Home Blog Page 58

Northland College declares financial exigency as ‘circumstances remain incredibly serious and significant progress will be needed in the next two weeks to avoid closure’

The Northland College Board of Trustees on April 4 voted to declare financial exigency, setting off a process designed to provide a final, good faith effort to save Northland College.

The decision comes after a March 11 fundraising appeal to raise $12 million dollars by April 3 to avoid closure and instead continue programs and operations beyond this academic year.

Northland boasts both men’s and women’s Division III hockey teams.

The appeal raised nearly $1.5 million from over 900 donations when it ended at midnight on April 3 – a record for the College.

“The Board has been inspired by the extraordinary effort and generosity over the past few weeks,” said Ted Bristol, chair of the Northland College Board of Trustees, in a statement. “As we’ve said from the start, our shared goal is to continue Northland’s mission and we are committed to ensuring we’ve explored all options to do so. The Board remains open and hopeful.

“However, I also want to caution that Northland’s circumstances remain incredibly serious and significant progress will be needed in the next two weeks to avoid closure.”

Financial Exigency is Not Announcement of Closure

Financial exigency is a formal recognition by the Board that the College is facing a serious financial crisis that requires immediate attention and resolution. It is the start of a defined process to explore program, staffing and budget adjustments to preserve the institution’s long-term viability.

The Board has set a timeline for this process to be implemented and will meet to make a final decision about the College’s future in two weeks. As part of the Board’s motion, the financial exigency process will focus on three key areas in the coming weeks:

— Collaboration to further refine a new structure for the College
— Further exploration of current and possible future budget options and adjustments
— Additional donor engagement

“There have been positive and productive conversations taking place among the Board, leadership, faculty and campus groups, as well as the community,” said Chad Dayton, Northland College President. “We are listening and agree that additional time and a defined process are valuable next steps. Financial exigency provides that but also will require crucial conversations and difficult decisions.”

Northland Community Impact

The College intends to continue this academic year as planned with no immediate changes to programs or services.

“While I expect this will be welcome news to many of our campus community, I want to acknowledge this extends the uncertainty for students and others who are waiting for a firm decision in order to plan their future which is why our original deadline was April 3,” said Dayton. “We will continue to provide support to help them and understand that this extended timeline may mean current and prospective students – as well as faculty and staff – need to make individual decisions sooner.”

In the weeks since the March 11 announcement, everyone in the Northland community—students, faculty, staff, alumni, partners, donors, friends and the Ashland and surrounding communities—has stepped up to support the College by raising funds, sharing stories, and collaborating to develop proposals for a more sustainable future model.

“I’m so proud of how our community stepped up, took action and used its energy for good,” said Dayton. “We would love to see some elements of the proposals come to life, but it must be financially feasible for the long-term.”

The Board of Trustees will be following up with various faculty, campus and community groups in the coming days to refine a new structure, explore budget options and adjustments and determine additional funding possibilities.

Hockey Commissioners Association men’s hockey honors for March 2024 include Boston College’s Gauthier, Boston University’s Celebrini, Denver’s Davis

From left, Cutter Gauthier, Macklin Celebrini, Matt Davis.

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced its men’s players of the month for March 2024.

Boston College sophomore forward Cutter Gauthier is player of the month, while Boston University freshman forward Macklin Celebrini is rookie of the month and Denver junior goalie Matt Davis is the goaltender of the month.

Gauthier had his second straight 16-point month for the Hockey East champion Eagles. He went 8-8-16 in an 8-0 month, scored the game-winning goal in both the Hockey East semifinal and final and then went 2-3-5 in the NCAA regionals in Providence. Also a Hobey Hat Trick finalist.

Celebrini was second in the nation among all players with 16 points in just seven games, making his 2.29 points per game an NCAA-best. Named most outstanding player of the Sioux Falls regional. Also named a Hobey Hat Trick finalist.

Davis was the most outstanding player of the Springfield regional where he won a pair of 2-1 games, one in double-OT. On the month, he went 9-1-0, with a 1.89 GAA and a .931 save percentage.

UConn’s Chan, Ohio State’s Barnes, Dunne, Kirk earn monthly Hockey Commissioners Association women’s hockey honors for March 2024

From left, Tia Chan, Cayla Barnes, Joy Dunne, Raygan Kirk.

The Hockey Commissioners Association has announced its women’s players of the month for March 2024.

UConn junior goalie Tia Chan and Ohio State graduate defenseman Cayla Barnes are co-players of the month, while Ohio State freshman forward Joy Dunne is rookie of the month and Ohio State senior Raygan Kirk is the goaltender of the month.

Chan led UConn to its first Hockey East regular-season and tournament titles ever. She stopped all 38 shots in a 1-0 OT win in the Hockey East final and stopped 48 of 49 in a tough 1-0 double-OT loss to Minnesota Duluth in the NCAA tournament. She had an NCAA-best 0.79 GAA in March with a .969 save percentage.

Barnes was a rock on defense for the Buckeyes and also set up the only goal of the NCAA championship final. She was a key part of the OSU defense that only allowed a single goal in three NCAA games and she went 2-7-9 in production from the blue line on the month. A first team all-WCHA performer, she was named to the all-tournament team for the NCAAs.

In a month when she was named winner of the Julie Chu national rookie of the year, Dunne scored the only goal of the NCAA championship final, her 24th of the season. On the month, she went 6-4-10 and on the season, led all NCAA rookies with 24-18-42.

Kirk was named the most outstanding player of the NCAA tournament for her phenomenal performance. In three NCAA games, she had two shutouts, including a 26-save 1-0 triumph over Wisconsin in the final. She stopped 59 of 60 shots in the tournament and on the month, had a 1.14 GAA and a save percentage of .934.

Hockey Humanitarian Award Finalist Feature: For Cornell’s Kempf, Big Red Blocks for Healing initiative benefiting local community, honoring late mother

Hank Kempf and his Cornell teammates traveled to the Dominican Republic this past summer (photo: courtesy Hank Kempf).

Hank Kempf didn’t think much about the case of trail mix that was in his house until it became more than a snack.

It was June in the Dominican Republic, but Kempf and his Cornell hockey teammates were sweltering in the heat as part of an annual service trip organized by coach Mike Schafer. For all of his 500-plus wins, 20-win seasons, trips to the national tournament, or ECAC Hockey conference championships, Schafer always made community service a core pillar to his program, and this past summer brought the Big Red to a tropical climate to help build a community center while assisting in the distribution of clothes, shoes and food.

The community outreach project was both a challenge and reward, and Kempf cracked open a bag of trail mix one day with the intention of simply having a snack. He offered it to a coworker who had been a part of the project, and in that moment, a bag of trail mix became more than just a snack.

“We had something like 100 [bags] back at our house for the week,” Kempf said. “We had a leftover that was available, so we gave it to him. What we realized was that he was making something like five dollars per week, so he started crying because he was so thankful for it.”

In that moment, Kempf realized the gift that had been bestowed upon him as a member of the Cornell hockey community. For the rest of the week, whenever the Big Red played baseball with the locals, they left the equipment and baseballs for kids. Where they could help, they went above the call, and when they came, their worlds had been changed with the realization of how some of the poorest people in a developing nation lived.

For Kempf, it was something to put in the back of his mind of an ever-evolving dedication to the service of communities both in Cornell’s Ithaca backyard and in the international community.

Hank Kempf emerged as a top player this season for Cornell (photo: Lexi Woodcock/Cornell Athletics).

“Coach Schafer always talks about how important service is,” Kempf said. “And playing for Cornell and being under him has really been a great learning lesson into the value of service. It’s been a big thing for me, and it’s influenced me to branch out. Being in the Cornell hockey program is such an incredible place in so many areas, but it’s developed me as a person because you get to do so much away from the rink.”

Kempf’s involvement in his community dips into the very soul and fabric of what hockey humanitarianism is all about. What he does is so much more than simply donating his time in a single event, and looking beyond the exotic trip to the Dominican Republic’s baseball-playing nation offers a glimpse into just how important his work impacts those around him.

His work in organizing the Big Red Blocks for Healing initiative, for example, stemmed from how his own personal life was tinged with tragedy after his mother passed away following a bout with breast cancer. Spurred into wanting to help, he developed a program with his teammates over the summer that capitalized on the team’s desire to get into the dirty areas of blocking shots during games.

“A bunch of returners stayed [on campus] over the summer,” he said. “And before last season, we got together and met with some staff. We all kind of decided that it would be a great thing, this year, to do a service project with the team and have it be something that speaks to the team. I was a little hesitant to do something out of the gate in honor of my mom, but after I talked to my family, we all [decided] it was something she would want me to do. From there, it was a no-brainer to do something to honor her and to do something for breast cancer.

“We really looked at something that spoke to us as a shut-down, defensive team. And we love blocking shots. Blocking shots is a thing that’s really big in our program, so it was something that we said would be cool to make [the program] performance-based specifically for using shot blocks to raise money for breast cancer.”

Drawing inspiration from a professor who likewise dealt with cancer tragedy in his personal life, Kempf and teammate Ryan McInchak began tying the program to Camp Kesem, a no-cost support service with year-round options for children whose lives have been impacted by a parent’s cancer. The organization simultaneously provided a one-week, no-cost overnight summer camp for kids aged six through 18, but its full impact is how it enables children to emotionally escape from the toll and tax enacted by cancer in their personal lives.

Being an active role model in the community is something Cornell players, including Kempf, have done for years under coach Mike Schafer (photo: courtesy Hank Kempf).

The Big Red Blocks for Healing program facilitated pledges based on the number of shots the team blocked during the season while continually offering one-time options for donations, and after blocking 370 shots during its 2022-2023 season, Cornell upped its goal from $5,000 to $10,000 after using 429 blocks to exceed its initial goal during the ECAC championship run this year.

“The student-athlete life is incredibly busy.” Kempf said. “And when you throw a project like this onto everything, it’s like another class that’s year-round. But I’ve gotten a ton of help from Ryan McInchak, who is kind of my right-hand man through all of this. During the setup process, I did a lot before the year started, and there’s a lot of reaching out to [people] for networking and stuff like that, but it’s a lot more enjoyable than doing another class.”

Beyond even those projects, the New York Rangers draft pick remains deeply tied to the community around him through the Racker Center, which supports children with disabilities, and the Newfield Schools Mentor Program, where he’s been a guest reader for children while hosting groups for events and skates at Lynah Rink.

“It’s been such a cool experience to learn what service is really about for the community at college [and beyond],” he admitted. “Hopefully, these are lessons that I can keep learning from and keep developing this passion as I keep maturing and getting older in life.”

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Wisconsin’s Casey O’Brien named USCHO Player of the Year

Wisconsin forward Casey O’Brien came into this season as a two-time National Champion, Patty Kazmaier Award Top-Ten Finalist and having led the Badgers in all offensive categories last season. And this year she was even better.

O’Brien is the USCHO Player of the Year because she became a dynamic two-way player who dominated in the faceoff circle and made herself into one of the best centers in the country. The senior from Milton, Mass. was second in the country with 73 points (18 more than her previous career high) on 23 goals and 50 assists (21 more than her previous career high). Her 858 faceoffs taken were fourth most in the nation and her 59.2% win rate ranks fifth among players with at least 500 faceoffs taken.

She’s just the ninth player in NCAA women’s hockey history to register 50 assists – the last (and only one since 2005) was Amanda Kessel in 2013. 

And she got better as the season wound down. Over the 23 games of the second half of the season, O’Brien averaged 2.04 points per game, with 15 goals and 32 assists. She came in  clutch, scoring 1/3 of her goals in the final eight games of the year, including game winners over Ohio State in the conference championship game and St. Lawrence in the NCAA Quarterfinals. She added 12 assists over that same stretch. She was First-Team All-WCHA, WCHA Tournament Most Outstanding Player, a Patty Kazmaier Award Top-Three Finalist and named a First-Team All-American.

With a host of talented teammates, O’Brien stood out as she shifted her role and grew as a player and a leader who looked at her own strengths and found ways to make them even better and more impactful.

A small and deft forward who has always used her speed on breakaways, this season O’Brien harnessed her quickness and skating on both ends of the ice, becoming a more dynamic 200-foot player that could close down opponents. Her explosive first few strides had been a hallmark of her offensive play and certainly help on catching a breakaway on the backcheck, but she also learned to adapt and utilize her speed within the smaller confines of the defensive zone.

That meant winning the race to a dumped puck, getting to deflections along the boards and in the corners and putting pressure on opposing skaters who are forced into making quicker decisions – and often, mistakes. From there she wins the puck, flipping momentum and the run of play and feeding into the offensive breakouts.

With great vision on the ice and a knack for reading how the play will develop on offense, in developing a more dynamic 200-foot game, O’Brien became adept at shutting down shooting lanes and angling players to the perimeter on defense. The result is a multi-dimensional top line center who an opposing coach jokingly called a pain in the butt because it’s impossible to fully shut her down.

They might stop her on breakaways, they might be able to block or save a nasty shot that comes from her quick wrists, they might pick off her pinpoint passes to her wingers, they might use their size to pin her along the boards, they might deke around her on defense, they might beat her in the faceoff circle, the might open a shooting lane, they might keep her from pressuring the puck carrier. But they’re unlikely to be able to do all of those things all of the time.

O’Brien is feisty and tenacious and this year made herself good at so many parts of the game that the top teams in the country dreaded playing against her. She wasn’t satisfied, kept working and in doing so became a more complete player.

Congratulations to Casey O’Brien on being named the 2024 D-1 Women’s Player of the Year.

Quinnipiac’s Graf signs NHL deal with San Jose, leaves Bobcats after junior season

Collin Graf was an impact player the last two seasons with Quinnipiac, especially during the Bobcats’ national championship run in 2023 after starting his NCAA career at Union (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

The NHL’s San Jose Sharks announced Thursday that the club has signed Quinnipiac junior forward Collin Graf to a standard, entry-level contract.

The contract will begin immediately for the 2023-24 season.

“Graf has excelled at the collegiate level, finishing as a Hobey Baker top-10 finalist for the last two seasons,” said San Jose GM Mike Grier in a statement. “His on-ice awareness allows him to process the game at a high level and is a unique player with a quality 200-foot game who excels in the offensive zone. We are excited to have him join the organization.”

Graf led Quinnipiac in scoring with 49 points and 22 goals and was second on the club with 27 assists in the 2023-24 season. Named ECAC Hockey’s player of the year and the conference’s best defensive forward, Graf registered 12 multi-point games on the season and tallied an assist in Quinnipiac’s NCAA quarterfinal contest, an overtime loss against top-ranked Boston College.

The native of Lincoln, Mass., helped the Bobcats win the NCAA national championship in the 2022-23 season as a sophomore, scoring a third-period, game-tying goal with 2:47 remaining in regulation to force the contest to a decisive overtime. Graf led the team in all scoring categories with 21 goals, 38 assists and 59 points, with his assist total tying for the NCAA lead and tied the program record in the process for most points in a season.

He was an HCA co-national player of the month in November, a two-time ECAC forward of the month in December and March, was tabbed for the ECAC first all-conference team, earned a spot on the NCAA all-tournament team, and was an AHCA first team All-American.

Graf played one year at Union before transferring to Quinnipiac, earning a spot on the ECAC all-academic team.

He finishes his collegiate career with 130 points (54 goals, 76 assists) in 112 games.

After pair of seasons with Quinnipiac, Lipkin leaves Bobcats, inks NHL deal with Coyotes

Sam Lipkin was a go-to player this season for Quinnipiac (photo: Rob Rasmussen/P8Photos.com).

The NHL’s Arizona Coyotes announced Thursday that the club has signed Quinnipiac sophomore forward Sam Lipkin to a three-year, entry-level contract.

Lipkin will report to the AHL’s Tucson Roadrunners.

“We are pleased to sign Sam Lipkin and have him join our organization,” said Arizona GM Bill Armstrong in a statement. “Sam is a big, skilled, two-way forward who had a very successful college career. We look forward to continuing to watch his development.”

Lipkin recorded 15 goals and 20 assists for 35 points and added 37 penalty minutes in 39 games with the Bobcats in 2023-24. He also scored four power-play goals, had two short-handed goals and tallied 11 multi-point games.

The Lafayette Hill, Pa., native finished the 2022-23 campaign second on the team in scoring with 14-29-43 in 39 games and won the ECAC Hockey rookie of the year. He tallied the primary assist on the game-winning goal in overtime of the national championship game to help Quinnipiac win its first-ever NCAA title in a win over Minnesota.

Lipkin was originally drafted by the Coyotes in the seventh round (223rd overall) of the 2021 NHL Draft.

Western Michigan’s Wendt leaves Broncos after junior year, signs NHL contract with New Jersey

Dylan Wendt helped Western Michigan to a GLI championship as a sophomore (photo: Ashley Huss).

The NHL’s New Jersey Devils announced Thursday that the team has signed Western Michigan junior forward Dylan Wendt to a two-year, entry-level contract starting in 2024-25.

Wendt will join the AHL’s Utica Comets on an amateur tryout for the remainder of the 2023-24 season.

The Grand Haven, Mich., native recorded 44 points (23 goals, 21 assists) in 38 games this season. His points and goal totals ranked second on Western Michigan, while his nine power-play goals and four game winners led the team. His shooting percentage (26.1%) was tops in all of college hockey (minimum 25 shots), his nine power-play goals cracked the NCAA’s top 10, at ninth overall, and his goal total was 10th in the NCAA.

Overall, Wendt earned 69 points (33 goals, 36 assists) in 111 career games with the Broncos.

He was named to the NCHC academic all-conference team in 2021-22, 2022-23, and 2023-24. He earned Western Michigan’s most improved player award last season.

North Dakota’s Blake, Boston University’s Celebrini, Boston College’s Gauthier named Hobey Hat Trick finalists for 2024 award as college hockey’s top player

From left, Jackson Blake, Macklin Celebrini, Cutter Gauthier.

The Hobey Baker Memorial Award Committee has announced the three Hobey Baker Hat Trick finalists for the 2024 award, honoring college hockey’s top player.

Alphabetically, they are Jackson Blake, a sophomore forward from North Dakota; Macklin Celebrini, a freshman forward from Boston University; and Cutter Gauthier, a sophomore forward from Boston College.

The three finalists for this year’s Hobey Baker Award were selected from the initial list of Top Ten candidates by the 30-member Selection Committee and an additional round of online fan balloting. Criteria for the award include displaying outstanding skills in all phases of the game, strength of character on and off the ice, sportsmanship and scholastic achievements.

Five of the top ten Hobey Baker finalists will be playing in the NCAA Frozen Four national championship this year, with three of the four schools represented with a Hobey top-10 finalist in the tournament.

Jackson Blake – North Dakota – Sophomore, Forward

A standout sophomore at UND, Jackson Blake recorded 60 points which marks UND’s highest single season scoring output since Brock Boeser’s 60 points in the 2015-16 season. Blake’s scoring consistency included eight games with at least three points, contributing to a streak where he scored in 17 of the last 18 regular-season games. Blake joined Zach Parise as the second sophomore in the last 30 years to reach 100 career points at UND, he also shattered the NCHC single-season scoring record with 37 points in conference play. Remarkably, he led the team in points as a freshman, the first time this had been achieved at UND since 1980.

• Finished season with 22 goals, and 38 assists for 60 points in 40 games
• Drafted by the Carolina Hurricanes in the 4th round (109 overall) of the 2021 NHL Draft
• Named to NCHC First Team and was named NCHC Player of the Year and Forward of the Year
• Ranks fourth in the NCAA in points (60)

Macklin Celebrini – Boston University – Freshman, Forward

At just 17, Macklin Celebrini stands out as one of the country’s top centers, showcasing a comprehensive, 200-foot game that balances elite playmaking with diligent defensive responsibility. His blend of superior talent, hockey sense, competitive drive, and work ethic underscores his commitment to improvement, both on the ice and off it. Through 37 games, Celebrini has helped lead the Terriers to this year’s Frozen Four, and so far has recorded 64 points, including 12 power play goals and 4 game winning goals, ranking second nationally in goals and tied for second nationally in points. His play helped Celebrini lead the Terriers to the 2024 NCAA Frozen Four

• Currently has 32 goals and 32 assists for 64 points in 37 games
• A top prospect eligible for the 2024 NHL Draft ranked #1 on NHL Central Scouting’s midterm rankings of top North American skaters
• Named Hockey East Rookie of the Year and Player of the Year, and also named to Hockey East First Team, All Rookie Team, is the Hockey East Scoring Champion
• Named Most Outstanding Player of the Sioux Falls Regional and named to the All-Tournament team

Cutter Gauthier – Boston College – Sophomore, Forward

Cutter Gauthier is at the forefront nationally, boasting 37 goals and 64 points (tied for second in the nation), showcasing his knack for clutch moments with ten game-winners and proficiency on the power play with 13 goals. Throughout the season, he’s been a consistent force, hitting the score sheet in 34 out of 39 games and achieving multiple points in 18 games. His offensive abilities have helped Gauthier lead the Eagles to the 2024 NCAA Frozen Four.

• Currently has 37 goals and 27 assists for 64 points in 39 games
• Was selected in the first round of the 2022 NHL Draft (fifth overall) by the Philadelphia Flyers, with his rights traded to the Anaheim Ducks in 2024
• Named to Hockey East First Team and was the runner-up for Player of the Year
• Is the NCAA goal-scoring leader, and the NCAA leader in game winning goals

For more information on the Hobey Baker Memorial Award or to access the Hobey logo, visit hobeybaker.com/media. The website has additional bio info, statistics and video of the finalists.

The Hobey Baker Award winner will be announced on April 12 during a live broadcast on NHL Network and streamed at hobeybaker.com beginning at 6 p.m. EDT. Additional national awards will also be announced during the show.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: St. Lawrence’s Chris Wells named USCHO Coach of the Year

The USCHO Coach of the Year does not necessarily go to the coach of the season’s title-winning team. There’s something to be said for being the person who put together a roster of top-tier talent, getting them to meld and guiding them to the finish line, but we also like to recognize coaches who have done excellent work in spite of coming up short of the ultimate goal. While each of the coaches in this season’s Frozen Four is a previous winner of the award, this season it felt right to name St. Lawrence’s Chris Wells our Coach of the Year.

It was a spectacular year for the Saints, who just last season finished below .500 and were sixth in the ECAC, exiting the conference tournament in the first round.

As senior captain Julia Gosling put it, her team barely qualified for the ECAC Tournament her freshman season (when only eight teams advanced to the postseason).

In arguably the country’s toughest conference, where the same teams have dominated the top half of the standings and moving up has proven notoriously difficult, St. Lawrence broke through. Their 28 wins this season were the most of any team in Wells’ 16 year tenure at St. Lawrence and their third-place finish was the highest of any team since his first year in the role (Covid-shortened season not withstanding).

Importantly, the Saints got better as the season progressed. They finished on a six-game win streak, including upsets of No. 6 Cornell and No. 3 Colgate. After losing a pair of games to those same teams to open up the second-half, the Saints were on a tear and lost just one game of 13 as the regular season wound down.

Peaking at the right time during a six-month season isn’t easy, but Wells had not just his team, but individual players performing at their best when it mattered most. Abby Hustler had 12 goals and 23 points through her first 19 games, but Wells knew she was capable of more and needed to be pushed to believe in herself.

She was named Hockey Commissioners Association Women’s Player of the Month in January where she led the nation with six goals and 19 points in nine games during the month. Not only did she start producing offensively, but her two-way game became stronger. She registered just three of her sixteen blocks before the winter break. For her efforts, she was named a Patty Kazmaier Award top-ten finalist, the program’s first since 2017.

St. Lawrence lost to Clarkson in the conference semifinals, but finished seventh in the Pairwise and received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, their first since 2017. Their opening round win over Penn State was the first of Wells’ career and the program’s first since 2007. The season was so monumental for this program that the university president and one of the women that played on St. Lawrence’s very first women’s hockey team in 1979 made the trek to Madison to cheer the team on.

Wells is a passionate coach who gets animated on the bench, can be heard across the arena and keeps a laminated paper in his pocket that informs the officials he would like to challenge a play. A St. Lawrence alum himself, he is keyed in to the greater campus and Canton, NY community and his love for the Saints program and his players is clear in how he talks about them – he was moved to tears more than once after their two NCAA games.

In a season where the two teams that finished above them in the conference standings advanced to the final weekend, Wells and the Saints stood out. They were resilient and adaptable. They bounced back from loses, eked out close wins and when facing their toughest opponent with their season on the line, they played what Wells called a perfect game. They executed their plan, weren’t intimidated and played their best game.

In recognition of all the Saints accomplished this season, Chris Well is USCHO’s Coach of the Year.

Live from St. Paul: USCHO Frozen Four Live! podcast covers the 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four

USCHO podcasts are going on the road, and you can join us for live broadcasts during the 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four in St. Paul, Minn.

USCHO Frozen Four Live! with Ed Trefzger, Jim Connelly and Derek Schooley will have live events featuring special guests and giveaways on four days at Tom Reid’s Hockey City Pub, 258 7th St W, near the Xcel Energy Center.

Here’s the schedule (all times Central):

Wednesday, April 10: 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Thursday, April 11: Noon to 2 p.m.

Friday, April 12: 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Saturday, April 13: 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

If you won’t be in St. Paul, check out the podcast from wherever you are on our site, on Apple Podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Check out all of USCHO’s college hockey podcasts, including USCHO Weekend Review and USCHO Edge, plus our entire podcast archive.

Hockey Humanitarian Award Finalist Feature: With LIU program still in relevant infancy, Sharks’ Quinn working at rink, out in community to lay foundation, ‘something that can make this program great’

LIU’s Jack Quinn regularly meets youth players from the area to provide tips, sign autographs, and to help build the LIU fan base (photo: Hockey In Harlem).

Having only launched in 2020, Long Island’s men’s hockey program has worked to build a fanbase for the Sharks, who know community work goes a long way toward that goal.

And there probably isn’t another LIU player who has delivered on that brief quite like senior forward Jack Quinn has.

Carrying on with a servant heart that he developed in his elementary school days, Quinn has worked tirelessly to grow the sport of hockey in the greater Long Island and New York City areas. That’s why he is one of this year’s five finalists for the Hockey Humanitarian Award.

“It’s one of those things that’s clichéd, but you really can’t say enough good things about him,” LIU coach Brett Riley said. “It’s like having an extra coach on staff in so many ways, and this is our fourth year, so he has grown with the program. Not everybody who has started on this journey has finished it, unfortunately, but he’s one of our four founding fathers, and while he’s a good player and an every-night guy for us, the standard he sets with the way he lives his life is unbelievable.

“I think he’s as good of a leader as anyone in college hockey, and for us as a young program, it is and it isn’t about wins and losses. You obviously want to be competitive and you want to win, but the foundation he has laid is something that can make this program great.”

Jack Quinn donned the ‘C’ this season for LIU (photo: Adam Rubin).

One of five siblings, Quinn’s knack for philanthropy came from his father, who encouraged him at a young age to play Little League Challenger baseball, a unified program that raises the skills of players with physical and intellectual disabilities. His public service continued while he attended a prep school in his home state of Massachusetts, and now at LIU, he has led on-ice events with a number of youth and adult hockey programs.

Among them are the Long Island Warriors, a program consisting only of military veterans who use the sport as therapy to cope with physical and mental disabilities. Additionally, Quinn and several LIU teammates have assisted with Hockey In Harlem, a youth initiative that brings inner-city children to an arena in Queens to learn the sport and hone their skills.

“it’s about making hockey fun for them,” Quinn said. “That’s one of the best things: These kids don’t really care about being the best hockey players. They obviously want to get better and want to learn, but they also just want to have fun, and as a college hockey player, where it’s so focused on win, win, win, win, it’s kind of a relief to go see kids having fun with the game, and to be able to see the game in its raw form.”

Quinn’s schedule is seemingly forever busy, but his extraordinary time management skills allow for it.

“He makes doing extra and being in the community cool,” Riley said. “We have such a great youth hockey community on the island, and it’s a lot of youth players and teams, and they’re all asking for Quinny, J.Q., No 19, at every game. It has made a difference in so many ways. It was something that started as maybe going to a youth hockey skate or going to Hockey In Harlem, and it has become something much bigger.

“There was almost a time where I don’t want to say we were doing too much in the community, but it was like, this kid needs to do schoolwork and rest. We would get back from a series in Alaska, or Trip X or Y, and there he’d be, skates on, youth practice. It’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen before.”

Later this year, Quinn will begin attending physical therapy school at UMass Lowell. There will be new challenges to face, but his public outreach will only continue.

Jack Quinn takes time out from his regular schedule to work with the Hockey In Harlem program (photo: Hockey In Harlem).

“Between hockey, school and everything in the community, you definitely learn to allocate time and manage it properly,” he said. “I can’t miss school and hockey at Long Island, obviously, but I don’t have much free time. I can’t sit still. I can’t just hang out at my house for a few hours, so when I do have free time, I like to try and do stuff, and I get a great sense of pride from going out in the community to do things. It’s a great tradeoff for my time.

“That’s one of the big reasons I picked physical therapy as something to go into. The amount of people that you can have a positive impact on is awesome, with the patients coming in who want to get back to what they love to do. I’m excited to be able to be a part of that puzzle.”

Women’s Division I College Hockey: Ohio State’s Joy Dunne is USCHO’s 2024 Rookie of the Year

The expectations were high for Joy Dunne coming into her freshman year. She was named WCHA Preseason Rookie of the Year, was captain of the US team at the 2023 IIHF U18 Women’s World Championships and there’s that highly recognizable last name, particularly in Columbus.

In the face of all that pressure, she played in every game for the Buckeyes, helping them to program-record numbers in goals, assists, points and conference wins. Dunne led Ohio State with 24 goals, which was also the most in the country among rookies and tied for sixth in the nation among all skaters. Her six game-winning goals paced her team and was tied for sixth in the country. She is the first Buckeye rookie to record 40 points since the 2017-18 season. A clutch player, she scored a goal in six of the Buckeyes’ final seven games.

If it wasn’t already clear what a special, game-changing player Dunne is, she closed out her massive first season by scoring a decisive goal in the national semifinal and her team’s only goal to win the National Championship.

Ohio State coach Nadine Muzerall calls out Dunne’s strength, shot, knowledge and relentlessness as reasons why she was able to win this award among a number of talented rookies this season.

“She has a high hockey IQ. She is a very unselfish hockey player, but she plays very physical,” Muzerall said.

Dunne uses her 5’11” frame to carve out space on the ice, shield the puck and cut in towards the goal mouth. Her snappy wrister is both deceptively strong and incredibly accurate. She picks her spot and places the puck with ease – the two goals she scored at the Frozen Four were from different locations, but still looked remarkably the same as she found space at midrange to release her wrister that beat the goalie before they realized it was past them.

“I haven’t seen many women shoot the puck the way she does, not just in terms of power, but in terms of accuracy and purpose,” Muzerall said after the national semifinal.

In each postgame at the Frozen Four, Dunne talked about trusting in herself and the work she’d done in the year leading up to those games – and even before – to guide her. That wrist shot, she said, she’d practiced hundreds of times this year alone. She was confident in it and herself and comfortable with relying on her instincts to unleash it in those high-pressure situations.

After settling for a bronze at the World Championships last winter, Dunne said she and her teammates never wanted to feel like that again. That same drive was apparent as Ohio State pushed for their second title. Dunne herself hadn’t been on the OSU team that lost the final game last season, but she took their disappointment as their own and was motivated by getting redemption for her teammates.

On a team of veterans, with NCAA and international championship experience, Dunne carved out a space where she both learned from them and led them and in doing so became Ohio State’s first-ever Hockey Commissioners Association National Rookie of the Year.

She won that award before the Frozen Four began, then went out and solidified in front of a national audience why it was the right call.

In recognition of a stellar season, Joy Dunne is this year’s USCHO Rookie of the Year.

 

Hockey Humanitarian Award Finalist Feature: Syracuse’s Thompson travelling world to fuel Sticks Together initiative with love of hockey, passion for sport at forefront

Syracuse hockey player Sarah Thompson traveled to Buenos Aires, Argentina, with the non-profit organization she founded, Sticks Together, which provides children opportunities to learn and grow through the sport of ice hockey. (photo: stickstogether.org).

It’s fair to ask if 15 is too young for an athlete to commit to a college future.

After all, a long time remains before they make the leap from high school to college and teenagers are known to change their minds with sometimes stunning frequency.

But it was at 15 that Sarah Thompson chose to study and play hockey at Syracuse, making the decision to commit to the central New York campus a little over a week after a visit.

“I felt this school had everything,” said Thompson, who just wrapped up her fourth year with the Orange. “I could sense the community already. Everybody was wearing orange. I was walking around campus, and I was truly blown away. It was an easy decision, and a quick decision.”

At Syracuse, where she said she plans to play next year as a graduate student, Thompson has laid the groundwork for what she hopes is a lifetime in hockey. With a sport management major and a minor in sport analytics under her belt, Thompson said she hopes to play professionally then work for an NHL team.

Sarah Thompson scored nine goals and added four assists for 13 points this season for the Orange (photo: Diana Valdivia).

She also hopes to continue the non-profit organization she launched two years ago, Sticks Together, which provides children in disadvantaged areas opportunities to learn and grow through the sport of ice hockey.

Through Sticks Together, Thompson has traveled the world aiming to reach families living in low-income communities where opportunities for children to learn and play sports can be few and far between.

Her efforts with Sticks Together have earned Thompson the honor of being named a finalist for this year’s Hockey Humanitarian Award.

During a trip to Buenos Aires, Argentina, Thompson and her group brought street-hockey equipment — including sticks, cones and nets — to children in a soccer-mad country who were, at first, a little bewildered at the sight of gear for a new and unfamiliar sport.

“They had no idea what it even was,” Thompson said. “But it was so exciting to have something new. And just having us there, all the hugs we got. They just appreciate every little thing they have, so much. It made me realize that a lot of the things I stress about, I really shouldn’t, because I’m very fortunate.”

The street version of the sport was the perfect vessel to introduce hockey to children in Argentina, where opportunities to play on ice are limited. In fact, street hockey was where Thompson first started to play the game growing up in Ottawa.

“All the boys in my neighborhood were playing, and I just picked up a stick,” Thompson said. “My dad was like, hey, maybe she’d actually want to play this. So then I learned to skate. That’s how I really got into it. That’s the grassroots of the game and how so many people in Canada fall in love with the game, just starting out on your front yard.”

Passion for sport is the root of what motivated Thompson to start Sticks Together. Thompson — whose travels with Sticks Together have also brought her to South Africa — said it was at a soccer game in Buenos Aires featuring the professional club La Boca where she got a taste of how passion for sport can feed a community.

“We were being thrown around in mosh pits, basically, and they scored one goal, and I’ll never forget — the woman next to me, grabbed me and started crying,” Thompson said. “I was like, this is crazy. Soccer is a religion for them. They’re just so passionate and it brings people together so much more than I’d ever seen before. That was special, seeing how much happiness sports brings to the people.”

Sarah Thompson plays tough on the ice and loves giving back off the ice (photo: stickstogether.org).

Thompson said she’s not ready to give up playing hockey yet.

“It’s far too soon for that,” she said. “I don’t see myself being done with my playing career any time soon. Beyond that, I want to stay connected in hockey in any way possible.

“The future, I have no idea what it’s going to look like, but I know hockey will be a part of it.”

To learn more about Sticks Together, visit www.stickstogether.org.

Women’s Division I College Hockey: 2023-24 All-USCHO Teams

Fifteen different programs are represented on the All-USCHO Women’s Division I teams this year. Congratulations to all the players on their spectacular seasons.

First Team
F: Izzy Daniel – Cornell
F: Casey O’Brien – Wisconsin
F: Kirsten Simms – Wisconsin
D: Cayla Barnes – Ohio State
D: Nicole Gosling – Clarkson
G: Michelle Pasiechnyk – Clarkson


Second Team

F: Tessa Janecke – Penn State
F: Danielle Serdachny – Colgate
F: Sarah Fillier – Princeton
D: KK Harvey – Wisconsin
D: Haley Winn – Clarkson
G: Raygan Kirk – Ohio State

Third Team
F: Abby Hustler – St. Lawrence
F: Abbey Murphy – Minnesota
F: Alexis Petford – Stonehill
D: Sydney Morrow – Colgate
D: Kate Reilly – Quinnipiac
G: Gwyneth Philips – Northeastern

Rookie Team
F: Joy Dunne – Ohio State
F: Emma Pais – Colgate
F: Alaina Giampietro – Robert Morris
F: Sofia Nuutinen – Mercyhurst
D: Andrea Trnková – RPI
G: Ava McNaughton – Wisconsin

College hockey coaching veteran Berard, ‘the ideal candidate,’ takes over as new head coach at Stonehill

David Berard spent seven seasons behind the Holy Cross bench, guiding the Crusaders from 2014 to 2021 (photo: Holy Cross Athletics).

Stonehill has named David Berard as the 12th head coach in program history as the program prepares for its third year at the NCAA Division I level.

Berard takes over for David Borges, who retired at the end of the 2023-24 season.

“We are thrilled to welcome David Berard to Stonehill as our men’s ice hockey head coach and are excited for him to lead our student-athletes as together they build a program that is on the rise,” said Stonehill assistant VP and director of athletics Dean O’Keefe in a statement. “David’s strong understanding of today’s collegiate hockey landscape, deep appreciation for the coach’s role in mentoring student-athletes on and off the ice, and eagerness to embrace Stonehill’s mission and values made him the ideal candidate for this role.”

Berard comes to Stonehill following three years as assistant vice president/associate deputy athletic director for coaching excellence at Providence, bringing eight years of experience as a head coach at the NCAA Division I level. He has a combined 29 years of coaching experience overall, including 19 years as a Division I assistant coach with stints in Hockey East, CCHA and Atlantic Hockey. Berard, who has won over 100 games as a head coach, also gained leadership experience with USA Hockey throughout his career.

“I am honored to be selected as the next head men’s hockey coach at Stonehill College,” said Berard. “Thank you to (president) Father John Denning and Dean O’Keefe for providing me the opportunity to lead the program into a new era. I am confident with our shared vision, passion and commitment, that we will be successful in building a strong and competitive Division I hockey program. I am excited to start and look forward to the future.”

Berard served as head coach at Holy Cross for seven seasons from 2014 to 2021. He led the Crusaders to 84 wins, including 74 in Atlantic Hockey play, with three victories against nationally ranked nonconference opponents. Holy Cross enjoyed four consecutive winning seasons in Atlantic Hockey, earning three first-round byes in the Atlantic Hockey tournament.

Berard mentored nine all-Atlantic Hockey selections, two AHA all-rookie team picks and three Walter Brown Award semifinalists at Holy Cross. Three Crusaders signed professional contracts in the AHL and four of Berard’s players attended NHL development camps. Berard’s teams performed in the classroom, recording a 3.25 team GPA each semester with 118 Atlantic Hockey academic all-stars and 12 AHCA All-American scholars. He led the fundraising initiatives for both the men’s and women’s hockey programs at Holy Cross, forming a hockey alumni group for fundraising, mentorship and engagement.

Prior to taking the reins at Holy Cross, Berard was appointed as interim head coach at UConn five games into the 2012-13 season after one year as assistant coach. He led the Huskies to its first winning season since 1999-2000 with a 19-10-3 record overall, including 14-7-3 in Atlantic Hockey for a fourth-place finish and spot in the AHA semifinals.

Of his 21 years as an assistant coach, with 19 at the NCAA Division I level, 16 were spent over three stints at Providence, his alma mater. In total, Berard helped the Friars reach three Hockey East championship games, winning the 1996 title, and three NCAA Tournament appearances in 1996, 2001 and 2014. He was instrumental in recruiting talented student-athletes to Providence that included three AHCA All-Americans, seven Hockey East all-stars and five Hockey East all-rookie selections. Additionally, Berard recruited 23 NHL draft picks, 10 of which played in the NHL, and two of his recruits represented the United States as the IIHF World Junior Championship during his tenure.

Berard served as top assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at CCHA member Lake Superior State from 1996 to 1998 after getting his coaching start at Colby for two years. He has been heavily involved in player development for USA Hockey at the national, district and local levels, serving as assistant coach for the USA Hockey Under-17 Select Team during the summer of 2004 that won the silver medal at the Five Nations Tournament in Germany.

In his administrative role at Providence over the three years, Berard served on the executive staff and leadership team that set strategic direction and priorities and collaborated in decision making in all athletic department matters. He served as mentor for coaching development, providing direct support and guidance for 13 Friar head coaches, served as sport administrator for the nationally ranked men’s and women’s hockey programs and was the primary institution representative at Hockey East administrative meetings.

“David’s extensive experience as both a collegiate head coach and assistant coach is impressive,” said O’Keefe. “His background as a senior athletic administrator, former student-athlete, and parent of two Division I student-athletes, provides him with the unique ability to look through a variety of critical collegiate hockey lenses in his new role.”

Berard is a 1992 graduate of Providence where he was a four-year letter-winner on the men’s hockey team, helping guide the Friars to a pair of NCAA tournament appearances.

After two seasons in Dartmouth crease, Black forgoes remaining NCAA eligibility to ink NHL deal with Panthers

Cooper Black has been a steady force in goal this season for Dartmouth (photo: William Rondeau).

Dartmouth goaltender Cooper Black has signed a two-year NHL contract with the Florida Panthers, forgoing his remaining NCAA eligibility.

“Getting to this point in my hockey career has been a long and difficult road but my time at Dartmouth has been some of the best,” Black said in a news release. “The relationships from my teammates and coaches and the support they’ve given me has helped me grow not just as a hockey player but as a person and I cannot thank each and every one of them enough.”

The 6-foot-8 sophomore goaltender from Alpena, Mich., started and played in 29 of the Big Green’s 32 games this season, including the three postseason games. In 29 games, Black led the Big Green to a 13-10-9 overall record and accounted for all their wins with a personal 13-8-8 record between the pipes, collecting eight more wins than in his first-year campaign.

“On behalf of Dartmouth hockey, I want to congratulate Cooper Black on fulfilling every player’s dream and signing his first NHL contract with the Florida Panthers,” Dartmouth coach Reid Cashman said. “Cooper, under the tutelage of Jason Tapp, has become one of the top free agent goalies in North America. He has spent the last two years improving every day and has earned this great opportunity. We are proud of Cooper and look forward to watching his future successes.”

This season, Black had a 2.59 goals-against average and a .910 save percentage. Black also posted two shutouts for the Big Green, including a 3-0 victory over Clarkson. He was recognized for his success on the ice, being named to the all-ECAC Hockey second team.

In addition to individual success, Black also helped lead the Big Green to team success, including their first opening round bye of the ECAC Hockey playoffs since 2010-11 and their first trip to Lake Placid since the 2015-16 season.

During his two seasons with Dartmouth, Black posted an 18-31-9 mark with a .904 save percentage, a 2.82 goals-against average and five shutouts.

Omaha blueliner Mancini gives up senior season with Mavericks, signs NHL contract with Rangers

Junior blueliner Victor Mancini scored his first NCAA goal in November for the Mavericks (photo: Mark Kuhlmann).

The NHL’s New York Rangers announced Tuesday that the team has agreed to terms with Omaha junior defenseman Victor Mancini on a two-year, entry-level contract.

Mancini compiled four goals and six assists for 10 points in 40 games this season with the Mavericks. He ranked tied for fourth on the Mavericks with a plus-7 rating and fifth in shots (78).

In his three collegiate seasons, the Hancock, Mich., native collected four goals and 19 assists for 23 points in 110 games. In 2022-23, he appeared in 32 games for the Mavericks where he logged a career-high eight assists and led all Mavericks with 41 blocked shots. That season, he was named NCHC academic all-conference and a distinguished scholar.

Mancini was originally selected by the Rangers in the fifth round (159th overall) of the 2022 NHL Draft.

UMass blueliner Morrow signs NHL deal with Hurricanes, leaves Minutemen after junior season

Scott Morrow was a productive blueliner over three seasons with the Minutemen (photo: UMass Athletics).

Massachusetts junior defenseman Scott Morrow has signed a three-year, entry-level contract with the Carolina Hurricanes, giving up his senior season with the Minutemen.

Morrow was originally drafted by Carolina in the second round (40th overall) of the 2021 NHL Draft.

“Scott Morrow is one of the most gifted players I have worked with during my time as head coach at UMass,” said UMass coach Greg Carvel in a statement. “His abilities on the ice helped us win a lot of hockey games but more importantly, he worked diligently to develop his all-around game on the ice, which has prepared him to move on an be an NHL hockey player. I look forward to watching Scotty impress crowds at the next level like he did for our fans over the past three years.”

The Darien, Conn., native led the Minutemen in scoring this season with 30 points on six goals and a team-best 24 assists over 37 games and earned a Hockey East third team all-star nod. He was tabbed Hockey East defensive player of the month in October after helping UMass go 4-2-1 for the month after putting up nine points (2 goals, 7 assists). He also became the first Minuteman defenseman to log 20 points in the first semester of a season since UMass Hall of Famer Thomas Poeck.

Morrow saw action in every game over his three years at UMass for a total of 109 contests. He leaves Amherst second on the defenseman career scoring list with 94 career points, trailing only Poeck (102) who played four seasons with the Minutemen. Morrow also became UMass’ all-time leader among defensemen in career assists with 66, good for eighth on the overall career list. He was plus-11 with 10 power-play goals, one short-handed goal and five game winners over three seasons.

Morrow, a 2022-23 Hockey East second team all-star and New England men’s Division I all-star, finished his sophomore season as the points leader for the Minutemen with 31 on nine goals and 22 assists, including four tallies on the power play, one short-handed and two game winners, seeing action in all 35 games. The two-time Hockey East defensive player of the week became just the second Minuteman blueliner to post 30-plus points in multiple seasons, joining Poeck.

As a rookie in 2021-22, Morrow became the first freshman program history to be named a first team All-American while also earning first team Hockey East all-star, a Hockey East all-rookie team selection and New England men’s Division I all-star team recognition.

Hockey Humanitarian Award Finalist Feature: After launching Merrimack College Women’s Hockey Community Service Committee, Szott continuing with other volunteer, fundraising opportunities in Merrimack Valley

Raice Szott has led a number of volunteer and fundraising initiatives at Merrimack (photo: Merrimack Athletics).

Merrimack senior defender Raice Szott has been named a finalist for the Hockey Humanitarian Award.

The award, which is celebrating its 29th season, is presented annually to college hockey’s finest citizen – a student-athlete who makes significant contributions not only to her team but also to the community through leadership in volunteerism. This is the second consecutive season in which Szott has been nominated for the award and her first time named as a finalist.

Growing up on a farm 140 km outside of Edmonton, Szott learned the importance of community early and had that lesson reinforced again and again as she grew up. Neighbors support each other, family lends a helping hand and the whole town pitches in. There’s no other way for a farm to survive. You help someone else knowing you’re going to need help in the future. There’s a connectedness and a knowledge that success is collective and all that more enjoyable when shared. Her dad and uncles all farm connected land and they shared a camaraderie.

“It’s not just that they were family, but it’s learning how working together and building each other up was so important. I was fortunate to grow up learning that lesson and I still carry it with me today,” Szott said.

It’s been many years since Szott was a full-time resident of the farm, but she’s always looked for a similar feeling of community wherever she’s gone. She picked up hockey because she wanted to be like her older brother, Chance, who she said pushed and encouraged her. As she followed in his skate tracks, it was the fellowship she found on a hockey team that created a love so great that she hopes to work in hockey when her playing career finishes.

“Your team is your family, and you have to be willing to do whatever you can for each other, not just on the ice but in life, as well. You’re one. You’re united as a family. It’s the same as the community. You have to be willing to give some and take some. It all ties together,” Szott said.

She chose to attend Merrimack because she saw an interconnectedness and closeness among the student body and staff that felt comfortable and familiar and said she would not be the person she is today who was nominated for a service award without the support of everyone on campus at Merrimack.

“Giving back was a way to make Merrimack feel more like my home – creating those connections with people. It was a great way to bring my values here,” she said.

When she got to North Andover, Mass., she started off volunteering with groups and events on campus until she learned the area better. Then she started getting involved with projects that carried import to her, like the Walk to End Alzheimer’s in honor of a grandpa who has the disease. The list of her involvements continued to grow.

Szott launched the Merrimack College Women’s Hockey Community Service Committee, which has led to several volunteer and fundraising opportunities in the Merrimack Valley. She has coordinated fundraisers to support local nonprofits, including first responders and the Ellie Fund, a local foundation that assists men and women suffering from breast cancer. Szott has coordinated volunteers for Merrimack’s Relay For Life, local girls’ hockey programs and after-school programs at local elementary schools.

Raice Szott has been an impact player during her time at Merrimack (photo: Jim Stankiewicz).

In addition, Szott oversaw logistics for a number of events, including: a teddy bear toss at a Merrimack College women’s ice hockey home game to benefit Toys for Tots; multiple Skating Strides games for the Ellie Fund; and a team event for the school’s “Relay for Life Walk” this coming April. Szott also created a program dedicated to teaching and mentoring young girls to help them build confidence through ice skating and hockey.

“She makes time for everything. She really understands that it’s not about just showing up, it’s about really dedicating whatever time she has to get things done. She’s so eager and willing and excited about helping people and putting people in a situation where they feel loved and cared about,” said coach Erin Hamlen.

Szott, who is a captain for the Warriors this year, is not necessarily a talkative leader, said Hamlen. She leads by example on and off the ice and demonstrates how to be more than just a student or an athlete. There’s no way to teach the kind of selflessness, care, leadership and humility Szott embodies. Having a captain like her for younger players to look up to and emulate is invaluable.

“She initiated all sorts of projects and got the team on board with really being a part of the greater community outside of our locker room. That has not only connected us to the Andover and North Andover community, but it also connected our team to each other. It brought teammates together doing something that wasn’t just playing hockey for themselves, it was doing something for somebody else. Connecting our teammates to each other by bringing them into service has been a unique and really cool experience for our players,” said Hamlen.

“That’s leadership. That’s showing the way. That’s influence.”

Szott has found the attention she’s received as a finalist a bit unnerving because she’s never thought of any of the things she’s done as hers alone.

“You see the nomination, you see my name, but honestly, part of what makes this so special is just the people that I can share it with and who have been a part of this whole journey. It has definitely not just been me doing all of this. It is such a special honor to be a finalist. I’ve always been proud to represent something bigger than myself. Merrimack. Hockey East. Everyone back home. My teammates. It’s being able to represent everyone on a bigger stage and make everyone else who’s been a part of this work proud,” Szott said.

Hamlen said that she’s glad Szott is being recognized, but she wants to emphasize that though there have been many projects on campus and around Andover, they are by no means the extent of what her captain has done and will continue to do.

“This is who she has been her entire life, not who she’s just been becoming. Now she’s taking more charge of where she spends her time, but she’s always been this giving, caring person who’s able to think of other people before she thinks of herself more often than not,” said Hamlen.

Szott credits her parents, Bev and Tim, with putting her on this path and helping her become the person she is today. They instilled her values and supported her in hockey at every opportunity. Some 4000 km from home, Szott is a campus and team leader and a role model, but she has also never stopped being a farm girl from rural Alberta. She just has a whole lot more perspective on life now.

Volunteer and fundraising initiatives have taken up much of Szott’s time off the ice at Merrimack (photo: Merrimack Athletics).

“My parents always remind me of who I am, my beliefs and encourage me. That’s who I am here (at Merrimack). I moved to the city and then to Ontario and to Merrimack and I tried to remain the same person with the same values and that’s because of them. My parents just always made sure that I’m staying true to myself and my values. They were willing to go to great lengths to help me branch out as a person and branch out as a player,” Szott said.

Szott plans to return to Merrimack for her fifth year of eligibility and continue studying sports management and management. She also plans to keep building on the foundation of giving she has already established.

“Hockey is a part of who I am and brought things like confidence, learning the value of hard work, supporting others and lifelong friends,” said Szott. “We’re so fortunate to be in this position where we can give back by utilizing our sport as the stage. I plan to continue to build and expand on all of this. There are always more ideas. There’s always more you can do.”

Latest Stories from around USCHO