Home Blog Page 598

Grunwald’s injury forces Wisconsin to add Breon as walk-on goaltender

Wisconsin announced on Monday that goaltender Ryan Breon has been added to the roster as a walk-on.

“Gabe Grunwald had surgery and is going to be out the rest of the season, so we had to look for another goaltender,” Wisconsin coach Mike Eaves said in a news release. “[Badgers director of hockey operations] John Hamre actually did a lot of leg work. He went online and we looked at club sports, we looked at intramurals and found a couple of young men who had played high school hockey.

“We interviewed a couple young men. We looked at their class schedules. Then there’s about a nine-step process we have to go through. He’s played high school hockey in Minnesota, so he has played at a pretty good level. We’ll get our first look at him here as we add him to our roster. He’ll be a third goalie for practice.”

An Orono, Minn., native, Breon is currently a junior at UW and is studying finance and economics with an emphasis in mathematics in the School of Business. He played three seasons of varsity hockey at Orono High School and was the starting goaltender for the Spartans in his final two seasons. During his senior year in 2012-13, Breon compiled a 12-7-1 record with a .901 save percentage and a 2.69 GAA.

Breon is also involved in several organizations on campus. He is currently the promotional manager at WSUM, UW’s student radio station, and has held the position for the last year. He has also hosted a music show at WSUM for the last two years, beginning in January 2014.

Weekend wrap: Feb. 1

Senior Nathaniel Heilbron backstopped Trinity to a pair of wins over Hamilton and Amherst last weekend, helping keep the Bantams atop the NESCAC standings (photo: Trinity Athletics).

The battle in every conference is on for regular season supremacy and playoff seeding.

Some teams helped themselves a lot this weekend while others lost out on chances to move up with the remaining weekends in the regular season swindling down as the calendar turns to February. There are just three weekends remaining and a handful of games to define the season and postseason opportunities.

The highlights of this past weekend certainly set up some interesting matchups for the remainder of the season with no one having clinched anything just yet.

ECAC Northeast

Just four points separate the top five teams in conference and three points separate the top three with Nichols holding a game in hand on their conference foes. Tyler Beasley’s two goals and two assists led a massive comeback on Wednesday night as the Bison rallied from a 6-2 deficit to upend Salve Regina by a 7-6 score. Colin Brennan came on in relief of Alex Larson and recorded 19 saves to pick up the key conference win and two points.

Salve Regina rallied back to pick-up a key road win downing Endicott on Saturday by a 4-0 score, while the Gulls also picked up a split on the week’s play having knocked off contending Suffolk by a 6-3 score behind two goals from Parker Wood.

Johnson and Wales had a chance to make up some ground after downing Curry 5-2 on Thursday, but could not keep the momentum and gain a valuable two points. The Wildcats dropped Saturday’s game to Wentworth by a 4-1 score. The Leopards got 33 saves from Joel Miller and three points from Jake McDonough to key the win for Wentworth.

ECAC West

Hobart created some room at the top of the ECAC West with a pair of home wins over Utica by scores of 7-3 and 4-2. The Statesmen continued to display balanced scoring led by Brad Robbins, who notched five assists in the two wins.

Manhattanville lost some ground on Hobart as they split a pair of games at Nazareth losing by a 6-3 score on Friday before rallying from a two goal deficit on Saturday to get a big two points with a 5-4 win. Stephen Gaul led the Valiants with a pair of goals in the win.

MASCAC

Plymouth State and Salem State are in a battle for the top spot that will go right down to the final week with both teams recording a pair of wins over the past week in conference play. The Panthers fought off a determined Worcester State 2-1 behind Ian McGilvrey’s goal and assist and then added a 5-2 win at Westfield State with Michael Economos potting a pair of goals and Dan Dupell adding three points.

Salem State stayed hot on the Panthers’ trail by winning both games in convincing fashion. The Vikings shutout Framingham State 5-0 on Thursday before dominating Worcester State by a 7-0 score on Saturday. Seven different players scored for the Vikings and Marcus Zelzer picked up his fourth shutout on the season.

NE-10

Stonehill remained unbeaten in conference play at 5-0-2 with a 1-1 overtime tie at Franklin Pierce on Saturday. Skyhawks goaltender William Palmer and Ravens’ goaltender Tom McGuckin were terrific with both recording over 40 saves in a game that didn’t lack quality scoring chances.

NEHC

Massachusetts-Boston and Babson both earned four-point weekends with wins over common opponents. Southern Maine and the University of New England provided the opposition, but the league leaders kept the race at the top close with back-to-back home wins. Goalie Matt Pompa earned a pair of wins and a shutout for the Beavers.

Norwich lost ground on the league leaders by dropping a 3-1 result at Castleton where Fabio Klay scored twice for the Spartans. The Cadets then tied Skidmore 2-2, leaving them eight points back in the standings.

NESCAC

One of the streaks had to end and it was Hamilton’s 11-game unbeaten streak that was stopped by Trinity on Friday night with a convincing 4-0 win. The Bantams won their sixth in a row on Saturday dropping Amherst 4-1 with Nathaniel Heilbron picking up both wins in goal for Trinity.

Williams matched the Trinity wins with a 4-0 win over Tufts and 3-2 win over Connecticut College. Defenseman Zander Masucci picked up a goal in each of the wins and three points overall for the Ephs.

SUNYAC

Not a team that would take anyone lightly, Plattsburgh made their swing of western New York State and came home with a pair of wins over Fredonia and Buffalo State. Friday’s 4-3 win was a see-saw affair where four different Cardinals chipped in with goals. Saturday night, Michael Radisa’s first-period goal was the only tally as Spencer Finney and Mike DeLaVergne were outstanding in their respective nets to keep the game a 1-0 Cardinal win.

Geneseo recorded two wins and a tie during the week, including their rescheduled game with Oswego which they won on Tuesday by a 3-1 score. Over the weekend, the Knights tied Morrisville 4-4 before taking the win on Saturday by a 2-1 score. Trevor Hills scored his 15th goal of the season as the game winner for the visitors.

Weekend Biscuits

Marcus Zelzer, Salem State – the Viking netminder turned back 38 shots in recording back-to-back shutouts and extending his goal-less streak to 146 minutes.

Tyler Beasley, Nichols – the senior forward recorded two goals and two assists, including set-ups on the game tying and game winning goals in the Bison’s 7-6 comeback win over Salve Regina.

Matt Lemire, Massachusetts-Boston – the senior forward posted one goal and three assists in two wins over the weekend, including three points in the Beacons win over UNE that snapped the Nor’easters seven-game unbeaten streak in conference play.

WEST WRAP – Brian Lester

MIAC

Augsburg maintained its hold on first place in the MIAC standings with a weekend sweep of St. Mary’s. The Auggies are now 12-6-1 overall and 8-1-1 in the conference, four points in front of second place St. John’s. Augsburg wrapped up the sweep Saturday with a 5-0 win. Nate Flynn came through with two goals and Jordyn Kaufer earned his first shutout in goal as a member of the Auggies. The transfer from Concordia (MN) has two shutouts in his career. As for Flynn, he now has 24 points on the year, including 13 goals, and he ranks fifth in the league in points. Drew Anderson dished out two assists, coming through with a multi-point game for the fourth time this year. The win marked the 10th time this season that Augsburg has scored four or more goals in a game. They picked up a 4-1 win on Friday. Augsburg forced the Cardinals into an 0-for-6 showing on the power play … The rivalry between St. John’s and St. Thomas lived up to the hype as the two teams played to a 2-2 tie in both games of their weekend series. On Saturday, Andrew Commers scored to give the Johnnies a 4-3 win in the shootout. St. Thomas won 1-0 in a shootout Friday night. Commers also scored a goal in regulation. Kevin Becker scored the other goal for the Johnnies, who are now 8-9-4 overall and 6-4-2 in the MIAC. Willie Faust and Ben Vikich both scored for the Tommies. Saxton Soley made a career-high 40 saves for the Johnnies. The Tommies came into the game ranked fourth in the nation in the power play, but went 0-for-5 in the two games. St. Thomas is now 9-6-3 overall and 6-2-1 in the MIAC. Faust scored in the shootout in Friday’s game. Michael Dockry and Bobby Murphy both scored for the Tommies while Mitch Fritz and Neal Smith scored goals for the Johnnies. St. John’s and St. Thomas are both tied for second in the standings with 21 points apiece.

NCHA

Marian continued its win streak with another series sweep. The Sabres took down the Milwaukee School of Engineering 4-1 in both games to stretch their win streak to eight games. Marin has swept through four consecutive weekends. Devin Stuermer stole the show in the series finale, coming through with a hat trick in the second period. The Sabres scored all four of their goals in the period — Derek Perl had the other goal — as they improved to 13-5-3 overall and to 11-4-1 in the conference. Patrick Dwyer scored the lone goal for the Raiders, who are 12-7 overall and 7-7 in the NCHA. Mike Baldwin won his 10th game in goal on Saturday, racking up 16 saves. Friday was an historic night for the Sabres, who nailed down the 300th win in program history. They also clinched a spot in the NCHA tournament. Gianni Mangone, Travis Meyer, Cole McCaig and James Mathias all scored goals for the Sabres. Omar Mullan scored the only goal for MSOE … St. Norbert capped a sweep of Concordia (Wis.) with a 3-0 win over the Falcons Saturday. The Green Knights won 8-1 Friday night and scored a total of six power play goals in the two games. Riley Christensen scored his ninth goal of the season on Saturday. The Green Knights held a 37-13 advantage in shots and T.J. Black came through with his second shutout of the year as he racked up 13 saves. Black has six wins on the season. St. Norbert, the co-No. 1 team in the country, is now 16-2-1 overall and 12-2 in the NCHA.

WIAC

Kyle Sharkey recorded a hat trick to help Wisconsin-Stevens Point roll to a 9-2 win over Lake Forest in nonconference action Saturday. Sharkey scored two of his goals during a six-goal second period. The Pointers improved to 15-4-1 overall and have won their last three games. The Pointers owned a 38-8 edge in shots, including a 16-1 advantage in the opening period. It was the fewest shots allowed by the Pointers in a period since limiting St. Norbert to seven in November of 1991 in a 22-1 win. Sharkey also dished out an assist in addition to his three goals. Jacob Barber dished out three assists in the win. Jesse Gordichuk made six saves en route to picking up his fourth victory of the season. On Friday, Stevens Point topped Lake Forest 3-1 on Wednesday in the first game of the series. Lawrence Cornellier scored his second game-winning goal of the season in the win … Wisconsin-Eau Claire picked up its second WIAC win of the year Saturday, topping Wisconsin-Superior 5-2. The Blugolds are 13-5-3 overall and 3-2-1 in the conference. Todd Koritzinsky scored two goals while Adam Knochenmus, Jake Hopfner and Patrick Moore also scored goals in the win. The goal by Knochenmus was his 17th of the season. Tyler Green made 27 saves and is now 9-4-2 on the year. The win was the second in three games for the Blugolds.

Beanpot looking strong; UMass and Merrimack, not so much; Maine in middle

These are the three things I think I learned this week.

1. All four Beanpot schools are going into Monday night’s games on high notes.

Boston College and Boston University polished off Notre Dame and Merrimack, respectively, by identical 4-0 scores.  The Eagles get the extra tip of the fedora considering that Notre Dame was at home and in the midst of a 12-game unbeaten streak. BC now has a seven-game unbeaten streak itself.

Northeastern was inactive on the weekend, but it goes into Monday night with six straight wins.

And for the record, that other Beanpot school, Harvard, also won on Friday night, 4-1, over Princeton, giving it three straight wins.

2. UMass and Merrimack are having a really tough time.

Let’s forget about Merrimack’s 10-0 feel-good demolition of Arizona State on Sunday. ASU came out here, a new Division-I hockey program, and got outscored by a total of 22-2 in two games against Massachusetts-Lowell and the one against Merrimack.

It’s the games against established teams that count.

And Merrimack lost 4-0 to BU on Friday to make it only a single win (against Canisius) since Nov. 13. And that win on Nov. 13th was against…

UMass, which got swept at home by Maine, a team that hadn’t won a single road game all year. I’m not sure it gets any worse than that.  Other than, of course, having lost every game since Thanksgiving (not even any ties) except a 2-1 win over Army West Point.

But you know, we really shouldn’t be surprised by these two teams’ struggles. Merrimack and UMass were picked to finish together at the bottom of the league before the season started.  Some surprising early season success for both of them heightened expectations, but we’re back to where we started.

Rebuilding years for both teams.

3. Maine gets four huge points.

Getting four points on the road vaulted the Black Bears into a tie for ninth place, just two points out of sixth. It wasn’t more than a few weeks ago that the Black Bears were in the cellar.

Granted, those two wins came against a UMass team that is really struggling, and the Black Bears’ next four games come against Providence and Notre Dame. But four points is four points.

Three things: Huskies close the gap with three-point weekend

Michigan Tech’s road unbeaten streak hit eight this weekend, and in the process inched closer to Bowling Green in the WCHA standings.

The Huskies earned the 4-4 tie in Friday night’s game in Bowling Green before scoring four more goals in Saturday’s 4-1 win.

It’s the second-straight three-point weekend for Tech — both against the top two teams in the league. Two weeks ago, the Huskies tied and beat Minnesota State in Houghton.

That means the three league leaders are neck-and-neck going into the final month of the regular season. All have played 20 games to this point, and the Mavericks (with 29 points) are just two points clear of Bowling Green and four points ahead of Tech.

All that means is that this upcoming weekend’s series between the Mavericks and the Falcons in Mankato becomes even more important. A sweep by the Mavericks makes it that much harder for the Falcons to catch up, while a BG sweep puts them in first place with six games to play.

Huntsville stays alive

Meanwhile, on the other end of the standings, Alabama Huntsville managed to earn a split with Alaska Anchorage and keep up some hope of making the WCHA playoffs.

The Chargers beat the Seawolves 2-1 on Friday, but Anchorage won Saturday’s series finale 3-2. UAH is in last place with 11 points — they’re three points behind Anchorage and five points back of Alaska. Not an ideal situation for them, to be sure, but they’re not quite out of the picture entirely, especially since they have eight games left.

The Seawolves are in a little better shape in ninth place, and have a more favorable schedule. The question is, can they catch the Nanooks? With Tyler Morley perhaps out for a lengthy period of time after suffering an injury this week in Alaska, the Seawolves definitely have a shot at catching them.

Nonconference still not good enough

With opportunities for league teams to score some valuable Pairwise-boosting nonconference wins dwindling, the league did OK in that regard this weekend. But at this point in the season, isn’t good enough.

The league is 22-33-9 in nonconference play overall, but 19-15-7 over everyone except the NCHC.

That’s right: The league’s record over the NCHC this season is a pretty dismal 3-18-2. Northern Michigan managed to pick up one of those three wins this weekend when the Wildcats beat Minnesota Duluth (they ended up splitting their series in Marquette). The other two league victories against the NCHC belong to Bemidji State (also over UMD) and Huntsville (over Colorado College).

Speaking of Bemidji State, they and Minnesota State both went 1-1 in the North Star College Cup this weekend both teams lost to St. Cloud State, but both also defeated Minnesota.

So although Wisconsin’s sweep of Alaska didn’t help, the WCHA is 10-8-5 over the Big Ten this season with a single game between Ferris State and Michigan left to play.

The other two nonconference opportunities for the WCHA this season are against the NCHC: Bemidji State’s power-outage-delayed makeup game against Duluth will be played next Tuesday, as will the home leg of Bowling Green’s home-and-home with Miami.

Weekend Wrap: Jan. 31

The games are getting more and more intense, as every team is hoping to peak at the right time.

In the women’s Division III ranks, it appears top-ranked Plattsburgh is on a mission.

The Cardinals remained undefeated (20-0-0) in knocking off No. 2 Elmira by scores of 4-2 Saturday and 7-1 Sunday. On Saturday, Melissa Sheeran scored twice and Camille Leonard made 31 saves for the win. Shannon Strawinski and Sarah Hughson scored for Elmira. Sunday, Sheeran rang up two goals and two assists and Courtney Moriarty tallied a hat trick as Leonard moved to 18-0-0 with a 22-save effort.

No. 3 Adrian took four points against St. Norbert, blanking the Green Knights Friday, 2-0, behind Jade Walsh’s 14 saves. Saturday, Kylie Gazzolo tied the game for SNC  at 16:12 of the third period before Kaylyn Schroka’s power-play goal at 3:51 of extra time gave the Bulldogs the 3-2 win. Walsh made 20 saves and Leigh Grall stopped 24 for St. Norbert.

Look for No. 4 St. Thomas to fall in Monday’s USCHO.com Division III Women’s Poll, as the Tommies lost both ends of a home-and-home series with St. Benedict. Friday, Angel Hillstrom made 37 saves in a 3-2 win that also saw Elli Marvin score two goals. Mackenzie Torpy made 15 saves for St. Thomas. On Saturday, the Blazers’ Brigette Miller posted two goals and two assists and Hillstrom was again unbelievable, turning aside 48 shots. Hannah Burns scored two for St. Thomas.

Fifth-ranked Lake Forest sat idle over the weekend.

No. 6 Amherst outscored Williams 9-1, winning 5-0 Friday and 4-1 Saturday. In the opener, Sabrina Dobbins made 34 saves and five different players scored. Dobbins recorded a 30-save outing Saturday, while Alex Toupal popped two goals.

Middlebury went into the weekend ranked seventh and came out of the weekend with two wins over Hamilton. The Panthers won 1-0 Friday as Katherine Jackson netted the lone goal and Julia Neuburger stopped all 11 shots she faced. Sam Walther made 22 saves for Hamilton. Neuburger stopped all 20 Saturday in a 2-0 win and Elizabeth Wulf and Kelly Sherman scored. Walther again finished with 22 saves.

Eighth-ranked Wisconsin-River Falls fell Saturday night, 3-1, to Wisconsin-Superior. Mikayla Goodin scored twice for Superior and Sky Brown kicked out 33 shots. Angie Hall made just 13 stops for River Falls.

Holy Cross soundly defeated No. 9 Castleton, 4-1, Saturday night. Maeve Reilly scored twice and Tessie Salatas stopped 20 shots for Holy Cross. Jess Cameron made 26 saves for Castleton and Aimee Briand scored the lone goal.

No. 10 Norwich won both of its games last weekend, downing Plymouth State 4-2 Friday and Massachusetts-Boston 1-0 Saturday on a Celeste Robert 24-save shutout. Rachel Myette stopped 40 for PSU, only allowing a first-period goal to Sarah Schwenzfeier. On Friday, four different players found the back of the net for the Cadets and Laurie King made 14 saves.

Expect some movement in Monday’s poll, for sure. My guess is that Adrian and Elmira flip flop, St. Thomas drops to No. 6, Lake Forest to 4, Amherst to 5, then Middlebury still 7, Norwich 8, River Falls 9 and Castleton coming in at No. 10.

St. Cloud is Minnesota champ

St. Cloud State captures Minnesota tournament
For the first time, the St. Cloud State Huskies won the North Star College Cup, a Minnesota hockey tournament that features four of the best teams in state. St. Cloud’s stellar offense, currently ranked second in the country, and its third-ranked power-play unit, combined for 10 goals on the weekend in a 5-4 win over Minnesota State and a 5-2 win over Bemidji State.

Against the Mavericks Friday, the power play came through with three goals, including Jimmy Murray’s game-winning strike at 16:41 of the third, seven minutes after Minnesota State had tied the game. Mikey Eyssimont also scored two on the power play, while goaltender Charlie Lindgren needed to be sharp, stopping 29 shots.

In Saturday’s championship game against Bemidji State, Joey Benik got two goals in the first period, putting the Huskies up at just 1:20 and then adding a second at 12:57. Patrick Russell, who had scored the first goal for St. Cloud in Friday’s game, scored the game-winner at 5:23 of the second, and Kalle Kossila put the game away when he scored at 14:18 of the second.

Though Bemidji did get two goals in the third, one was a power-play strike at 18:31 of the period, after Eyssimont had scored an empty-netter at 16:31 to put St. Cloud up 5-1.

RedHawks raise profile
In my second-half preview of the conference, one question I had was whether Miami could bounce back. The RedHawks closed the first half in a 2-8-1-1 tailspin, and were in seventh place in the NCHC. Miami had several woes, including an anemic offense that was ranked 55 out of 60 teams nationally.

After splitting with No. 13 Denver this weekend, the RedHawks are back in the hunt, in a three-way tie for the final home ice spot in the NCHC with 19 points. The RedHawks went 5-3-1 in January, including 3-2-1 in NCHC play.

The offense has improved slightly, as the RedHawks average 2.40 goals per game. The defense is a strength, keeping the team in games, as Miami only gives up 2.72 goals per game.

On Friday, the RedHwaks rallied to win. After Danton Heinen put Denver up 1-0 at 7:06 of the first, Anthony Louis scored a minute and a half later to tie it. Jack Roslovic scored the game-winner at 17:36 of the second on a power play, and Kevin Morris sealed the win with an empty-netter at 19:37 of the third.

Saturday’s game was much different, as Denver dominated much of the play, something Miami coach Enrico Blasi acknowledged, saying, “I thought Denver pretty much outplayed us from the beginning of the game. They were the better team in all aspects of the game tonight. … We just didn’t have that jump.”

Miami starts February by hosting red-hot St. Cloud State, but closes the season with three weekends in a row against teams below them in the standings, including a final weekend series against Minnesota-Duluth, which could prove crucial for playoff seeding.

What’s wrong in Omaha?
Entering the second half, the Omaha Mavericks were 14-3-1 and ranked six in the USCHO.com D-I Men’s Poll. They were unbeaten at home in their new arena.

The second half started with Omaha getting swept by Denver at home, and things have gone downhill from there. The Mavericks went 2-6 in January. The one bright spot was an overtime win over North Dakota.

Part of the issue has been defense, or, rather, the lack thereof. Omaha gave up three or more goals in all but one game in January, Saturday’s 6-1 win over Colorado College. That win came on the heels of Omaha getting blown out by CC on Friday, 5-1. CC isn’t exactly an offensive powerhouse, averaging 2.19 goals per game, good for 53rd nationally, though the Tigers did hang five goals on North Dakota the previous weekend.

Still, Omaha’s lack of defense has been a trend; the Mavericks also gave up seven goals to Miami and five to North Dakota. Freshman Evan Weninger was finally back in the lineup over the weekend, after getting hurt in the Denver series with an ankle injury. He didn’t look like the goalie who had only given up more than two goals twice in the first half in Friday’s game, as the Tigers torched him for four goals. CC got a power-play goal from Mason Bergh at 3:29 of second, then another power-play goal from Luc Gerdes at 6:38 of the second. Omaha’s Brian Cooper scored at 18:58 of the second to put Omaha back in it, but Trevor Gooch scored at 9:04 of the third, then Christian Heil scored at 15:20, and Sam Rothstein added an empty-net short-handed goal at 16:20.

Omaha bounced back impressively Saturday, getting goals from Jordan Klehr and Luc Snuggerud in the first six minutes of the first, and then breaking the game open in the second with four goals, starting with Steven Spinner’s strike at 1:34.

Despite Omaha’s overall good record, the Mavericks have been poor in NCHC play, going 6-9-1. Omaha is off this coming weekend, so Dean Blais has work to do before the team resumes play against Western Michigan on Feb. 12. Considering the Broncos swept the Mavericks back in October, Omaha should have lots of motivation.

Weekend wrap: Jan. 31

Bobcats increase ECAC lead
Melissa Samoskevich scored power-play game winners on back-to-back days to help No. 4 Quinnipiac to weekend wins over Harvard, 1-0, and Dartmouth, 2-1. The freshman popped in a rebound 6:52 into Friday’s game with the Crimson. Emerance Maschmeyer slammed the door on the other 37 shots from the Bobcats, but meanwhile, Sydney Rossman was pitching a 20-save shutout, her 12th of the year.

Robyn Chemago was knocked behind her net by one of her own skaters on Saturday, and before she could get back into her crease, Emma Woods had hit the unguarded cage. Samoskevich doubled the lead when she slid a backhand shot through the five-hole on a rush, and that proved to be the deciding goal when sophomore defenseman Hailey Noronha’s first collegiate goal put Dartmouth on the board.

Quinnipiac is unbeaten over its last 20 games.

Badgers shut out St. Cloud State
Ann-Renée Desbiens and No. 2 Wisconsin turned in twin 3-0 shutouts of St. Cloud State. She needed only 15 saves on Saturday and another 13 on Sunday to up her season shutout total to 14, as she closes in on the NCAA record of 17. Katie Fitzgerald did what she could to hold the Huskies in the contests, totaling 86 saves, but Emily Clark got to her for three goals. Sam Cogan and Annie Pankowski had three-point weekends, and Sarah Nurse scored in both games.

Even dozen
No. 6 Northeastern upped its winning streak to 12 games with a 5-2 win over New Hampshire. Lauren Kelly’s goal at 12:25 of the second period broke a 2-2 tie and proved to be the winner for the Huskies, who got two-point games from five different players.

How the rest of the top 10 fared
Makenna Newkirk had a goal and an assist and Megan Keller contributed two helpers to No. 1 Boston College in its 4-1 defeat of Merrimack. Katie Burt needed only 14 saves to gain her 22nd win, while Samantha Ridgewell made 52 saves to prevent greater damage.

No. 3 Minnesota ground out a pair of 2-1 wins at No. 7 Bemidji State. Cara Piazza deflected in the winning goal on a third-period power play on Friday, after Minnesota’s Sydney Baldwin and Ciscely Nelson of the Beavers traded first-period goals. After Lauren Miller gave BSU an early lead on Saturday, it took more than two periods for Dani Cameranesi to knot the score and force overtime. Lee Stecklein sniped a game-winner 47 seconds into the extra session, giving Amanda Leveille a 28-save win and hanging a 42-save loss on Brittni Mowat.

St. Lawrence and No. 5 Clarkson played a home-and-home series, with the Golden Knights coming away with three of the points. Olivia Howe had a goal and three assists to spark Clarkson to a 6-1 win in Canton. Shea Tiley made 27 saves, and Erin Ambrose chipped in three helpers. Lydia Grauer’s power-play goal with under five minutes to play salvaged a 2-2 tie for the Saints in Potsdam. Grace Harrison made 29 saves for SLU. Amanda Titus scored both tallies for the Golden Knights off of assists from Lauren Lefler.

No. 8 North Dakota had all it could handle as it hosted Minnesota State. Layla Marvin’s goal at 10:02 of the third period gave the Fighting Hawks a 2-1 win on Friday and came just 27 seconds after Savannah Quandt hat tied it up for the Mavericks. Jordan Hampton had opened the scoring a period earlier. Shelby Amsley-Benzie made 16 saves to get the win, and Brianna Quade kept MSU in it with 36 stops. UND needed a goal from Becca Kohler at 17:18 of the third period to escape with a 5-5 tie on Saturday. Meghan Dufault had a goal and three assists for the Fighting Hawks, who got a two-goal effort with a helper from Halli Krzyzaniak. On the other bench, Jordan McLaughlin and Emily Antony had three-point games, with the former’s day including two goals.

No. 9 Princeton started its week with a 4-0 victory over Connecticut. Kimberly Newell whitewashed the Huskies, recording 20 saves, and Hilary Lloyd, Morgan Sly, Kelsey Koelzer, and Cassidy Tucker found the net.

On Friday, Princeton rallied past Dartmouth, 4-1. The Tigers lost track of Laura Stacey, who cruised in front of Newell with a pass from Ailish Forfar, and Stacey swung a backhand around the sprawled netminder for a 1-0 Big Green advantage. Karlie Lund tied the score before the second period elapsed, getting behind the Dartmouth defense, collecting a pass from Sly, and beating Robyn Chemago. Jaimie McDonell took over in the third period, scoring on an end-to-end rush with a snipe over Chemago’s glove and adding an insurance goal six minutes later. Molly Contini’s empty-netter finished the scoring and Newell finished with 27 saves.

On Saturday, Harvard snapped the Princeton winning streak that had grown to 12 games. The Crimson skated to a 4-1 win, backed by 34 saves from Emerance Maschmeyer. Miye D’Oench led the attack with a goal and two assists, and Sydney Daniels put her second goal of the game into an empty net to seal the verdict.

No. 10 Colgate earned wins over Rensselaer, 5-3, and Union, 1-0. Five different Raiders hit the net against the Engineers, with Olivia Zafuto and Annika Zalewski having a helper as well. Melissa Black made 39 saves for the Dutchwomen, but she couldn’t prevent Breanne Wilson-Bennett’s power-play goal that gave Ashlynne Rando a 19-save shutout.

Other action
For the second time this season, Rensselaer posted a 2-1 overtime victory at Cornell’s expense. Taylor Woods struck first for the Big Red on a great individual effort, winning a puck battle, carrying to the net front, and finding the goal in the second period. Ten minutes later, Katie Rooney picked off a pass, circled the net, and scored on the short side for the Engineers. After a scoreless third period, Lauren Wash knocked a clearing attempt out of midair and fed Rooney in front for the RPI win, with Lovisa Selander stopping 23 shots.

The Engineers began their week with a 2-1 loss to Yale, making up a game postponed from January 23. Selander made 33 saves, but Taylor Marchin and Jordan Chancellor beat her to put the Bulldogs up by two goals, and Hannah Behounek’s third-period goal was the only one of 18 shots that RPI could get past Hanna Mandl.

Mercyhurst and Syracuse split another series. Once again, the home team took the opener. Emily Costales gave the Orange an early lead, but J’nai Mahadeo tied the game in the second period, and Emily Janiga put the Lakers up to stay with a short-handed goal. Jenna Dingeldein iced the 4-1 win with two empty-net goals in the final minute. Sarah McDonnell got the win by making 21 saves. Jessica Sibley’s goal at 3:30 of overtime gave Syracuse a 2-1 win on Saturday. The Lakers’ Jillian Skinner and Stephanie Grossi of Syracuse sandwiched goals around the first intermission.

Host Robert Morris swept Lindenwood. Maeve Garvey had two goals and an assist in Friday’s 5-2 win. On Saturday, Amanda Pantaleo tallied 1:36 into overtime to lift the Colonials to a 3-2 triumph.

Celine Whitlinger and Hannah Ehresmann of Penn State each registered shutouts over RIT. Amy Peterson scored the game’s lone goal while shorthanded on Friday. Shannon Yoxheimer tallied both goals in the Nittany Lions’ 2-0 win in the finale.

Ohio State won 6-4 on Friday in Duluth. The Buckeyes converted on four of five power-play opportunities and seven skaters had two-point games. Morgan Morse scored twice, including the game-winner, as Minnesota-Duluth bounced back with a 4-3 win.

Connecticut swept Vermont, 2-1 and 3-1. Elaine Chuli made 31 saves and Margaret Zimmer scored the winning goal in the opener. Leah Lum scored twice and added an assist on Saturday.

Maine won its first Hockey East game since October when it posted a 3-1 decision at Providence on Saturday, with Meghann Treacy making 24 saves. Cassidy Carels scored her second goal of the weekend to give the Friars a 1-0 series split. Madison Myers turned in a 20-save shutout.

Defenseman Alexis Crossley scored twice and the line of Sarah Lefort, Victoria Bach, and Kayla Tutino all finished with a goal and two assists in Boston University’s 6-2 victory over Merrimack.

Cornell defeated Union, 3-1, thanks to two goals from Jess Brown.

Yale swept a home-and-home series from Brown, 4-1 and 6-3. Janelle Ferrara and Julia Yetman each scored twice in the second game for the Bulldogs, as did the Bears’ Maddie Woo.

Gallery: St. Cloud State wins the North Star College Cup

St. Cloud State beat Bemidji State for the title at the North Star College Cup on Sunday in St. Paul, Minn., after Minnesota State beat Minnesota for third.

[photoshelter-gallery g_id=”G000050tFafcYTHo” g_name=”20160131-NSCC-All” f_show_caption=”t” f_show_slidenum=”t” img_title=”casc” pho_credit=”iptc” f_link=”t” f_bbar=”t” fsvis=”f” width=”500″ height=”375″ bgcolor=”#AAAAAA” bgtrans=”t” btype=”old” bcolor=”#CCCCCC” crop=”f” trans=”xfade” tbs=”4000″ f_ap=”t” linkdest=”c” f_fullscreen=”f” f_constrain=”f” twoup=”f” f_topbar=”f” f_bbarbig=”” f_htmllinks=”f” f_enable_embed_btn=”f” f_show_watermark=”f” f_send_to_friend_btn=”f” f_smooth=”f” f_mtrx=”f” f_up=”f” target=”_self” wmds=”llQ6QNgpeC.p1Ucz7U.f3NowjA2l27NHWMngqnyjzy1Oez3bLHFmFBUXKxFG66Ghn0sl6g–” ]

A look at the past weekend in ECAC Hockey

Several lengthy unbeaten streaks  for ECAC Hockey teams came to an end over the weekend.

Yale owned a six-game unbeaten streak entering play on Friday, but looked flat in a 2-1 loss to Union. However, the Bulldogs rebounded on Saturday, beating a Rensselaer team that entered the night with six-game unbeaten streak, one that was extended Friday after the Engineers rallied from a 3-0 deficit at Brown.

And finally, Dartmouth saw its five-game winning streak come to a halt Friday, as Quinnipiac scored six third-period goals in a wild 7-5 Bobcats win. More on that below.

Quinnipiac stages wild comeback against Dartmouth

It was a quite a night in Hanover Friday, as Quinnipiac erased deficits of 4-1 and 5-2 against a Big Green team that had allowed eight goals during its five-game winning streak. Dartmouth hadn’t been called for penalty all game, but the Big Green were whistled for two infractions in the final period that resulted in a pair of Quinnipiac power-play goals.

Sam Anas scored twice in a span of just over four minutes to tie it, while Bo Pieper’s second goal of the season put the Bobcats ahead for good at 15:16. Harvard’s Jimmy Vesey is considered a favorite for the Hobey Baker award, but Anas’ 17 goals and 32 points in 26 games should put him in the conversation as well.

The win pushed Quinnipiac’s league record to 11-0-3;. The Bobcats have a six-point lead over second-place Harvard and have only lost one game all year; a 4-1 setback to non-conference opponent Boston University on Dec. 12. It wasn’t all bad for the Big Green, as Dartmouth rebounded with a 2-0 win over Princeton Saturday and only sit a point behind fourth-place Cornell.

Brown’s Lappin hit 100 career points

Stuck in a five-game losing streak, Bears head coach Brendan Whittet broke up the trio of Tommy Marchin, Nick Lappin, and Mark Naclerio for Saturday’s game with Union.  Sophomore Charlie Corcoran centered Marchin and Lappin, while Naclerio slid on a to a line with Davey Middleton and Alex Brink.

It worked somewhat, as Brown and Union played to a 2-2 tie, with Lappin posting his 100th career point on  first-period goal. Regardless of what line he skates on, Naclerio should join Lappin in the 100-point club soon; the senior currently has 97.

Rankings roundup: How ranked teams fared, Jan. 25-31

Jimmy Murray and No. 3 St. Cloud State beat No. 19 Minnesota State and Bemidji State to win the North Star College Cup (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Here’s how the teams ranked in the Jan. 25, 2016, USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll fared between Jan. 25 and Jan. 31:

RANK LAST WEEK’S RESULTS RECORD THIS WEEK’S GAMES
1
Quinnipiac
Friday: won at Dartmouth 7-5 20-1-5 Friday: vs. Cornell
Saturday: vs. Colgate
2
North Dakota
Friday: won at Western Michigan 2-0
Saturday: won at Western Michigan 2-1
22-3-3 Off
3
St. Cloud State
Saturday: beat No. 19 Minnesota State 5-4
Sunday: beat Bemidji State 5-2
22-5-1 Friday-Saturday: at Miami
4
Providence
Friday: beat New Hampshire 3-1
Saturday: lost to New Hampshire 3-1
17-5-4 Friday-Saturday: at Maine
5
Boston College
Friday: won at No. 10 Notre Dame 4-0 17-4-4 Monday: vs. Harvard
Friday: vs. New Hampshire
6
Michigan
Thursday: won at No. 15 Penn State 7-4
Saturday: beat No. 15 Penn State 6-3
16-3-4 Friday: vs. Michigan State
Saturday: at Michigan State
7
Harvard
Friday: beat Princeton 4-1 12-4-3 Monday: vs. Boston College
Friday: at Brown
Saturday: at Yale
8
UMass-Lowell
Friday: beat Arizona State 4-1
Saturday: beat Arizona State 8-1
17-5-4 Friday: vs. Northeastern
Saturday: vs. New Hampshire
9
Boston University
Friday: beat Merrimack 4-0 14-7-4 Monday: vs. Northeastern
Friday: at Massachusetts
10
Notre Dame
Friday: lost to No. 5 Boston College 4-0 14-5-7 Friday-Saturday: at Vermont
11
Yale
Friday: lost to Union 2-1
Saturday: beat No. 16 Rensselaer 3-0
12-5-4 Friday: vs. Dartmouth
Saturday: vs. Harvard
12
Omaha
Friday: lost at Colorado College 5-1
Saturday: won at Colorado College 6-1
16-9-1 Friday-Saturday: vs. Western Michigan
13
Denver
Friday: lost at Miami 3-1
Saturday: won at Miami 5-3
13-8-5 Off
14
Cornell
Friday: lost at Clarkson 2-1 (OT)
Saturday: lost at St. Lawrence 2-1 (OT)
11-7-3 Friday: at Quinnipiac
Saturday: at Princeton
15
Penn State
Thursday: lost to No. 6 Michigan 7-4
Saturday: lost to No. 6 Michigan 6-3
16-7-3 Friday-Saturday: at Minnesota
16
Rensselaer
Friday: won at Brown 4-3
Saturday: lost at No. 11 Yale 3-0
14-8-6 Friday: vs. St. Lawrence
Saturday: vs. Clarkson
17
Michigan Tech
Friday: tied at No. 18 Bowling Green 4-4
Saturday: won at No. 18 Bowling Green 4-1
14-7-5 Friday-Saturday: vs. Lake Superior State
18
Bowling Green
Friday: tied No. 17 Michigan Tech 4-4
Saturday: lost to No. 17 Michigan Tech 4-1
15-8-6 Friday-Saturday: at Minnesota State
19
Minnesota State
Saturday: lost to No. 3 St. Cloud State 5-4
Sunday: beat No. 20 Minnesota 3-2
14-9-5 Friday-Saturday: vs. Bowling Green
20
Minnesota
Saturday: lost to Bemidji State 4-2
Sunday: lost to No. 19 Minnesota State 3-2
13-12 Friday-Saturday: vs. Penn State

Michigan rolls, Wisconsin revers and Minnesota falters

Greetings from the Xcel Energy Center press box, where Minnesota State just completed a 3-2 victory over Minnesota (more on the Gophers later). Here’s how the B1G teams did this weekend:

  • Michigan swept Penn State in a Thursday-Saturday series
  • Wisconsin swept Alaska-Fairbanks at home
  • Ohio State and Michigan State split their series in Columbus
  • Minnesota dropped both of its games at the North Star College Cup in St. Paul. Bemidji State beat the Gophers 4-2 on Saturday and Minnesota State defeated them 3-2 on Sunday.

Here are my three thoughts from the weekend:

1. Michigan’s “CCM line” is legit

The Wolverines’ top line of JT Compher, Kyle Connor and Tyler Motte had another great weekend. The trio combined for four goals and seven assists during Thursday’s game and had three goals and two assists at Madison Square Garden on Saturday.

Compher scored twice, the second being a late empty-netter, during Michigan’s four-goal third period on Saturday and helped complete the comeback from down 3-2 after two periods.

Side note; Senior Justin Selman scored the game-winning goal on Saturday. Here’s a quote Red Berenson gave me about Selman when I talked to him last week that I didn’t put in the column:

“It’s been a process for Justin. He came in with high credentials and had trouble living up to them — with injuries — but we saw the good things, we just couldn’t keep him healthy or keep him confident or keep him playing well for a period of time. His second year was worse and it looked like he was falling off of his game, but it came around last year. He ended up on a line with Zach Hyman and Dylan Larkin, and you know where Dylan Larkin is now. He really started to show what we though he could show when we recruited him, so good for him. The last half of the year last year was a really strong finish for Justin and now he’s off to a good start. He’s got a good role on our power play and penalty killing and a top line, so I’d say he’s becoming the player that we thought he would be.”

2. Wisconsin had a nice bounce-back weekend

The Badgers, who got thoroughly embarrassed by Minnesota last weekend, rebounded with two nice wins over Alaska this weekend. Now, Alaska isn’t one of the elite teams but a sweep of any team is an impressive feat for the Badgers right now.

The Badgers won a defensive-minded game 4-3 on Friday where they only gave up 23 shots on goal and came back on Saturday with a four-goal third period to win 5-2.

The sweep doesn’t really change my opinion of the Badgers, I still think they’ll fight with Michigan State for the No. 6 spot in the conference, but their scoring and goaltending is good enough to be a thorn in the side of the top three down the stretch. However, consistency is still Wisconsin’s main enemy.

3. Minnesota had another rough weekend at the North Star College Cup

After rattling off five wins in a row the Gophers came into the North Star College Cup on a little bit of a roll. Said roll is now over after losses to Bemidji State and Minnesota State. The Gophers have now dropped their last four games at the tournament after winning the cup in a shootout its inaugural year.

Minnesota simple struggles to score at times. They looked awful during five-on-five play this weekend and the Gophers’ losses would have been worse if the power play didn’t connect as often as it did.

The team doesn’t have to look far for some motivation, however. Last year’s team was in a much worse spot heading into the North Star Cup and went on a run to win the Big Ten regular-season and postseason crown after its two losses in St. Paul.

 

Three Things: Here Comes Bentley

Two weeks ago, when Bentley struggled through two losses to RIT at home at the John A. Ryan Arena, the Falcons looked like a team trending downwards in the second half of Atlantic Hockey. They had lost four in a row and six out of seven games. They had gone from over .500 in league play, a team tied for third or fourth in the league, down to eighth.

Two weeks later, the Falcons are right back in the thick of it.

After taking three points from American International last week, Bentley earned three points the hard way against a Sacred Heart team that almost always plays tough against them. On Friday, Bentley jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first period, but the Pioneers never really went away. Each time Bentley rallied for a two goal lead, SHU cut it in half.

Up 2-0, Sacred Heart scored 30 seconds later to make it 2-1. When Bentley led 3-1, the next goal came from the Pioneers. Bentley went up 4-2 early in the third but couldn’t hit an empty net goal late to ice the game. They had to play complete hockey on both ends of the ice to come away with two points.

On Saturday, the Falcons needed a rally after giving up the first two points of the game. Justin Danforth scored 3:52 into the game, and another early second period goal by Erlich Doerksen made it 2-0. Buoyed by goaltender Gabe Antoni, the Falcons fought back with a power play goal from Andrew Gladiuk and an early third period goal from Cody DePourcq. Although they took the lead and lost it in about a minute’s time late, it was another earned point for the Falcons.

For the Falcons, back-to-back three point weekends has them out of eighth place and right back in the fight.

Refuse To Lose

No team is better at staving off potential elimination like the RIT Tigers. The defending league champs sat on the verge of losing both games this weekend against Holy Cross. On Friday, they trailed 1-0 for the bulk of the first two periods before going down 2-0 with just over five minutes to go in the game.

With about 90 seconds left in the game, Wayne Wilson pulled goalie Christian Short for an extra attacker. That’s when Todd Skirving led an absolute charge into the Holy Cross zone. Goalie Paul Berrafato came up with the first save, but Caleb Cameron punched the rebound into the net to make it 2-1.

30 seconds later, still with the net empty, the Norrish brothers tied the game when Chase fed Brady for a one-time howitzer knotted the game at 2-2.

The next night, RIT held a 2-1 lead after one but gave up goals to Castan Sommer and Mike Barrett to fall behind 3-2. About a minute and a half after going down by a goal, Chase Norrish did it again, scoring the game-tying goal to tie the game at 3-3.

It wound up being a virtual weekend split since both teams walked away with two points, but the argument could be made that the Tigers truly went out and won the weekend by not dropping points in a huge matchup between teams standing near the top of the AHC.

Here We Go Again

The season’s last month kicks off this week, and pretty much everything is up for grabs. Robert Morris, who ran away with last year’s regular season championship, sat idle this week, allowing RIT and Holy Cross to make up ground thanks to their weekend “split.” While that was happening, Air Force took three points from Canisius, tying them for third place with the Crusaders.

As it stands right now , the top four teams in the league sit within two points of one another. That’s going to have a huge downstream impact, especially with fifth place Mercyhurst sitting three points back.

But it’s not that easy for the Lakers. They’re only two points up on Canisius for the final bye slot, with Bentley one point behind the Golden Griffins. Sacred Heart’s one point at Bentley keeps them in the fight, one point behind the Falcons in eighth place. Four points separate eighth from fifth, with Army three points behind that in ninth.

Further down, nobody’s been mathematically eliminated from home ice, but Niagara can be the first team locked into a first round road series as early as next week. It can happen to AIC as well since the Yellow Jackets are seven points back of Sacred Heart, but a couple of big weekends could claw them back into things.

Regardless, points are critical for more favorable matchups since everyone is within striking distance of someone else over a single weekend’s time. Best way to move ahead? As the late Al Davis would say, “Just win, baby.”

Wisconsin’s Soleway gets one-game suspension from the Big Ten

The Big Ten announced Saturday that Wisconsin junior forward Jedd Soleway has been suspended for one game as a result of an incident that occurred in a game against Alaska on Jan. 29.

The action was taken by the conference after a review of an incident that occurred near the 18:17 mark of the third period and resulted in the player receiving a major penalty for hitting from behind and a game misconduct.

Soleway is ineligible to play in Wisconsin’s next game tonight (Jan. 30) against Alaska.

Hockey East hands down one-game suspension to Maine’s Lacroix

Hockey East has suspended Maine forward Cedric Lacroix for one game stemming from a high-sticking incident in the first period Friday, Jan. 29 at Massachusetts.

Lacroix will miss tonight’s game (Jan. 30) at Massachusetts.

He will be able to return to the Black Bears’ lineup next Friday, Feb. 5, when Maine hosts Providence.

Big Ten sets Madison Square Garden games for 2017, 2018

The Big Ten has rounded out its college hockey games at New York’s Madison Square Garden through 2018 as part of its Super Saturday series.

Wisconsin will play Ohio State on Jan. 28, 2017, while Minnesota will play Michigan State on Jan. 20, 2018.

Michigan and Penn State are set to start the Super Saturday — College Hoops & Hockey series this Saturday.

The event features a men’s basketball and men’s hockey game on the same day at the Garden. In 2017, Wisconsin’s men’s basketball team will play Rutgers, with Minnesota’s men’s basketball team playing Ohio State in 2018.

Hockey teams for a 2019 event haven’t been determined; the basketball game matches Illinois and Maryland, neither of which has a varsity men’s hockey team.

ECAC Hockey look ahead: Jan. 29-Feb. 1

Here’s a look at this weekend’s games featuring ECAC Hockey teams:

Friday, Jan. 29

No. 16 Rensselaer at Brown
RPI is coming off a 5-2 win against Union last weekend and two ties to Quinnipiac and Colgate, giving it a 13-7-6 record heading into the season’s final stretch. While the Engineers have maintained their position within the ECAC, Brown has struggled. The Bears are in the midst of a four game losing streak. RPI should have no trouble with this one.

No. 14 Cornell at Clarkson
Cornell has struggled since mid-January, going 0-3-1 in their its four games. A 3-0 loss to Dartmouth on Jan. 22 and a 1-0 loss to RPI on Jan. 15 have been in stark contrast to the strong performances the Big Red put on display in the season’s first half. They’ll look to get back on track against Clarkson, a team that continues to break out of its .500 record.

No. 1 Quinnipiac at Dartmouth
Although you probably wouldn’t think it, this weekend’s biggest game is between the No. 1 team in the country and unranked Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H. Quinnipiac, as coach Rand Pecknold said last week, has struggled since Christmas. Dartmouth, on the other hand, is on a five-game winning streak. If there’s a time to face the Bobcats, it’s now. And they might be ripe for the taking.

Princeton at No. 7 Harvard
Harvard has kept its composure this season, solidifying it with a two-game sweep last weekend against Colgate and Cornell. Princeton, still in rebuild mode, will have a tough challenge against the Crimson.

Colgate at St. Lawrence
St. Lawrence has dropped out of the top 20, and for good reason. The Saints have gone 1-5 over their last six games, including ugly losses to Clarkson and Dartmouth. The others have been one-goal nail-biters, and while that might not say much about the program in general it does speak to their fortunes. Colgate might be the right elixir to fix their woes.

Union at No. 11 Yale
Yale has moved into fourth place in the ECAC standings with a 6-3-3 record within the conference. While its conference record might not be impressive, its overall record certainly is: 12-4-4 with a little more than a month and a half still to play. The Bulldogs face a Union team that has gone 2-7-3 within the ECAC.

Saturday, Jan. 30

Union at Brown
A battle of two of the bottom-feeder teams in the ECAC, with Brown slightly below the Dutchmen in the standings. Union’s record overall (9-9-6) is much better than the Bears’, which might work to its advantage.

Colgate at Clarkson
Another battle of two of the bottom teams in the conference. Colgate is coming off of losses to surging Dartmouth and strong Harvard last weekend. Clarkson, on the other hand, went off on Brown in a 5-0 win last Saturday. Offensively, at least, the edge might go to the Knights.

Princeton at Dartmouth
After facing the No. 1 team in the country on Friday, the Big Green will face rebuilding Princeton in Hanover. Either way, it’ll be a stark contrast to their game the night before, but a good chance to escape the weekend with at least one victory.

No. 14 Cornell at St. Lawrence
Given all the struggles Cornell has faced, a matchup against the struggling Saints might be just what the doctor ordered. The Big Red will be looking for their first win since Jan. 9.

No. 16 Rensselaer at No. 11 Yale
If momentum was a factor, Yale would have the advantage against two top-20 teams. The Bulldogs are 3-0-1 in their last four but have faced struggling Brown twice, Clarkson once and St. Lawrence once. RPI might be their first test down the stretch.

Monday, Feb. 1

No. 7 Harvard at No. 5 Boston College
Day one of the 2016 Beanpot is Monday night. Harvard still has its 6-5 loss to Boston University on its mind from Jan. 7, and will be looking for some revenge against its cross-town rival. One thing’s for sure: We’re looking forward to the Jimmy Vesey show.

Senior CLASS Award nominees announced for 2016

Kyle Criscuolo is one of two Harvard nominees for the 2016 Senior CLASS Award (photo: Melissa Wade).

Twenty of the top men’s senior hockey players who excel both on and off the ice have been selected as candidates for the 2015-16 Senior CLASS Award.

To be eligible for the award, the individual must be classified as an NCAA Division I senior and have notable achievements in four areas of excellence: community, classroom, character and competition.

An acronym for Celebrating Loyalty and Achievement for Staying in School, the Senior CLASS Award “focuses on the total student-athlete and encourages students to use their platform in athletics to make a positive impact as leaders in their communities.”

The 20 candidates will be narrowed to 10 finalists in February, and those 10 names will be placed on the official ballot. Ballots will be distributed through a nationwide voting system to media, coaches and fans, who will select one candidate who best exemplifies excellence in the four Cs of community, classroom, character and competition.

The winner will be announced during the Frozen Four in April.

Player's NamePositionSchool
Kyle CriscuoloFHarvard
Ralph CuddemiFCanisius
Simon DenisDFerris State
Theo Di Pauli von TreuheimFUnion
Steven FogartyFNotre Dame
Andrew GladiukFBentley
David GlenFPenn State
Christian HilbrichFCornell
Jake HildebrandGMichigan State
Soren JonzzonFQuinnipiac
Luke JuhaDPenn State
Alexander KuqaliDRIT
Zac LynchFRobert Morris
Rob O'GaraDYale
Jamie PhillipsGMichigan Tech
Ethan ProwDSt. Cloud State
Tyson SpinkFColgate
Jimmy VeseyFHarvard
Travis WalshDMichigan State
Tyson WilsonDRobert Morris

Michigan appoints Connecticut AD Manuel to same position in Ann Arbor

Warde Manuel has been named the new director of athletics at Michigan, effective March 14, with a five-year appointment.

Manuel, a U of M alumnus who played football under Bo Schembechler, is currently the director of athletics at Connecticut.

“Athletics plays a key role in the U-M community and beyond. It is a front door to the many activities and values of our community,” said university president Mark Schlissel in a statement. “Warde Manuel knows how to succeed in the classroom, compete on the field and positively contribute to the social fabric of a vibrant university.”

The announcement makes Manuel Michigan’s 12th athletic director in 150 years of intercollegiate athletics at the university.

“I am honored to have been selected to serve Michigan as the Donald R. Shepherd Director of Athletics by President Schlissel,” added Manuel. “I look forward to working with all the student-athletes, coaches, staff, faculty, students, donors and fans to continue the Michigan tradition of being ‘Leaders and Best.'”

Jim Hackett, the retired CEO of Steelcase Inc., has served as interim AD since Oct. 2014 and will continue until Manuel arrives on campus.

Weekend Picks: Jan. 29

Well, I knew I should have picked Miami, and then I’d have another game on Matthew. As it is, we had the same record, as I picked St. Cloud to sweep Western Michigan and he picked Denver to sweep Minnesota-Duluth. Last week, we went 4-3-1. On the year, I am 84-39-14, while Matthew is 79-44-14.

Let’s get to this week’s games.

Friday-Saturday, Jan. 29-30

No. 12 Omaha at Colorado College
Candace: I’m not sure what is wrong in Omaha, but I have trouble seeing this being anything but a split right now. Colorado College 3-2, Omaha 3-2
Matthew: Neither team is what it was earlier in the season. This series really intrigues me, and I’d be surprised to see anything other than a split. Colorado College 2-1, Omaha 4-1

No. 13 Denver at Miami
Candace: I don’t think this will be a sweep necessarily, but I’m also really bad at picking the correct night, and feel I should pick at least one game differently than Matthew, so … Denver 2-1, 3-2
Matthew: I’m eager to see if Miami can keep rolling this weekend. It’ll be tough, though, with a very solid Denver team coming into Oxford. Miami 3-1, Denver 2-1

No. 2 North Dakota at Western Michigan
Candace: I expect North Dakota to clamp down on defense and take both games. North Dakota 4-2, 4-1
Matthew: This could come back to bite me, but I’ll take UND to win both of these games. North Dakota 3-1, 3-1

Minnesota-Duluth at Northern Michigan
Candace: I have no idea where Minnesota-Duluth’s offense has disappeared to. If I could call two ties, I would. As it is, I will be a league homer. Minnesota-Duluth 2-1, 2-1
Matthew: Northern has been decent at home this season, but I’m going to take the league homer pick here. Prove me right, Bulldogs. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, 3-1

Saturday, Jan. 30

No. 3 St. Cloud State vs No. 19 Minnesota State
Candace: The Huskies are looking fearsome, with a complete package of offense and defense. St. Cloud State 4-1
Matthew: I like the Huskies to take the de facto state championship this year. Gotta win this one first, though. St. Cloud State 4-2

Hockey East picks – Jan. 29-Feb. 2

Darn it, UConn. A tie against Boston College and a loss to Sacred Heart was the only thing that kept me from perfection last week. Still at 11-1-1, I picked up a game on Dave, which is a better-than-average consolation prize.

Jim last week: 11-1-1
Jim to date: 131-50-31
Dave last week: 10-2-1
Dave to date: 127-54-31

Friday, January 29

Merrimack at Boston University
Jim’s pick: Merrimack’s struggles recently give me no confidence to pick and upset on the road.
BU 4, MC 2
Dave’s pick: With only one win (over Canisius) since Nov. 13, Merrimack is making itself a very tough pick. And on the road against the Terriers, who are 9-2-2 at Agganis? Not a chance.
BU 5, MC 1

Boston College at Notre Dame
Jim’s pick: I don’t know if there is a hotter team in the country than Notre Dame. So even against Boston College, the fact that Notre Dame is at home influences this pick.
ND 3, BC 2
Dave’s pick: I was really, really hoping Jim would take the Eagles since the Irish blew me away with their domination of UNH last Friday. But as usual, he failed to cooperate. I suppose I should go against Jim’s pick either way to make up some ground, but Notre Dame just looks too good right now.
ND 3, BC 2 (OT)

New Hampshire at Providence
Jim’s pick: This is one of just two two-game league series this weekend and this one is the easier for me to pick.
PC 5, UNH 2
Dave’s pick: The disappointing season for the Wildcats continues.
PC 5, UNH 3

Maine at Massachusetts
Jim’s pick: Neither team is playing well but Maine also has been an awful team away from home this season. So, at least on night one, I’m picking the Minutemen.
UMass 3, Maine 2
Dave’s pick: I don’t like to kick teams when they’re down, but it’s tough to like either club. Maine is 0-8-1 on the road and UMass has only a single win (over Army) since Nov 7 and not even a tie since Nov. 21. At Alfond, I’d pick a Maine sweep. At the Mullins Center, I’ll go with the Black Bears in game one.
Maine 3, UMass 2

Arizona State at UMass-Lowell
Jim’s pick: The River Hawks won’t pick up any league points this weekend but should be able to grab a couple of wins.
UML 5, ASU 2
Dave’s pick: It’s great to see new D-I programs like Arizona State, but it’ll be take-your-lumps time against the River Hawks.
UML 7, ASU 1

Saturday, January 30

New Hampshire at Providence
Jim’s pick: It will be a tighter game than Friday, but expect Providence to sweep at home.
PC 3, UNH 2
Dave’s pick: Uh-oh, looks like an eighth straight loss for the Wildcats.
PC 5, UNH 2

Maine at Massachusetts
Jim’s pick: I really want to pick a UMass sweep because they are at home, but the reality is UMass hasn’t swept a league series since the first week of November.
Maine 4, UMass 3
Dave’s pick: I don’t like either team’s chances, so I’m picking the split the opposite way Jim is doing, so I could either pick up two games on him or fall over the precipice. And the way this season has gone, I know which of those two possibilities is more likely.
UMass 4, Maine 2

Arizona State at UMass-Lowell
Jim’s pick: It might be a bit closer, but I expect Lowell to win these two games.
UML 3, ASU 1
Dave’s pick: Not to be unkind, but if Lowell only beats a new D-I team like ASU by two goals — a team that is 2-16-0 on the road — then the River Hawks are in trouble.
UML 8, ASU 1

Sunday, January 31

Arizona State at Merrimack
Jim’s pick: Merrimack has struggled of late. But they also are now playing a first-year Division I school that is finishing a three-in-three.
MC 5, ASU 2
Dave’s pick: The Warriors could really use a win right now, and they’ll get it.
MC 6, ASU 2

Monday, February 1

64th Beanpot Tournament (Boston)

Boston College vs. Harvard
Jim’s pick: This may be the Hockey East homer in me, but I have to go with the Eagles in this one. It’s been a long time since Harvard has won a first-round game, which factors in.
BC 3, HU 2
Dave’s pick: Harvard has played in exactly two, count ’em, two Beanpot title games in the last 21 years (1998 and 2008). And lost both. So until 2018, it feel like a bet-the-ranch pick to go against the Crimson. (If you think I’m being overly harsh, keep in mind this is Hahvahd  we’re talking about.
BC 4, HU 2

Northeastern vs. Boston University
Jim’s pick: It would be a wonderful rogue pick to go with Northeastern, though its play of late would justify it. That said, I’m not rogue like Sarah Palin. I’m going for the conventional.
BU 4, NU 3
Dave’s pick: And I’m supposed to be like Sarah Palin?  Sorry, I don’t want Tina Fey imitating me on Saturday Night Live. But boy oh boy, the Huskies sure have a chance. A chance for a title dance. Don’t look at me askance. It’s a wickid good chance.
(This pick is based on BU scoring an extra attacker goal in the final 30 seconds and winning in double overtime.)
BU 4, NU 3 (2OT)

Tuesday, February 2

Brown at Connecticut
Jim’s pick: I have seen both teams play and really think that they are similar. While home ice should influence my pick, UConn’s midweek loss this past week is on my mind.
Brown 5, UConn 4
Dave’s pick: UConn’s loss last week dropped me another game behind Jim, but I’m going to believe that the Huskies make that up this week. I just think they’re the better team with the latest evidence being their tie with BC.
UConn 4, Brown 3

Latest Stories from around USCHO