with passion

Goalie Pierce Diamond has been stellar so far for Albertus Magnus (Photo by Albertus Magnus Athletics Marketing)

For head coach Kyle Wallack, the road to Albertus Magnus’ first season as an NCAA D-III program took about 700 days but he believes he has the right recruits and built the foundation for a solid and competitive program in the highly competitive New England hockey landscape. Going 0-2-2 in their first four games, Coach Wallack has seen a lot of good things to build on and lots of coaching opportunities for his young Falcons to become a winning hockey team.

“It has been a process to get our program going,” said Wallack. “It was legitimately a 700-day project with recruiting and getting our $6M facility built out and it is all very exciting for the program and the school. Our administration has been very involved so the support has been incredible and New Haven is a good hockey town so we will have a good fan base to draw on as we build the program in the community. We wanted to attract and recruit A-level competitors, good citizens and kids that can play with passion. I think we have done that, and the results will come as we build the daily habits for success with the team.”

Wallack, a former goaltender, believes the foundation of the team starts in goal and Pierce Diamond has delivered on the needed performance to give the Falcons a chance to win every night. Through four games, Diamond has surrendered just seven goals, has a .954 save percentage and a 1.69 goals-against average for Albertus Magnus.

“We recruited two top caliber goaltenders,” noted Wallack. “Unfortunately, Hunter Virostek got hurt in about the third minute of our first practice, so Pierce has had to carry the load and he has [played exceptionally well. He is fiery which I like because he expects a lot of his teammates. He is passionate and can throw his stick a time or two in practice, but he knows there is a line on how much of that passion can come out and I make sure he knows where that line is. We have been in every game with good goaltending which helps us compete and, at times, get by some mistakes a young team will make.”

The Falcons are young with just one sophomore on the roster, transfer forward CJ Smith from Wisconsin – River Falls. The team is expected to compete while they learn collectively from their experiences. The first weekend at St. Michael’s provided an early opportunity as the team surrendered a heart-breaking goal in the final 15 seconds of regulation to drop their opening game, 2-1. The team didn’t swell on the disappointment and came back the next day to pick up a hard fought 2-2 tie against the Purple Knights.

“We want to compete and get better,” stated Wallack. “I may be more demanding than some coaches, but we want to play with speed, and I focus on “field position” with our game – we want to be in the offensive end getting opportunities and controlling the puck. It’s hard for opponents to score from their goal line. We have played 12 periods of hockey so far and really, there has only been one lackluster period. The team is competing hard and will continue to learn from their experiences.”

While entering this season as an independent, Albertus Magnus will be playing a challenging schedule that includes games against teams from the UCHC, NESCAC, NE-10 and NEHC. Next season, 2020-21, the Falcons have an affiliate schedule set with the NEHC where they will play an 18-game schedule against the likes of Norwich, Hobart and Babson.

“It is great that we have the affiliate schedule already announced and planned,” stated Wallack. “We also play in the Codfish Bowl tournament this year so will see UMass-Boston from the NEHC to start the New Year this season. We are very focused continuing to make progress and earn our results as a program. The kids have embraced the blank sheet of paper we have given them to define our program going forward day by day and are doing that every day on and off the ice, on campus and in the community. It is great to see!”

On Friday night, the Falcons played their home opener in front of a raucous crowd at the still be renovated Ralph Walker Skating Rink. The played a 1-1 overtime tie with fellow independent Anna Maria that saw Diamond make 41 saves for the Falcons.

“It was a great opening night,” said Wallack. “The kids have been supporting the other sports as part of the effort to build a fan base and New Haven is a good hockey town so we will find our place in that. I spent some time at Yale, Quinnipiac and UConn and am a Connecticut native, so I am very excited to be a part of building this here. We had music blaring and food trucks for the opener – it was a great atmosphere with a lot of excitement around the program and the game. Our renovations should be done this week and I know moving into our locker room and offices will be another big step for the program.”

The Falcons complete a four-game homestand with two games on Monday and Tuesday next week against two other Connecticut schools in Post and Conn College.

Western Michigan getting back on track ahead of key NCHC weekend series with Omaha

Paul Washe (Western Michigan-23) 2018 Jan. 12 The St.Cloud State University Huskies host Western Michigan in a NCHC matchup at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud, MN (Bradley K. Olson)
Paul Washe leads Western Michigan in scoring with 12 points in the Broncos’ first 10 games (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

Around mid-October, Western Michigan was mired in a mini-slump, having lost three straight games.

After a strong start to the season with a tie and win in the Ice Breaker tournament, the Broncos were swept by Bowling Green and then suffered an ignominious 4-0 defeat to in-state rival Michigan.

The back half of the weekend series against Michigan saw the Broncos get back on track, defeating the Wolverines 4-1. Since then, Western hasn’t lost, going 4-0-1 since the Michigan loss.

To hear coach Andy Murray tell it, his team was doing a lot of the right things, but not getting the bounces. The Broncos felt they just needed to stick with it to turn it around. There was never any panic in the locker room.

“We’ve played tough teams,” Murray said. “Bowling Green is a good team. I mean, they were in the national tournament last year. We played them three times in a row. We played them in the Ice Breaker tournament, we beat them there, and then we played them in their rink and didn’t play well, and then we dominated the game the next night and lost in overtime. In reality, we lost a game, but we played really well and felt in our first three games of the first four, we played really good hockey. We had one win and then with the overtime, two losses and one tie with Ohio State in a game that we outshot them badly in the first period and dominated that game. I mean, we were getting good chances, we just were not scoring. We were out-chancing teams and not finding a way to score.

“Our goalie was playing well, and we were losing games giving up only two or three goals. I actually thought we were playing good hockey. To me, it wasn’t that we needed to change a lot. We just needed to stick with it and just score on our chances.”

Last weekend, the Broncos swept Ferris State by scores of 4-2 and 8-2.

In Saturday’s 8-2 win, sophomore forward Rhett Kingston had a hat trick. Kingston, who was born with only three fingers on his right hand and needed multiple surgeries to make the hand functional, pulled his glove off and flashed the three fingers after the hat trick. Kingston has battled injuries, missing part of last year after playing on the top line in the second game of the season against North Dakota. He was also injured at the start of this year, and Saturday’s game marked his first return to the top line, an opportunity he took full advantage of.

“To him, he doesn’t he doesn’t even talk about it,” said Murray of Kingston’s hand. “He doesn’t see it as a hardship. He doesn’t know anything different, because he was born that way. The big thing with him is he’s a tremendous skater, and he’s got good size and is physical. When he uses his physicality and when he skates and uses his speed, he can be a very good player. He just has to learn how to do that every shift and every game.”

Several things have been impressive about Western’s 5-3-2 start. One is that the Broncos have had a lot of players injured, including players who were team leaders in scoring for them last year. Two, they have been getting scoring from players who haven’t always been in that role. For instance, Paul Washe, a junior, currently leads the team in scoring with 12 points, which is more than he had his entire sophomore year and only five points away from his total points in his first two years.

Lastly, Western has done well while only playing three of its first 10 games at home. For a team that has depended on its strength at home to offset a middling to poor road record in recent years, this is a big step forward.

“We’ve had a lot of injuries,” said Murray. “Mattias Samuelsson missed a number of games. Cam Lee has not played yet, who had 26 points last year. He’ll play this weekend against Omaha. Wade Allison has missed games, Hugh McGing missed games, Ethen Frank missed a game. The list goes on and on. So, I am optimistic about our team. We’ve played 10 games and have three losses in those games, and we’ve played seven games on the road. Even when we didn’t have the wins, I liked our team. I liked how they were competing.”

In addition to Washe, another surprise has been freshman goaltender Brandon Bussi, who started in the first game of the year and has taken over the position.

“What does he have, a goals-against of 2.3 something?” asked Murray. “And he’s got almost a .92 save percentage. I mean, his problem is we don’t give up many shots, so if he lets in a goal, it hurts his save percentage. He hasn’t let many goals in. You look at Paul Washe, he’s also winning I think over 60 percent on faceoffs right now. He’s always been a hard worker. His line has been good.

“Lawton Courtnall has been playing with him most of the season and played with him last year. Lawton’s been playing at a different level, and his speed and ability to make good decisions with the puck for both him and Paul Washe, it’s been it’s been fun to watch.”

One area Murray knows can improve is the special teams. The power play has only seven goals in 44 attempts (15.91 percent), while the penalty kill has been slightly better at 84 percent.

“When your power-play players are not scoring five-on-five, it’s difficult to score on the power play, too,” Murray said. “Some of our top power-play guys have not found the range yet. When we look at the goal totals for a lot of the guys that play on our power play, which they should be on our power play, they haven’t scored yet five-on-five either, but they’re playing good hockey. I think once they start producing five-on-five, then I think it carries over into the power play as well.

This weekend, the Broncos face a tough test when they host resurgent Omaha, which has wins over Ohio State and Wisconsin already this year. Murray mentioned staying out of the box as a key to success.

“Mike (Gabinet) has done a great job,” said Murray. “I talked to him a couple of weeks ago about something else, and he just talks so much about his young guys and their enthusiasm. You watch them play, they’re fun to watch. They can skate. They’re physical. They play the game the right way. I’m excited for him to see how he’s done such a good job with that program. We have to be ready and focused. We have a lot of respect for their team. We’ve already seen a lot of video on them, and we know how good they are. We know they’ll have some surprises for us as well.

“We don’t want to take a lot of penalties. To be honest with you, I don’t want to be tested like that. We know their statistics and how good they are. You’re foolish if your penalty kill is tested too much. They’re a very well-coached team. They’re getting very good goaltending this year. They’ve got the one young freshman defenseman that’s having a great year, and a couple of their young forwards, I mean, they had back-to-back rookie of the week awards in the NCHC in the last two weeks. They’re going to be excited to come in here and try and quiet down the Lawson Lunatics, which is not easy to do. We have to play good hockey.”

Denver to host North Dakota

For No. 2 Denver, this weekend provides the second stiff test in a row.

Last weekend, the Pioneers suffered their first loss of the season, a 5-2 defeat to No. 6 Minnesota Duluth. This weekend, Denver plays host to resurgent No. 9 North Dakota. Last season, the Pioneers swept the Fighting Hawks in the first round of the NCHC playoffs, ending their season.

This weekend will see the renewal of a fierce rivalry.

“It’s never a good feeling thinking about the time where they ended our season, so it’s going to be a little extra oomph in our game,” said North Dakota forward Mark Senden in a video interview posted on the team’s website. “We’re going to bring it, but we just kind of have to stick to what we do and play with a little swagger. We can’t get too caught up in they ended our season last year. It’s a new year this year, a different team.”

After offseason departures, Harvard finding depth, success coming from players taking advantage of opportunities

Harvard sophomore defenseman Jack Rathbone is part of a solid back end this season for the Crimson (photo: Harvard Athletics).

Harvard freshmen goalie Mitchell Gibson had an impressive collegiate debut Friday against Princeton.

But any thoughts about his upcoming start were the furthest thing from his mind the night before.

“I had a ton of homework [Thursday] night, so I was more focused on that,” Gibson said. “I was up in the Lamont Library until about midnight knocking that out.”

It didn’t impact his play on the ice, as the Washington draft pick made 31 saves in a 3-0 win over the Tigers. He followed that up with another strong performance in a 7-2 win against Quinnipiac on Saturday.

“It’s funny when you hear that your starting goalie is off to the library,” Harvard coach Ted Donato said. “He actually got off the ice early [Thursday] as well because he had a gateway exam for his math class. Obviously, it didn’t hurt his performance tonight, so I think it’s a nice message to our players that they can do both things well.”

Gibson is the center of a retooled Crimson defense that lost starting goalie Michael Lackey and four of its top six defensemen from last season. Two of those defensemen, Adam Fox and John Marino, are currently playing in the NHL.

“We had a pretty experienced defensive corps last year,” sophomore defenseman Jack Rathone said. “Coming in, you learn a lot from the leadership with the seniors we had, along with ‘Foxy’ and Johnny.”

It wasn’t long ago that Harvard had some good teams held back by lack of depth on defense. That changed over the last several seasons, as the Crimson defenders helped drive the pace of play and create offense from the back end.

While it’s early, it looks like the latter option may be the case this season despite the offseason turnover. Rathbone and Reilly Walsh are now the veteran leaders of the defense, in addition to being established offensivee threats, while freshman Henry Thrun has four points in his first three collegiate games.

“It’s awesome. I think it’s something that I was ready for coming in, something that I prepared for over the summer,” Rathbone said of he and Walsh entering the season as the veteran members of Harvard’s defense. “It’s not just us. We’ve got some freshmen that have come in and played really well. It’s easy when you’ve got guys that can make plays and guys that want to make the right play in the ‘D’ zone and then jump up.

“It’s fun to play with guys that want to push the pace and get our forwards the puck.”

The departures on defense have also opened up minutes for several returning skaters who didn’t see much playing time during their first few seasons at Harvard.

Junior Benjamin Foley has played in all three games thus far after only making four appearances during his first two collegiate seasons, while classmate Nick Azar made his Harvard debut in the season opener and has played two games thus far.

“They work hard in practice and they really haven’t been rewarded in the first couple of years with ice time,” Donato said of Foley and Azar. “I thought that the minutes that those guys have played in the first two games have been very good and they’ve played a positive role in helping the team have success.”

Not only has the pair helped the Crimson get off to a 3-0 start, but they’ve sent a positive message to the rest of the team as well.

“Quite honestly, as a coach you like to see guys get rewarded from all the hard work that they do,” Donato said. “I think as teammates, it helps create a positive vibe in the locker room when you see guys that work hard and take advantage of the opportunity when they get it.”

Barron powers Cornell

Cornell’s Morgan Barron emerged as one of the league’s top forwards last season.

It’s early, but the Big Red junior appears ready to bring his game to another level this year.

Barron was named the league’s player of the week after scoring four goals last weekend, including a hat trick in a 6-2 win over Yale on Saturday. Overall, the New York Rangers prospect has five goals and five assists in four games for the undefeated Big Red. He leads the nation in points per game.

“He’s a flat-out beast when he wins puck battles and the way he can shoot the puck … he has a pro shot,” Cornell coach Mike Schafer said. “When he combines that with determination and moving his feet like he did tonight, he can be almost unstoppable.”

Power outage

Brown (first), Cornell (second), and Rensselaer (eighth) each boast power-play units ranked among the top ten in the nation.

But it’s been the opposite for several other league teams.

Union has drawn the second-most penalties in the nation, but is only 4-for-52 on the power play. Colgate’s first goal of the season came on the power play, but Raiders are in a 0-for-35 slump on the man advantage since then.

Yale has yet to score on any of its 14 power-play chances this year. The Bulldogs will host Dartmouth on Friday, who is only 1 for 9 on the man advantage in the early going.

From a roar to a whimper

Princeton opened some eyes with a win and a tie at St. Cloud to open the season two weeks ago.

The Tigers battered the Huskies for ten goals in two games after averaging less than three goals per game last season.

But it was the opposite last weekend, as Princeton scored one goal in two games en route to getting swept on the road by Harvard and Dartmouth.

Against the Crimson Friday, the Tigers had 31 shots, but generated few second chance opportunities. On Saturday, Princeton tied the game in the third period before Dartmouth scored twice to pull away for the win. The Tigers will play at home for the first time this year when they host Rensselaer and Union this upcoming weekend.

Wednesday Women: Pondering players taking time away to play international tournaments and the impact their absence has on their college teams

Maddie Rooney (Minnesota Duluth Athletics)
Maddie Rooney will lead Minnesota Duluth against Ohio State this weekend. (photo: innesota Duluth Athletics)

Arlan: Nicole, don’t you just love early November? Even in a year like this one where the Four Nations tournament was canceled because of a Swedish boycott and a league like the WCHA goes on a one-week hiatus, some teams still wind up being bitten by player absences.

Canada and the US decided to play anyway. Princeton took to home ice minus forward Sarah Fillier and defender Claire Thompson, got thumped by Harvard, and squeaked by Dartmouth. Boston College didn’t have the services of Cayla Barnes as it suffered its first defeat of the campaign courtesy of UConn. 

Maine was down to 13 skaters due to an international-tournament conflict of their own. Thanks for the assistance on this one, because I wasn’t aware that the 5 Nations Tournament was taking place in Russia. In any case, several of these ladies were in the Eastern Hemisphere on gameday. Perhaps Merrimack got an assist from the Black Bears’ resulting fatigue as it battled back from a 3-1 deficit to defeat them 4-3 in overtime on Friday, before Maine had enough gas left to push past Holy Cross on Saturday.

Which of these results do you see as the most impactful?

Nicole: If last year is any indication, Princeton’s loss to Harvard will be the most damaging, especially if Harvard is as good as they’ve looked so far. I don’t see how the top of the ECAC doesn’t come down to some tiebreakers and since they all only play each other twice, record against the other top teams in the conference comes into play. Either way, I think Princeton will be ruing those lost points well into February. 

That’s probably the more high-profile situation, but the Maine and Merrimack game could be the difference between making the postseason and not. The top eight Hockey East teams make their conference tournament and both these teams look like they might be vying for those final few spots. Even if they get in, there’s a big difference between facing Northeastern and facing BU right now (sorry, Terriers). 

Arlan: Or am I making too big a deal of this? Maybe any women’s hockey is a good thing, and the NCAA teams just have to suck it up, use the next-woman-up mentality, and deal with these absences just like they would with an injury or illness.

Nicole: I don’t think you are.  Sure, all these teams should have depth to get through injuries, which is essentially what it’s like when you’re missing one or two players short term. Of course, I don’t know any team that could have survived missing as many players as Maine, but there’s probably a valid argument to be made about that being the price you pay for adding international-caliber players to your roster. 

But I also think it’s unfair of country federations to use NCAA programs as the primary tool of women’s top tier talent and also not take those programs’ schedules into account. Changing the status quo would require a lot of finagling of the international calendar, but it certainly feels like the federations get the benefit of top tier instruction, training and facilities for their players (that most of those federations refuse to even provide themselves) and also take advantage of the programs providing those things by taking their players for international competition whenever they want. It just seems like this could and should be a bit more of a cooperative relationship. 

I wrote a column on this last year that I advocate folks read as it touches on all the reasons why a discussion about moving Four Nations (and maybe also Five Nations) to outside the regular college women’s hockey schedule should at least be on the table. 

Arlan: While I do hate to see some top players having to miss a portion of their college seasons, I have a selfish reason for my displeasure as well. Last time, we bemoaned the fact that it is almost impossible to predict the outcome of games in some leagues.

Now we have to sort out what Harvard’s 6-2 win over Princeton means. Are the Crimson really four goals better than the Tigers? Are the Crimson the better team, but by a lot closer margin if both are at full strength? Do we throw out the result entirely for future analysis? It could be that this is just a reversion to historical form, where Katey Stone’s team always seemed to have Princeton’s number in the Jeff Kampersal days.

Nicole: I certainly don’t have any more idea what this win for Harvard means for the state of things and I’ve decided to reserve judgement for a few more weeks. I’d like to see how they fair against Boston University next week and then the following weekend as part of the Country Classic in Nashville with BC, Wisconsin and Minnesota. I’m taking advantage of having family in Memphis to make the trip, so I get to see them against three of the top-ranked teams in the country and I get to see them play in person, which is always better than trying to infer things from a stream. Harvard also have off this coming week, so we won’t be any closer to figuring them out any time soon. 

What I know about the Crimson is that I really, really like Lindsey Reed in goal. I like how she moves, I like how she uses her size and she gives them the chance to be in every game. It seems as though the offense has figured this out – they’re averaging five goals per game thus far. When Harvard traveled to Madison last season, they gave the soon-to-be national champs pretty much all they could handle as the Badgers eked out two one-goal games. In the past, playing up or down to their opponent has plagued them, but again, the first few games imply they may have broken that mold. Here’s hoping, for their sake, that this isn’t just about small sample size. 

In the other direction, I never imagined Quinnipiac would be at the bottom of the ECAC with an 0-4-1 start to conference play? Do you see the Bobcats rebounding? To what do you attribute their struggles?

Arlan: More than anything, I think that the Bobcats’ start is a function of their schedule. They opened ECAC play with a game at Princeton, and it wasn’t surprising that they would lose that one. The Tigers, who are Quinnipiac’s travel partner, are much more highly regarded, and they were only 2-2 over the next four games, so it isn’t shocking to struggle versus that group of teams. As we discussed above, Harvard looks to be improved, so Dartmouth is the game that the Bobcats really needed to win, rather than settling for a 1-1 draw. 

Even when Quinnipiac enjoyed its zenith and made the NCAA Tournament, the team wasn’t built on being explosive offensively. That’s been the case again, as it scored more than two goals in regulation only versus Sacred Heart, an opponent that has traditionally helped offenses get healthy.

My guess is that Quinnipiac will show improvement when it travels to Rensselaer and Union, squads that have one win between them. If that doesn’t happen, ask me about the Bobcats again in two weeks, and I’ll look deeper into what may be amiss with Cassandra Turner’s team.

Nicole: Looking ahead, we’ve got some fun games this weekend – and into Tuesday. (10) Minnesota Duluth heads to (7) Ohio State, (6) Boston College plays at Boston University on Friday and then faces off against (4) Northeastern on Tuesday. 

I haven’t gotten to see either the Buckeyes or Bulldogs in person yet and just one series each via stream. Do you have any insights on how that series in Columbus might play out?

Arlan: This is one of the most intriguing pairings in the WCHA, because it matches the leagues only female head coaches and teams that are determined to join Wisconsin and Minnesota as national powers, but are often tripped up by teams below them. In most years, there’s going to be room in the NCAA Tournament for at most one of UMD and OSU, so their head-to-head games become extra critical.

Over the last two seasons, the home team has swept every series, and in Nadine Muzerall’s first year behind the OSU bench, the Bulldogs took all four games. Six straight sweeps looks to be too orderly of a trend to continue, so I’m looking for some form of a split this weekend.

The Buckeyes have been slightly better to date, taking a game from Minnesota. Despite going winless in Mankato, they have been better at beating the teams that they need to beat, grinding out a sweep in Bemidji, a city where UMD was swept. The Bulldogs look to have played their best hockey out of conference, splitting with Clarkson and taking the IceBreaker Championship in Buffalo by defeating Mercyhurst and Colgate.

I haven’t been able to see much of either team. I tried to watch a TV broadcast of St. Cloud State in Duluth, but there were technical difficulties with the Bulldogs ahead 1-0. When coverage returned some time later, the Huskies were now leading. UMD rallied to win with two third-period goals 14 seconds apart, but I can’t speak to its defensive vulnerabilities. I should get to watch the Bulldogs in person in a couple of weeks.

Nicole: I’m super excited to watch that BC/Northeastern game. The Huskies are allowing less than a goal per game and Boston College trails only Minnesota and Wisconsin for goals scored – they’re averaging more than four goals per game. I’m also interested to watch how the Eagles’ defense handles the puck-handling and movement from the Huskies’ top skaters. They’re two very different teams and watching them play on the same ice can be fascinating. Do you have a preference for one style over the other? Which do you think will be most effective – both in this game and in the long run of the season?

Arlan: In the past when I’ve watched Northeastern and Boston College, I haven’t seen a ton of difference stylistically. Both teams are speedy and want to get up and down the ice in a hurry. If you look at last year’s statistics, Northeastern finished slightly ahead of BC in both scoring offense and scoring defense, but the two differed by less than a tenth of a goal per game.

I’m guessing that in the long run, they’ll wind up fairly similar once again. Both have areas where I’m sure that they will be looking to improve over last year. Northeastern’s power play only converted 17 percent of the time, which ranked in the middle of the pack; it’s currently at 21.4 percent. BC was hurt by its penalty kill, which was successful only 83.6 percent of the time. So far, that’s improved to 86 percent, but was part of the problem in its loss, as UConn scored two power-play goals.

As for where they’ll end up, it’s too soon to say. We remember the Eagles’ 2018-19 season as being a train wreck, but it didn’t go off the rails until the end of November. That started a stretch where BC dropped six of seven games, culminating with another loss to the Huskies before turning things around the next day by finally defeating Northeastern. All told, the teams met five times with NU holding a three-two edge and earning both Hockey East crowns.

The BC versus Northeastern games were pivotal, but not necessarily predictable. I expect that the race will go down to the wire this year, with not more than a game or two separating them in the standings. If I had to guess, I’ll say that BC narrowly takes both the conference race and Tuesday’s first meeting.

In our prior column, we looked forward to the Wisconsin at Minnesota series, and wound up saying it would likely be split, because most of their series are. That wound up being true, with the only surprise being that the Gophers were the team that got the larger slice, and ultimately, ascended to the top ranking.

In comparing them to last year’s championship club, I thought that the Badgers missed Maddie Rolfes and Mikaela Gardner, who finished as their top pair on defense. What did you take away from that series and what it could possibly mean to Wisconsin in attempting to repeat?

Nicole: The Badgers defense got exposed pretty significantly in the series. You’re absolutely right about them missing their top defensive pair from last season. The focus had been on the loss of Annie Pankowksi and Emily Clark on offense, but clearly we should have been talking about what graduation did to the defense. There wasn’t a Badger blue liner that wouldn’t like a do over for that Minnesota series. There were bright points, but overall they looked a bit like they were standing still while the Gophers skated right by them. And the problems seemed to compound so that by the end they were diving in, biting on easy moves and getting beat along the boards. It was sloppy.

That being said, there were a number of individual great plays and I think those are the things the team can focus on and build from. I’m thinking specifically of a play late in Sunday’s tie where Chayla Edwards just plain stood up Sarah Potomak, who pretty much had her way with the Badgers all weekend. Edwards disrupted Potomak’s drive, blocked the shot and prevented her from getting a rebound. And Alexis Mauermann was the star of the weekend. She was all over the ice and absolutely relentless along the boards. 

I think it was surprising in that the cracks hadn’t really shown much before that for the Badgers. Obviously Minnesota is the toughest team they play, but Wisconsin had their best series in recent memory against Ohio State earlier in the season. In the end, I’m sure Mark Johnson and the players would say it’s a good time to learn the lesson. You’d rather figure out where you need to put in work in November than in January. The bonus for Wisconsin is they had this past weekend off and you can bet there was a lot of practice and film study based on those results. 

I’ll admit the outcome surprised me, as it had felt like Minnesota was still finding their rhythm a bit through the early season and Wisconsin has been cruising. I still figured it would be a tight, close weekend, but I think I expected the balance to be more in the Badgers favor based on the hockey I’d watched through the first few weeks. 

As for what it means? It seems pretty clear right now that Minnesota is the front-runner. Obviously any games between these two are toss-ups and I don’t expect if they played again this weekend the results would be the same. But when it comes down to it, tf the Badgers have any hopes of repeating, they’ve got work to do. 

 

Despite slow start, Air Force coach Serratore not worried, says ‘this is a resilient group’

Kieran Durgan (88 - Air Force) (2018 Omar Phillips)
Kieran Durgan is tied for second in Air Force scoring with six points in 10 games for the Falcons (photo: Omar Phillips).

Air Force struggled out of the gate, going winless in the team’s first seven games, unprecedented in the 23 years coach Frank Serratore has been behind the Air Force bench.

The streak included sweeps at the hands of No. 8 Notre Dame, Arizona State and league rival Rochester Institute of Technology. The RIT series saw the Falcons outshoot the Tigers 80-22 in two games but come away on the wrong side of 2-1 and 1-0 losses.

“Life ain’t fair, and hockey ain’t fair,” said Serratore. “Our best weekend without question, was against RIT. Had we given (goaltender Zack) LaRocque two or three goals, we would have won both games.”

After a loss to Sacred Heart the following Friday, Serratore went with sophomore Alex Shilling in net, who made his first collegiate start the next night and helped the Falcons to their first win of the season, 4-3 over the Pioneers.

As it so often happens after a goaltending change, the Air Force offense came to life. The Falcons scored a total of eight goals in their first seven games, all losses, but 11 goals in their next three games, all wins.

“We showed good determination against Bentley,” said Serratore of last weekend’s sweep of the other Atlantic Hockey Falcons. “We found a way to win in a couple of close games.”

Air Force’s special teams are also showing signs of life. The Falcons were two for seven with the man advantage in the Bentley series after going one for 34 in their prior eight games.

Last Saturday’s win over Bentley was the first time all season that Air Force scored more power play goals than its opponent.

“We’re working on it,” said Serratore. “We’re working on a lot of things. This is a resilient group.”

Legacy

Long-time Mercyhurst equipment manager Mike Folga lost his battle with cancer prior to the start of the season. Mike made quite an impact on Mercyhurst as well as the greater hockey community, which included 11 years as a trainer in the NHL.

Mike’s legacy will continue for a long time at Mercyhurst, thanks to the Class of 2020, which raised money to endow a scholarship in Folga’s name that “is intended to benefit a student who actively supports Mercyhurst but encounters a major setback – an illness, accident, family or financial problem – that could jeopardize his or her education plans.”

People outside the Mercyhurst community can donate here.

National recognition

The October edition of the the Hockey Commissioners Association players of the month has been announced, and an Atlantic Hockey player is among the three designees.

Each of the six Division I conferences selects its own player, goaltender and rookie of the month and then national winners is picked by the conference commissioners.

Joining Notre Dame forward Mike O’Leary (player) and Wisconsin’s Cole Caufield (rookie) is Rochester Institute of Technology goaltender Logan Drackett.

Drackett helped RIT get off to its best start in its Division I era, a 5-1-0 record in October. In those six games, Drackett posted a 1.17 GAA and a .966 save percentage, and was named Atlantic Hockey goalie of the week three times.

When is a goal not a goal?

Atlantic Hockey’s new overtime rules have only had to be applied twice so far this season, and I witnessed both: on Nov. 2 in a contest between RIT and Holy Cross and last Friday in a game between RIT and Niagara.

In case you missed it, the new overtime format includes three points for an outright win, either in regulation or the first (five on five) overtime, and two points for winning either the ensuing three on three session or a shootout, should be teams still remain deadlocked.

The loser of the three on three or the shootout earns a point. The NCAA considers the game a tie if no one scores during the five on five overtime.

The hockey purist in me approves of the way the NCAA handles this (although if Hockey East and the ECAC, the only remaining holdouts, give into peer pressure and adopt this format, we could see things change on a national level), but that’s because I was fine with ties to begin with. That puts me in the minority.

“I’ve liked it so far,” RIT coach Wayne Wilson told USCHO. “I’m a little more interested in seeing more of the three on three.

“I would eliminate the shootout and even the five on five. Go right to three on three for 10 minutes. After that, maybe it’s deserving to be a tie at that point. I can live with that.”

Interestingly enough, we haven’t actually had a three on three yet in Atlantic Hockey. In both cases so far, a penalty continued into the second overtime, resulting in a four on three which would become a three on three at the next whistle. That whistle never came as play continued until either the overtime expired (in the Holy Cross/RIT game) or a goal was scored (in the Niagara/RIT game).

Did I say “goal”? Well, it wasn’t really a goal as far as the NCAA or even Atlantic Hockey is concerned. Eric Cooley’s tally sure seemed like a goal – it was a thing of beauty. You can see it, as well as Cooley’s other goal, a “real” goal which tied the game in the third period and was also pretty special, here.

I’d venture that Cooley’s non-goal, which touched off a wild celebration and was worth a point in the standings, would be considered one of his career highlights to date. If it counted.

Maybe we should just tie, already.

Looking ahead

This coming weekend will mark the first time that five conference series are taking place. Here are two to watch:

Niagara at Canisius: The teams are a combined 1-13-1 so far, but you can throw out the records in the Battle Of The Bridge rivalry.

Sacred Heart at RIT: The Pioneers and the Tigers occupy third and second place, respectively, in the standings, each looking to gain ground on first-place Robert Morris.

NESCAC Preview: Trinity facing big challenges from Wesleyan, Williams and Amherst

 

Senior Walker Harris leads Wesleyan in pursuit of a conference title (Photo by Wesleyan Athletics)

The road to the championship in recent years has often traveled through Hartford, Connecticut and the Trinity Bantams. This year there is maybe reason to believe that the overall depth and talent across the conference will lead to yet another dynamic race right into February where several teams could lay claim to the title come playoff time. The league continuously showcases the best balance top to bottom so there are no nights off on any weekend of conference play.

NESCAC opens the season with conference play so early points will be important and points in every weekend a must if you want to stay in the race.

The Favorites

The defending champions from Trinity always have a goal for the NESCAC title and bring back a deep roster in pursuit of the repeat. Coach Matt Greason will look to his veterans like goaltender Tedy Loughborough and defenseman Liam Feeney to ground a solid core of defenders while the offense finds its way to steady production. It’s a long way to February but the last two games of the regular season against travel partner Wesleyan may go a long way in determining the top seed for the conference tournament.

Wesleyan is stacked and poised to challenge for the title behind last year’s conference player and goalie of the year Tim Sestak and All-Everything forward Walker Harris. The team built good depth over last season and looks to make that next step towards a conference title.

The Contenders

There is not a season in recent years that Bill Kangas’ Williams squad is not in the championship discussion. This year is no exception as the Ephs will bring their speed and pressure game to challenge among the conference’s best led by forward Niko Karamanis and defenseman Jack McCool.

Amherst progressed to the NESCAC title game last season where they fell in overtime to Trinity, 3-2. The roster is deep and has great leadership form the likes of forwards Joey Lupo and Patrick Daly as well as defenseman Noah Gilreath. The key for the Mammoths will be how fast eight freshmen adapt to the college game in coach Jack Arena’s system.

Players to watch

Amherst: Noah Gilreath – defense; PJ Conlon – forward
Bowdoin: Bradley Ingersoll – forward; Albert Washco – forward
Colby: Justin Grillo – forward; Andrew Tucci – goaltender
Connecticut College: Jacob Moreau – forward; Connor Rodericks – goaltender
Hamilton: Nick Ursitti – forward; Stephen Cochrane – defense
Middlebury: Michael Fahey – forward; Zack Shapiro – forward
Trinity: Liam Feeney – defense; Tedy Loughborough – goaltender
Tufts: Anthony Farinacci – forward; Cooper Stahl – defense
Wesleyan: Tim Sestak – goaltender; Walker Harris – forward
Williams: Jack McCool – defense; Niko Karamanis – forward

USCHO Predicted finish

1. Trinity
2. Wesleyan
3. Williams
4. Amherst
5. Colby
6. Hamilton
7. Middlebury
8. Bowdoin
9. Connecticut College
10. Tufts

It is finally time to play some players wearing another colored sweater after almost three weeks of practice time since November 1. League play to start things off including some key games like Colby at Williams, Hamilton at Amherst and Conn College at Trinity. It should be a roller coaster ride right to the last game of the regular season.

Curley contending with more than just WCHA in second season behind Alaska Anchorage bench

Second-year Alaska Anchorage coach Matt Curley has the Seawolves out to a 2-4-2 overall mark (2-1-1 WCHA) this season (photo: Skip Hickey).

At a time where most coaches are just figuring out what kind of team they have and whether or not they can make a run at their respective conference titles, one coach in the WCHA has a lot more on his plate than just coaxing out some wins.

Matt Curley, who is in his second season at Alaska Anchorage, has to deal with improving his team, making a push in the conference, deal with a program anniversary and with the uncertainty that his program’s future holds, both in the WCHA and also in existence.

It is a tough line to tread in the early going.

However, Curley would not have it any other way.

“It’s certainly, to say the least, it’s not what I expected coming in into it,” he said. “I will say this, I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else. I love Alaska. I love being at the helm of the Seawolf program, and I’m very proud and grateful for this opportunity.

“For us and our staff, Mark Phalon, Matt Bruneteau and Nick Walters, who’s been with me here for these two years, it’s been an extremely rewarding process in terms of finding kids that want to be here, sticking with this process despite all the outside noise and really in terms of learning experience and challenges.”

For their part, the Seawolves players have, save for their first game of the season, done their best to put all the distractions aside and focus on their job on the ice, winning hockey games. After dropping a 7-1 decision to Maine back on Oct. 11, the Seawolves have gone 2-3-2 since, including taking five of a possible six points on the road from Alabama Huntsville last weekend.

Curley admitted that the season opener was not the effort he was looking for from his team.

However, he is pleased to see his team turn things around quickly, starting with the 2-1 loss in overtime the next night.

“I think the first night, the score was probably, I don’t think was indicative of how the game went,” he said. “I thought night two, we kept it really tight and it was a coin flip and I was really happy with our effort there.”

In splitting with Alaska two weeks later, losing 4-3 and then tying Omaha, things have started to take a positive turn. The Seawolves then followed that up with a shootout win against the Chargers on Friday and a 3-1 win on Saturday.

The reason for the turnaround starts with the confidence of a talented group of freshmen that includes Nick Wicks and Taylor Lantz, and the efforts of a group of veterans that starts with senior defenseman Tomi Hiekkavirta and includes juniors Trey deGraaf and Drake Glover and sophomore Jared Nash.

deGraaf, who had just 13 career points coming into the 2019-20 season, struck twice in Saturday’s win, stepping forward in a big way for Curley’s squad. He has three goals in his last four games.

“Our upperclassmen really stepped up, guys that found a way to find the back of the net,” said Curley. “Trey deGraaf had two on Saturday. Drake Glover had one (goal) and one (assist) on Friday night. Jared Nash had an outstanding weekend.

“Those are some of the older guys that really stepped up for us and allowed for us to get a job done, which was great to see.”

Solid goaltending from sophomore Kristian Stead also helped. Stead made 58 saves on the weekend against the Chargers.

The big weekend came on the heels of the announcement by WCHA commissioner Bill Robertson on Friday that both Alaska Anchorage and Alaska will continue to have hockey for the 2020-21 season, keeping the WCHA in its current 10-team format for another season.

While he was happy to get the good news, Curley remains committed to making sure the 2019-20 Seawolves get as much out of the season as they can.

“It’s always nice to know that, certainly, but at the same time, college is a four-year deal,” he said. “It’d be nice to have a little more of a long-term plan solution here.

“I felt very confident in the fact that things are going to be okay here for the immediate future, which turns out to be true. Of course, we’re very happy about that. But where we’re at, in fairness, and out of respect to the kids that are here, we’re hoping that things can be resolved at the state level here to give us an opportunity to stand by what we’re preaching and to stand by these kids that are showing good faith in us and get something long term so we don’t have to worry about these things that quite frankly, the rest of the country doesn’t have to worry about.”

The Seawolves, who currently sit fifth in the WCHA with a 2-1-1-1 record, good for eight points, do not know whether things will change in two seasons when seven of the 10 WCHA member schools plan to split from the conference as it currently stands, but they cannot focus on that right now, nor can they focus on what Gov. Mike Dunleavy might cut from the state budget next.

On top of all of this, the Seawolves hit the WCHA gauntlet in full starting this weekend as they host Bowling Green. Next weekend, they travel to current No. 1 Minnesota State.

Curley admits his team has its work cut out for themselves. They will see both teams again later in the season as well.

“I think as happy as we’ve been with our start, and where we’re at right now, these next two weekends, these next four games, are really going to be benchmarks for us,” Curley said. “You want to get a real sense of how far you’ve come along from where you’ve been, playing two tournament teams, the two top teams in our league, I think there’s no better way to do that. So it will be a real interesting challenge for us, and I’m curious to see what the boys can do.”

One bit of happy distraction for the Seawolves is that the team is in the process of celebrating 40 years as a hockey program.

Curley said he cannot say enough about what it means to him to have former coach Brush Christiansen around.

Christiansen was the first coach in program history in 1979-80 as a Division II independent and stuck with the team as it transitioned first to Division I and then to the WCHA in 1993.

“I think that’s what gets lost in all this, unfortunately,” Curley said. “I wish we could have a little more emphasis on that. Coach Brush Christiansen has been a great mentor for me and a really good friend through my transition here and someone I speak to regularly.

“The work that Brush put in to get this program going and the support from our boosters, and the supporters in the early 80s … [we are] very grateful for those folks and the work that they’ve put in. Certainly with everything going on right now, I don’t want to lose sight of the value of that.”

No fear in Pietila

Michigan Tech started freshman goaltender Blake Pietila at home Saturday against then-No. 2 Minnesota State, who won the game 2-1.

Despite giving up a goal 4:55 in, all the youngster did was stop 18 of 20 shots thrown his way, including two key saves on Mavericks seniors Marc Michaelis and Parker Tuomie in the final 20 minutes of action.

He also stopped all six shots he saw in his debut in the third period of Friday’s contest.

Getting offensive

Bemidji State rocked the Lake Superior State goaltending duo of juniors Mareks Mitens and Roman Bengert for 12 goals in a weekend sweep, winning 7-1 and 5-1.

Adam Brady struck twice in the first period Friday. He added another on the power play Saturday night to open the scoring. Charlie Combs also had two goals, one in the first and another in the third.

UCHC Preview: Utica expecting a tight conference race

Gianluca Baggetta will be the man in the crease for Pioneers’ hunt for a UCHC title (Photo – Utica Athletics)

Last year’s surprise team from Wilkes saw head coach Brett Riley step down to take and assistant coach position with Colgate from the ECAC. New head coach Tyler Hynes inherits a solid team that knows how much of a battle every game is in the UCHC. The pre-season coaches’ poll showed some of the usual suspects expected to win the league, but this conference has been filled with surprises early and often so don’t assume anything will go according to general consensus.

Utica is the early favorite and has an experienced roster augmented by a pair for transfers to bolster the offense. Kasper Kjellkvist from Curry and Donovan Ott from RPI will add balance to returners Brett Everson and Conor Landrigan. The Pioneers are in very good shape in goal where returning starter Gianluca Baggetta has proven to be a bi8g-game goaltender for head coach Gary Heenan. Early road games at Manhattanville and Neumann should give an indication to the Pioneers pedigree.

The Contenders

Aaron Saul’s Elmira squad boasts some great senior forwards including Connor Powell, Matthew Cuce and Nick Ford. Ford recorded 39 points last season and is an offensive catalyst for the Soaring Eagles. Ben Fleischman is the only returning goaltender for Elmira who will be looking for a number one among a group of four that includes Clarkson transfer, Chris Janzen. An opening home-and-home series with Hobart will need Elmira to bring their “A” game early.

Last year’s conference champions took the two-game format to the maximum needing a second game win at Utica to stay alive and a mini-game win to claim the title. Head coach Arlen Marshall’s team always plays hard and physical hockey and their significant losses to graduation may take some time to take shape, but no one should take the Valiants lightly.

Players to watch

Chatham: Michael Lamison – forward; Chris Lutz – forward
Elmira: Matthew Cuce – forward; Nick Ford – forward
King’s: Tyler Wilding – defenseman; Tanner Wilding – forward
Lebanon Valley: Cole Hepler – forward; Tyler Romel – defenseman
Manhattanville: Ken McLean – forward; Joel Knight – defenseman
Nazareth: Brian Miller – forward; James McDonald – forward
Neumann: Zac Boyle – forward; Richie Brusco – defenseman
Stevenson: Aaron Murray – defenseman; Domenic Brenza– forward
Utica: Brett Everson – forward; Gianluca Baggetta – goalie
Wilkes: Tyler Barrow – forward; Donald Flynn – forward

USCHO predicted finish

1. Utica
2. Elmira
3. Manhattanville
4. Wilkes
5. Nazareth
6. Stevenson
7. Neumann
8. Lebanon Valley
9. Chatham
10. King’s

The MAC title chase emanating from a subset of UCHC teams looks to be a hotly contested battle among Manhattanville, Wilkes and Lebanon Valley. While the hardware and championship designation are an important goal for all these teams, they all clearly know that the points count in both conference standings and the UCHC is the one with the auto-bid to the NCAA tournament.

NE-10 Preview: Southern New Hampshire and St. Anselm lead the way in the NE-10

Mike Ferraro seeks a repeat as NE-10 scoring leader Photo – St. Anselm Athletics)

The sole D-II conference in college hockey is now a seven-team league with Post University officially joining the NE-10 hockey conference. That addition sets up an 18-game conference schedule with each team playing league opponents three times. The addition of Post does not change the playoff structure where only the top four teams will qualify for the championship tournament.

Last season’s champions from Southern New Hampshire and finalist St. Anselm appear to be the favorites to continue their backyard brawl in Manchester, NH for the league title again this season.

The Favorites

The Penmen defeated their cross-town rivals last season, 4-3 in the title game and return a solid group in front of senior goaltender Kurt Gutting who made 37 saves in the championship game. Gutting was among the best in the country last year with a .935 save percentage and 2.17 goals-against average in 21 games played for SNHU. Senior forward Brett Strawn will be a key contributor on offense as the sophomore heavy line-up will look to repeat and build on their championship formula for head coach Sean Walsh.

St. Anselm returns much of their offensive firepower from a year ago including the league’s leading goal scorer, Mike Ferraro. Eight of the top nine scorers are back including Sean Verrier who proved to be a reliable offensive weapon for the Hawks. The offense will be expected to help a young group of goaltenders that has just five games of collegiate experience from Michal Soustal.

The Contender

Assumption which lost in the semifinal round last season in triple overtime returns a solid team coming off a 15-win season. Goaltender David Zulauf returns for his senior season with a strong group of defensemen returning led by Robert Roche and John McDonagh. Offensively Colin Phillipon and Devan Sheth will look to surpass the 20-point plateau for the season and help the Greyhounds contend for the NE-10 title.

Players to watch

Assumption: Dante Maribito – forward; John McDonagh – defense
Franklin Pierce: Mark Indelicato – defense; Alex Lester – forward
Post: Evan Lugo – forward; Jake Raleigh – forward
Southern New Hampshire: Kurt Gutting – goaltender; Brett Strawn – forward
Stonehill: Jack Hall – forward; Cameron Wright – forward
St. Anselm: Sean Verrier – forward; Mike Ferraro – forward
St. Michael’s: Brandon Mitchell – forward; Sel Narby – defense

USCHO Predicted finish

1. St. Anselm
2. Southern New Hampshire
3. St. Michael’s
4. Assumption
5. Post
6. Franklin Pierce
7. Stonehill

Expect this league to be very competitive especially with the addition of a Post team that garnered half of their ten wins in the final seven games of the season over quality opponents like St. Michael’s, SNHU and Assumption.

RIT’s Wayne Wilson talks Tigers, Atlantic Hockey, 3v3 OT: USCHO Spotlight Season 2 Episode 6

Hugo Esselin (15 - Merrimack) collides with Logan Drackett (30 - RIT) (Omar Phillips 2019)
Part of RIT’s early-season success has been the play of goalie Logan Drackett. Merrimack’s Hugo Esselin collides with Drackett during the Tigers’ Brick City Weekend homecoming game in front of 9,805 on October 19, 2019 (photo: Omar Phillips).

Rochester Institute of Technology is off to its best start in the D-I era for the program at 7-1-2. Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger are joined by RIT head coach Wayne Wilson to talk about this season’s Tigers, Atlantic Hockey, the 3v3 overtime, video replay, and more.

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

Sponsor this podcast! Visit https://www.advertisecast.com/USCHOSpotlight for details.

TMQ: Talking the new poll, Alaska schools coming back for ’20-21, Atlantic Hockey’s nonconference plight

02 Nov 19: The University of Minnesota Golden Gopher host the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish in a B1G matchup at 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis, MN. (Jim Rosvold)
Notre Dame swept Ohio State last weekend and moved up to No. 4 in the Nov. 11 USCHO.com Men’s Division I Poll (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Each week during the season, we look at the big events and big games around Division I men’s college hockey in Tuesday Morning Quarterback.

Jim: Let’s start off this week’s TMQ by welcoming back Dan Rubin, who is filling in admirably once again for Paula Weston.

And Dan, we’ll also start by welcoming Minnesota State back to the top spot in the USCHO.com poll. The Mavericks are no stranger to being No. 1, but this is the first time this season. Between Minnesota State’s 8-1-1 start to the season and Denver’s slip up at Minnesota Duluth, earning a tie and loss in the weekend series, the voters placed the Mavericks back in the top position.

That said, it wasn’t an easy vote looking at the poll. Minnesota State received exactly half of the first-place votes, while four other teams – Denver (15 first-place votes), Cornell (5), Notre Dame (4) and UMass (1) – all got some consideration from the voters for the top spot.

I think we’ve learned over the years that when the nation’s top team falters, the voting can be a little spread out the following Monday. But this seems borderline insane. I guess a case can be made for some of these teams (I’m not sure UMass deserves any consideration for No. 1 right now after losing to New Hampshire), but this lack of consensus maybe speaks to how wide-open this year’s races – whether we’re talking conference races or nationally – might be.

What are your thoughts on just how spread out this week’s poll seems?

Dan: As always, I appreciate the offer to ride sidecar on this ride, and hopefully my hot takes won’t scorch our readers too much.

When it comes to our poll, I always recognize it as a snapshot of how things are currently going along in college hockey. I don’t view it as the be-all, end-all, but I also enjoy putting a good amount of merit into how people view some teams versus another. It’s also always good for revealing if the voters have a bias towards a particular program or league based on how teams rise and fall with any weekly performance.

Any time a No. 1 team loses, there’s that anticipation that a team behind it can swipe the top slot, so it’s not a surprise to me to see Minnesota State take the top ranking from Denver. It also doesn’t surprise me that Denver retained a number of votes out of respect to Minnesota Duluth and the NCHC, even though Duluth’s overall record isn’t where anyone probably expected the two-time defending national champs to be.

It’s also a measure that you can look at Duluth’s barely-over-.500 record and drop the Bulldogs into a ranking ahead of Clarkson, Penn State and even North Dakota. It’s all a measure of local apprehensions around voters that see teams versus people who watch other teams. I know I love Cornell, and I almost put the Big Red at No. 1. But I recognize that I watch more ECAC than NCHC, and the temptation came from my respect for the Big Red’s current performance over the Mavericks’ performance.

That doesn’t mean Minnesota State isn’t worthy of No. 1 and ultimately, I put the Mavericks in that spot in my own poll, but it’s a conversation piece, if nothing else.

It’s like UMass in this situation. The Minutemen lost to New Hampshire, but it now becomes a sign of respect for the Wildcats more than it does a knock against UMass. That win boosts UNH more than it hurts UMass, at least in one voter’s mind.

The one thing I do take mild umbrage at is the lack of respect for Atlantic Hockey throughout the polls, but I recognize that “my league” still struggles to consistently win non-league games. RIT has had a really hard time cracking through, but I fail to think that a 7-1-2 record with a 3-1 non-league record would keep a team from any other league out of the Top 20 except for a lack of awareness or knowledge or perspective compared to the better-known teams.

I’m not sure if you agree with that statement, so I’ll ask you about your perspective about that and for your perspective on how Atlantic Hockey, despite its advances in the NCAA tournament, somehow still manages to inconsistently win non-league games?

Jim: I agree 100 percent with your take on Atlantic Hockey. For many seasons, it was reasonable to place the conference a peg below all of the other five. To me, though, that no longer is sensible.

An Atlantic Hockey has won an NCAA tournament game in each of the last three seasons. Not every conference can make that claim. And when you compare all six conferences, you can see that, at least for the last three seasons, the ECAC, WCHA and Atlantic Hockey are all pretty much on even footing from top to bottom.

That said, Atlantic Hockey has a difficult time gaining the notoriety because of the lack of a large scale college hockey name. That is no fault of the conference or its members. But the ECAC has the Ivies and teams like Clarkson, Union and Quinnipiac to help its brand recognition. The WCHA might not have any teams with major recent cache, but Lake Superior State, Michigan Tech Northern Michigan and Bowling Green are all past national champions.

Atlantic Hockey’s biggest brands are likely the military schools – Army West Point and Air Force. Sure, RIT might be better known for reaching the Frozen Four in 2010, and people very familiar with college hockey (especially North Dakota and Minnesota fans) won’t forget the Holy Cross upset of Minnesota more than a decade ago. But the lack of a well-known brand continues to provide an excuse for people to forget all too often about Atlantic Hockey.

I know your work with Bentley places you closer to the league. I covered the conference when it first started, so both of us understand just what a massive progression this league has made. But we are the minority.

Dan: Atlantic Hockey schools are doing a really good job of building their brand in their own ways, but there’s still that fight against the rising tides of tradition and history.

I know Bentley has done that more locally here in Boston, where the new arena and wins over Hockey East schools make it a legitimately hockey brand in the region. Watching the university get behind the hockey team helped create a wave of momentum, and there’s no question that it’s a player now in Metrowest Massachusetts. Likewise, AIC has done a good job of capitalizing on its run from last year, and the game against UMass this year felt like a true blue Western Massachusetts matchup between two hockey schools. So there’s local growth, and that’s a step in the right direction.

But you’re absolutely right that there’s an issue with branding nationally. Maybe it’s a hint of how hockey is becoming part of the mainstream college sports lexicon because schools like Penn State and Ohio State will always have that name recognition factor, along with conventional “hockey schools” like Boston University and North Dakota, and until I see the change in the way the poll is voted, I’m going to probably retain that line of thinking.

That said, I know Atlantic Hockey is primed for a breakthrough in the national tournament, and I absolutely believe there’s another Frozen Four or a first national champion coming, very quickly.

Speaking of hockey’s changing tides, the story broke this week that the WCHA will continue with both Alaska programs through next season. I’m a huge supporter of those Alaska schools, and I think going to the Last Frontier is one of those things that just makes hockey more fun in a utopian setting. But I also think that the sport’s shift is precarious for the teams that could be left behind in both Anchorage and Fairbanks. What was your reaction when you first read the news?

Jim: I think that the news about the two Alaska schools continuing to operating as independent programs in 2020-21 is a positive step… for one year.

Realistically, they’ve already been deserted – as has Alabama Huntsville – by the seven other members of the WCHA who will break off from the league at the end of the 2020-21 season. As if both Alaskas and Alabama Huntsville didn’t have enough problems already, that move over the summer to basically desert those schools and the WCHA could signal a sad future for parts of college hockey.

Yes, for the two Alaskans schools, this is their problem. Funding for these programs is inadequate and needs to be bolstered and not reduced. But if you’re an administrator at these schools or someone who holds the purse strings in the Alaskan government, do you give more of less when you see that these programs are becoming, for lack of a better term, orphans.

I am fine with change, so I won’t criticize the realignment that has gone on in recent years. But I hate to see contraction in college hockey in a time where it seems like the sports is flourishing around the world. More people are playing the game globally, but t the Division I level in NCAA hockey, it seems like too many are okay with reducing the number of opportunities rather than expanding them.

Dan: I am with you 100 percent here. I love the growth of the game, and I think there’s a ton of compelling opportunities within that expansion. I think the new teams are going to find their way to nationally-branded schools like Penn State and Arizona State, and the next stage is going to really latch into the areas where the game is excelling. Hockey has done a really good job of using itself to create popularity in previously-unknown or unrecognized markets. It’s created a talent pool that’s deeper than ever, and there’s a spillover effect. I mean, turn on the NHL on any given night, and the level of competition is off the charts now.

That’s why it’s so important for college hockey to come to a consensus and work together for all 60 – or more – programs. There’s no reason why the tide can’t change without retaining interest in the success of all programs. If the WCHA programs want to break away from Alaska, Alaska Anchorage and Alabama Huntsville, that may ultimately be the right decision. I’m just afraid that it’s done without the interest of the total sum of parts. If contraction ultimately happens, it shouldn’t be because other schools forced a situation where a program doesn’t exist because a state legislature or board of directors or regents have to pony up more money that it simply doesn’t have.

It can be done, and I point to Atlantic Hockey as living proof. When the first round of realignment went through, there were rumors everywhere about which teams wanted to join the CCHA or create a new league or join Hockey East. Everyone had a theory, though nothing was public. Eventually, Atlantic Hockey sat down as a collective unit and dedicated itself to the league in terms of infrastructure, scholarships, investment, etc. Everything looked inward. It’s created an incredibly compelling and competitive league that’s unquestionably an indication of “growth,” as I’ve pointed out plenty today.

The only other thing I’ll mention is a personal fear. If this sets a precedent where league teams can meet and break away from its members, I don’t know if that creates a future warning that it could happen to another program that’s part of the breakaway. I have no proof to back up that it might happen, but there’s always that potentially-slippery slope. Just worth mentioning, if nothing else.

Like you, I’m totally fine with change and support anything that makes college hockey more competitive in the long run, but I want the scenario to include everyone. I love the game itself, and anything that we can do to save players, coaches and opportunities at a time of unprecedented success? Maybe I’m idealistic, but that’s what I want – and I think we can do it.

USCHO.com presents its NCAA Division I Plays of the Week, Nov. 8-10

Robert Morris senior Jacob Coleman scored his first goal of the season last Friday night at Canisius (photo: Jason Cohn/RMU Athletics).

Each week, USCHO.com will present its Plays of the Week via our YouTube channel.

Minnesota State ascends to top of USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll

Edwin Hookenson (Minnisota State - 24). ((c) Shelley M. Szwast 2016)
Edwin Hookenson has tallied two goals and four points this season in 10 games for Minnesota State (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

With 25 first-place votes this week, Minnesota State is the new No. 1 team in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

Denver, which was the top team last week, falls to No. 2, but also earned 15 first-place votes.

Cornell moves up one spot to No. 3 and picked up five first-place nods from the voters.

Notre Dame garnered four first-place votes and is up one spot to No. 4, while Massachusetts falls three spots to No. 5 and notched one first-place vote this week.

Minnesota Duluth is up one to No. 6, Clarkson is up one to sit seventh, Penn State falls two to No. 8, North Dakota jumps one place to No. 9 and Providence rounds out the top 10, up one from last week’s poll.

USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll – Nov. 11, 2019

The biggest mover in spots 11-20 is Harvard, up five spots from No. 18 to No. 13.

Western Michigan enters the rankings this week at No. 20.

Nine other teams received votes this week.

The USCHO.com Poll consists of 50 voters, including coaches and beat writers and sports professionals from across the country.

Minnesota Duluth picks up four points, Notre Dame stays unbeaten, UNH gets the upset: Weekend Review podcast Season 2 Episode 6

Hosts Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger look at the games of November 7-10, 2019, including Minnesota Duluth’s four-point weekend hosting Denver, Notre Dame’s sweep of Ohio State, and New Hampshire’s 3-1 Sunday win over UMass. Also in this episode: Clarkson and Cornell’s two wins setting up their showdown this coming weekend, Harvard’s wins over Princeton and Quinnipiac, Lowell’s three points from Maine, Boston College’s two routs of UConn, Michigan State’s split with Penn State, and RIT’s four-of-six points from Niagara. Plus, Jim and Ed discuss news that Alaska and Alaska Anchorage will compete in the WCHA in 2020-21.

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

Sponsor this podcast: https://www.advertisecast.com/USCHOWeekendReview

D-III West Weekend Wrap

Trevor Coykendall moves the puck with teammate Vinny Post joining the rush. (Action photo by Mike Dickie)

Saint Thomas picked up its first signature win of the season Saturday night, stunning reigning national champion Wisconsin-Stevens Point 4-3.

Along the way, the Tommies ended a nine-game losing streak to the Pointers that dates back to the 2005-06 season. 

Johnny Panvica scored the game-winning goal with 1:52 left in regulation, lifting the Tommies to their second win of the year.

Brett Gravelle and Derek Olmschenk scored goals in the second period to erase a 2-1 deficit and Luke Readetic tied the game with just under seven minutes to play.

Cam Buggrabe rose to the occasion in goal, stopping 30 shots. The Tommies took 28 shots on goal while the Pointers (2-2) came through with 33 shots.

Outside the top 15 going into the game, the Tommies should rise with the win over the top-ranked Pointers. 

St. Thomas is unbeaten in its last three games. It has won twice during that stretch.

The other big game of the weekend featured Lake Forest completing a sweep of third-ranked St. Norbert Saturday night with a 4-3 win. The Foresters opened the weekend with a 1-0 win.

Zach Feldman scored his first goal of the year in the win and it was the Forester’s third power play goal of the season. 

Aaron O’Neill, Jack Clark and David Cohen also scored for Lake Forest. Boyd DiClemente made 29 saves in the win. Lake Forest remains unbeaten on the year, improving to 3-0-1.

Here a handful of other highlights from around the west region over the weekend.

Damon gets it done: Justin Damon recorded his first collegiate win in, and he did it in impressive fashion, helping Gustavus notch a 2-0 win over Wisconsin-Stout Saturday night. 

The Gusties bounced back from Friday’s 4-2 loss to Wis.-Stevens Point, partly thanks to Damon, who stopped 27 shots. 

Less than four minutes into the game, Gustavus took the lead. 

Two clutch saves by Damon early gave the Gusties a chance to put the first goal on the board. And the Gusties responded with Tyler Rock capping a two-on-one break with the score. Tyler Ebner tallied the assist.

Logan Norman scored the second and final goal of the night. Reid Brown assisted on the goal.

Both teams failed to score on the power play, with Gustavus going 0-for-3 and the Blue Devils coming up empy on four opportunities.

Gustavus is off to a 3-1 start to the season and has scored two or more goals in all three wins. The Gusties are well on their way to topping last year’s win mark of seven games.

Yellowjackets dominate Cardinals: The season couldn’t have gotten off to a better start for Wisconsin-Superior Friday night. The Yellowjackets scored three times in the second period and four times in the fourth in a 7-0 victory.

Artur Terchiyev helped lead the way, scoring a goal and dishing out two assists. Chad Lopez punched in a goal as well to go along with a pair of assists. Coltyn Bates came through with a goal and an assist and Jordan Martin dished out two assists as the Yellowjackets used a team effort to nail down the win.

Oscar Svensson started in goal and notched the second shutout of his career, recording 22 saves. The Yellowjackets capped the weekend with a 3-2 win over St. Olaf.

Blugolds put offense on display: Wisconsin-Eau Claire scored 12 goals in its two games over the weekend, including seven in a 7-2 win over St. Olaf Friday.

Jake Bresser scored twice for the Blugolds while Andrew McGlynn tallied three assists for Wis.-Eau Claire..The Blugolds capped the weekend with a 5-2 win over Saint Mary’s on Saturday night to improve to 2-0-1 on the season.

Zach Dyment stopped 21 shots to pick up his first win of the season. Bresser and McGlynn scored goals in Saturday’s win as well and Riley McVeigh stopped 13 shots.

Big night for Balsamo: Dino Balsamo turned in a stellar performance Saturday night, recording a hat track in a 5-4 win over Marian in NCHA play. Balsamo scored twice off the power play.

Balsamo now has six goals, the most in the league, and his point total stands at eight. Adrian lost Friday’s game to Marian but with Saturday’s victory, the Bulldogs improve to 26-4-2 all-time against the Sabres.

Andrew Bellant dished out two assists, pushing his season total to six as he continues his great start since transferring in from Michigan Tech.

Nick Tallarico tallied 24 saves in his debut for the Bulldogs, who boucned back after a 5-4 loss to Marian the night before and ended a two-game winless streak.

Weekend Wrap: November 11

Lindsay Reed of Harvard (Harvard Athletics)
Lindsay Reed made 40 stops in Harvard’s upset win over (7) Princeton. (Photo: Harvard Athletics)

(3) Cornell at St. Lawrence

The Big Red excelled on special teams en route to their 4-1 win. Amy Curlew opened the scoring on the power play midway through the first. St. Lawrence’s Rachel Teslak tied it up less than two minutes later. Curlew added a second goal two minutes after that to give Cornell the 2-1 lead. That’s how it would stay for another 41 minutes. In the final five minutes of the game, Grace Graham tallied a short-handed goal and one at even-strength to give Cornell the 4-1 win.

(3) Cornell at (6) Clarkson

Lindsay Browning and Marie-Pier Coulombe each had 28 saves as this game ended in a 1-1 tie. The game was scoreless into the third period. Izzy Daniel scored for Cornell, but Clarkson responded less than three minutes later with a power play goal from Elizabeth Giguere. An extra frame could not decide a winner.

Holy Cross at (4) Northeastern

Aline Mueller had a goal and two assists and Tessa Ward had two goals to lead Northeastern to a 6-0 conference win.

(5) Boston College at Connecticut

Taylor Wabick scored :55 into the game and her twin sister Morgan put one in the net on the power play midway through the first to put UConn up 2-0. Delaney Belinskas cut the lead in half, but that’s as close as the game would get. Viki Harkness’ goal with :14 left in the first period put the Huskies back up by two as they headed to the locker room with a 3-1 lead. Natalie Snodgrass’s goal made it 4-1 in the second period. Belinskas’ second goal close the gap to make it 4-2, but Harkness responded on the power play to earn Connecticut the 5-2 win. It was Boston College’s first loss of the season.

Colgate at (6) Clarkson

Elizabeth Giguere scored twice in less than two minutes midway through the second period and that would be enough to carry Clarkson to the win. Tanner Gates scored a short-handed goal just before the second period break to make it 2-1, but Colgate could not complete the comeback.

Harvard at (7) Princeton

Princeton out-shot Harvard 42-25, but Crimson goalie Lindsey Reed made 40 saves to help lead her team to a 6-2 win. Harvard jumped out to a 3-0 lead after the first period thanks to goals from Kat Hughes, Anne Bloomer and Emma Buckles. Sharon Frankel cut the lead to 3-1 with a goal midway through the second period, but Bloomer responded two minutes later to make it 4-1 Crimson. Dominique Petrie extended the lead to 5-1 with a power play tally before Mariah Keopple added an extra-attacker goal of her own to make it 5-2. Kristi Della Rovere added one more late in the third to make it a 6-2 Harvard win.

Dartmouth at (7) Princeton

Sharon Frankel put Princeton on the board first with a goal midway through the first period. CC Bowlby tied the game up before the first period break. The game stayed tied until Maggie Connors scored on a breakaway early in the third period to give the Tigers the 2-1 win.

(10) Boston University at Providence

Freshman Julia Nearis scored her team-leading sixth goal to give Boston University a 2-1 win. The game was scoreless until just before the halftime mark, when Nearis put the Terriers on the board with a goal from the right circle. Neve Van Pelt scored on the power play to tie the game for Providence early in the third, but it was Nearis, also on the player advantage, that would tally the game-winner 66 seconds later.

 

D-III East Round-up

Brockport’s Connor Hutchins was one of many players on the weekend with a four-point game (Photo by Brockport Athletics)

If you wanted to see lots of goal scoring then this was the weekend for you as teams like UNE, Norwich and Hobart showed off some firepower in conference play. The UCHC saw a lot of goals too as Elmira, Nazareth and Utica all had big offensive nights in big conference wins. Great action everywhere over the weekend and it will be interesting to see if the high-scoring games continue to signify a trend with more goals and some very lopsided outcomes.

Here is the recap of the D-III action in the East:

CCC
After being shutout in their opening game by Norwich, the University of New England kicked their offense into high gear with a pair of wins over Becker. Brent Hill recorded a hat trick in Friday’s 6-1 win and Brett Mecrones picked up four points with a goal and three assists in Saturday’s 10-2 rout.

Salve Regina took both games against Nichols with John McLean’s power play goal being the difference in Friday’s 3-2 win. On Saturday, the game was a penalty filled affair with Vincent Marino’s power play goal in the second period proving to be the game-winner. Louis-Felix St. Jean picked up both wins making 74 saves in the two games.

Curry and Endicott split their two-game series with both teams winning on home ice. On Friday, the Gulls made goals from James Winkler and Luke Rodgers stand up for a 2-1 win. On Saturday, the Colonels returned the favor with goals by Michael Curran and Viktor Jansson overcoming a 1-0 deficit for the 2-1 win. Both games saw neither team able to score with the man advantage going a combined 0-23 on the weekend.

Independents
After a 1-1 tie with Albertus Magnus on Friday night, Anna Maria played Fitchburg State looking to stay unbeaten in their first four games. The Falcons raced out to an early lead and sealed the 5-2 win with goals from Christopher Vicario and Adam Kusior just 26 seconds apart in the third period. The loss sees the AmCats at 2-1-1 to open the season.

Canton dropped a pair of games during the week. On Tuesday, the Kangaroos surrendered a lost minute tying goal to St. Michael’s before Jeremy Routh gave the Purple Knights the overtime win. On Saturday, Canton ran into a Geneseo offense that put up 10 goals in a 10-2 win that ran Canton’s record to 1-2-1.

MASCAC
Massachusetts-Dartmouth took advantage of Cameron Mack’s hat trick and cruised to an 8-1 win over Framingham State on Tuesday night.
Plymouth State’s Andreas Pettersson stopped 31 shots and added an assist as the Panthers opened conference play with a 4-1 win over Fitchburg State on Thursday night.

Despite outshooting the hosts 59-35, Westfield State needed a rally in the third period from a two-goal deficit to tie Post, 3-3. Goals by Daniel Backstrom and Justin Alves, assisted by Backstrom, earned the overtime tie for the Owls.

NE-10
Assumption opened NE-10 play with a 6-4 win on Friday over Stonehill. Six different players scored for the Greyhounds. On Saturday, Assumption needed overtime to down Post, 4-3. Michael Zampanti gave Assumption the lead in the third period only to see Post’s Jake Raleigh tie the game with an extra-attacker goal in the final 30 seconds of regulation. Alexander Mavrogiannis scored with less than a minute remaining in the overtime period to give the visitors a 4-3 win.

Another overtime thriller saw St. Anslem beat St. Michaels’s on Saturday, 3-2. Mike Ferraro’s second goal of the game tied the score at 2-2 and teammate Trey Aiello scored the game winner at 4:44 of the five-minute overtime session.

NEHC
Norwich continues to play strong defense as the Cadets picked up shutout wins over New England College and Southern Maine. The offense was on display Friday with Felix Brassard scoring one goal and assisting on three more in the 7-0 win. On Saturday, things were a little tighter as Braedyn Aubin’s first goal stood up as the only goal netminder Tom Aubrun would need in a 1-0 win over the Huskies.

Hobart scored 16 goals in wins over Johnson & Wales and Suffolk. The Statesmen received two goals from Zack Tyson and single markers from seven other players in the 9-0 runaway win. On Saturday, Brenden Howell scored a pair of goals and five other teammates added goals in the 7-4 win over Suffolk.

Skidmore also picked up a pair of wins in NEHC play. William Brochu scored twice, and Brandon Kasel made 19 saves to earn a shutout in the 5-0 win over Suffolk. On Saturday, Mike Gelatt scored two goals and added two assists in a 6-2 win over Johnson & Wales.

SUNYAC
Oswego continued Plattsburgh’s early season woes with a 3-0 win on Friday night. Anthony Passero, Carter Allen and Tyler Currie scored for the Lakers and David Richer stopped all 25 Cardinal shots to earn the shutout. On Saturday, Oswego opened up the offense in an 8-1 win over Potsdam. Travis Broughman was the offensive leader with two goals and two assists in the decisive win.

Brockport continued their hot start on Friday with a 6-0 win over Morrisville led by four points from Connor Hutchins and three points each from Doc Gentzler and Anthony Hora. On Saturday, Morrisville joined Brockport at 3-1-0 with a 4-1 win. Jared Young made 25 saves to lead the Mustangs and give Brockport their first loss of the season.

UCHC
Utica picked up two key road wins over the weekend. Friday night Brandon Osmundson’s natural hat trick broke open a 2-2 on the way to a 5-2 win over Manhattanville. On Saturday night against Neumann, a four-goal third period including power play goals from Daniel Fritz and Dante Zapata led the Pioneers to a 6-2 win and weekend sweep in conference play.

Wilkes also doubled down on conference wins with a 4-3 win over Lebanon Valley followed by Saturday’s 5-3 win over Elmira. Tyson Araujo scored twice and Phil Erickson’s goal with less than two minutes in regulation led to the win over the Flying Dutchmen. Against Elmira, two power play and one shorthanded goal in the second period rallied the hosts back from a two-goal deficit. After Elmira tied the game at 3-3 early in the third period, Wilkes’ Billy Berry’s unassisted goal proved to be the game winner with Donald Flynn adding insurance in the final minute for the 5-3 final.

Three Biscuits

Andrew Romano – Geneseo – picked up six points for the Knights in Saturday’s 10-2 win over Canton. Romano scored two goals and added four assists in the runaway win.

Cameron Mack – Massachusetts-Dartmouth – the Corsair forward recorded a hat trick in Tuesday’s 8-1 win over Framingham State. Mack scored one goal on the power play, one goal shorthanded and one goal at even strength to pace the win.

Nikita Pintusov – New England College – paced the Pilgrim offense with four goals in Saturday’s bounce-back win over Castleton, 9-3. Pintusov staked NEC to a 2-0 first period lead before adding power play goals in the second and third periods.

Some expected contenders flexed their muscles early while others are still looking for that winning formula. All leagues will be in action with NESCAC joining the fray this upcoming weekend.

Monday 10: Three teams still undefeated, nine ties Friday night, Michigan State upsets Penn State

John Lethemon of Michigan State (Andrew Knapik/MiHockeyNow) ((Andrew Knapik/MiHockeyNow))
John Lethemon made 48 saves as unranked Michigan State blanked then-No. 6 Penn State on Friday night (photo: Andrew Knapik/MiHockeyNow).

Each week, USCHO.com will pick the top 10 moments from the past weekend in our Monday 10 feature.

1. Minnesota Duluth has shaken off its early blahs

After opening the season 1-3, with uncharacteristic defensive lapses, the two-time defending national champion Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs are back in sync. The Bulldogs rallied from a 3-1 third-period deficit to tie Denver, 3-3, on Friday and then followed that with a convincing 5-2 win the next night. After losing seven straight to Denver at one point, Duluth has been on a tear of late against the Pioneers, going 4-1-1. Duluth is also 3-0-1 in its last four games.

Duluth had to rally in both games. In Friday’s game, Noah Cates completed the rally by scoring with just 31 seconds left in the game. The two overtimes resolved nothing, and Brett Stapley scored on the shootout to give Denver the extra point. On Saturday, after Denver took a 2-1 lead early in the second period, Luke Loheit put the Bulldogs up 3-2 with a goal at 11:25 of the second, and Cates and Cole Koepke scored late in the third to seal the win.

One impressive stat in Duluth’s recent play against Denver has been its third period performance. Through last season’s five games and the two this season, Duluth has outscored Denver in the third period and OT, 14-2, and outshot the Pioneers in those periods, 87-43.

2. Ties rule the roost

Ties were the name of the game on Friday night, as nine games ended in ties. A 10th game went to OT, with No. 5 Notre Dame edging No. 9 Ohio State 3-2 behind Pierce Crawford’s goal at 3:59 of the OT.

When it comes to ties, no one does it better of late than St. Cloud State, which after tying Northern Michigan, 3-3, on Friday, has four ties on the year. Friday’s was particularly tough to swallow, as the Huskies blew a three-goal lead in the third period when the Wildcats struck three times on a five-on-three five-minute major, with André Ghantous scoring two of those goals. St. Cloud almost duplicated that ignominious feat Saturday, again managing to blow a three-goal third-period lead, but Nick Perbix scored at 3:53 of OT to give the Huskies the win. St. Cloud has struggled mightily on defense this year after its amazing season last year, giving up on average 3.12 goals per game, 45th in the country.

3. Notre Dame makes a statement

Last season, Ohio State captured the Big Ten crown, running away with the league by a nine-point margin over second-place Notre Dame. Two seasons ago, it was the opposite, with the Fighting Irish winning the league crown by an eight-point margin over second-place OSU.

In the first series between the two this season, the Fighting Irish came away with two one-goal wins, edging the Buckeyes in OT Friday and following it with a 2-1 win on Saturday, as Cam Burke’s goal at 12:05 capped a two-goal rally in the third period. Goalie Cale Morris made 24 saves in the win that put Notre Dame in the early lead in the Big Ten.

4. Arizona State splits as road struggles continue

Arizona State split with Alaska on the weekend, losing 4-3 on Friday but rebounding for a 4-0 win on Saturday. Last season, the Sun Devils were a Cinderella team, making it to the NCAA tournament, but this year has been more of a struggle, mainly due to a middling 3-3 record on the road.

The Sun Devils will need to better their road performance if they want to return to the NCAA tournament.

5. Massachusetts upset by resurgent New Hampshire

One team that won’t take advantage of Denver’s slip is No. 2 Massachusetts, which fell to New Hampshire 3-1 on Sunday.

Jackson Pierson had two assists, and Max Gildon’s second-period power-play goal at 8:29 proved the game-winner.

New Hampshire has quietly been building toward something, opening its season with a 5-2-1 record, including two wins over ranked teams. Pierson leads the team in scoring with 13 points, good for 10th in the nation, while Gildon is right behind with 12 points. Mike Robinson has a .918 save percentage and 1.95 goals-against in six games.

USCHO’s Hockey East columnists picked UNH to finish seventh and eighth respectively, and those predictions could still come true, but for now, the former Hockey East power seems resurgent, tied for third in the league standings.

6. North Dakota back on track

You could hear the wails from Grand Forks last year when the state’s beloved Fighting Hawks missed out on the postseason for the second consecutive season. For a team that had not missed the NCAA tournament since 2003 and hadn’t missed the tournament in consecutive years since the mid ‘90s, this was monumental.

It’s still early, but North Dakota seems back on track, as the Fighting Hawks swept Miami on the weekend to improve to 7-1-1 on the year. The big thing that has improved is offense. North Dakota struggled to score the last two years, but through eight games is averaging over four goals a game and is ranked third nationally in team offense. Junior Jordan Kawaguchi has 13 points so far, and Westin Michaud, a graduate transfer from Colorado College, has eight points, tied for second on the team. Also making a statement early is freshman Harrison Blaisdell, who has seven points, all at even strength.

This weekend, the Fighting Hawks will race league rival Denver on the road in what is always an intense series. The intensity will likely be upped, as Denver ended North Dakota’s season last year by sweeping the first-round NCHC series between the two. North Dakota was 1-4-1 against the Pioneers last season.

7. Michigan State upsets Penn State

If you looked at shots alone, you’d have thought Penn State dominated Michigan State on Friday night, and perhaps they did in puck possession, but goaltender John Lethemon stopped all 48 Penn State shots as Michigan State upset No. 6 Penn State 2-0.

The 48 saves were a career-high for Lethemon. Saturday, the Spartans gave the Nittany Lions another run, but Penn State came away with a 6-4 win. Penn State built a 5-1 lead late in the second, but Michigan State almost rallied, as Patrick Khodorenko scored with 12 seconds left in the second to start the rally. He scored again at 18:53 of the third to pull Michigan State within one, but Denis Smirnov sealed the win with an empty-net goal.

8. Minnesota State continues to roll

No. 3 Minnesota State swept its weekend road series with struggling Michigan Tech, 3-0 and 2-1. The Mavericks sit atop the WCHA standings with a 5-1 league record and 8-1-1 overall record.

Sophomore Dryden McKay has an impressive .946 save percentage and 1.31 goals-against, while freshmen forwards Lucas Sowder and Nathan Smith have been important cogs in the offense, each averaging a point a game.

9. Providence, Northeastern back in win column

After a four-game stretch without a win, the No. 11 Providence Friars finally got a victory with a 6-5 decision over Boston University on Saturday. Tyce Thompson’s goal at 13:45 of the second period broke a 4-4 tie, and the Friars held on for the 6-5 win as both the Terriers and Friars scored in the third.

Providence need the confidence boost, as this weekend they will face No. 13 Northeastern in a home-and-home series. The Huskies had likewise been without a win in their previous four games before they edged Merrimack, 3-1, on Saturday behind Aidan McDonough’s two goals and 19 saves from Craig Pantano.

This weekend, Providence will host Friday and Northeastern Saturday/

10. Three teams still undefeated

With Denver falling from the undefeated ranks on Saturday, three teams remain without a loss on the year: No. 5 Notre Dame (7-0-1), No. 4 Cornell (4-0), and No. 18 Harvard (3-0). The latter looked particularly impressive with its 7-2 win over No. 15 Quinnipiac Saturday. The Crimson raced to a 3-0 lead in the first period and never looked back. All seven of Harvard’s goals were scored by different players. Quinnipiac, which is 0-3-1 in its last four games, will likely fall out of the USCHO.com poll later today.

Women’s D-III wrap Nov. 11: Elmira explodes

Eliza Beaudin of Elmira (Elmira Athletics)
Eliza Beaudin of Elmira (Elmira Athletics)

Elmira explodes
No. 3 Elmira opened its season in explosive fashion, winning 12-0 over Wilkes Friday and following it with a 6-0 win Saturday against King’s. Junior Emma Crocker had nine points on the weekend for a ridiculous 4.5 points per game average, while freshman Holley Riva debuted with four points on the weekend. There are 12 players who had at least two points. Goalies Elizabeth Hanson and Stephanie Martin weren’t challenged much, as Hanson only had to make five saves against King’s and Martin only had to make eight saves against Wilkes.

Gustavus Adolphus scores lone upset
While a couple of ranked teams had ties, only No. 7 Wisconsin-Eau Claire suffered a loss, a 1-0 decision Gustavus Adolphus. Hailey Holland scored the only goal of the game at 13:19 of the first period, and Francesca Gerardi made 19 saves for the shutout. It was the first loss of the year for Eau Claire.

Hamline in the win column
After going winless in its first two games of the season, No. 4 Hamline finally got in the win column with a convincing 6-1 win over Concordia (Wis.) on Saturday. Michaela Arnold and Olivia Arkell each scored two goals, while Sophie Rausch and Madison Davis each had two assists. The Pipers fired 43 shots on net in the win, while goalie McKenna Hulslander only faced 13. The Pipers have a home-and-home with Augsburg looming this weekend.

Plattsburgh still rolling
The defending national champion Plattsburgh Cardinals continue to roll, posting an impressive midweek 3-1 win over No. 8 Norwich and following that with a 7-0 and 3-1 sweep of Oswego. Against Norwich, Sarah Wolf broke a 1-1 deadlock with a goal at 10:35 of the second, and Kaitlin Drew-Mead added a late goal in the third to seal the win. What’s perhaps most impressive is that through its first six games, Plattsburgh has rotated three goaltenders, all of whom have a win. In its first six games, Plattsburgh has only given up two goals.

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