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Pickin’ the WCHA, Jan. 29-31

Hey, it’s the last weekend of January!

That means there’s (basically) a month left in the college hockey season. As per usual, absolutely nothing has been decided in the WCHA, and likely won’t until the season’s last weekend (again).

There are only two conference series this weekend, but both are extremely meaningful to the standings. The plethora of nonconference games will also be intriguing — it’s the last real chance for the WCHA to gain some respect nationally (and the last chance for the bubble teams to move themselves up in the Pairwise).

I’m excited for this weekend, so let’s get to the picks!

Michigan Tech at Bowling Green

Shane: This should be a great series between two of the top teams in conference. Certainly, a lot of eyes down Mankato way will be scoreboard watching this one. A good offense, a good defense, a good home team, a good road team … it all makes for a tough call. I think they’ll split, but which team wins which day? Shot in the dark: Falcons 3-2, Huskies 4-2

Jack: Michigan Tech was off last weekend, but the quirk of the schedule has them playing both Minnesota State and BGSU in consecutive series. The Huskies aquitted themselves well against the Mavericks and I could very well see them getting three more points here. They’re a god road team. However, BG is excellent at home so I think this is a split as well. Just to be contrary, I’ll go with the opposite, Shane: Huskies 3-2, Falcons 4-2

Alabama Huntsville at Alaska Anchorage

Shane: Interesting series with a couple of teams that could be road weary heading into Anchorage. The Seawolves are coming off a two-weekend trip south, and the Chargers are making the long trek north. This also feels like a split. Chargers 2-1, Seawolves 4-1

Jack: Both teams have really deserved better fates than their respective records. The Chargers need the points more, but I’m not sure they’ll be able to take all four points here. Seawolves 3-2, Chargers 3-1

Minnesota Duluth at Northern Michigan

Shane: WCHA teams haven’t fared all that well against NCHC teams this season, but the Wildcats are at home and have played everybody tough this season, thanks to solid goaltending and defensive play. Surprisingly the Bulldogs haven’t scored much lately, so this sets up for at least one Northern win. (Actually, I’d call two ties, if that were allowed.) Wildcats 2-1, Bulldogs 5-2

Jack: I don’t think the Bulldogs are quite the team they were cracked up to be at the start of the season. They are ranked in the top 5 to start the season, but I just don’t see that from them. The Wildcats, on the other hand, have been consistently okay: They won’t overpower you offensively but they’ll defend as well as anybody and force you to play their style. That usually means a pair of low-scoring games, and I don’t see that changing the way UMD has played lately.  I’ll pick a split too, but I think NMU could steal a sweep (or three points). Bulldogs 2-1, Wildcats 2-1

Alaska at Wisconsin

Shane: The Nanooks head back on the road after a week off but go to Madison where the Badgers continue to struggle for a second year in a row. Bucky will be angry after getting kicked by Minnesota last weekend, and it will take it out on the visiting team from another conference. But I suspect Alaska will leave Wisconsin happy. Badgers 6-3, Nanooks 2-1

Jack: Fun fact: Wisconsin is 1-0-3 against the WCHA. Alaska, meanwhile, hasn’t played out of the conference since the two Alaska tournaments at the start of the year. The Nanooks have been disappointing, to be sure, but Wisconsin is in such disarray that the Badgers have barely looked like a team that belongs on the same ice as most of their Division I opponents right now. I’ll call as Nanooks sweep. Nanooks 4-2, 3-1

Minnesota State and Bemidji State in North Star College Cup

Shane: This should be a fun weekend in St. Paul with four teams that are playing some pretty good hockey right now. The Mavericks have a tough matchup with No. 3 St. Cloud State to start, while the Beavers take on red-hot Minnesota. Can the WCHA rivals avoid playing each other on Sunday? Why not? Huskies 5, Mavericks 4; Beavers 3, Gophers 2 … Mavericks 4, Gophers 2; Huskies 5, Beavers 2

Jack: Once again, the Beavers seem to be the odd team out in this tournament — of all the coverage I’ve seen in the Minnesota media, much of it has been focused on the Gophers and the Huskies without mentioning the defending champions (the Beavers). A few outlets have mentioned the defending runners-up (the Mavericks) but not many. That’s why I kind of think both teams will once again defy the pundits and play for the title again. After all, the Mavs need some redemption after their early-season 0-fer against St. Cloud. Mavericks 5, Huskies 1; Beavers 4, Gophers 2 … Huskies 6, Gophers 2; Mavericks 3, Beavers 2

Last week: Shane 4-1-1, Jack 2-3-1. Overall: Shane 82-48-26, Jack 71-59-26

Weekend Picks: Jan. 29

This weekend, two games may be a major preview for what to expect at the national tournament in short order.

In a series, that needs no formal introduction, No. 1 Plattsburgh plays two at No. 2 Elmira on Saturday and Sunday.

That above sentence speaks volumes, says plenty.

So who wins?

Friday, Jan. 29

St. Anselm at Franklin Pierce
Candace: I sometimes think St. Anselm should go D-I. In any event, I think they win a close one here. St. Anselm 3-2
Matt: This is a battle of unranked teams that have spectacular records. And yeah, I know they’re Division II schools. St. Anselm is 15-2-0; Franklin Pierce 12-3-1. Let’s go with the visitors taking this. St. Anselm 5-3

Friday-Saturday, Jan. 29-30

No. 3 Adrian at St. Norbert
Candace: St. Norbert is a battling team, and this series might be closer than anticipated, but I like Adrian to sweep. Adrian 4-2, 3-2
Matt: Just like the men’s version of this series last weekend, these two games will be fought tooth and nail. It just seems with Adrian that the Bulldogs are on a mission. Take away Elmira and Plattsburgh and AC could easily rule the roost in D-III. I like an Adrian sweep here. Adrian 4-1, 4-1.

Saturday-Sunday, Jan. 30-31

Plattsburgh at Elmira
Candace: Elmira might be the only team that could end Plattsburgh’s bid for perfection, but I like the Cardinals to escape. Plattsburgh 2-1, 3-2
Matt: I give Elmira its due — the Soaring Eales are good. Make that really good. Plattsburgh, though, is in its own section of “really good.” I see the Cardinals taking both in close games — it won’t be easy to close out Elmira. Plattsburgh 3-2, 2-1

Tuesday, Feb. 2

No. 7 Middlebury at No. 10 Norwich
Candace: Another chapter in the battle for Vermont. I like the Panthers in a close one. Middlebury 3-2
Matt: Middlebury should sweep Hamilton this weekend and then head to Norwich with momentum — and a victory — to end Norwich’s momentum after what I’ll say will be two wins this weekend at Plymouth State and Massachusetts-Boston. Middlebury 3-1

Weekend Picks: Jan. 29

I had a decent week, barring CHA picks, going 22-5-5 (.765) to bring my season record to 287-81-44 (.750). We have some big series this week, including battles of top 10 teams, so hopefully I can do OK.

Friday, Jan. 29

Princeton at Dartmouth
Home ice won’t be enough to get the Big Green a win against the surging Tigers. Princeton 3-1

Quinnipiac at Harvard
The Crimson took the Bobcats to OT back in December. Something tells me they get a win. Harvard 2-1

Colgate at Rensselaer
The Engineers could play spoiler, but I like the Raiders. Colgate 3-2

Cornell at Union
The Dutchwomen’s travails continue. Cornell 4-2

New Hampshire at Northeastern
The Huskies are one of the elite. The Wildcats are improving, but aren’t there. Northeastern 4-1

Friday-Saturday, Jan. 29-30

Syracuse at Mercyhurst
This was a split a few weeks ago, and figures to be again. Mercyhurst 2-1, Syracuse 3-2

RIT at Penn State
My picks record would be even better if I didn’t try to pick CHA games. RIT 2-1, Penn State 2-1

Lindenwood at Robert Morris
I thought the Colonials were getting better, but league play has been a killer. Robert Morris 3-2, Lindenwood 2-1

Brown versus Yale
A tough one to call, but I see the Bulldogs winning both. Yale 3-1, 2-1

Minnesota at Bemidji State
Home ice for the Beavers means closer games, but same results. Minnesota 3-1, 4-1

Ohio State at Minnesota-Duluth
With these teams, you could flip coins and get better results. Minnesota-Duluth 3-2, 3-1

Minnesota State at North Dakota
One game will be close, but I see a NoDak sweep. North Dakota 3-2, 4-1

Saturday, Jan. 30

St. Lawrence at Clarkson
Given how the Golden Knights did earlier tonight, I have a hard time seeing this turning out differently. Clarkson 4-1

Quinnipiac at Dartmouth
The Bobcats will get back on track, or continue a win streak if they beat Harvard Friday. Quinnipiac 3-1

Princeton at Harvard
The Tigers won a clash with the Crimson earlier in the year, so why not again? Princeton 3-2

Cornell at Rensselaer
This game was a lot easier to pick last year. Cornell 2-1

Colgate at Union
The Raiders should keep pace in the ECAC races. Colgate 3-1

Merrimack at Boston University
The Terriers get some momentum for the Beanpot. Boston University 4-1

Saturday-Sunday, Jan. 30-31

Maine at Providence
Maybe the Black Bears get back in the win column, but it’s not a safe bet. Providence 2-1, 2-1

Connecticut at Vermont
This is likely a split, but I’ll go out on a limb. Connecticut 2-1, 3-2

St. Cloud State at Wisconsin
The Huskies are playing much better than expected, but not good enough to defeat the Badgers. Wisconsin 4-1, 4-1

Tuesday, Feb. 2

Harvard versus Boston College
This is where BC’s streak ended last year, so I think the Eagles will be extra focused. Boston College 3-1

Northeastern at Boston University
The Terriers have fallen off and Northeastern is better. Northeastern 4-1

What to Watch: Jan. 29

Beanpot
While the field is once again strong for Boston’s midseason tournament, hosted by Boston University, it definitely looks like No. 1 Boston College and three would-be spoilers. There have been three different winners over the last trio of seasons, and BU hasn’t even reached the final over that time. It will hope that home ice brings magic, because BU’s only title came as a club team back in 1981.

The semifinals kick off Monday at 5 p.m. EST with the Eagles clashing with defending champion Harvard, the team that ruined their perfect season in last year’s Beanpot final. They played two weeks ago on January 19, and BC was able to neutralize the Crimson attack and gain a 2-0 win.

In the second semi, scheduled for an 8 p.m. start, BU entertains No. 6 Northeastern. The Huskies cruised to a 7-1 rout when they met the Terriers back in October.

Syracuse at Mercyhurst, Friday, 3 p.m. EST, and Saturday, 2 p.m. EST
Just two weeks ago, the top two teams in the CHA collided in Syracuse, and nothing was decided, as they traded two-goal wins. Goals were at a premium, with each scoring three times in the series. Another split would work to the Lakers’ advantage, because they enjoy a two-point edge in the standings, with only six games remaining after this weekend.

No. 4 Quinnipiac at Harvard, Friday, 3:30 p.m. EST
NESN will be airing this contest, as one of last year’s ECAC co-champions welcomes the league’s current leader. Quinnipiac is one of three teams that the Crimson trail, and they’re three games out of first place, so they’ll need some serious help to gain another crown. First things first — a victory over the Bobcats is a must. Quinnipiac prevailed in overtime when it hosted Harvard in December.

New Hampshire at No. 6 Northeastern, Friday, 7 p.m. EST
The Huskies took both halves of a home-and-home series three weeks ago. UNH tries to catch them looking ahead to the Beanpot.

No. 3 Minnesota at No. 7 Bemidji State, Friday, 7:07 p.m. CST, and Saturday, 4:07 p.m. CST
The Beavers took a game off of Minnesota in each of the first two series the two teams played in the Sanford Center, but since then, the Gophers have come home with three straight sweeps, and they won the 2014 WCHA Final Face-Off in the building. Minnesota scored a dozen goals in the first series in November, three more than it managed in five head-to-head meetings last season.

St. Lawrence at No. 5 Clarkson, Saturday, 3 p.m. EST
The Saints try to shake off the effects of the 6-1 beating that the Golden Knights administered two days earlier in Canton.

Cornell at Rensselaer, Saturday, 4 p.m. EST
Critical ECAC points are on the line for two teams that head into the weekend just a game apart in the fight for playoff berths. The Engineers needed OT to come out on top back in October.

Atlantic Hockey Picks, January 29-30

Last week:

Dan: 5-4-3
Chris: 7-2-3

On the season:

Dan: 91-58-16 (.600)
Chris: 104-45-16 (.679)

 

This Week’s Picks:

Friday, January 29 and Saturday, January 30
Sacred Heart at Bentley
Dan:This year’s Sacred Heart seniors are 6-5-2 against Bentley overall, but a 5-2 record over the past two seasons highlights the way they’ve always seemed to play well against the Falcons. After scoring an offensive breakout with seven goals against Connecticut on Tuesday, I don’t foresee them losing two games this weekend. That said, though, Bentley’s offense woke up in a big way, scoring 11 goals last weekend against AIC. I’ll take a split.Bentley wins on Friday, Sacred Heart wins on Saturday.
Chris: Most of the the action is out West this weekend, but the lone matchup in New England is a great one. I’m not leaning either way on this one – Sacred Heart struggled at home with RIT last weekend but hung seven goals on UConn on Tuesday. As Dan said, Bentley’s offense woke up in a big way last weekend as well. So I too am going with a split, and using SHU’s record on Fridays (1-7-3) vs. Saturdays (5-5), I’m going with a Bentley win on Friday and an SHU victory on Saturday.

Air Force at Canisius
Dan: Canisius has been excellent at taking points; they haven’t been swept once in conference play over a full weekend at all this year. After splitting with the Falcons out west, I don’t see that changing. But since we can’t pick ties, I’m going with Canisius; Canisius sweeps.
Chris: Both teams are playing well right now, with Canisius unbeaten in its last four games and Air Force unbeaten in its last six. I’m going with another split with Air Force winning on Friday and Canisius on Saturday.

American International at Mercyhurst
Dan:After losing three of four points to Robert Morris last weekend and only splitting with Sacred Heart the weekend before, Mercyhurst finds itself in need of points this weekend. A big weekend could have them back in the race for a first round bye and home ice.Mercyhurst sweeps.
Chris: It’s an easy choice to pick the Lakers to sweep, but AIC again showed on Tuesday that a hot goalie can be the equalizer as rookie Jacob Caffrey made 45 saves in a 1-0 loss at Princeton. But I think Mercyhurst will find a way to get all four points at home. Mercyhurst sweeps.

Army West Point at Niagara
Dan: I still think Niagara is a better team than their record would indicate, but they’re really fighting it lately. They haven’t won since December 11th at RIT, going 0-8-1 with only their tie against Canisius since then. These next two weekends might be their best opportunities to get some momentum before playing Mercyhurst, RIT, and Air Force. Niagara wins on Friday. Army West Point wins on Saturday.
Chris: I too think Niagara’s going to win one of these games, but I don’t know which. Since the Purple Eagles have yet to win on a Saturday, I’m going with Niagara on Friday and Army West Point on Saturday.

Holy Cross at Rochester Institute of Technology
Dan:We’re all of a sudden looking at a logjam towards the top of the standings. With RMU off this week, a big weekend by either team can either tie or pass the Colonials and create a real battle for first place. The edge right now is with the Crusaders, who have a slightly better goals against average, so I’m taking the Crusaders. Don’t be shocked with a split, though. Holy Cross sweeps.
Chris: The Tigers’ struggles in league play at home (3-5) vs. the road (9-0-1) is somewhat baffling. RIT coach Wayne Wilson has said the opposition gets a jump from the atmosphere at the Polisseni, and that may be the case. Fridays have been especially tough on the Tigers at home, so I’m taking Holy Cross on Friday and RIT on Saturday.

Weekend West picks: Jan. 29-30

We’ve reached the point of the season where things start to get interesting in conference play.

Over the next few weeks, the best will separate themselves from the rest as titles are decided and playoff tickets are punched.

So without further delay, here are some of the big games on tap for the weekend.

Augsburg (10-6-1, 6-1-1) vs. St. Mary’s (8-9-2, 5-4-1)

Augsburg comes into the weekend as the top team in the conference. The Auggies would love nothing more than to take care of business in this series and remain in first place in a tight title race.

Goaltending will be a key for the Auggies, who have won just once in their last four games. Jordyn Kaufer is 9-4-0 with a 2.45 GAA and a .908 save percentage.

The Cardinals, who just snapped a four-game losing streak, feature two of the top five goal scorers in the conference in Jay Heinle and Martin Gruse. They have come through with 14 and 13 goals, respectively. St. Mary’s has tallied 82 goals in all and will aim to stay in contention for a conference playoff berth.

St. Mary’s, 5-3, Augsburg, 4-2.

St. Thomas (9-6-2, 6-2) vs. St. John’s (8-9-2, 6-4)

This series is always a big one and it’s only appropriate that the stakes will be high when the Tommies and Johnnies square off in a crucial home-and-home series.

St. Thomas and St. John’s are both tied for second with 18 points.

Tommies goaltender Joe Morris leads the league in GAA (2.11) and save percentage (.926) and is 9-5-2 on the year. Connor McBride leads the offense with nine goals and four assists.

The Johnnies, winners of three consecutive games, also have a stellar goaltender in Saxton Soley. He is 5-8-2 with a 2.53 GAA. Neal Smith has been an integral part of the offense, tallying eight goals and two assists.

St. John’s, 3-2, St. Thomas, 4-3.

Milwaukee School of Engineering (12-5, 7-5) vs. Marian (11-5-3, 9-4-1)

Two of the top goaltenders will meet up in this weekend NCHA series.

Nick Kohn is fifth in the league in GAA (1.79), while Omar Mullan leads the offense for the Raiders, punching in seven goals and dishing out eight assists. Gage Christianson has come through with 14 assists, fueling the offense with his remarkable play-making ability. He has also scored twice.

Marian is one of the hottest teams in the conference, having won its last six games. The Sabres have been aided by the play of goaltender Mike Baldwin, who has started 13 games and is fourth in the conference in goals against average (1.67). The offense is led by Devin Stuermer, who ranks fourth in the NCHA in goals with 10. He has also dished out nine assists. Derek Thorogood is third on the team in points with 25.

Marian, 5-3, MSOE, 5-4

St. Norbert (14-2-1, 10-2) vs. Concordia (Wis.) (9-6-2, 5-5-2)

Michael Hill has played a pivotal role in the success of the Green Knights, striking for 11 goals and dishing out four assists. St. Norbert also features two of the best goaltenders in the conference in Tony Kujava and T.J. Black. Kujava owns a 1.42 GAA and Black’s stands at 1.57. They rank first and second, respectively, in the conference in that category.

St. Norbert has racked up 81 goals on 108 assists as its offense is one of the most balanced in the nation.

Concordia has only scored 49 goals, but has done it off 91 assists. Stefen Seel has dished out 12 assists to go along with six goals, while Trammell Lynes has come through with 10 assists. Braden Crone leads the team in goals scored with seven and goaltenders Andy Munroe and Jack Romanulk have combined to start 17 games.

St. Norbert, 6-3, 5-2

Wisconsin-Stout (9-6-4, 1-1) vs. Wisconsin-Superior (6-11-2, 0-2)

Stout is looking to end a three-game winless streak and stay in the hunt for a conference title. The Blue Devils have a winning record on the road, fashioning a 4-3-1 mark, and they hope to continue that success Friday night. Jake Useldinger has played a key role offensively, scoring eight goals and dishing out nine assists. Five other players have scored at least five goals.

Superior is the only team in the WIAC without a win in conference play. The Yellow Jackets are just 2-6-2 at home and are hoping to change that trend this weekend. Ian Ecklund leads the team in points with eight goals and 14 assists. Anton Svensson leads Superior in goals scored with 10.

I think Stout’s balance will be too much to deal with.

Stout, 4-3.

Wisconsin-Eau Claire (12-5-2, 2-2) vs. Wisconsin-Superior (9-6-4, 1-1)

The Blugolds have won five of seven and are determined to stay on track for a conference championship. They feature a high-powered offense that has cranked out 76 goals, with Adam Knochenmus paving the way with 16 goals and 12 assists. Eight other players have tallied at least four goals. Tyler Green has started 13 games at goaltender, including the last four, and owns a 1.69 GAA. He has won eight games.

Superior will look to counter Eau Claire’s potent attack with a stellar defensive effort. Ethan Wood has started seven games and has won twice. Cory Simons has six starts and has picked up three wins. No matter who starts in goal, he will have to be on top of his game for Stout to have a shot at pulling off the upset.

Eau Claire, 5-2.

St. Cloud State’s offense gets back into gear, and then some

St. Cloud State scored 15 goals in a sweep of Western Michigan last weekend (photo: Bradley K. Olson).

St. Cloud State played host to a scrappy Western Michigan team last weekend on the heels of a disappointing 1-1 tie against Minnesota-Duluth the weekend before. For a team with the second-ranked offense in the country that averages over four goals a game, scoring only one goal was a surprise.

The offense was back on track over the weekend in an impressive sweep, pacing the Huskies to 8-2 and 7-3 wins over the Broncos. The offense got balanced contributions; 11 different players scored St. Cloud’s 15 goals, and only one skater, Patrick Newell, had a multi-goal game.

“That doesn’t happen too often where you score goals like that,” said St. Cloud coach Bob Motzko. “Obviously, both power-play units found some life, and it’s happened a few times this year. The biggest thing is confidence.

“We’re led by our four senior forwards, and then Ethan Prow, a defenseman. You put all five seniors who are all pushing 30 points in their season, and three are at 100 points and two are getting close to 100 points for their career, that’s confidence, and it passes down into the other classes and other lines.”

With the scores as lopsided as they were, it would have seemed from a casual glance that St. Cloud dominated both games, but Western Michigan had plenty of opportunities. Goalie Charlie Lindgren had to make 34 saves in Friday’s win and 25 more in Saturday’s game.

According to Motzko, Lindgren’s play justifies his teammates’ faith in him.

“We err on the side of offense, we always have, and when you do that, we’re going to give some chances up, and our guys just have to put faith in Charlie because we need him,” Motzko said. “We do take some risks from the offensive side. We do put ourselves in some tough spots once in a while and Charlie has to be there for us, and he’s been there all season.

“When you break down the games, there are key moments in the game where Charlie’s the guy behind the scene that’s been a contributor in our wins, probably a major factor in many of them.”

Five seniors lead the scoring for St. Cloud, with Kalle Kossila the top point-getter with 32, ninth overall in the country. Joey Benik and David Morley each have 29 points, Jimmy Murray has 27, and Prow has 25.

According to Motzko, his team has seen production like this from Kossila before, and it helps spur the play of others.

“He had 40 points his sophomore year, but then everything got put on hold for a year because he really battled through some injuries and then the two surgeries to correct it,” Motzko said. “As the year has gone on, he’s gotten back into the best shape he’s been in two years. He is playing with confidence and he’s been our most consistent offensive player. We put him in so many offensive situations, but then we have the other guys, Benik, Morley, and Murray, they kind of take turns at their chances at it.”

In addition to having the second-best offense in the country, St. Cloud’s defense is seventh-best, giving up just two goals a game. The Huskies have a defensive corps that contributes strongly to that effort, which is impressive considering three of the defensemen are freshmen and one is a sophomore.

“The surprise of our team, there’s no question, has been our D corps, if I go back to the start of the year to today,” said Motzko. “Charlie established himself as a goalie a year ago. We knew we had offense returning and we had a chance to be offensive, but we didn’t anticipate three freshman defenseman to join that crew and play so consistently at a high level.”

The Huskies are in first place in the NCHC, three points ahead of North Dakota. Two years ago, St. Cloud captured the inaugural Penrose Cup as NCHC regular season champion, but Motzko said that isn’t currently a focus of his team.

“Nope. Honestly never talked about it,” he said. “We don’t have the standings up in our locker room, never have, never will. Our whole goal every year is to win our series against each team, and that puts us in a good spot at the end of the year. We have a much larger goal that we would like to attain. It’s something we will talk about in late February if we are in the hunt for it.”

This weekend, St. Cloud has its last nonconference games when it participates in the North Star College Cup, an in-state tournament that also features Minnesota, Bemidji State and Minnesota State.

“These are big hockey games, our last two nonconference hockey games,” said Motzko. “All four teams are playing very well since Christmas. Mankato is in first place, the Gophers are in first place and Bemidji is playing its best hockey of the last month, so I just think it sets up for a great college hockey weekend in the state of Minnesota. We’re anxious to get back down there; our freshmen and sophomores have never played in the Xcel Center.”

Denver responds from bad tie to get impressive sweep

At 3-0-3, Denver is unbeaten in 2016 (photo: Michelle Bishop).

Two weeks ago at home, No. 13 Denver had a chance to get a critical NCHC sweep against conference foe Western Michigan. After eking out a win Friday, the Pioneers took a 2-0 lead midway through the third period of Saturday’s game, only to give up the tying goal with 30 seconds left in regulation and Western Michigan’s goalie pulled.

Denver then lost the extra conference point when Tanner Jaillet gave up a goal in the three-on-three overtime.

It was the second time in the second half that Denver had given up an extra-attacker goal in a Saturday game and settled for a tie. The Pioneers had let Notre Dame grab a tie two weeks before the Western series.

Just as they had after the Notre Dame series when they swept Omaha, the Pioneers responded to the adversity with an impressive sweep last weekend, taking a pair from Minnesota-Duluth and placing Denver solidly in third place and a home-ice slot for the playoffs in the ever-competitive jungle of the NCHC.

“I think we’ve toughened up as a team,” Denver coach Jim Montgomery said of his squad’s response to disappointments. “I think from our leadership on down, players are recognizing how to execute in big moments. In those big moments, the part that has improved the most is our communication of the players on the ice to each other.

“We’ve talked about it since we got back from Christmas break, that we controlled our own destiny, that we felt St. Cloud, North Dakota were too far ahead and they would have to collapse to come back to us, but we controlled our own destiny in being able to make a run at third place. We’ve put ourselves in position, but we know we have to continue to get better because of how hard it is to win games.”

In Friday’s game against Duluth, Denver fell behind 2-0 in the first five minutes. Montgomery pulled Jaillet, who had won the starting goalie position to start the second half, and inserted Evan Cowley, who responded by shutting down Duluth and enabling Denver to rally for a 3-2 win behind Cowley’s 39 saves.

The next night, Cowley was again impressive, making 34 stops en route to a 2-1 win.

“Evan came in when we were down 2-0 and gave us great life, made probably about five big-time saves during the remaining two periods of the game, and then on Saturday night, he was just a rock,” said Montgomery. “He was just square to pucks and attracting the puck better than I’ve ever seen him.”

In addition to the play of its goaltenders, one key to Denver’s second-half resurgence has been the play of forwards Danton Heinen and Trevor Moore, who were reunited on Denver’s top line recently after playing on different lines for much of the first half.

The two had great chemistry playing together last season. This season, the duo are playing with freshman Dylan Gambrell, who leads the Pioneers in scoring with 24 points and is second in scoring in the NCHC among rookies, trailing North Dakota’s Brock Boeser’s 27 points.

“We’ve been trying to find chemistry on our lines all year,” said Montgomery. “Danton and Trevor had played together in the first half, and for whatever reason things weren’t clicking. Ever since they’ve gotten back for the second half, we decided we were going to go with it because we needed more offense and I think they’ve responded with better 200-foot hockey and work habits.”

This weekend, Denver travels to Oxford, Ohio, to face surging Miami, which posted an impressive sweep of Omaha last week.

“We are going to have to manage the puck well and defend our net well,” said Montgomery. “You look at Miami and how hard they come on the forecheck and how they pressure you in your own end, if you can’t get the puck out of your own end Miami overwhelms you, and that just shows how well they are coached. Rico [Blasi] and the staff with a young team, that’s a sign of really good coaching, is they play a lot better as the year goes on, and that’s what they are doing.”

NCHC players of the week

Offensive player of the week — Joey Benik, St. Cloud State: Benik led the Huskies to a sweep of Western Michigan, accounting for nearly half of St. Cloud’s 15 goals on the weekend. On Friday in an 8-2 win, he scored the game’s first goal in the first period and added three assists in the second period and another assist in the third, tying a career high with a five-point game while going plus-4 and being named the game’s first star. On Saturday, he again scored the game’s first goal with a power-play strike, then added an assist in St. Cloud’s 7-3 win.

Defensive player of the week — Matthew Caito, Miami: Caito helped lead Miami to an impressive pair of victories at Omaha, the RedHawks’ first road sweep of the season. On Friday, he scored the game-winning goal on a power play with 2:03 left in the game and assisted on the empty-net goal that sealed the win while going plus-1 and being named the game’s first star. On Saturday, he assisted on a power-play goal during a six-goal second period and again went plus-1.

Rookie of the week — Rhett Gardner, North Dakota: Gardner, who had scored only five goals entering the weekend’s series against Colorado College, nearly doubled that mark, scoring four goals while helping North Dakota earn a tie and win. On Friday in an overtime tie, he scored the game’s opening goal in the first period and then scored an extra-attacker goal with 32 seconds left in the game to tie it. On Saturday, he again scored twice in North Dakota’s 5-1 win, including an empty-net, short-handed strike to seal the win. He was plus-4 on the weekend and won 26 of 38 faceoffs.

Goaltender of the week — Evan Cowley, Denver: Cowley, inserted into the first game of Denver’s series against Minnesota-Duluth with his team trailing 2-0, turned in an impressive weekend, stopping 73 of 74 Minnesota-Duluth shots over the next 114 minutes. On Friday, he stopped all 39 shots as Denver rallied to win 3-2 and was named the game’s first star. On Saturday, he stopped 34 and again was named the first star. He posted a 0.53 GAA and .986 save percentage, and helped Denver kill all four Bulldogs’ power-play chances.

Weekend East picks: Jan. 28-30

It is already the final week in January, so the home stretch is officially upon all teams and conference play is now everything in terms of points and position for playoff seeding.

The picks for last week may be a confidence boosting jump start for me coming into February as I finished at 5-2-0 (.714) for the weekend. That brings the season record to 37-24-7 (.596), which has me just below the seemingly ever elusive 60 percent success threshold. Let’s see if I can make it two strong weeks in a row.

Here are my picks for the East this week:

Thursday, Jan. 28

Fitchburg State @ Massachusetts-Dartmouth
The last time the two met saw Falcons coach Dean Fuller on the precipice of his 500th win, but the game ended in a tie, prolonging the celebration of the coaching milestone. Just points in conference and seeding on the line in this one and fellow 500-win club member John Rolli likes his team on home ice, but needs some more consistent defense and goaltending to earn this win – UMD 4, FSU 3.

Friday, Jan. 29

University of New England @ Babson
The Beavers are still looking to catch Massachusetts-Boston for the top spot in the NEHC, but a young and hungry UNE squad stands in their way with equal desire to move up in the top four. This one will be fun and physical with the home team being just a tad better – Babson 3, UNE 2.

Utica @ Hobart
Hobart coach Mark Taylor knows exactly what it means to be playing your best hockey going into the end of the year and now back in conference play, the points and position makes it imperative to hold serve at home where the Statesmen are a perfect 8-0 this season. The Pioneers will be a worthy adversary, but the Statesmen will eke this one out – Hobart 2, Utica 1.

Potsdam @ Buffalo State
The Bears have proven they can take the best that SUNYAC has, but to be at the top, they are going to need to finish strong down the stretch starting with a game Bengal squad. The visitors somehow find a way, barely – Potsdam 5, Buffalo State 4.

Saturday, Jan. 30

Salve Regina @ Endicott
Two teams fighting near the top of the ECAC Northeast will want to send a message about who is the better team late in the season. Endicott got its first NCAA win against the Seahawks last fall in a crazy 7-5 affair. Don’t expect so many fireworks this time around, though – Endicott 3, Salve Regina 2.

Hamilton @ Trinity
The battle for a home-ice playoff spot is hot and heavy in the NESCAC and these two contenders know this game is a four-pointer in potentially knocking down a close rival for a spot. No doubt the game will be tight, but the home team gets the nod and maybe in an extra session – Trinity 2, Hamilton 1.

Franklin Pierce @ Daniel Webster
This nonconference game could become a nice rivalry in the Granite State in the future. Both teams have struggled this season for success on the ice, so facing an opponent with equal challenges could be the motivation for a win to close out January – Franklin Pierce 4, Daniel Webster 2.

You virtually blink after Christmas and the end of January is already here. There are just a few weekends remaining in the regular season, so get those points – drop the puck!

Bertagna on Hockey East’s hot topics: age, commitments, special events

Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna speaks at a news conference announcing the 2012 edition of Frozen Fenway. The event could return next season (photo: Amy Donnelly/Boston Red Sox).

With the Hockey East season in full swing, the standings beginning to take shape and the Beanpot on the horizon, it seemed like a perfect time to put individual teams aside and talk with Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna to get his take on the major issues facing his league and college hockey.

Here are some of the key points from the conversation:

York’s 1,000: It’s the sheer magnitude

When Boston College coach Jerry York became the first in college hockey to reach 1,000 wins last Friday night, he not only hit a milestone, he may have destroyed it.

York, who in is his 44th season as a college hockey head coach, has averaged more than 22 wins a season. He’s led five teams to national championships, including four at Boston College alone. Ten of his teams have captured their league’s postseason title, while 12 have won the regular season crown.

But with the entire resume of the legendary bench boss, becoming the first college coach to reach 1,000 victories might be the most impressive.

It symbolizes consistency and achievement. But it also is a feat that might not even be accomplished again.

York began his coaching career at age 26, an age when few are hired in today’s game. He has persevered and he’s never wavered from wanting to be a college coach.

“Part of it’s the way he’s gone about it,” Bertagna said of York, referring to the head coach’s gentlemanly demeanor. “He’s so low maintenance from a commissioner’s point of view.”

The accomplishment, however, represents the ability for York, year in and year out, to find and develop some of the top talent.

“If you want to put a critical eye on it, you’d cite an old Jack Parker quote that the team that gets off the bus with the best players usually wins,” said Bertagna. “Jerry would be the first to tell you that a lot of those [1,000] games he got off the bus with the better players.

“But when you look at the number of years, you don’t sustain that level of talent all the time, so to be able to average [that number of wins] as long as he has, knowing that there are up years and down years for talents, and guys leaving programs and guys being hurt, no matter what the circumstances, he’s been pretty consistent.”

Big Ten’s age-limitation proposal continues to loom on radar

The Big Ten’s proposal to limit the maximum age of a college hockey player, which came to light to most in late November, continues to loom, said Bertagna.

The proposal would, in effect, restrict the maximum age for a college hockey player to 24 years old, meaning athletes that often reach their 25th birthday in their senior season would be either forced to enter a year earlier or limit their careers to three seasons instead of four.

A vote is expected in April. A nonbinding vote of men’s college hockey coaches was taken earlier this year, and while all Big Ten coaches voted in favor of supporting the proposal and all coaches in the WCHA, NCHC, Atlantic Hockey and ECAC Hockey all reportedly voted against supporting the proposal, Hockey East was hardly as clear cut.

Nearly a third of Hockey East coaches voted in favor of supporting the legislation, putting Bertagna in a somewhat precarious position.

“Roughly a third of the people I answer to have taken a position in support of this,” said Bertagna. “But when you get right down to it, I am expected to carry out the wishes of the majority. So whatever the position of the majority is, that’s the position I have to take.”

One of the largest issues surrounding the legislation is the sheer power the Big Ten — the only college hockey conference with an all-sport presence — has in pushing this legislation through. Outside of the Big Ten representatives, most who will vote on the proposal in April don’t come from an institution that sponsors college hockey and, further, most who will vote don’t have much background in the college hockey game.

That, according to Bertagna, forces those who oppose the proposal to take on roles similar to what lobbyists do when dealing with politicians in Washington.

“I think the bigger issue here is that the Big Ten can, and now is showing, that it can go on its own and file legislation without having a great national discussion ahead of time,” said Bertagna. “Having one league that can go out and file [legislation] certainly is a departure from the ways we’ve done things where we worked by consensus as leagues in the past.”

Early commitments a concern

Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna says he hopes coaches can discuss recruiting ages at this year’s convention (photo: Melissa Wade).

While the Big Ten’s legislation could push through rules that a major part of the college hockey body opposes, another issue causing strife among some college coaches right now is the age at which coaches are seeking commitments from prospective student-athletes.

In January 2014, Maine made headlines when it was revealed that 13-year-old Oliver Wahlstrom committed to play hockey for the Black Bears. He has since decommitted from Maine and committed to Harvard for the fall of 2018.

That was surpassed in August when another 13-year-old, Anthony Cipollone, announced on Twitter his commitment to Vermont.

Although official commitments cannot be made until the signing periods in the year before the recruits arrival on campus, for many years coaches have respected verbal commitments made by prospects by no longer pursuing those student-athletes.

As Bertagna notes, those “gentleman’s agreements” were put in place in an age when players were recruited one, maybe two, seasons before they were to matriculate. The goal was to allow some of the smaller programs that identified talent and convinced them to attend their schools from having that talent poached by some of the bigger-name programs.

Those “agreements” were generally respected when the target player was 16, 17 or 18 years old. But moving the recruiting timeline up by three additional years to an age as young as 13 — nearly 20 percent earlier in the player’s development timeline — makes it impossible for some coaches to take a hands-off approach.

“It’s somewhat messy out there with kids making commitments and reneging on commitments; coaches making commitments and putting off the kids’ arrival at school,” said Bertagna. “Talking to coaches across the country, there’s a lot of unease in the way some of this is conducted.”

Bertagna hopes that at this year’s coaches’ convention, held in Naples, Fla., each April, significant time can be spent discussing the ages at which players are targeted.

“The climate out there in recruiting and the respect between coaches isn’t what it used to be,” Bertagna said. “I hear coaches saying the honor among coaches isn’t what it used to be, and it’s bothersome.”

Special events remain a focus

The success of this year’s Friendship Four in Belfast, Northern Ireland, led the tournament’s organizers to commit to a second tournament in 2016. That, however, means finding two participants from Hockey East and ECAC Hockey for the event.

Bertagna said that tournament organizers, which include former Boston University players Steve Thornton and Shane Johnson, will be in town for the second night of the Beanpot tournament hoping to further the planning.

Bertagna also noted that Hockey East is in discussions with the team at Fenway Sports Management about a potential for a fourth edition of Frozen Fenway.

The event, which has had varying levels of success — most related directly to the weather — typically has been played on alternating years, which would have set the event to have taken place this month. But with the NHL playing the Winter Classic at Gillette Stadium, the parties involved in Frozen Fenway decided that next year would be a better option.

Nothing is set in stone, but it certainly seems plausible that Fenway Park will once again host hockey in January 2017.

Finally, Bertagna said Hockey East is excited to move this year’s women’s championship, which has been played on Cape Cod for the last three years, to Merrimack this March.

That could conflict a bit with the men’s playoffs. Should Merrimack finish at a seed between five and eight, it would host a first-round series over the same weekend. That would result, in all likelihood, in a Thursday-Friday-Sunday men’s series, opening Lawler Arena on Saturday for the women’s semifinals. If the men’s series goes three games, a separate-admission doubleheader (possibly noon and 7 p.m.) would feature the women’s title game and the deciding game of Merrimack’s first-round men’s series.

Pickin’ the Big Ten: Jan. 28-31

It’s hard to believe there are only seven weeks left in the regular season, but here we are at the end of January and Jayson Moy has Bracketology if you want to speculate about what happens come late March. First, though, how Drew Claussen and I are doing with our picks:

Last week
Drew: 3-1-0 (.750)
Paula: 3-1-0 (.750)

Season
Drew: 60-35-15 (.614)
Paula: 65-30-15 (.659)

This week

There are two Big Ten series this week — including a game in the Big Apple — one nonconference series and the North Star College Cup.

Michigan vs. Penn State

Drew: Both of these teams have been playing pretty good hockey so far in 2016, so this series should be an interesting one. I see Penn State having an advantage for its home game on Thursday and Saturday’s game in NYC should be more of a toss up. I predict a split, which will clump the Gophers, Wolverines and Nittany Lions closer together near the top of the conference standings.

Paula: The Wolverines bring a six-game unbeaten streak (5-0-1) into this series, which has the teams meeting in Pegula Arena Thursday night and Madison Square Garden Saturday. Last week, Michigan defeated the U.S. Under-18 team 5-2 (Jan. 21) in exhibition play. Penn State split a road series with Ohio State last weekend, a 3-2 overtime win Friday and a 5-1 loss Saturday. The Nittany Lions are 6-3-0 all-time against the Wolverines, including a 3-1-0 record at home and a 1-0-0 record at neutral sites. Michigan’s Cutler Martin will miss this entire series because of actions during a fight at the end of UM’s 8-6 win over Ohio State Jan. 17, and his teammate, Dexter Dancs, will miss Thursday’s game for the same reason. Both games begin at 7:00 p.m. Thursday’s is untelevised but the Big Ten Network is carrying Saturday’s game as part of Super Saturday, which also features a Michigan-Penn State men’s basketball game earlier in the day in MSG. Isn’t it great that hockey is the prime time event?

Drew’s picks: Penn State 5-3, Michigan 6-3.
Paula’s picks: Penn State 5-4, Michigan 5-4.

Michigan State at Ohio State

Drew: This is the perfect opportunity for Ohio State to keep the momentum from its last win over Penn State going. I wouldn’t be surprised if Michigan State snapped its losing streak this weekend, but I also wouldn’t be surprised if the Buckeyes extended it two more games. The Spartans have been down in the dumps since early December and needed overtime to win an exhibition game last weekend. I’m picking Ohio State to sweep at home.

Paula: I couldn’t agree more. The Buckeyes are playing well, but their last game was a home loss to Penn State. The Spartans are not playing especially well, but their last game was a home exhibition win over the U.S. Under-18 team. Michigan State was 3-1-0 against Ohio State last season, including a split in the Schottenstein Center. Ohio State’s Josh Healey will sit out this series because of a two-game suspension he’s serving following his contact-to-the-head penalty early in the third period of last Saturday’s loss to Penn State. Friday’s game begins at 6:30 p.m. and is carried by the Big Ten Network. Saturday’s game starts at 7:00 p.m. and is untelevised.

Drew’s picks: Ohio State 4-2, 3-1.
Paula’s picks: Ohio State 4-2, 2-1.

Alaska at Wisconsin

Drew: Both of these teams have some quality wins this season, but both have also struggled to string wins together. That fact is going to lead to me picking a split. The only question is which way is it going to go? There’s a 90 percent chance I pick that wrong.

Paula: The Nanooks are 2-3-1 in January, having split last weekend with Northern Michigan, a 3-2 overtime win and 5-3 loss. This series against Wisconsin marks the third of three road series for the Nanooks. Wisconsin is winless in the new year (0-5-1) and the Badgers got thumped by Minnesota at home last weekend, 4-0 and 9-2. These teams last met in the Kendall Hockey Classic Oct. 10, 2014, a 1-0 win for Alaska. Wisconsin will be without Aidan Cavallini for Friday’s game and Eddie Wittchow for the series plus an additional game. Each was suspended for separate incidents in last Saturday’s game against Minnesota. This is a Friday-Saturday series, with both games beginning at 7:00 p.m. and Saturday’s game carried by The Wisconsin Channel. Drew has more faith in the tenacious Badgers this weekend than I do.

Drew’s picks: Wisconsin 4-3, Alaska 5-3.
Paula’s picks: Alaska 3-2, 3-2.

Minnesota vs. Bemidji State and St. Cloud State or Minnesota State

Drew: This should be a fun tournament, with three of the four teams in the field being conference leaders. The one team that isn’t leading its conference, Bemidji State, is the defending tournament champion. It’ll be important for Minnesota not to look past Bemidji State to a possible rematch with St. Cloud State because the Beavers could definitely take down the Gophers. I’m pretty sure I’ve predicted the North Star Cup horribly wrong in both previous years, so take this one with a grain of salt.

Paula: This is a great field. Last weekend, Bemidji State played two overtime games against Ferris State, a 3-2 loss and 1-1 tie. The Beavers are 5-2-1 to open 2016. Minnesota State swept Lake Superior State at home last weekend, 8-0 and 5-1, and St. Cloud beat Western Michigan 8-2 and 7-3. Between the Gophers, the Mavericks and the Huskies, there is potential for a lot of scoring in this tournament. The Gophers play the Beavers at 4:00 p.m. Friday and then either the Mavericks or Huskies at either 1:00 p.m. or 4:00 p.m. Saturday. Either way, whenever the games, Fox Sports North is covering them.

Drew’s picks: Minnesota over Bemidji State 4-1 and St. Cloud State over Minnesota State 4-3. MSU over BSU 5-2 and SCSU over Minnesota 4-3 for the championship.
Paula’s picks: It defies logic, but I’m picking the Gophers in both games, no matter who they play Saturday. Minnesota 5-2, 5-4.

Competitive Winslow adding punch to Middlebury’s offense, defense

Middlebury sophomore forward Maddie Winslow has been an offensive catalyst this season for the Panthers (photo: Middlebury Athletics).

Just a sophomore, Maddie Winslow is playing beyond her years for No. 7 Middlebury.

She talks a mature game as well.

Add to that the fact that she is double majoring in economics and art history and you can’t help but be a fan of the native of Manchester, Vt.

Growing up playing hockey for the esteemed Assabet Valley program in Concord, Mass., Winslow wanted to continue playing competitive hockey in college.

That’s where Middlebury came into play.

“I was excited to play for Coach (Bill) Mandigo and for a team that wanted to compete,” said Winslow. “I felt like I could become a better player at Middlebury and could make an impact here. I also was excited to play in such an evenly matched and competitive league like the NESCAC. I like that we have such a hard schedule and that every game is just as important and just as competitive as the next. The school was also a great fit for me both academically and outside of hockey, which was really important for me during my college search.”

In 15 games with the Panthers this season, Winslow leads the team in scoring with 18 points on eight goals and 10 assists. Last season, she tallied 10 goals and 20 points in 28 games, good for fourth on the team.

“Offense has always come more naturally to me, which is why I’m really focusing on getting better on the defensive side of the puck this season,” explained Winslow. “Growing up, I always loved being a playmaker. I played boys hockey for a long time, so I was always surrounded by bigger kids with stronger shots. I found most of my success in beating them through outsmarting them and looking to make plays and set up my teammates.”

Middlebury is 9-3-3 overall with a 5-0-3 mark in NESCAC play, which has the Panthers third in the league standings.

The Panthers play two at Hamilton this weekend before going to No. 10 Norwich next Tuesday.

“After graduating eight very talented seniors, we came into this season with a really young team with 15 underclassmen,” noted Winslow. “There was obviously a lot of learning that needed to be focused on at the beginning of the season, but coming back from winter break, I think our team has really come together. Everyone from the freshmen to the seniors has been contributing to our success. I think our team right now is focusing on doing all the little things, whether that’s blocking shots, backchecking hard, or winning the battles in the corner, and I think this mentality has contributed to the enormous amount of progress our team has already made this season.

“I think that if we keep working as hard as we are, our team can accomplish a lot this season.”

On an individual level, Winslow has been as consistent a player there has been in all of Division III.

“This season I’ve been focusing on ‘doing my job,’ as coach Mandigo always says,” said Winslow. “I think any individual success I’ve had so far this season can only be contributed to a collective effort from my team. All our wins have been team wins and I am happy that I have been able to play my role and contribute in my team’s success.”

Winslow added that hockey has been a major part of her life for as long as she can remember.

“I started skating about as soon as I could walk,” remembered Winslow. “My family always had an outdoor rink growing up, so the second I could fit into a pair of skates, they had me out there skating with my older siblings and neighborhood friends. I joined my first team when I was four years old and was by far the youngest player out there.”

On that first team, coached by her father, Winslow found herself in an unfamiliar position — quite literally.

“My dad volunteered me to play goalie for the first game when no one else wanted to, but the pads were too big for me, though, so whenever I went down to make a save, I couldn’t get back up,” laughed Winslow. “I finally decided to just lie across the crease all game instead of trying to get up. Unfortunately, I was too small to even cover the entire crease. We lost the game 6-0, so safe to say I learned early on that a future goalie career was out of the question.”

Some years later, Winslow is enjoying college life, on and off the ice, and has big-time goals for the Panthers as the season stretch drive is around the corner.

“Obviously, I would love to see our team win it all,” said Winslow. “I think what really will make this season successful for the team as a whole and for me is forward progress. Are we getting better every day? Are we correcting mistakes? Are we strengthening our skills? If at the end of every week we come out a better team than we started, we are headed in the right direction.

“My only expectation for my team for the rest of the season is that we will outwork every team we play. There are a lot of really great teams this year and the rest of our season will be very competitive, which is awesome. It’s fun to play good teams. We have been playing good teams all season long, and I hope to keep playing good teams until the last possible weekend we can.”

On an individual level, Winslow credits her success to the rest of her squad.

“This season will also be successful if I can make my teammates better,” Winslow said. “I have become such a better player in my two years at Middlebury so far and a lot of that is thanks to my teammates pushing to make me better, and I only wish that I can have the same impact on them as they do on me.”

NOTEBOOK

St. Michael’s senior defenseman Emily Loebs is one of 18 nominees for the 2016 Hockey Humanitarian Award. She’s also the lone women’s D-III player on the ballot. A Dean’s List student, Loebs is also a member of the women’s lacrosse team, co-president of SAAC for the 2014-15 and 2015-16 school years, is involved in the Purple Knight Leadership Academy, and serves on Athletic Advisory Council and St. Michael’s Athletic Hall of Fame Committee. … No change in Monday’s USCHO.com Division III Women’s Poll; Plattsburgh still No. 1 at 18-0-0 and garnering all 15 first-place votes. … Adrian’s Logan Taylor leads all of women’s D-III with 25 assists, Lake Forest’s Michelle Greeneway is tops with 26 goals, and Adrian’s Kristin Lewicki is the top scorer with 38 points on 24 goals and 14 helpers. … Plattsburgh goalie Camille Leonard continues to put up staggering numbers: 16-0-0, .978 save percentage, and 0.38 GAA, and, oh, 11 shutouts. … Andrea Klug of Concordia (Minn.) and Utica’s Keira Goin each have six goose eggs this season.

BC conquests — a history lesson

Megan Keller (BC - 4) - The Boston College Eagles defeated the visiting Syracuse University Orange 10-2 on Saturday, October 4, 2014, at Kelley Rink in Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. (Melissa Wade)
Megan Keller is a solid presence on the blue line for Boston College. (Melissa Wade)

Some people like to read the final page of a book first in an attempt to determine whether or not they think the story will be worth reading. While I’ve never done that, I have jumped ahead when watching a recorded sporting event to see if I want to watch the whole thing or just see the final result.

At times, we’d like to do that in a season as well. News flash — it isn’t possible. However, we can get some hint as to how the rest of the year may unfold by studying what history has taught us.

On Tuesday night, No. 1 Boston College won its 27th straight game, and will be just the second team in the 16 seasons that the NCAA has sponsored the national tournament to finish January with a perfect record.

The previous team to do so completed its perfect season, and in so doing, won the NCAA Championship. Will the Eagles? They are nearly two thirds of the way there, needing only seven more regular-season wins, four victories in Hockey East’s tournament, and then capped by a three-game run in the NCAAs, to achieve their own perfection. While BC victories in all but a handful of those games are nearly a sure thing, the percentages will never favor a team staying perfect this far out. Even if the chances of winning the toughest games are as high as 80 percent, the odds say that a team will fail to win one of five such games.

Of course, BC doesn’t need to be perfect to hoist its first national-championship trophy. What if we treat the Eagles not as a perfect team, but just as the best team in the country. How often do those teams finish on top? Boston College was at the top of this week’s USCHO poll, the final one of January. Consider how other No. 1 teams for the final week of January fared by season’s end.

In the previous 15 years, the top team in the poll at the end of January has won the title a third of the time, or on five occasions. The second-ranked team has also won five times. Twenty percent of the time, or three seasons, the third-ranked team in the January poll went on to reign. Teams in fourth and fifth at the end of January have won once apiece.

Obviously, this hasn’t been a Cinderella-friendly tournament, but I think we already knew that. In the first five seasons with a four-team field, it was nearly impossible for Cinderella to get invited. With the expansion to eight teams and three rounds, the requirement to pull three straight upsets has proven to be too much.

So what became of the 10 January favorites that didn’t become champions? Only one, Mercyhurst in 2007, fell in the quarterfinals. The most-common stumbling block has been the semifinals; that’s where the season unraveled for six of the January powers. It’s worth noting that three such losses occurred in the first four years of the tournament, when the NCAAs began at the Frozen Four. Anyway, our arithmetic tells us that the other three January leaders came up one game short. Thus, January’s top-ranked team has been playing in the final just over half the time.

Let’s look more closely at the 2007 Lakers team the suffered the earliest exit. That was the freshman season for Meghan Agosta, and Mercyhurst was a balanced team, ranking fourth in scoring offense and second in scoring defense. That definitely was more impressive than the Minnesota-Duluth team that defeated the Lakers; the Bulldogs had the eighth-best offense and sixth-best defense.

Mercyhurst had likely encountered opponents that were as good if not better. The Lakers had played three games against teams that ultimately lost in the NCAA quarterfinals, sweeping a series from Dartmouth and defeating New Hampshire. It played another three games against Frozen Four teams, shutting out Boston College and splitting at St. Lawrence. The problem for the Lakers was that all six of those games took place in October and November. Thereafter, the only teams that Mercyhurst faced that wound up with winning records were January games against Yale and Connecticut, teams the ended one and two games over .500, respectively.

So if UMD was not the best team that the Lakers had seen, it was definitely the best team that they had seen lately. Agosta scored two minutes into the second period to give Mercyhurst a two-goal lead, and the Lakers offense then went dormant for the nearly 49 minutes that ultimately remained in its season. The Bulldogs got a goal late in the second period, a tying goal late in regulation, and Jessica Koizumi’s second goal of the game won it at 11:16 of overtime on a power play. That highlighted the one statistic that proved to be Mercyhurst’s undoing: the Lakers ranked second in the country with 15.8 penalty minutes per game.

Of the other nine January leaders that didn’t win, six of them were No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament: Dartmouth, 2001; Minnesota, 2002; Harvard, 2008; Mercyhurst, 2010; Wisconsin, 2012; Minnesota, 2014. The last two in that list lost in the championship game. The other four were beaten in the semifinals by a squad that lost in the next round.

Harvard in 2008 and Mercyhurst in 2010 came out of rather weak conferences. No other team from those leagues reached the Frozen Four. The Crimson dominated their league, going a perfect 22-0-0, while Mercyhurst’s only CHA blemishes in a 14-1-1 campaign were both versus Niagara, a team that finished with a losing record. Both Harvard and Mercyhurst had one nonconference loss before the NCAA tournament. Harvard lost to New Hampshire, a Frozen Four team, while Mercyhurst split during the regular season with eventual national-champion UMD.

Top-ranked teams at the end of January hold their position well. Only Dartmouth in 2004 slid as low as the fourth spot heading into the NCAA tournament.

So which of the previous 15 teams ranked at the top after the year’s first month does BC most closely resemble? The obvious answer would be 2015’s Boston College. The key players are virtually the same, with the one big missing piece being Patty Kazmaier Finalist Emily Pfalzer on the blue line. Sophomore Megan Keller’s output has increased to provide what was lost offensively with Pfalzer. The addition of Makenna Newkirk up front has helped offset the graduation of Emily Field and Kate Leary. Goaltender Katie Burt’s sophomore numbers are an improvement over her rookie performance. To this point, scoring offense and scoring defense are both improved from the Eagles of a year ago, and this year’s club is second offensively and third in scoring defense.

Because the 2015 Eagles weren’t exactly a postseason juggernaut, lets aim higher in looking for a comparable comparison to this year’s BC.

The temptation would be to switch to 2013’s Gophers, the other team that entered February with a perfect mark. The biggest difference between that team and Boston College is that Minnesota was the defending champion. The same was true of the 2005 Gophers, making both Minnesota squads less of a fit with BC.

The other three top-ranked teams from January that went on to titles were all from Wisconsin: 2006, 2009, and 2011. None of those were defending championships, but the 2009 and 2011 units were a year removed from doing so. In Sara Bauer, Jessie Vetter, and Meghan Duggan, all three had a player who won the Patty Kazmaier that season. Of those teams, BC most closely resembles the 2011 team. Those Badgers had a young goaltender and a dominant top line that included Olympic veterans.

Once in that neighborhood, the 2012 Wisconsin team might be a closer fit. The Badgers were backstopped by Alex Rigsby in her sophomore season. The dynamic offense featured Hilary Knight, a goal scorer whose numbers and release are similar to Alex Carpenter. Brianna Decker is a reasonable facsimile for Haley Skarupa. Both teams include a variety of other weapons up front. The 2012 Badgers were also defending champions, but that intangible could be canceled by the Eagles possessing a better blue line.

In the end, that’s my estimate — the Eagles will wind up like Wisconsin of 2011. Or maybe 2012, I’m not sure. Yes, that’s a big difference, because one became the NCAA champ and the other landed a rung short. Which one will it be?

BC will not lose its NCAA quarterfinal. Most likely it draws the CHA champion, the third-best team from the ECAC, or the second team into the field from Hockey East, in decreasing order of likelihood. The Eagles will handle any of those on home ice.

Next up is a Frozen Four semifinal at New Hampshire. The Whittemore Center’s large ice sheet doesn’t favor teams like Quinnipiac or Clarkson in a match against speedy BC. With the likely tournament bracket, I think BC is on to the final. As long as Carpenter, Skarupa, and Burt are all healthy, the Eagles are still favorites to win, with only two potential pitfalls.

Wisconsin goaltender Ann-Renèe Desbiens could flat out steal the game. There are those who will tell you that she’s not as good as advertised, that her numbers are a product of the defense in front of her. It takes more than one facet of the game to have numbers as stellar as those of Desbiens, but having watched her, she is the biggest reason her goals allowed are so low while her save percentage is so high, and she’s stolen games from a powerful offense already this year. The Eagles have seen an All-American caliber goalie foil their Frozen Four hopes before, and they also have had bad Frozen Four experiences with the cardinal and white.

While it is far less likely, Minnesota could get a roster addition that would shift the balance of power at the top. Josephine Pucci wasn’t on the ice, or even the roster, when BC was shellacking Harvard by eight goals 14 months ago, but the Crimson were a different team once they faced the Eagles again. For the Gophers, it would be more like an urban legend, but hey, didn’t Blake Kessel play at New Hampshire?

Ferris State hopes it has put ‘consistently inconsistent’ trend in the past

Ferris State started a five-game unbeaten streak with a win over Connecticut in the Mariucci Classic third-place game on Jan. 2 (photo: Jim Rosvold).

Ferris State didn’t start 2016 the way coach Bob Daniels would have preferred.

Playing No. 7 Harvard in the Mariucci Classic on Jan. 1 in Minneapolis, the Bulldogs let the Crimson jump out to a 3-1 first-period lead. Daniels said it could have been worse.

“At one point in the first period they were outshooting us 17-3,” Daniels said. “We were only down 3-1 after the first period but it could have been 6-1.”

Harvard ended up winning 7-3, but Daniels said his team learned a valuable lesson that afternoon.

“They saw that if you’re not ready to play at any given time, things can go wrong in a hurry,” the Ferris State coach said. “That had been a problem for us [in the first half of the season]. From one period to the next, you never know quite what was going to come out of the locker room.”

The Bulldogs hadn’t exactly been playing poorly before the holiday break — they were a .500 team — but since the Harvard game something seems to have clicked.

Ferris State is unbeaten in its last five games, including two consecutive three-point WCHA series. And now the Bulldogs (at 11-9-6 overall and 9-7-4 in the league) are all of a sudden tied with Michigan Tech for third place in the conference standings.

That’s not exactly what most pundits would have expected from the Bulldogs after the departure of All-American goaltender CJ Motte.

But Ferris seems to have found an excellent replacement in freshman Darren Smith, who is the reigning WCHA rookie of the week and has a 2.11 GAA to go along with a .928 save percentage in 16 games played. He has started all five games of this unbeaten streak after splitting time early with senior Charles Williams.

“We really enjoy good goaltending,” Daniels said. “And Darren has looked really comfortable in the net. We’re fortunate that as a freshman, he has been able to step up and play like a veteran.”

The Bulldogs have also been able to score — junior forward Gerald Mayhew is tied for the WCHA’s scoring lead with 22 points (seven goals and a league-high 15 assists) while Corey Mackin’s 17 points (8-9–17) leads all league rookies.

Still, for a team that Daniels has described as “consistently inconsistent,” he’d like to see a little more. The Bulldogs are off this weekend before a trip to Fairbanks to play Alaska in the first week of February.

“I’m cautiously optimistic,” Daniels said. “I’ve seen some signs that we have a chance of being a pretty good team. But even in a modest five-game win streak that we’re on here, it can change on a dime. We can’t get too comfortable.”

Big matchup

Chris Nell and Bowling Green host Michigan Tech this weekend (photo: Omar Phillips).

In a series that could have a big say in who wins the MacNaughton Cup, No. 18 Bowling Green will host No. 17 Michigan Tech this weekend.

The series features the WCHA’s highest-scoring team, the Huskies (2.92 goals scored per game) against the league’s stingiest defense, the Falcons (1.85 goals allowed per game).

“[Michigan Tech] is good at every position and they are deep at every position,” Falcons coach Chris Bergeron said in a series preview on the team’s website. “And they are confident. Confidence is a difficult thing to teach. You have to earn that, and they’ve earned it.

“To make the step from contender to champion, we have to win. I hope guys are coming to Bowling Green to play in games like this and to be in races like this.”

The Falcons are 6-0-4 at home against league opponents, while the Huskies are a solid 6-2-1 on the road in league play and 9-3-3 overall away from Houghton. The two teams split a series in Houghton on Nov. 13-14.

Bowling Green is coming off a home sweep of Alaska-Anchorage in which it put up 12 goals (two 6-2 victories), the most in a weekend series by the Falcons since getting a dozen against Alaska on Jan. 7-8, 2005.

Michigan Tech, meanwhile, was idle last week after taking three of four points at home against first-place Minnesota State on Jan. 15-16.

Battle of Minnesota

Minnesota State and Bemidji State will step out of conference play this weekend to participate in the all-Minnesota North Star College Cup in St. Paul.

The Beavers are the defending tournament champion and will face No. 20 Minnesota on Saturday at the Xcel Energy Center in a game that follows the Mavericks taking on No. 3 St. Cloud State.

The two winners and two losers will meet on Sunday.

The third-year tournament involves all five of Minnesota’s Division I teams, with one team rotating out each year (Minnesota being the exception). Minnesota-Duluth is out this time. Bemidji State is 2-0 in the event after sitting out the tournament’s first season in 2014, while Minnesota State is 1-3.

“Since we’re all in different conferences right now, it kind of re-energizes those in-state rivalries,” Bemidji State coach Tom Serratore said.

He compared it to a regional tournament atmosphere.

“By us winning that championship last year, it was like winning a regional,” he said. “Just look at the teams that are in it. You’re playing against good teams at a tremendous venue. … It’s exciting to play against your in-state rivals.”

Hobey candidates

Fan voting has begun for the Hobey Baker Award, and nine players from six WCHA teams are included among the 66 nominated players.

The group includes:

• Alabama-Huntsville forward Max McHugh

• Alaska forward Tyler Morley

• Bowling Green goaltender Chris Nell

• Ferris State forwards Kyle Schempp and Gerald Mayhew

• Michigan Tech forward Alex Petan and goalie Jamie Phillips

• Northern Michigan forward Dominik Shine and goalie Atte Tolvanen

Ice chips

• Alabama-Huntsville had the week off after taking just one point from Ferris State in Big Rapids and now returns to action at Alaska-Anchorage. The Chargers are in last place in the WCHA with just nine points and are looking up at UAA and Alaska, who are tied for eighth at 14 points. A pair of wins for Huntsville couple pull it right back into the conversation for the playoffs.

• Alaska-Anchorage is back at home after going 1-3 on a Midwest road swing. The Seawolves, who host UAH, are looking to snap a six-game winless streak at Sullivan Arena, where they are 3-7-2 this season.

• Alaska got a much-needed week off after its own two-week road trip to the Lower 48 but will get right back on the road this weekend as it goes to Wisconsin for a nonconference series. After that, the Nanooks will play six of their final eight regular season games in Fairbanks.

• It may be just a .500 team, but Bemidji State keeps pucks out of the net as well as anybody in the country. The Beavers’ defensive unit is No. 10 nationally, allowing just 55 goals in 25 games (2.20 GAA) and their penalty kill is an efficient 90.2 percent (92-for-102). Part of that is due to the play of Michael Bitzer, who is 4-1-2 in his last seven games after going 2-9-2 to open the season. In the previous seven games, he has stopped 163 of 171 shots (.953) with a 1.11 GAA in more than 430 minutes.

• Lake Superior State was swept by Minnesota State, 8-0 and 5-1, last weekend. The Mavericks held sophomore newcomer and leading scorer J.T. Henke off the scoreboard for the second straight weekend. Henke has six goals and eight assists for 14 points in 25 games played this season and has not recorded a point in his last five games. Henke’s last goal came on Dec. 5 against Alaska.

• Minnesota State goaltender Cole Huggins scored two wins, including a shutout on Friday, in his first games since Nov. 13 when the Mavericks swept Lake State 8-0 and 5-1. The junior got the nod when freshman Jason Pawloski, who had started 13 straight games, went out with an injury in practice before the series.

• Michigan Tech is one of the best road teams in the WCHA. The Huskies, who are at Bowling Green this weekend, are 9-3-3 away from Houghton (and just 4-4-1 at home). They lead the WCHA in numerous categories when playing on the road or in neutral-site games, including goals per game (3.13), goal margin (plus-14), power-play efficiency (21.2 percentage), shots on goal per game (31.20) and shot on goal margin (plus-72). They are 5-0-1 over their last six conference road games and haven’t lost a conference game away from home since Oct. 23 (4-1 at Northern Michigan).

• Northern Michigan was off last weekend and returns to action this week with a nonconference series against Minnesota-Duluth in Marquette. The two teams were conference opponents from 1984 to 1996 and have met 72 times in their history. UMD has a slim 35-33-1 lead in the series, including a sweep on Feb. 6-7, 2015, in Duluth.

• This week’s WCHA players of the week are: Minnesota State sophomore forward C.J. Franklin (co-offensive), Bowling Green sophomore forward Brandon Hawkins (co-offensive), Minnesota State junior goaltender Cole Huggins (defensive) and Ferris State freshman goalie Darren Smith (rookie).

Seven weeks out, and it’s all rather straightforward

Jayson Moy theorizes that moving a Boston College-Yale first-round game from St. Paul to Worcester, and bringing Omaha and Notre Dame west, would help attendance (photo: Melissa Wade).

It’s time once again to do what we like to call Bracketology, college hockey style. It’s our weekly look at how I believe the NCAA tournament will wind up come selection time.

It’s a look into what are the possible thought processes behind selecting and seeding the NCAA tournament teams.

We’ll keep bringing you a new one every week until we make our final picks before the field is announced on March 20.

Those of you that are veterans of the college hockey scene know that it is all about the PairWise Rankings. This is USCHO’s numerical approach that simulates the way the NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey committee chooses the teams that make the NCAA tournament.

Since USCHO began the PairWise Rankings, we have correctly identified all of the teams that have been selected to the NCAA tournament.

I am the only prognosticator to have correctly predicted the exact brackets for the NCAA tournament in four of the last five years, meaning that I have predicted how the committee thought when putting together the brackets.

This is not a be-all, end-all analysis of the bracket. I am trying to give you, the reader, an idea of what the committee might be thinking and not exactly what they are thinking.

If you want to skip the inner workings and get to the results of the analysis, then click here.

Here are the facts:

• Sixteen teams are selected to participate in the national tournament.

• There are four regional sites (East — Albany, N.Y.; Northeast — Worcester, Mass.; Midwest — Cincinnati; West — St. Paul, Minn.).

• A host institution that is invited to the tournament plays in the regional for which it is the host and cannot be moved. There are four host institutions this year: Union in Albany, Holy Cross in Worcester, Miami in Cincinnati and Minnesota in St. Paul.

• Seedings will not be switched. To avoid undesirable first-round matchups, including intraconference games (see below), teams will be moved among regionals, not reseeded.

Here are the NCAA’s guidelines on the matter, from the 2016 pre-championship manual:

In setting up the tournament, the committee begins with a list of priorities to ensure a successful tournament on all fronts, including competitive equity, financial success and the likelihood of a playoff-type atmosphere at each regional site. For this model, the following is a basic set of priorities:

1. Once the six automatic qualifiers and 10 at-large teams are selected, the next step is to develop four groups from the committee’s rankings of 1-16. The top four teams are No. 1 seeds and will be placed in the bracket so that if all four teams advance to the Men’s Frozen Four, the No. 1 seed will play the No. 4 seed and the No. 2 seed will play the No. 3 seed in the semifinals. The next four are targeted as No. 2 seeds. The next four are No. 3 seeds and the last four are No. 4 seeds.

2. Step two is to place the home teams. Host institutions that qualify will be placed at home.

3. Step three is to fill in the bracket so that first-round conference matchups are avoided, unless it corrupts the integrity of the bracket. If five or more teams from one conference are selected to the championship, then the integrity of the bracket will be protected (i.e., maintaining the pairing process according to seed will take priority over avoidance of first-round conference matchups). To complete each regional, the committee assigns one team from each of the remaining seeded groups so there is a No. 1, No. 2, No. 3 and No. 4 seed at each regional site.

Given these facts, here is the top 16 of the current PairWise Rankings (PWR), and the conference leaders through all games of Jan. 19:

1 Quinnipiac
2 St. Cloud State
3 North Dakota
4 Providence
5 Harvard
6 Michigan
7 Boston College
8 Notre Dame
9 Omaha
10 Yale
11 Boston University
12 Massachusetts-Lowell
13 Denver
14 Cornell
15t Minnesota
15t Penn State
21t Minnesota State
23t Robert Morris

Current conference leaders based on winning percentage:

Atlantic Hockey: Robert Morris
Big Ten: Minnesota
ECAC Hockey: Quinnipiac
Hockey East: Notre Dame
NCHC: North Dakota
WCHA: Minnesota State

Notes

• Bracketology assumes that the season has ended and there are no more games to be played — i.e., the NCAA tournament starts tomorrow.

• Because there are an uneven amount of games played inside each conference, I will be using winning percentage, not points accumulated, to determine the current leader in each conference. This team is my assumed conference tournament champion after applying the tiebreakers.

Step one

From the committee’s report, choose the 16 teams in the tournament.

We break ties in the PWR by looking at the individual comparisons among the tied teams, and add in any current league leaders that are not currently in the top 16. The only teams that are not are Minnesota State and Robert Morris.

From there, we can start looking at the ties and bubbles in a more detailed fashion, but there are none among those in the field.

Therefore, the 16 teams in the tournament, in rank order, are:

1 Quinnipiac
2 St. Cloud State
3 North Dakota
4 Providence
5 Harvard
6 Michigan
7 Boston College
8 Notre Dame
9 Omaha
10 Yale
11 Boston University
12 Massachusetts-Lowell
13 Denver
14 Minnesota
15 Minnesota State
16 Robert Morris

Step two

Now it’s time to assign the seeds.

No. 1 seeds: Quinnipiac, St. Cloud State, North Dakota, Providence

No. 2 seeds: Harvard. Michigan, Boston College, Notre Dame

No. 3 seeds: Omaha, Yale, Boston University, Massachusetts-Lowell

No. 4 seeds: Denver, Minnesota, Minnesota State, Robert Morris

Step three

Place the No. 1 seeds in regionals.

No. 1 Quinnipiac is placed in the Northeast Regional in Worcester.
No. 2 St. Cloud State is placed in the West Regional in St. Paul.
No. 3 North Dakota is placed in the Midwest Regional in Cincinnati.
No. 4 Providence is placed in the East Regional in Albany.

Step four

Now we place the other 12 teams so as to avoid intra-conference matchups if possible.

Begin by filling in each bracket by banding groups. Remember that teams are not assigned to the regional closest to their campus sites by ranking order within the banding (unless you are a host school, in which case you must be assigned to your home regional).

If this is the case, as it was last year, then the committee should seed so that the quarterfinals are seeded such that the four regional championships would be played by No. 1 vs. No. 8, No. 2 vs. No. 7, No. 3 vs. No. 6 and No. 4 vs. No. 5.

So therefore:

No. 2 seeds

No. 8 Notre Dame is placed in No. 1 Quinnipiac’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 7 Boston College is placed in No. 2 St. Cloud State’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 6 Michigan is placed in No. 3 North Dakota’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 5 Harvard is placed in No. 4 Providence’s regional, the East Regional.

No. 3 seeds

Our bracketing system has one regional containing seeds 1, 8, 9, and 16; another with 2, 7, 10 and 15; another with 3, 6, 11 and 14; and another with 4, 5, 12 and 13.

No. 9 Omaha is placed in No. 8 Notre Dame’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 10 Yale is placed in No. 7 Boston College’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 11 Boston University is placed in No. 6 Michigan’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 12 Massachusetts-Lowell is placed in No. 5 Harvard’s regional, the East Regional.

No. 4 seeds

One more time, taking No. 16 vs. No. 1, No. 15 vs. No. 2, etc.

Since Minnesota is a host institution, we must place Minnesota in the West Regional.

No. 14 Minnesota is sent to No. 2 St. Cloud State’s regional, the West Regional.
No. 16 Robert Morris is sent to No. 1 Quinnipiac’s regional, the Northeast Regional.
No. 15 Minnesota State is sent to No. 3 North Dakota’s regional, the Midwest Regional.
No. 13 Denver is sent to No. 4 Providence’s regional, the East Regional.

The brackets as we have set them up:

East Regional (Albany):
13 Denver vs. 4 Providence
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 5 Harvard

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Robert Morris vs. 1 Quinnipiac
9 Omaha vs 8 Notre Dame

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
15 Minnesota State vs. 3 North Dakota
11 Boston University vs. 6 Michigan

West Regional (St. Paul):
14 Minnesota vs. 2 St. Cloud State
10 Yale vs. 7 Boston College

Our first concern is avoiding intraconference matchups. We have none this week.

We now head to our favorite topic — attendance.

Don’t kid yourselves, folks: Attendance is a huge part of where teams go.

How can we make attendance better?

I see at least one thing we can do. We swap the Yale-Boston College game and the Omaha-Notre Dame game to bring those teams closer to their regions.

East Regional (Albany):
13 Denver vs. 4 Providence
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 5 Harvard

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Robert Morris vs. 1 Quinnipiac
10 Yale vs. 7 Boston College

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
15 Minnesota State vs. 3 North Dakota
11 Boston University vs. 6 Michigan

West Regional (St. Paul):
14 Minnesota vs. 2 St. Cloud State
9 Omaha vs 8 Notre Dame

Is there anything else we can do? I would love to have both Michigan and Notre Dame in Cincinnati, but that can’t happen because they’re both No. 2 seeds.

So that’s about all we can do for this week.

See you here next week for the next Bracketology.

Here’s a summary of everything that we have covered.

This week’s brackets

East Regional (Albany):
13 Denver vs. 4 Providence
12 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 5 Harvard

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Robert Morris vs. 1 Quinnipiac
10 Yale vs. 7 Boston College

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
15 Minnesota State vs. 3 North Dakota
11 Boston University vs. 6 Michigan

West Regional (St. Paul):
14 Minnesota vs. 2 St. Cloud State
9 Omaha vs 8 Notre Dame

Conference breakdowns

Hockey East — 5
NCHC — 4
ECAC Hockey — 3
Big Ten — 2
WCHA — 1
Atlantic Hockey — 1

On the move

In: Denver, Minnesota

Out: Cornell, Penn State

Attendance woes?

Cincinnati is iffy.

Last week’s brackets

East Regional (Albany):
14 Penn State vs. 4 Providence
9 Boston College vs 8 Cornell

Northeast Regional (Worcester):
16 Holy Cross vs. 1 Quinnipiac
12 Boston University vs. 6 Harvard

Midwest Regional (Cincinnati):
13 Massachusetts-Lowell vs. 3 North Dakota
10 Notre Dame vs. 7 Michigan

West Regional (St. Paul):
15 Minnesota State vs. 2 St. Cloud State
11 Yale vs. 5 Omaha

Rensselaer adds longtime Houston Field House employee Quantock as operations manager for men’s, women’s teams

Rensselaer’s men’s and women’s programs have added Aaron Quantock to their staffs as the operations coordinator.

“We are thrilled to welcome Aaron to the RPI hockey family,” said RPI men’s coach Seth Appert in a news release. “I’ve worked with Aaron my entire time at RPI while he worked as our lead utility specialist at the Houston Field House. His work ethic, character and professionalism has always stood strong.”

Quantock will handle video coordination, including breaking down games, preparation and pre-scouting for upcoming opponents, team travel coordination and community relations. He will also serve as special events coordinator, including organizing alumni and community events.

A native of Rensselaer, N.Y., Quantock has been in his current position at the Houston Field House since 1998.

Marian’s Thorogood destroying any thoughts of a sophomore slump

Marian sophomore Derek Thorogood leads the Sabres in scoring with seven goals and 18 assists for 25 points (photo: Marian Athletics).

Derek Thorogood hasn’t had to worry about a sophomore slump.

Nineteen games into his second season at Marian, the talented sophomore forward already has 11 more points (25) than he did all of last year when he scored nine goals and dished out five assists.

His numbers are impressive. In addition to seven goals, he has rung up 18 assists, helping Marian win six consecutive games. Along the way, Thorogood has scored a point in 12 consecutive games.

But Thorogood won’t take all of the credit.

“My linemates (Hunter Stewart and Devin Stuermer) have made it easy for me to be successful,” Thorogood said. “We have great chemistry and our new coach (Erik Largen) has us playing in a way that has led to opportunities for me to make plays.”

Thorogood is native of Canada, growing up in Calgary, and he took three years off of school while playing junior hockey.

It took time to readjust to a life of balancing athletics with academics but Thorogood has figured it out.

“One of the biggest things was getting used to managing time again,” Thorogood said. “I also had to get used to the game being faster at this level. But everything has worked out well for me.”

He said one of the big keys to his adjustment to the game is that he is around players he is familiar with. He grew up with several of the players on the team and lives with them in college.

“I came in with five of the guys from Calgary and that made things a lot easier because I already knew people,” Thorogood said. “It’s been a great experience so far. I’m glad I have the opportunity to play college hockey.”

Thorogood has no doubt made the most of his opportunity, making significant strides since last season. He went into the week ranking ninth in the nation in assists per game (0.95).

“I’ve improved both offensively and on defense,” Thorogood said. “I think the fact that we play differently this year under a new coach has been a big part of why I’ve been so successful.”

Hard work has also made a difference.

“We do a lot of work on and off the ice and that puts me in a position to be prepared to play every weekend,” Thorogood said. “We’re ready for every challenge that comes our way, and I feel like that has been a big part of our success as a team.”

The Sabres, sitting at 11-5-3 overall and 9-4-1 in the conference, are riding a wave of momentum and playing with a great deal of confidence as they head down the final stretch of the regular season. They know they can play with the best in the country.

After all, they took one game from St. Norbert (4-2) at the start of the year and played Adrian close (4-4, 3-2) in a two-game series. St. Norbert and Adrian are currently the co-No. 1 teams in the USCHO.com Division III Men’s Poll.

“We just have to keep playing the way we have up to this point,” Thorogood said. “We were able to split with St. Norbert and we were right there to win against Adrian. We know we have a lot of potential and want to continue playing our best hockey as we get closer to the postseason.

Oles showing signs of improvement

St. Olaf went through a difficult stretch earlier this season, going winless in 10 consecutive games. The streak included eight losses in a row.

But the Oles have started to turn things around a bit. They played Gustavus Adolphus to a 3-3 tie in each of its two games against the Gusties over the weekend. They have lost only once in their last four games and sit at 3-11-5 overall and 1-5-4 in the MIAC.

Peter Lindblad has been a bright spot for St. Olaf despite the tough moments. He has tallied a team-best 11 goals and has also dished out eight assists.

Drew Otto is also playing well for the Oles, punching in eight goals to go along with six assists. Steven Sherman leads the team in assists with 11 and has also tallied three goals.

St. Olaf will have to be at its best to finish on a high note, though, as only two of its remaining six games are against an opponent with a losing record. The Oles play Bethel this weekend before taking on Concordia (Minn.) and St. Thomas in the final two weekends of the season.

Northland on a roll

Northland swept a weekend series against Aurora, beating the Spartans 4-0 and 4-3 to improve to 5-11-1 overall and 4-8 in the NCHA.

The Lumberjacks got two goals from Ben Owen in Saturday’s win, the final one serving as the game winner. Owen has played in 11 games this year and has racked up two goals and three assists.

Lucas Benedet leads the team in goals scored with six and he has also dished out six assists. The Lumberjacks have tallied 39 goals in all.

AJ Smith is only a freshman, but has five wins to his credit.

Northland has the potential to close the season riding a wave of momentum. After the Lumberjacks play at Finlandia Friday, the final seven games will be played at home.

No matter how the rest of the year plays out, the Lumberjacks have no doubt turned things around. They opened the year on a five-game losing streak and lost seven of their first eight overall.But they have played better as of late and already have two more wins than they did all of last season.

Falcons eager to bounce back

Wisconsin-River Falls saw its 11-game unbeaten streak come to an end Saturday in a 4-3 loss to Wisconsin-Stevens Point in a WIAC showdown.

But the Falcons are still in first place in the conference, sitting atop the standings with a 3-1 record. They are 12-5-3 overall.

River Falls plays its final nonconference game of the year Thursday as it takes on Bethel before closing the regular season with two games against Wisconsin-Stout and two against Wisconsin-Superior.

The loss to Stevens Point marked only the second time in the last 12 games that the Falcons have allowed more than two goals in a game. In fact, it’s only the fourth time it has happened all year.

Goaltender Tanner Milliron deserves a lot of credit for that success on defense. He has won 11 games this year and has two shutouts to his credit. Milliron owns a 1.76 GAA with a .928 save percentage and three shutouts.

The Falcons have given up only 34 goals all year while scoring 57. Kyle Gattelaro leads the way with seven goals. He has also dished out seven assists.

Best of the West

The top spot in the latest USCHO.com poll is shared by Adrian and St. Norbert. The co-No. 1 teams in the nation split an NCHA series last weekend. Stevens Point checks in at No. 5 this week while Wisconsin-Eau Claire is also in the top 10 as it’s ninth this week. River Falls is 12th and the Milwaukee School of Engineering and St. Scholastica are 14th and 15th, respectively.

DeGregorio weighs in on Atlantic Hockey’s future growth, need for nonconference success

Atlantic Hockey commissioner Bob DeGregorio says the league is “always looking beyond the possibilities currently in front of us.” (photo: Omar Phillips).

As the college hockey regular season approaches its final month, I sat down with Atlantic Hockey commissioner Bob DeGregorio to talk about a wide range of topics impacting his conference and its 11 member institutions.

In a sort of “State of the League,” he addressed a number of different topics, ranging from on-ice results to off-ice possibilities.

The rise of competitiveness

In taking stock of the league’s 11 teams, DeGregorio looked at how all of the teams are simply getting better.

“Robert Morris might have the best team in the league this year,” he said, “but then they play Mercyhurst, who has a freshman goalie [Adam Carlson] stand on his head for 50 saves and earn them a tie. [Shane] Conacher from Canisius might be the league’s best player. Army is getting better and better. Air Force is young and becoming very good.”

Despite a need for more nonconference victories, the level of competitiveness is growing within the AHC. DeGregorio pointed out how Atlantic Hockey teams are scoring more marquee victories — Robert Morris defeated nationally ranked Penn State and UMass-Lowell to win the Three Rivers Classic; Army defeated nationally ranked Merrimack while also beating Connecticut; Bentley swept Northeastern; Mercyhurst split with Colgate and defeated Ohio State.

“I look at next year, and I see some really great, great nonleague games that are going to be great opportunities for us,” he said. “We just need to tip the scale with more consistency.”

One reason for the league’s success is an elevation of its scholarship limit. Although the NCAA allows for a maximum monetary value of 18 scholarships, Atlantic Hockey allowed only 12 until last year. Over the past two years, they’ve phased in two more scholarships, bringing the league limit up to 14.

“The increase in scholarships allowed teams to offer athletes more money, which is helping them become much more competitive in recruiting,” said DeGregorio, who anticipates the topic will be reviewed once again at the league’s meetings this spring.

The need for nonconference wins

Since Niagara earned the only at-large bid in AHC history as the third seeded team in the 2013 West Regional, there’s been a special interest in seeing it happen again. Fans, coaches, players and league officials alike would love to see it become a trend.

But even with strides forward, league teams aren’t winning consistently enough to mathematically qualify. Despite winning the Three Rivers Classic, Robert Morris lost to Dartmouth and Union. After watching Mercyhurst split with Colgate, St. Lawrence and Clarkson both swept Rochester Institute of Technology and Niagara. There are wins and ties against Brown, Princeton, Arizona State and Bowling Green, but there’s losses to the Alaska schools, Boston College, Boston University, New Hampshire and Penn State. AHC teams aren’t exclusively at the bottom of the PairWise Rankings, but they’re also not inside the bubble either.

“We are earning great opportunities,” he said, “but it’s for naught because we’re also losing games. So even though we’re getting more competitive, we’re not winning enough games [to get a second team into the NCAA tournament]. We have to win some of those games.”

Balance through growth

With Arizona State entering Division I this season as the 60th team, questions have swirled about another possible round of realignment. Depending on which, if any, teams move, DeGregorio indicated that Atlantic Hockey has to be ready for whatever the future holds.

“We’re always looking beyond the possibilities currently in front of us,” he said, “because we know there is no real quiet niche of 10 or 12 teams anymore in college hockey. We need to be willing to move with the growth of the game because as the game grows, more teams will need places to go.”

That brings up the obvious question of expansion. With 11 teams, going to an even number would make scheduling balanced and protect rivalries.

“We certainly don’t want to lose anyone,” he said, “and we’ve talked to different schools to gauge their interest. We have let some schools know that we’re willing to welcome them, but it’s all their call. Adding a sport is a significant investment. So our focus right now has to be, as a league, to continue getting more competitive. We have to win more games to create success to become more attractive to any teams looking to add the sport.”

Given the league’s east/west configuration, DeGregorio acknowledged the difficulties in scheduling and said that the league is looking to protect rivalries. He acknowledged several solid rivalries developing inside the league’s ranks, including Air Force-Army, Canisius-Niagara, Bentley-RIT and others.

“No matter what, protecting rivalries is a priority to us moving forward,” he said.

Not feeling “Blue” at all

Blue Cross Arena will host the Atlantic Hockey championship through 2017 (photo: Dylan Heuer).

Before 2007, Atlantic Hockey played its championship game at campus sites. Beginning with that ’07 game, however, the league’s crowned its champion at Blue Cross Arena in Rochester, N.Y.

Atlantic Hockey is signed to Blue Cross Arena through 2017, a relationship the commissioner hopes can continue to blossom.

“We’ve made some inroads in the community and with sponsorship opportunities,” he said, “so it’s a relationship that we don’t want to see end anytime soon.”

Players of the week

Atlantic Hockey announced its Travel Team USA Weekly Honors this week, with the following picking up victories:

Player of the week — Bentley’s Andrew Gladiuk: Gladiuk netted a natural hat trick in Bentley’s five-goal third period last Friday. In helping the Falcons to a 6-1 victory at home, he scored three straight times in less than five minutes, while adding two assists for five points. If that wasn’t enough to warrant honors, Gladiuk scored a goal and an assist in Saturday’s 5-5 tie, giving him seven points on the weekend alone.

Defensive player of the week — Canisius’ Jack Stander: Plus/minus might be one of my favorite stats in hockey, so it’s worth leading off Stander’s line with a plus-3 weekend against Holy Cross. He scored his first goal of the season on Saturday, adding an assist on the eventual game-winner in a 2-1 victory.

Goalie of the week — Canisius’ Simon Hofley: Hofley shut down one of the league’s best offenses, making 91 saves on 94 shots in the process. He became the first Golden Griffins player to post back-to-back 40-plus-save performances since Tony Capobianco four years ago. That type of performance took the honors away from Mercyhurst’s Adam Carlson, who made 50 saves in a 2-2 tie against Robert Morris.

Rookie of the week — RIT’s Gabe Valenzuela: Valenzuela scored three goals and was a plus-2 on the weekend in the Tigers’ weekend sweep of Sacred Heart. After scoring a goal in a 3-1 win on Friday, he scored twice in a 5-3 victory on Sunday, a game postponed from Saturday thanks to Winter Storm Jonas.

Congratulations to Mercyhurst

In case you missed it this week, Mercyhurst announced that an anonymous donor contribution $250,000 for renovations and improvements to its hockey programs. Mercyhurst Ice Center, already undergoing a redesign of its lobby, will have further renovations done to locker rooms and arena seating.

As someone who follows and covers Atlantic Hockey, here’s a hearty congratulations to men’s coach Rick Gotkin, women’s coach Michael Sisti and all of the Lakers family on a landmark day for their program.

Hamilton’s success built on cumulative experience

Goaltender Evan Buitenhuis is ranked second nationally in goals-against average and first in save percentage in backstopping Hamilton to an 11-3-2 record this season (photo: Hamilton Athletics).

Following weekend wins over Amherst by a 2-0 score and Daniel Webster by a 6-2 score, Hamilton is truly enjoying an 11-game unbeaten streak that has pushed the Continentals to 11-3-2 on the season and battling for the top spot in the NESCAC.

What do they attribute their recent run of success to?

It’s accumulated experience that is paying dividends for an upper classman laden roster.

“No doubt, experience is a big factor for us,” Hamilton coach Rob Haberbusch noted. “The bulk of our team is made up by nine juniors and three seniors who lead the way for us. The team is playing great and having fun right now. They have really grown up since the days of getting our butts kicked when they were freshmen and sophomores. Now that we are enjoying some success, they want more – the more success we have, the hungrier this team gets.”

While the coach gives credit to his upperclassmen for leading the way, the Continentals have been getting contributions from everyone up and down the roster. Junior Robbie Murden leads the team in scoring with 13 goals and 23 points, but the balance has been there for Hamilton along with new experiences driving the next leap from talented underclassmen who are contributing in a big way.

“We are a deep team,” stated Haberbusch. “I think our all-freshman line of [Jason] Brochu, [Jon] Stickel and [Rory] Gagnon has nine goals with all of them contributing. I don’t think you will find many first-year lines contributing as much and really adding to the depth and balance.”

Two sophomores having breakout seasons are also key contributors to the current run. Goaltender Evan Buitenhuis and forward Neil Conway have been key factors in Hamilton’s success. Buitenhuis is among the leaders nationally in both goals-against average (1.32) and save percentage (.959), while Conway is second on the team in scoring (6-13-19) as a key element in the first line productivity with linemates Murden and Brandon Willett.

Robbie Murden leads Hamilton and the NESCAC in scoring as the Continentals battle for the top spot in league play (photo: Hamilton Athletics).

“I don’t know if you would call it a breakout season for Evan,” said Haberbusch. “He really had an injury-riddled season as a freshman, but what we saw in the five games he played was right in line with how he has played all year for us. We just needed him to get and stay healthy. He has told other media that his success comes from ‘a culture of defensive responsibility.’ I like that a lot and think Evan is right on with the team’s commitment to solid team defense, but he has been there to shut teams down and pick us up with the big save when we need it.”

Conway has built on his slow start as a freshman to be one of the impact playmakers on the Continentals’ offense.

“Neil got off to a slow start as a freshman,” Haberbusch said. “The final third of the season, he got it going. He didn’t think he was doing much, but the coaches saw the improvement so much he moved onto the power play unit late in the season. During the summer, he made a big commitment to getting bigger and faster. He worked out hard and added 15 pounds of muscle in the offseason without sacrificing any of his speed and agility. He is stronger on the puck now and moved to a new plateau playing with the first line.”

While the team and its coach aren’t shying away from any conversation around the current streak, they also know that the hard work is upon them with the second half of the conference schedule kicking into high gear over the remaining weekends.

So how does a team on a roll keep it fresh and morale high coming down the home stretch?

It’s all about doing a little less to achieve a little more.

“Now that classes are back in session, we had one practice day off per week,” said Haberbusch. “The strategy to keep everybody’s energy level up in these last few weeks is to add one more day off per week and shorten the remaining practices to keep everybody focused and less fatigued. The schedule really comes at you quickly after the break and we have high expectations from this group. We always target being in the top four for a home playoff berth, but I think this team wants and expects more.

“There is still a lot of work to be done. We expect the second half to be harder than the first and are preparing with a one-game focus. The next game is the most important one.”

The next one is in fact a matchup with the defending national champs from Trinity on the road this Saturday night in Connecticut. Back in early December, the Continentals lost a heartbreaker at home in overtime by a 3-2 score after surrendering the tying goal in the final two minutes of regulation play. That was the last time they lost a hockey game this season.

“We are playing for ourselves and don’t need any other motivation like making it about being a revenge game,” noted Haberbusch. “We would like to keep the streak and the fun going – that is where our experience can make it count.”

As health has returned, so have wins for Clarkson

James de Haas and Clarkson are 4-1-1 in their last six games (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

A perfect storm of injuries and a string of tough road games had Clarkson stuck in a five-game losing streak at the start of January.

But as the Golden Knights have gotten healthy, the wins have started coming. Clarkson is 4-1-1 since Jan. 2, including road wins at Bowling Green and Harvard.

With players like forward Jordan Boucher, Dylan Gareau and defenseman Terrance Amorosa back in the lineup, the Golden Knights have been able to play the up-tempo and physical game that coach Casey Jones prefers.

“Our defensive corps are very capable guys for us,” Jones said. “Right now they are moving pucks well, allowing us to play fast. They’re getting pucks up to the forwards, and that affords us an opportunity to play the way we want to play.”

Three of Clarkson’s regular defensemen are NHL draft picks, as Amorosa (Philadelphia), Kelly Summers (Ottawa), and James de Haas (Detroit) all have their rights owned by NHL teams, while seniors Paul Geiger and Kevin Tansey have plenty of experience.

The Golden Knights are a team that doesn’t rely on one or two players to score, meaning that missing several players from the lineup takes away from how they want to play.

“We generally put four lines out there,” Jones said. “When we do that, we limit other teams’ scoring chances and play with good pace and instincts. That’s our recipe for success, and I thought we did a good job of that last weekend.”

Clarkson tied Yale last Friday and then shut out Brown on Saturday.

It’s also helped that goalie Greg Lewis has become a stabilizing presence in net for the Golden Knights. The senior has started six games in a row, and has a .918 save percentage this season for a team that has an overall mark of .897.

“He’s in his senior year and he’s played a lot over his career,” Jones said of Lewis. “It took him a little bit to get where he needed to be, but he’s competed for playing time and has taken advantage of it.”

Clarkson is healthy at the right time, as two players have left the program in the last month. Sophomore forward Janick Asselin signed a contract with the Norfolk Admirals in the ECHL, while junior defenseman Bryan Sinz transferred to Division III Wisconsin-Eau Claire.

“For us, it’s an opportunity for other guys [to step up],” Jones said, adding that sophomore forward Ben Dalpe is one of the players who has taken advantage of his added playing time. Dalpe’s .593 faceoff winning percentage leads the team and is 19th in Division I.

Not only are the Golden Knights healthy, but they will play eight of their final 12 games at home. Clarkson is 8-1-2 at Cheel Arena this season.

“If we take care of things in our own building, it affords us the opportunity of getting where we want to get,” Jones said.

Brown looking for more scoring depth

Brown is looking for more secondary scoring from players like Tyler Bird (photo: Shelley M. Szwast).

While they might not get the attention they deserve, Brown’s top line of Tommy Marchin, Mark Naclerio and Nick Lappin is arguably one of the best in ECAC Hockey.

The trio has combined for 61 points in 57 games, led by Lappin, who has 11 goals and 14 assists and is 13th in the country in points per game. Marchin is sixth nationally among freshmen in points per game. Both Lappin and Naclerio, who is an excellent faceoff man, play on the penalty kill as well.

Despite that line combining for 26 of Brown’s 46 goals, coach Brendan Whittet has no plans to break the trio up.

“They’ve been so dominant it doesn’t make much sense to screw around with that a line that has been able to put up the point totals that they have this year,” he said. “It’s hard to mess with something that you know works to put something together that may work and kind of spread the wealth a little.”

Whittet has tried to mix up the other three lines, although his options are limited given that the Bears are down to 12 healthy forwards for the remainder of the season.

Sophomores Tyler Bird, Max Willman and Sam Lafferty are all NHL draft picks, and along with classmate Charlie Corcoran, they have the potential to give Brown some scoring depth behind its top line. Freshman Max Gottlieb has 15 points in 19 games, a pace that is ninth among Division I defensemen.

“Guys are definitely making strides,” Whittet said, “and that’s good to see because we have to have some secondary scoring.”

Two weekends ago, the Bears were able to match Yale’s speed in a 3-2 loss at Ingalls Rink. Brown outplayed the Bulldogs for stretches, but bad decisions with the puck led to some costly turnovers.

Rensselaer on the rise

RPI has one loss in its last 10 games, an impressive stretch that has helped the Engineers post the second-best winning percentage in league play behind Quinnipiac. Second-place Harvard is a point ahead of RPI, but the Crimson have played an extra ECAC game.

The Engineers beat Union 5-2 last Saturday in a nonconference game to win the Mayor’s Cup. The win gave RPI a sweep of the regular season series with the Dutchmen and evened the Mayor’s Cup series at two.

Last Thursday, RPI came within 10 seconds of handing Quinnipiac its first conference loss of the season, but Sam Anas’ late goal helped the Bobcats rally for a 2-2 tie.

The Bobcats attempted 102 shots in the game, with 29 of those getting blocked by the Engineers. Those that got through were saved by Jason Kasdorf, whose .938 save percentage is tied for third in the nation.

“Yes, you’re praised when you do block shots but at the halfway point of the season it’s become the other way,” RPI coach Seth Appert said. “The guys who don’t block shots, it’s like ‘come on, everyone else is doing it.’ That’s become the expectation inside the locker room.”

On the season, the Engineers are fourth in the nation in blocked shots, while senior captain and defenseman Chris Bradley ranks third with 66 in 26 games.

“We’ve got good on sticks in front of the net — that’s the staple of our team,” Bradley said. “The net front is huge on both ends of the ice. That’s were the most important battles are.”

RPI has been strong in that aspect despite numerous injuries. Kasdorf and forward Mark Miller missed time earlier this season, while freshman Evan Tironese had seven points in six games before getting knocked out for the season. The Engineers are without defenseman Parker Reno and leading scorer Riley Bourbonnais.

Freshmen Meirs Moore and Tommy Grant have taken many of the minutes left open by Reno’s absence.

“We’ve had so many injuries this year, that doesn’t even faze our guys,” Appert said. “We don’t even address it, it’s just the next man up. It’s not that we need Tommy and some of these other guys to replace Parker’s style of play, they just have to eat his minutes in their own way.”

Around the league

• Union forward Mike Vecchione might be off his 50-point pace from a year ago, but the junior is having a terrific year in the faceoff circle. His .627 faceoff winning percentage is sixth in the country. Other league players among the national leaders in faceoffs include Cornell’s John Knisley (ninth), Dartmouth’s Troy Crema (11th) and Union’s Spencer Foo (16th).

• Harvard’s Kyle Criscuolo, (player) and Michael Floodstrand (rookie) joined Dartmouth’s Charles Grant (goalie) as the league’s weekly award winners. Criscuolo had two game-winning goals in a four-point weekend for the Crimson, including his 100th career point Friday, while Floodstrand had the first multi-point game of his career Saturday with a goal and an assist at Cornell. The win was Harvard’s first at Lynah Rink since the 2012-13 season. Grant had a .958 save percentage on the weekend, including the second shutout of his career at Lynah Rink. The senior ends his regular season career at Lynah with a 3-0-1 mark against the Big Red.

• Harvard hosted a skating event on Monday with One Summit, an organization that helps children with cancer build courage and confidence. Members of the Crimson skated with children fighting cancer, and each child received a Harvard hockey jersey.

• Princeton returned to action for the first time since Jan. 8 on Tuesday, beating American International 1-0. Colton Phinney had 23 saves in the win.

Wednesday Women: The haves and the in-betweens

 

Jonna Curtis of New Hampshire (Gregory Greene)
Jonna Curtis leads New Hampshire  in scoring. (Gregory Greene)

Candace: The results from the weekend are strange to me in several ways Arlan. In the WCHA, 23 of 24 points went to the favorite, with Minnesota State’s tie with Ohio State Friday being the only point garnered by a lower seed. Granted, North Dakota made life difficult for Wisconsin, but ultimately couldn’t get a win or tie to match the success it had against the Badgers in December. Bemidji State’s sweep of Minnesota-Duluth was impressive to me, and lifted the Beavers back ahead of the Fighting Hawks in the WCHA standings. That could flip again this weekend when Bemidji faces Minnesota and North Dakota faces Minnesota State, and then possibly flip back the following weekend when North Dakota faces Minnesota and Bemidji State faces St. Cloud State. Those two are going to be battling for the 3-4 spots down to the final weekend.

Hockey East also pretty much went to script, with the team with the better record winning every game in the conference over the weekend. In the ECAC, a couple of ties Friday between Clarkson and Cornell and St. Lawrence and Colgate were the only thing preventing the ECAC going according to plan, although I guess if you want to be truly accurate the tie between Brown and Union Saturday also fits that mold.

And then there’s the CHA. I just don’t know what to make of that conference. Lindenwood managed a split with Mercyhurst, Robert Morris, with the best overall record of any team in the conference, lost and tied Penn State, and RIT, which has come out of nowhere to win the CHA tournament the last two years, beat Syracuse in overtime. I wouldn’t want to bet on any CHA game right now. I’ll bet you are glad that you aren’t trying to pick those games anymore.

What do you make of the CHA right now?

Arlan: I think the story in the CHA is much as it has been for the last season and a half. There isn’t a lot of firepower in the league. RMU’s Brittany Howard, with 31 points, is the only conference member with more than 25 points and the only one averaging more than a point a game. The Colonials have the 10th-best scoring offense in the country. Syracuse and Mercyhurst are next at 13th and 15th, and the other three are near the bottom. So the league doesn’t see that many goals scored. This weekend, the teams collectively averaged just a goal and a half, and that was with the benefit of three overtime games. Nobody scored more than three goals in a game this weekend, and nobody did so the previous week either.

Thus, the games are always close. The underdog can stay in the game most of the time. Penn State and Lindenwood have had strong goaltending all season. The third team in the bottom half of standings, RIT, recently got senior Jetta Rackleff back from injury, and she seems to have made a difference, coming up with some big performances and holding the Tigers in games. In the four games over the weekend where the lower-ranked team got points, its goaltender finished with 33, 35, 40, and 41 saves.

Home ice seems to matter in the CHA as well. Two of the underdogs were playing series at home, and RIT and Syracuse played a home-and-home series with the host coming out on top. The miles involved can be considerable for some of the trips, so travel can present an obstacle for the road teams.

Over the long run, Mercyhurst is the best team, and that has played out year after year in the conference standings, but over 60 minutes, rather than 20 games, the Lakers’ advantage isn’t what it once was, so the other CHA teams subscribe to the “on any given day” philosophy, no matter who they’re playing.

We tend to see something similar in Hockey East, but only in games involving the bottom six teams, and while the results in the CHA tend to fluctuate rather quickly, some of the Hockey East teams can get cold and struggle for a month or more.

One team that isn’t struggling these days is Northeastern. The Huskies made it 11 straight wins over the weekend, equaling the program’s longest streak since back in 1991. Do you think Northeastern can keep it going until it potentially runs into Boston College in the Beanpot final?

Candace: I’d say it’s likely. Though New Hampshire has moved into fourth place, the Wildcats don’t possess enough firepower or defense to slow Northeastern for long. Boston University’s 6-1 loss to Quinnipiac shows to me that the Terriers have just not figured out how to beat top teams in the post Marie-Philip Poulin era. After the first Beanpot game against the Terriers, the Huskies get Providence, another one of those teams that shows it can beat the ones near it in the standings, but won’t come close to the top squads. Northeastern beat the Friars 5-1 two weeks ago. That takes Northeastern right into the Beanpot championship game against either BC or Harvard. Northeastern won’t get a break either, because three days later the Huskies travel to Chestnut Hill to play the Eagles in their final Hockey East matchup of the season before closing with a home-and-home with BU.

Kendall Coyne continues with the hot hand; she leads the nation in scoring, two points ahead of BC star Alex Carpenter. A rarity happened on Friday, as Elaine Chuli and Connecticut held Coyne off the score sheet. It didn’t matter, as Northeastern got goals from four others, including Coyne’s linemate, Denisa Krížová, who is continuing to have a strong year. Coyne was back at it Saturday with four points on two goals and two assists. Brittany Bugalski is also playing well in net for the Huskies, sporting a 1.72 goals-against and a .930 save percentage. Regardless, I have trouble seeing anybody but a top team like BC, Wisconsin, or Minnesota slowing Northeastern down.

Let’s circle back out west. We had talked about Minnesota-Duluth getting better over the course of the season, but Bemidji State swept them again. What does that tell you about the state of the Bulldogs and Beavers, respectively?

Arlan: One of my questions for the Bulldogs is what is the goaltending situation these days. When I watched them, freshman Maddie Rooney was playing great. She got lit up in her start in Madison to begin January, and now looks to be part of some sort of goaltender rotation that includes two seniors, three-year starter Kayla Black and little-used Karissa Grapp. During Jessie Vetter’s first season for Wisconsin, she was part of a three-goaltender rotation right up until the NCAA tournament started and that turned out okay, but it’s certainly not the norm. Maura Crowell is likely trying to give each one a chance and hoping that one plays so well that it forces her to make her the starter, but thus far in 2016, they’ve all had their moments, but nothing that has added up to a UMD win.

The Bulldogs need the goaltending to be top-notch, because they aren’t that deep up front and they’re young on the blue line. The offense is often limited to what the top line can provide, and with youth on the back end comes the occasional breakdown. The last six games were a brutal stretch against ranked opponents, and now the schedule brings the bottom two teams in the standings, so that provides a different sort of a measuring stick.

Meanwhile, Bemidji State has three more wins than it did through the same number of games last season, but the Beavers’ season lacks a bit of the wow factor. They haven’t beaten Wisconsin or Minnesota, and they had knocked off both of those squads by this point a year ago. They’ve certainly been more consistent; the Beavers have eliminated the bad losses to teams below them.

I’d say that the big advantages that Bemidji State has over UMD is that the Beavers have a better idea of what they need to do to win, the coach and players are farther along in adjusting to each other, and BSU has more players who can contribute in some way on a nightly basis. Bemidji State may not have a top line as dangerous as that of UMD, but BSU has a better Plan B and is more comfortable winning a 1-0 game if need be. Once graduation knocks some holes in the Beavers’ roster, the roles may be reversed next season.

Bemidji State gets one more shot to knock off a top-three team this weekend when it hosts Minnesota. North Dakota has done better in that regard thus far this season, and while it didn’t necessarily almost defeat Wisconsin, it certainly gave the Badgers a battle all weekend. Saturday’s game basically came down to the Badgers being the team that benefited from a kind bounce, and Wisconsin needed a power-play goal in the last couple of minutes to come out on top on Sunday.

Over the course of the year, I’ve tried to theorize a few times on why the Fighting Hawks can look comparable to the power teams at times and then vulnerable against seemingly lesser opponents at others. I’m not sure I’ve succeeded, so how do you explain a team that can stay right there with some of the best teams in country over the course of a weekend stumbling against teams like Ohio State and Syracuse? Is it a case of UND getting so high on certain weeks that it suffers a letdown on others, or is there some other element of its play that stands out to you?

Candace: I think there are actually a few things going on that contribute to North Dakota’s mercurial results. Yes, I think the Fighting Hawks really get up to play their two WCHA rivals, Minnesota and Wisconsin, and are completely focused and basically working at their limit for 60 minutes in those games.

However, it isn’t just that. For all of North Dakota’s success, the Fighting Hawks offense is in that category you alluded to with the CHA and that conference’s struggles. North Dakota is ranked only 20th nationally out of 36 teams for offense, scoring just 2.21 goals a game. The defense is much better, giving up only 1.79 goals per game, but that isn’t a huge margin, just half a goal. For the big two in the WCHA, Minnesota’s goal differential is 4.08 goals more than it gives up, and Wisconsin’s is 3.42 goals per game. When your margin is as razor-thin as North Dakota’s, there isn’t a lot of room for error.

Aside from teams like BC, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Northeastern, a lot of teams really struggle to score. It’s not rocket science that the teams that have the best margin between goals scored and goals allowed are those that are in the top 10 in the rankings, such as Clarkson, Quinnipiac, and Princeton, which are all over a 1.5 goal differential.

North Dakota has some scorers, but Amy Menke is the only one averaging over a point a game, and that is just barely, at 1.08 points per game. I think players like Becca Kohler, Meghan Dufault, and Tanja Eisenschmid are slightly under-producing in their senior years. Kohler is right about where she was as a junior, but I think North Dakota needs more from her. Dufault is just under a goal per game, but again, is barely above her junior year production. Eisenschmid is a defenseman, so her contributions are more important in North Dakota’s end, but her scoring is down from both her sophomore and junior year.

Without players that can really put the puck home, North Dakota has to focus on defense, and there are a lot of teams that are in the same boat, because they too don’t score as much as they need to. When you get into defensive battles, one bounce of the puck can be enough to decide the game, so I think North Dakota is always going to be vulnerable there.

I mentioned Clarkson before, and the Golden Knights can score, but they have struggled at times. Their 2-2 tie with Cornell Friday has to be looked at as a disappointment, a chance that slipped away to do more to secure second place in the ECAC, or even gain ground on league-leading Quinnipiac. The Golden Knights face St. Lawrence tomorrow, a must-win game in what is always a big rivalry. As North Dakota has had puzzling results, so at times has Clarkson. What is your take on the Golden Knights?

Arlan: Clarkson is similar in some ways to Bemidji State in that it is having a better season than it did a year ago, but for some reason, it doesn’t always feel like it. Maybe both are victims of our expectations. We expected the Golden Knights to take a step forward, and overall, they have. However, in the ECAC, they’re a point behind their pace from a year ago, a season in which they finished strongly, winning seven of their final eight ECAC games.

While they shared the season title with Harvard last year, they could run the table and still not catch Quinnipiac if they don’t get some help. The Bobcats are two games ahead, with each team having eight games left. On paper, Clarkson has the easier slate remaining, with five home games, including very winnable contests against Union, Brown, Yale, and Rensselaer, but that didn’t matter when it lost to RPI in the first half. The other two weekends figure to be key, starting this week with a home-and-home series with rival St. Lawrence. In two weeks, the Golden Knights have a tough road trip to visit Princeton and Quinnipiac.

Clarkson’s offensive production is up by over a half a goal from what it was last season, but the production in ECAC action has increased by only about 0.14 goals per game, and that has been canceled out by an equivalent scoring increase for ECAC opponents. I’m not sure if the slight degradation defensively is from being younger on the blue line, or if Shea Tiley just hasn’t been quite as steady this year. As a sophomore, she may be dealing with a bit higher expectations as well. In the games that I’ve seen, there have been goals allowed that have been a little surprising, but I’ve also seen a couple of unlucky bounces.

In any case, a great season is still a possibility for the Golden Knights. It all comes down to how they develop over the final couple of months.

Meanwhile, I’d almost forgotten that Princeton existed. The Tigers had 16 days between their defeat of RPI and Monday’s 4-0 handling of Connecticut. That made it 11 straight wins for Jeff Kampersal’s squad, including the last three on the road. Princeton has to retain that road magic, because it still needs to travel to Dartmouth, Harvard, Colgate, and Cornell before it gets to entertain at Hobey Baker Rink again.

We haven’t focused that much on Princeton, but one key to its gains this year is that its overall scoring average is up about 0.8 goals a game. One factor is a player I don’t remember us discussing previously, freshman Karlie Lund, who leads the team in assists with 16 and points with 27. Defenseman Kelsey Koelzer is the only player on the roster within 10 points of her. She has provided a similar boost to that of Melissa Samoskevich at Quinnipiac, and in points per game, she’s exceeded the impact of the Bobcats’ rookie. Lund has given another element to the Tigers, who didn’t have anyone average a point per game last year.

I think we’ve half expected Princeton to fade down the stretch. Is it possible that the Tigers aren’t going away?

Candace: It’s certainly looking that way to me. The win Monday against Connecticut is impressive to me because it came on the road. Yes, Chuli wasn’t in net, but Annie Belanger is a capable backup, posting pretty solid numbers, including a .906 save percentage. No, they aren’t light-the-world-on-fire numbers, but as a backup, I think sometimes it’s hard to get into a groove. Belanger has actually played 11 games so far, somewhat surprising given that Chuli is a senior. I wonder if coach Chris MacKenzie is hoping to keep Chuli fresh for a possible playoff run in the Hockey East tournament?

Anyway, back to the Tigers. Their offense has certainly caught fire of late. Granted, some of the teams aren’t defensive powerhouses, but during their 11-game win streak, the Tigers have been held to under three goals only once, by Harvard, and that still wasn’t enough for the Tigers to lose, as they came away with an OT win. You mentioned Lund and Koelzer, but even though those two are setting the pace, Princeton is still getting decent production from a few others. Molly Contini has 17 points and is averaging .810 points a game, and Hilary Lloyd is at .750 points a game. The Tigers have eight players averaging at least half a point a game.

The other thing Princeton has in its favor is the presence of senior goaltender Kimberly Newell. She’s putting up gaudy numbers, with a 1.39 goals-against and a .947 save percentage, both career bests. In fact, the goals-against is almost a goal lower than her previous best. Sophomore Alysia DaSilva has also won three games during the current streak, and has an even better save percentage and goals-against than Newell, which tells me the Tigers are committed to solid play in their own end.

Having said that, aside from Harvard, I think the teams Princeton has beaten during its streak are teams it should beat, though the numbers have been impressive, such as a 5-1 win over Yale, a 6-1 win over Brown, and a 5-0 win over Union, then a 3-2 win over Rensselaer.

The next three weeks will really tell us where Princeton is at. I expect the Tigers will beat Dartmouth in Hanover this Friday, because the Big Green just can’t seem to catch a break, but after that, Princeton runs a gauntlet with five games against some of the ECAC’s best, including road games against Harvard, Colgate, and Cornell, and then a home series against Clarkson and St. Lawrence. The latter two both beat the Tigers back in November, and were the last teams to actually defeat Princeton. Cornell also beat Princeton back in November, and Colgate only lost by one goal, a 3-2 decision, so this next stretch will be the true answer to whether Princeton is for real.

Right now, the Tigers would be in the NCAA tournament according to the revised PairWise criteria, depending on whether favorites won in the ECAC, Hockey East, and WCHA tournaments, but they are on the bubble, and Bemidji State and North Dakota are right there too. The next four weeks are going to really interesting in that regard.

I know we usually talk about the movers and shakers, but I want to shift gears right now. Minnesota State had a great weekend against Minnesota two weekends ago, and seemed poised to get its first conference win of the year, but came up short against Ohio State, tying the Buckeyes on Friday and then getting blown out Saturday. Friday might have been their last chance to get a win in conference, because the Mavericks end their season by facing, in order, North Dakota, Minnesota-Duluth, Wisconsin, and Bemidji State.

The Mavericks at least have won out of conference this season. By contrast, Union hasn’t won a game at all this season, though it has a few ties. The Dutchwomen had a great chance this weekend to get a win, but fell short against Yale Friday, giving up the game-winner at 12:53 of the third in a 2-1 loss. On Saturday, the Dutchwomen played Brown, and carried a 2-1 lead into the last couple minutes of the game, but Erin Conway scored an extra-attacker goal at 18:42 to tie it for the Bears. When I look at the Dutchwomen’s remaining games, I don’t see many opportunities to pick up a win, though I guess they could put a scare into either Cornell or Dartmouth, and maybe St. Lawrence.

Do you think Minnesota State will get a conference win, or Union a win of any sort, before the playoffs?

Arlan: You have to kind of feel for the Union kids with the way their season has fizzled. The question coming into the season was how would they replace Shenae Lundberg in net, and Melissa Black has answered that question very confidently, with a better save percentage and goals-against average. The problem has been on the offensive end, as it so often is for Union. It came into this year with more promise than usual, after Kathryn Tomaselli and Jessica Kaminsky reached 20 points as juniors, lofty heights for anyone on Union’s roster. With only eight games remaining, Tomaselli has only half the points that she had a year ago, and Kaminsky has just five. Nobody else has made a dramatic gain, and the overall scoring for the Dutchwomen is 62 percent of last year’s output. That’s a huge drop for a team that has to scratch and claw for every goal.

When Union does get a lead, it hasn’t been able to close the deal. It has scored first in nine games, and obviously, every lead has slipped away. One might think that given its strength is defense, it might find a way to clamp down once ahead on the scoreboard, but that’s not the case. The good news is that when the Dutchwomen do score first, they at least tie more often than they lose, but that’s a rather hollow consolation. If the opponent scores first, the game is virtually over, because Union is only 0-16-1 in such games.

Can the Dutchwomen find a win in their final eight games? I don’t see it. It would be the perfect punctuation to just how competitive the ECAC season has been if a winless team could find one as the days dwindle, but it’s hard to pick a likely candidate. Maybe Dartmouth, because as you say, little has gone right for the Big Green of late, but I doubt Union’s odds are any better than one in five of pulling the upset.

As for Minnesota State, that is more probable. I’d say the Mavericks have about a 50/50 shot of winning once in their next eight games. They battled from behind to erase four different leads by the Buckeyes, but the defense let them down. After holding the Gophers to five goals the week before, OSU scored 11 times. They’ll need a better effort from Brianna Quade than what she delivered in allowing five goals on 19 shots on Saturday. If the Fighting Hawks don’t bonk after an emotional series in Wisconsin, then MSU’s best chance would seem to be when it hosts UMD. Bemidji State is easier to shut down, but I doubt the Mavericks will score enough against the Beavers to take advantage.

These aren’t the only teams that are struggling. We’ve talked about Dartmouth, which is 0-11-1 in its last dozen. Maine, which once had a 3-2-0 conference mark, has gone 0-12-1 in Hockey East since then. For all the parity and equality that has come into the sport, there is still disparity between the haves and certain others.

BC has won 26 straight. Quinnipiac is unbeaten in its last 18 games. As we previously mentioned, Princeton and Northeastern have those 11-game streaks. So while there is ever-increasing parity, I doubt that Union can really relate to the season that the Eagles or Bobcats are having. The simplest way to explain it is that the teams rattling off long hot streaks have someone near the top of the scoring charts. Lund of Princeton is 14th in points per game after Monday night’s game, and the other teams have at least one in the top 10. Of those I mentioned on losing streaks, the highest individual scoring performance is Dartmouth’s Laura Stacey at 45th. That’s why it is tough for a team like Bemidji State to swim upstream with an offense whose most prolific scorer is Kaitlyn Tougas, currently tied for 88th in points per game, so the Beavers have to play an almost perfect game defensively to have success.

Still, teams find ways to turn it around. New Hampshire looked quite hapless when it lost its first seven and won just twice in the next seven. Now the Wildcats have won seven of 10. I wonder how much of it is the relief of knowing that the name “Boston College” no longer remains on the schedule?

Candace: Funny, but I think it’s more than that. I suppose you could add that two of the Wildcats’ three games against Northeastern are done too, as are its games against the ECAC elite of Quinnipiac, Harvard, and Clarkson.

In all seriousness, New Hampshire’s fortunes are probably tied to the emergence of freshman goaltender Kyra Smith, who has supplanted senior Vilma Vaattovaara as the starter. Smith has played 18 games so far, and has gone 9-8-1. She’s posted a 2.60 goals-against and a .900 save percentage. Aside from the two games against the high-powered Northeastern offense, she’s done a respectable job of keeping the scores close. She made 23 saves in New Hampshire’s 5-2 win over Yale, and 30 in the 3-2 win over Dartmouth back in December.

In addition to the increasingly steady goaltending, New Hampshire is getting scoring from senior Jonna Curtis, who has 28 points and is averaging over a point a game. Curtis is tied for 18th nationally in goals scored. New Hampshire is also getting secondary contributions from Amy Boucher and Amy Schlagel, both sophomores. Boucher is tied for 14th nationally in power-play goals with four.

New Hampshire is now in the final home ice spot for the Hockey East tournament, one point ahead of Connecticut, though the Huskies have a game in hand. The schedule seems to favor the Huskies, who have only one game left against the big three in Hockey East, while New Hampshire still has one against Northeastern and a home-and-home with mercurial Boston University, but New Hampshire ends its season at home with a pair against Connecticut, and that could decide home ice. UNH beat the Huskies 2-1 back in November on the road, so if the Wildcats can sweep, they might take that final home ice spot, and then get to play Connecticut all over again.

I guess you can put New Hampshire in the “pleasant surprise” category for this season, alongside teams like Colgate. Are there any others that have surprised you this season with their performance, either positively or negatively?

Arlan: Just scanning down the rankings, I don’t think there is any surprise from BC, Wisconsin, or Minnesota. We could say it is a surprise that the Eagles are still perfect, but after their season last year, not really. The big difference from last year to this year is who exactly would we have expected to bounce BC this year? Both BU and Harvard have taken steps back, and for all the improvement shown by Northeastern, it still had a considerable amount of ground to make up.

I think Quinnipiac is a bit of a surprise. Not a shocker, by any means, given they’ve had similar starts and were a tournament team last year. Nothing is guaranteed with a new coach and a new primary goaltender, so kudos to coach Cassandra Turner and Sydney Rossman for sliding seamlessly into their new roles, and helping the Bobcats take another step forward.

Princeton would have to be another pleasant surprise. The ECAC coaches slotted the Tigers sixth, and they currently sit tied for second. If they wind up in the NCAA field when the pairings are announced, I think that may qualify as the biggest positive surprise.

Looking at some second-division teams, St. Cloud State has been more competitive than expected. The Huskies were tabbed by the coaches to finish ahead of only Minnesota State, but they’ve been fifth for a while now. I don’t know that they can stay there, but it is still an advancement by Eric Rud in his second season, even if they drop to sixth.

Rensselaer is also far above where most thought. The league’s coaches predicted a 10th-place finish, and yours truly mistakenly put the Engineers one spot lower. Freshman goaltender Lovisa Selander has stabilized them defensively, and they’ve climbed up to seventh in the ECAC.

As for a disappointing team, maybe Maine? The Black Bears were a home-ice team in the quarters last year, and the Hockey East coaches predicted that they would be again. Now Maine sits eighth and could possibly miss the playoffs altogether. Its only win in the last two months plus came over winless Union. With the improvement Providence has shown over the course of the season, and the problems Maine has had versus Connecticut of late, that puts a lot of pressure on its series versus Merrimack. I also didn’t expect Dartmouth to have only four wins at this point. At least when I watch the Big Green, they look like their next win could be just around the corner.

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