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Wednesday Women: Back in the saddle

Candace: Well Arlan, we’re about to kick off the second half of the season in earnest, but let’s briefly look at last week’s very short slate of games. There were a couple of surprises for me. I think first though, you have to look at Robert Morris hanging with Bemidji, even though the Colonials lost both games by one. However, losing two such close contests to the No. 8 team in the country is rarefied air for Robert Morris. Earlier in the year, I had hinted that Rebecca Vint’s impressive season to date may have had something to do with the comparably weak schedule the Colonials had played. She figured in three of the four points Robert Morris scored against a defensively sound Beavers squad, and now leads the nation in rookie scoring. Perhaps she’s the breakout star Robert Morris needs to challenge Mercyhurst?

Arlan: Yes and no. Is she a breakout star? I’d say that seems fair, given she holds her team’s highest total for both goals and points by a safe margin. Vint is having a season for RMU similar to the one Kelly Babstock enjoyed for Quinnipiac a year ago, albeit to a lesser magnitude. But as we’ve seen with the Bobcats, adding one impact player on the offensive end isn’t enough when going head-to-head with the juggernauts of the sport. To seriously threaten a team such as Mercyhurst, a team is going to have to be able to perform some aspect of the game better than the Lakers. The Colonials have Vint, and a half a dozen other players that can find the net on any given night. However, Bailey Bram has outdone Vint by 20 points, Christine Bestland leads her by a dozen, and players like Jess Jones and Kelly Steadman can match Vint in points. So I’d say that the situation for the Colonials is still one where they’d better not get into a scoring contest with Mercyhurst, because they’ll find that they are outgunned.

The games versus Bemidji State were either half full or half empty for RMU, depending on one’s perspective. Yes, they played BSU tight, but in the end, they got swept at home — one of the games was played at CONSOL Energy Center. The Beavers were without two of their top players in Emily Erickson and Montana Vichorek, played both of their goaltenders, and managed to find that deciding goal late in both contests. Robert Morris has learned how to compete, and now, they’ll have to learn how to win versus a top opponent.

All that said, RMU remains the best hope for a Mercyhurst challenger. It sure doesn’t appear that Syracuse is up to the task. The Orange were dispatched quite easily by Colgate, 5-0, on Monday night — not exactly a confidence builder heading into a weekend versus Mercyhurst. Am I wrong, or does Syracuse seem to be heading in the wrong direction?

Candace: I don’t think there’s any doubt that the Orange are heading in the wrong direction, though that might partly be do to me overestimating them. After Syracuse beat New Hampshire for the second straight year, I thought the Orange were a team on the rise, and destined to perhaps finally give Mercyhurst some competition in the CHA. However, as the Wildcats have proved since then, they are not the powerhouse team that made five straight NCAA tournament appearances and two Frozen Fours, so Syracuse beating New Hampshire might not even be considered an upset in this season. Also, the Orange lost Isabel Ménard to Boston University, which is huge. Ménard led the Orange in scoring last year with 43 points, 15 more points than team no. 2 Julie Rising, who graduated, and 16 more than Ashley Cockell, who also graduated. Menard has 18 points this season for the Terriers. Factor in that team no. 4 scorer Akane Hosoyamada only has two points this season, and I think we can see why the Orange have fallen off. The Orange face the Lakers gauntlet this weekend, so if there was any time for its offense to wake up, now would be good.

Speaking of offensive woes, the Ohio State Buckeyes continued their mercurial play, only getting three goals in two disappointing ties with Princeton, even though Natalie Spooner was playing. Post-holiday letdown, or just the Buckeyes showing they aren’t ready for anything close to WCHA top billing?

Arlan:  The post-holiday readjustment should be the same for both teams, so I don’t think that makes for much of an excuse. As you said, the Buckeyes did have Spooner, she fired 16 shots, but couldn’t get any to go. They didn’t have their other key senior, Laura McIntosh, nor Europeans Annie Svedin and Minttu Tuominen — one more example of rosters being compromised by international commitments, and hopefully after the coming week, that will be the last of it this season. That left Ohio State with only 15 skaters versus Princeton, but again, the Tigers only had 14, so OSU wasn’t at a disadvantage.

I hear coaches say the same thing over and over, essentially that the separation between most teams in the middle of the pack isn’t that great, and many games will come down to a goal either way. I guess in the case of Princeton and OSU, nobody could find that goal. In the final analysis, these ties that feel like losses for the Buckeyes may not be that costly, as they likely aren’t close enough for the bubble for it to matter in the national picture. If they play to form over the second half, they will suffer enough losses to keep them out of the running for an at-large bid.

We have more examples of teams playing with key players away at international competition this week. Ohio State should be able to handle St. Cloud State without their trio, but then I expected them to be okay versus Princeton as well. Harvard plays three games on the road without Sarah Edney:  Connecticut, Princeton, and Quinnipiac. The Bobcats are minus Nicole Kosta for that game as well as one with Dartmouth. Mercyhurst is missing Bailey and Shelby Bram for its Syracuse trip. A Boston University team that’s been struggling as it is goes to Maine without Isabel Ménard and Tara Watchorn. Clarkson won’t have Jamie Lee Ratray at Northeastern and BC. Cornell gets hit hard again, as Amanda Mazzotta, Hayleigh Cudmore, Jessica Campbell, Jillian Saulnier, Chelsea Karpenko, and Catherine White are all absent, although it may not matter against Union and RPI. Genevieve Lacasse won’t be around for Providence’s series with RMU. And both Wisconsin and Minnesota must fill holes for their big series, as Badgers Brittany Haverstock and Saige Pacholok and the Gophers’ Sarah Davis are in Germany at the Meco Cup, along with everyone else mentioned above. The conflict might be easier to accept were it for a more meaningful event, but I’m not even sure what the age group for the Meco is. The other countries seem to use anyone they want, while Canada’s roster consists mainly of U-22 players with the odd exception like Lacasse or Mallory Deluce. It’s like a made-for-TV event without the TV. In addition, BC’s Alex Carpenter is in the Czech Republic for the U-18 World Championships. At least that tourney has a recognizable structure.

Do any of those absences jump out at you as a potential problem for the impacted college team?

Candace: I find the Meco Cup’s appearance in the middle of the season a little pointless. It’s not like the men with the World Juniors. Looking at those outages, there are a couple that pop out. Merychurst missing Bailey Bram would be much worse if the Lakers were facing someone from the PairWise, instead of Syracuse. As it is, the Lakers are probably deep enough that Syracuse shouldn’t pose a problem. Cornell is missing a couple of really important players in Saulnier and Mazzotta. I would like to think RPI and Union have enough to trouble Cornell, but RPI got blown out by Clarkson and St. Lawrence before the break, so probably not. That leaves the Boston teams, who both lose key players. Carpenter is Boston College’s leading scorer, and Menard is second for the Terriers. BC isn’t playing bottom dwellers like some of the other squads; both St. Lawrence and Clarkson have enough firepower to be troublesome to even a fully-loaded Eagles’ team. The Terriers are the team I think that will suffer the most though; with Marie Philip-Poulin still injured, losing Ménard, a leading offensive cog, and Watchorn, a leader on defense, when the Terriers play a dangerous Black Bears squad, could be the nail in BU’s tournament hopes. The Terriers really can’t afford to lose to anybody except for Boston College if they hope to get an at-large bid. If they even split with Maine, I don’t see the Terriers making it back to the tournament.

You mentioned the Wisconsin-Minnesota series. I figure that the Badgers still have most of their firepower, as do the Gophers. I expect you are in for a treat getting to see that series at Ridder this weekend! Wisconsin certainly has a gauntlet to run to start the second half, with Minnesota, North Dakota, Minnesota-Duluth, and Bemidji over the next four weeks. What are your initial thoughts on Gophers-Badgers, and Wisconsin’s second half start?

Arlan: For the Cornell absences, it isn’t even a question of who — although they will lose three of their top five scorers. How many seems to be a bigger problem, with five skaters being gone from a team that typically only has 17. As far as the Eagles without Carpenter, I agree with you, except that Clarkson faces the same problem without Rattray.

The holes for the Badgers and Gophers are more subtle. Wisconsin is very deep on the blue line, so they’ll have plenty of bodies to insert into the rotation, but I’m sure they’d like to have Haverstock and Pacholok, likely both in the top four of their depth chart for defensemen, when going against a top offense. For Minnesota, although Davis hasn’t lit up the scoreboard, she is vital to the puck possession and defensive efforts of its second line, so a big factor for the series may be how the coaching staff elects to replace her. They can either slide a wing like Sarah Erickson with experience at center into the middle, or move up the third-line center, Becky Kortum, and find a replacement on her line. In my opinion, the Gophers need to sweep this series to have a realistic shot at the league title. If they come out of the weekend trailing Wisconsin, I doubt they can expect to play the rest of the WCHA slate better than a squad that was perfect against everyone else over the first pass. Given Minnesota last swept this series in 2005 and has only once won a series since, it doesn’t favor the Gophers getting the six points they need. As for the series being a treat, we’ll have to wait and see. The UW and UM meetings have offered up more clunkers over the years than either team’s history with UMD, and I’ll touch on that in this week’s column.

The schedule for Wisconsin looks tough on paper, but they had a similar stretch in the first half with BU instead of Bemidji State and went 7-1. If they match that again, they should be a lock for both the league title and the top seed in the NCAA tournament.

As for potential treats, I’m looking forward to watching the Clarkson and Northeastern game on Thursday afternoon. If they had Rattray, I’d give the Golden Knights a 50-50 chance of pulling an upset, and I’d like to watch her, as she is someone I’ve never seen play. Are there players that you’ve missed and would really like to see in action?

Candace: Well, it’s interesting that you mention that game, because I still haven’t seen Kendall Coyne of Northeastern, who is neck-and-neck with Vint for the rookie scoring title, and is probably more important to her team’s second half success. I also haven’t seen Cornell play yet this year, so I still want to see Saulnier play. I guess the team that comes to mind is Harvard. I haven’t seen the Crimson play in a while, so I am hoping to catch the Beanpot this year and see how the Crimson stack up.

Brown hopes talent will shine after some tough lessons were learned

Don’t sleep on Brown.

In a topsy-turvy weekend for ECAC Hockey in holiday tournaments and non-conference play, it was the Bears who came through on top.

Friday’s 5-2 victory at New Hampshire was the program’s first win against the Wildcats since 1987, and the first time a Brown team had won in Durham since 1930. The Bears capped their weekend with a 5-2 win over Providence in the 26th edition of the Mayor’s Cup. It was the first time since the 2006-07 season that Brown had taken home the trophy.

“We wanted bragging rights within the state of Rhode Island and within the city of Providence,” coach Brendan Whittet said. “It’s a situation where the seniors, who hadn’t experienced any kind of success in the tournament, were able to leave a mark before they left. It’s one game, but we’re going to use it as a springboard.”

Brown sits 11th in the ECAC with six points, although that’s deceiving as the Bears have played just six conference games, going 3-3. At 6-6-1 overall, Brown has looked much better than a .500 team at times, and at times, much worse.

Consider: The Bears have won three straight, those wins coming against Yale, UNH (which, while having a down year, is still a traditional Hockey East contender), and a resurgent Providence team led by former Union coach Nate Leaman. Throw in earlier wins against Union and Cornell, and you’ve got the makings of a team that can play with anyone.

But some of the chances left on the board make you pause. One point in four games against American International, Holy Cross, Rensselaer and Army certainly is reason for hesitation. Those teams’ combined record? 8-47-8.

“I don’t think we quite understood how hard we had to work,” Whittet said of several of the Bears’ early season losses. “That’s a bad way to think. Who are we to do that? We’re a program trying to establish itself in that regard and we didn’t play as crisp and as hard as we could. That’s not the makeup of the program, and not the makeup of the guys we bring into the program.”

Of the 30 players on Brown’s roster, 18 are underclassman. While not an excuse, it certainly makes the lapses explainable.

But there’s undeniable talent among the younger players. Freshmen Matt Lorito and Ryan Jacobson flank senior captain Jack Maclellan on the top line, while sophomores Dennis Robertson and Matt Wahl were the top defensive pair against the Friars.

Larito was hurt for the majority of the season, Whittet said, but still has seven points in five games.

In net, sophomore Marco De Filippo made his first start in almost a year count, making 39 saves in the win at UNH.

“He’s a big guy; he covers a lot of the net,” Whittet said of the 6-foot-2 De Filippo. With senior Mike Clemente a bit inconsistent this year, the sophomore could push for time down the stretch.

Senior assistant captain Bobby Farnham (4-5–9) has garnered attention from several NHL teams thanks to his tenacious and gritty style of play, Whittet said.

As as the fourth-ever alumnus to serve as head coach at Brown, Whittet would like nothing more than to bring a league championship to the school. And with 16 league games ahead of them, there’s plenty of time for an improved Bears team to make their mark.

“Those weren’t fluke wins,” Whittet said of the program’s success against contending teams. “We played the game very hard and when we get away from that, we’re not successful. We hope the guys have learned that lesson.”

A glance at the holiday tournaments

It was bound to end at some point. Cornell goaltender Andy Iles entered the holiday break without giving up a goal in 152 minutes, 36 seconds, the ninth-best streak in program history

That came to an end with a 5-2 loss to Massachusetts in the opener of the Florida College Classic. But the Big Red came back with a 5-3 win over Clarkson in the consolation game.

The good news for the Golden Knights? Alternate captain Ben Sexton returned to action in Florida after missing 12 games with an injury.

The senior notched the first two-goal game of his career Friday against Cornell and was named to the all-tournament team. Sexton averages just over a point per game, so his return should boost Clarkson down the stretch.

The not-so-good (although not devastating) news for Clarkson? All-world goalie Paul Karpowich had his games-started streak snapped at 43 when the senior didn’t play in either game in Florida after playing every single minute in net thus far this season.

The school’s official athletic website said he was out with an illness, so it doesn’t sound too serious. Still, his absence showed — the Golden Knights failed to register a single win in Florida.

Clarkson will need Karpowich when it heads to Winnipeg, Manitoba, on Saturday to close out a nine-game road trip with the U.S. College Hockey Classic against North Dakota.

History and hardware

While Dartmouth made history last weekend, St. Lawrence took home some hardware without a win to its credit.

A 3-2 win over Holy Cross in the opener of the Ledyard National Bank Classic gave the Big Green their 1,000th win in the program’s 106 years. Current coach and alum Bob Gaudet has 212 of those during his 15-year tenure.

But it was the Saints who took home the Ledyard National Bank Classic championship, thanks to two shootout wins that will go on their record as ties. St. Lawrence and Merrimack tied 6-6 in the opener before the Saints won the shootout. Dartmouth and St. Lawrence then tied 2-2 in the championship game before the Saints won the tournament on Greg Carey’s shootout goal.

Falling short

Princeton failed to garner any wins at the Mariucci Classic in Minneapolis. The only difference for the Tigers is that they fell to Northeastern 4-3 in an eight-round shootout in the opener before settling for a non-shootout tie with Niagara in the consolation game.

How bad were things for Rensselaer last weekend at the UConn Holiday Classic? Massachusetts-Lowell scored just 43 seconds into the opening game, sending RPI to the consolation match with a 7-2 loss. There, the Engineers lost to one-win Army 3-2, pushing their losing streak to five games.

“It’s disappointing,” RPI coach Seth Appert said following the loss to Lowell. “I don’t have any issue with how hard they’re playing, but too many guys are making too many critical mistakes, which is sometimes mental preparation and sometimes mental toughness.”

Neither Yale or Colgate took part in any holiday festivities, outside of the 14 combined goals they racked up against Bentley (Yale, 9-3) and Canisius (Colgate, 5-2).

ECAC in the West

While the ECAC’s performance in holiday tournaments could be summed up as lukewarm at best, none of the three teams that played out West did much to help the conference. Harvard played two games with North Dakota, taking home a tie and a loss. Same for Quinnipiac at Nebraska-Omaha.

Following a big non-conference win against Merrimack, Union came home empty from Colorado, falling 3-1 to Denver and 2-1 to Colorado College. The western swoon probably has the biggest impact on the Dutchmen, as it seems likely they’ll have to win the league tournament for a berth in the NCAA tournament.

Weekly and monthly awards

As selected by conference coaches:

Player of the week: Kyle Flanagan, St. Lawrence. The junior was the MVP of the Ledyard National Bank Classic after missing eight games with an injury. Flanagan had three goals and three assists in the tournament.

Rookie of the week: Ryan Jacobson, Brown. The freshman had three goals and three assists while finishing at a plus-5 in two games this weekend, helping Brown beat UNH on Friday and win the Mayor’s Cup Sunday against Providence.

Goaltender of the week: Cab Morris, Dartmouth. The sophomore started both games of the Ledyard National Bank Classic, making 55 saves and posting a 1-0-1 record.

Player of the month: Austin Smith, Colgate. A legit Hobey Baker Award candidate, Smith had four goals and six assists in a 3-0-1 month for the Raiders. He’s scored in nine straight games and has 16 points during Colgate’s seven-game unbeaten streak.

Rookie of the Month: Patrick McNally, Harvard. A two-point-per-game pace wasn’t a bad way to wrap up the calendar year for the freshman out of Glen Head, N.Y. McNally had two goals and six assists in the Crimson’s four games, all on the road.

Goaltender of the Month: Cab Morris. The sophomore has twice as many conference awards (two) as he did career starts (one) entering December. After allowing four goals on 21 shots in a loss to RPI on Nov. 5, 2010, Morris stopped 20 of 21 shots against Sacred Heart on Dec. 11 before starting both of Dartmouth’s games in the Ledyard National Bank Classic. Overall, he was 2-0-1 with a 1.62 goals against average and .938 save percentage in December.

In the rankings

The latest USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll has four ECAC teams ranked: Colgate (ninth), Cornell (13th), Union (14th) and Yale (20th). The top ECAC teams in the PairWise Rankings are Colgate (tie, 13th) and Cornell (17th). Meanwhile, Union tumbled into a tie for 24th.

In case you missed it

Good article over the break on Colgate’s Kevin McNamara and his creation of Goals for Good, an organization that pairs ECAC men’s and women’s hockey teams with charities in their communities. Check it out here. And here’s a rehash in the Boston Herald of some heroic actions by several Brown players during Hurricane Irene last summer.

Lake Superior, Northern Michigan better for the experiences

It’s a good year for teams in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. All three squads that call the U.P. home — Michigan Tech, Northern Michigan and Lake Superior State — have seen measurable improvement from 2010-11.

At the Great Lakes Invitational, it was nice to catch up a little with former Michigan associate head coach, Mel Pearson, who’s in his first year as head coach at Michigan Tech, his alma mater. Pearson had some nice things to say about having coached at Michigan. He also talked about how much the GLI meant to him as a player and how much he would have liked the Huskies to have been rewarded for their hard work in the tournament.

The other two Yooper teams, our very own LSSU and NMU, each played last week under different circumstances, but each got what they wanted out of the experiences — except, perhaps, for some hardware.

Win or lose, it’s still good

Four CCHA teams were contending for midseason glory last week, and one — Michigan — secured a trophy. Michigan State played the Wolverines to an exciting overtime title game at the GLI, while Ferris State and LSSU traveled to Vermont to contend for the Catamount Cup. The latter two came home empty-handed; only the Lakers managed a win, Thursday’s 5-3 victory over Vermont. LSSU lost the title game the following day to Rochester Institute of Technology 3-1.

“What can you say about tournaments?” said LSSU coach Jim Roque. “If you win, then you’ve got something to get you going in the second half. If not, you’re glad you’ve got a couple of games under your belt.”

The Lakers made the 700-mile trip by bus, taking two days to get to Burlington, Vt., and riding straight through on the way back. That may have contributed to a little rust, said Roque.

“I thought we played OK both games,” said Roque. “I didn’t think we were sharp. I don’t know if it was the break plus the ride. I thought against RIT we didn’t have enough zip. I think we played hard and tried hard but didn’t accomplish enough.”

Roque said that the team enjoyed the tournament and the trip, which it took through Ontario — and which could have included a little pond hockey in Deep River, Ontario, on the way back. That’s where they stopped for lunch, and there were about a dozen kids playing outdoors. Had it not been New Year’s Eve, the team would have stretched their legs a little more.

Roque likes the midseason tournaments. “It puts your kids in a position to win something,” he said. “I think that’s a good thing. You play different teams that you don’t see all the time. It’s over break so there’s nothing going on at school. It’s a good experience.”

There were a couple of interesting things to take away from the tournament. Sophomore defenseman Matt Bruneteau got to play against both of his brothers who play for Vermont, sophomore defenseman Nick and junior forward Brett. Goaltender Kevin Murdoch — a sophomore who played with the USHL’s Lincoln Stars last season after a year with Minnesota State — played in his third game of the season, the championship game against RIT. Murdoch backs up starter and classmate, Kevin Kapalka.

“We’d planned [to play Murdoch] before we went out there,” said Roque. “I thought we needed to get him in the game. You never know. It’s Kapalka’s net. He’s durable. He’s the guy. But it’s important to get Kevin [Murdoch] in the game.”

The fourth-place Lakers are nine points out of first place and begin their second half on the road against a tough opponent, the newly minted GLI champion Wolverines. To keep pace with the upper-tier CCHA teams, Roque said that what the Lakers have to do is simple.

“We need to get something going here,” said Roque. “We had a great October and then have been a .500 team ever since. If we’re going to stay in the hunt we’re going to have to play better. Get a little more oomph in our game. Our goaltending is going to have to be better in the second half.”

Roque is particularly concerned with the team’s play in its own end. “I thought the four games before Christmas our defensive play was a little lax around our net a couple of times,” he said. “Even against RIT, we gave up a couple of goals around the net.”

Another small concern is the offense. “It’s inconsistent,” said Roque. “One night it’s five, the next night it’s one. Some of our talented kids are younger. Maybe they’re having difficulty playing consistently on back-to-back nights.”

The Lakers are four points ahead of Michigan and five points ahead of Miami, whom they meet at home Jan. 13-14.

Under the radar — for now

While the Lakers were out East, the Wildcats were playing host to the Russian Red Stars, a single exhibition game that NMU won 3-2 on Dec. 30.

“It was OK,” said NMU coach Walt Kyle. “It served a purpose. For us, I would rather be playing a game that doesn’t count than a game that counts. Up here, we don’t always get kids back from break in time because of flights and weather.”

The Wildcats scored a single goal in each period. Two players that don’t have NCAA goals yet to their credit, sophomore defenseman C.J. Ludwig and freshman forward Ryan Daugherty, had the goals in the first and second periods; sophomore Erik Higby (2-4–6) had the marker in the third. Senior Devan Hartigan — who played six games his freshman year and none since — had the unofficial win.

“We got the opportunity to give a lot of ice time to a lot of kids who don’t normally get it,” said Kyle, who was particularly pleased to give Hartigan the game. “He’s a senior, a straight-A student. He’s going to medical school when he graduates.”

The Wildcats, who are No. 9 in the PairWise Rankings at midseason but not ranked in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll, may be the wild card in the second half of CCHA play.

“We’re big time under the radar,” said Kyle. “We’ve still got a long way to go and a lot to prove. There are a couple of reasons. We’re only 9-7-3 and we’re under .500 in the league. What people missed in the that whole deal is that if you look at the PariWise, we’ve played the top schedule in the country. If I was looking at us I may not vote us there, either.”

Kyle said that NMU always tries to schedule tough nonconference opponents in the first half of the season; the Wildcats started 2011-12 with a road split against Wisconsin and two home wins against St. Cloud State. They took four of six points from Michigan in the first weekend of CCHA play.

“We have seven losses, but of those seven losses, two were at Ohio State and two were at Western Michigan, arguably two of the top teams in the country,” said Kyle. “We kept ourselves in it with a schedule that could have buried us.”

One reason for NMU’s ability to keep pace with nearly anyone the Wildcats have played is the consistency of senior goaltender Reid Ellingson (2.41 goals against average, .922 save percentage) and sophomore Jared Coreau (2.13, .925), who have split time in net.

“Those guys have been really solid,” said Kyle. “They’ve each only had one game where they haven’t been good. They’ve both played really well and that’s been the backbone of our team.”

There are several other players who, like the entire Wildcat squad, fly under the CCHA radar, said Kyle.

“There’s no better player in our league that Justin Florek,” he said. “He’s not an exceptionally dynamic guy, but he’s a horse. I can play him 30 minutes if I have to. He’s a great defensive player, he makes players around him play better. He’s not a guy who’s going to out-craft people. He uses his reach, gets on loose pucks strong. He’s just so good all around.”

Florek, a senior, is second among Wildcats in scoring (9-6–15) and is on pace to put up the best goal-scoring numbers of his career. Two other players, defensemen Ludwig and his fellow defenseman, junior Wade Epp, are unsung heroes as well. “Ludwig and Epp have really come on and nobody knows about those guys,” said Kyle. They’re players who have taken big strides.”

With 20 points, the Wildcats are tied for sixth place with Michigan State; each team is 12 points behind league-leading Ohio State. In order for the Wildcats to creep up the standings, the No. 16 NMU defense must remain solid, and the team needs to keep scoring as it has all season — by committee.

“We’ve got guys on our team that have one and two and three goals,” said Kyle, “and those goals were all big goals for us.”

This weekend, the Wildcats begin the second half with two games at home against Alaska. The Nanooks are six points behind NMU.

Noted

• Alaska begins its second half with a prolonged stay in the Lower 48. The Nanooks face Northern Michigan this weekend and won’t return to Fairbanks until after their series with Ferris State, Jan. 13-14.

• Bowling Green hasn’t won a game since Nov. 12, when the Falcons completed a two-game sweep of visiting Canisius. BGSU has gone 0-8-2 in the stretch since.

• Ferris State has been shut out four times this season, most recently against RIT in the Catamount Cup. The Bulldogs have the 45th-best offense in the nation, averaging 2.50 goals per game.

• Miami has had nearly a month off, having played last Dec. 10, a 3-2 home overtime loss to Ohio State.

• Michigan State begins the second half of the season with three consecutive weekends at home against CCHA opponents: Miami, Northern Michigan and Lake Superior.

• Notre Dame forward Anders Lee had two goals in ND’s 5-2 win over Boston University Dec. 31. That snapped a nine-game goal-scoring drought for the sophomore.

• Western Michigan sophomore defenseman Dennis Brown had two assists in WMU’s 2-1 overtime win over St. Cloud State on Dec. 30, including a helper on the winner. Brown has 10 assists in 19 games, one shy of his total from his 2010-11 total, reached in 42 games.

Players of the week

Three of the four honored come from the teams that met in the GLI title game. All three of the league’s Big Ten schools are represented.

Rookie of the week: Ohio State’s Nick Oddo, who had a goal and an assist in OSU’s 4-2 win over Robert Morris Friday.

Offensive player of the week: Michigan’s Luke Moffatt, who had a goal in UM’s 4-2 win over Boston College at the GLI and two assists in the Wolverines’ 3-2 OT win over Michigan State. Moffatt did not make the all-tournament team. He was, however, on my ballot.

Defenseman of the week: Michigan’s Kevin Clare, who had an assist against BC and scored the game-winning goal versus MSU.

Goaltender of the week: Michigan State’s Drew Palmisano, who had a remarkable 90 saves — 45 in each game — in the GLI, breaking a tourney record held since 1969. Palmisano was outstanding and would have been the tournament’s MVP had things gone differently in that overtime game.

My ballot

1. Minnesota-Duluth
2. Ohio State
3. Minnesota
4. Boston College
5. Notre Dame
6. Boston University
7. Merrimack
8. Colorado College
9. Michigan State
10. Western Michigan
11. Colgate
12. Lake Superior State
13. Northern Michigan
14. Massachusetts-Lowell
15. Denver
16. Michigan
17. Union
18. Cornell
19. Ferris State
20. Air Force

Report: Scherr to be installed as first NCHC commissioner

The Colorado Springs (Colo.) Gazette reported Tuesday morning that former United States Olympic Committee chief executive officer Jim Scherr of Colorado Springs will be announced as the first commissioner of the new National Collegiate Hockey Conference Wednesday morning.

The newspaper said an anonymous source close to the hire had confirmed the hire. Scherr was unavailable for comment.

The news conference is scheduled for 11 a.m. MST at Colorado Springs’ Penrose House, where the league announced its formation in July.

The Colorado Springs-based league includes charter members Colorado College, Denver, Miami, Minnesota-Duluth, Nebraska-Omaha and North Dakota. St. Cloud State and Western Michigan joined on Sept. 22.

Scherr is expected to hire a director of hockey operations, who will oversee officials, coaches, scheduling and other on-ice concerns, as well as a public relations director who will heavily promote the league across all platforms, notably social media, and through the league website.

The conference realignments were sparked by Penn State’s new Division I program, which prompted the other Big Ten schools to form a six-team conference that also begins play in 2013.

That league will include PSU, current WCHA members Minnesota and Wisconsin and CCHA schools Michigan, Michigan State and Ohio State.

With Notre Dame headed to Hockey East, the WCHA will absorb the remainder of the depleted CCHA, which will dissolve after the 2012-13 season.

Team USA dominates Latvia in World Junior relegation round

Austin Watson’s natural hat trick and four assists led the U.S. National Junior Team past Latvia 12-2 Tuesday afternoon at the Scotiabank Saddledome in Calgary in the relegation round of the World Junior Championship.

“I was happy with our effort and intensity,” said Team USA coach Dean Blais in a news release. “It was good to see our offense gel today and hopefully, that can continue tomorrow.”

Nick Bjugstad added a hat trick of his own, while United States captain Jason Zucker (Denver), J.T. Miller, Bill Arnold (Boston College), Adam Clendening (Boston University), Kyle Rau (Minnesota) and Austin Czarnik (Miami) added singles.

Jack Campbell made 27 saves in the win.

Team USA improved to 2-0-0-3 (W-OTW-OTL-L) overall and with a win against Switzerland on Wednesday (Jan. 4) would finish in seventh place.

Jan. 3 show features Hockey East’s Bertagna, Starman on World Juniors … and your calls live

The Tuesday, Jan. 3, episode of USCHO Live! features Hockey East commission Joe Bertagna to preview Frozen Fenway and hockey analyst Dave Starman with a live update on the 2012 World Junior Championship.

Bertagna became the commissioner of Hockey East in 1997 after serving as ice hockey commissioner and in other roles for the ECAC for 15 years. He is a former goaltender at and a graduate of Harvard, and has coached goaltenders at his alma mater and with the Boston Bruins, as well as with Team USA and the Milwaukee Admirals. Bertagna also launched Harvard’s women’s team and was its first head coach. After Harvard, Bertagna played professionally for the Milwaukee Admirals and in Cortina, Italy. He has served as the executive director of the American Hockey Coaches Association since 1991.

Starman is in his ninth season providing color commentary and analysis for the CBS Sports Network. The former coach is also a scout for the Toronto Maple Leafs. Dave completed his fourth consecutive stint covering Team USA’s games at the IIHF World Junior Championship as a color analyst and reporter for the NHL Network.

This week’s episode is returns live, so we invite your calls at 646-200-3405 or your tweets to @uscho.

Join us for the conversation and information, Tuesday, Jan. 3, from 8 to 9 p.m. ET at blogtalkradio.com/uscholive. If you can’t listen live, check out the podcast of USCHO Live! available on the player at the right (click through if you’re reading this via RSS.)

Each episode of USCHO Live! features a look at news around NCAA hockey, a look ahead at upcoming games and events, and conversation with people who coach and play college hockey and journalists who cover the sport.

About the hosts

Jim Connelly is a senior writer at USCHO.com and has been with the site since 1999. He is based in Boston and regularly covers Hockey East. He began with USCHO.com as the correspondent covering the MAAC, which nowadays is known as Atlantic Hockey. Each week during the season, he co-writes “Tuesday Morning Quarterback.”

Ed Trefzger has been part of USCHO since 1999 and now serves as a senior writer and director of technology. He has been a part of the radio broadcasts of Rochester Institute of Technology hockey since their inception — serving as a producer, studio host, color commentator and now as RIT’s play-by-play voice for the last several seasons. Ed is based in Rochester, N.Y.

Seeing Frozen Four go to Tampa is ‘mission accomplished’ for ex-Vermont forward St. Louis

Seven years ago, when Martin St. Louis sat in meetings about a bidding process that could potentially bring a major college hockey event to Florida, he was hopeful for the future.

Tampa, Fla., the city where St. Louis played professional hockey, had a shot at hosting the final three games of the NCAA Division I college hockey tournament. And St. Louis, a former college hockey player, could potentially have a role in that process.

But like any NHL player, he also had some reservations. He asked himself: Will I be part of the Tampa Bay Lightning in seven years? Will I be able to see this come to fruition in the town where I live and work?

“I went to the meetings but I didn’t have input as far as the landscape of [the Frozen Four in Tampa],” said St. Louis, a right wing with the Lightning. “But it’s weird to think that seven years ago, we had that meeting and tried to get the Frozen Four here. Time flies.

“But it was an honor to be part of it. To see something like this happen now, it’s wild.”

In his 10th season with the Lightning (not including the 2004-05 lockout year), St. Louis has seen the appeal of hockey grow in the Tampa-St. Petersburg region. The Lightning have made five playoff appearances in that time, won the 2004 Stanley Cup and reached the 2011 Eastern Conference finals. Furthermore, the organization includes three of the NHL’s marquee players in St. Louis, Steven Stamkos and Vincent Lecavalier.

But April 5 and 7, St. Louis’ home arena — the Tampa Bay Times Forum — will host the Frozen Four, Division I hockey’s semifinals and championship game. It will be the first time since 1999 that a city south of the 36th parallel will host the national semifinals and championship, and it’s another change in the landscape of college hockey’s culture.

The scope of the Frozen Four itself has changed for players, for teams and for fans. When St. Louis played in the 1996 Frozen Four with Vermont, he enjoyed the experience of playing in the championship atmosphere. However, St. Louis also remembers the controversial ending for the Catamounts on a swampy ice surface in Cincinnati’s Riverfront Coliseum (now named U.S. Bank Arena). An apparent hand pass set up Chad Remackel’s goal at 9:32 of the second overtime to help Colorado College defeat Vermont 4-3 and reach the national title game against Michigan.

In the 15 years since that weekend in Ohio, St. Louis admits he hasn’t paid much attention to the locations of the Frozen Four each year. But he’s seen the college game change.

“When I played, it was four leagues: the ECAC, the WCHA, Hockey East, the CCHA and maybe an independent team,” St. Louis said. “It’s expanded, and that’s how I see college hockey has changed. But in terms of the Frozen Four experience, I want to see how that changes.”

At this year’s Frozen Four, there will be a small group of fans who make the annual trip to each Frozen Four, including several who live in Florida.

Vermont's Martin St. Louis. (Vermont Athletics)
Martin St. Louis posted 85 points in 1995-96, when the Catamounts appeared in the Frozen Four in Cincinnati (photo: Vermont Athletics).

Tom Bore has gone to every Frozen Four since 1988, when Lake Superior State won the national title, 11 years before the NCAA renamed the semifinals and championship round of the national tournament the Frozen Four in 1999, when Maine, New Hampshire, Michigan State and Boston College met in Anaheim, Calif.

This year, he and his wife, Diane, will travel about 180 miles round trip from The Villages, Fla., to Tampa for each of the three Frozen Four games.

“I look forward to seeing the same friends each year, people from Alaska and Michigan,” Bore said. “It’s the fun of it. Hockey East has dominated in the Frozen Four for a bit, with Boston College and BU winning.”

And, Bore laughed and added, when the big schools get beat, “everyone is happy!”

But at the same time, fans have seen changes over the course of the years. Since 1999, Pat Bearden has traveled from San Juan Capistrano, Calif., to each Frozen Four for the past 12 years. Twelve years ago, she paid $99 for a ticket to the national semifinals and championships in Anaheim. This year, Bearden paid $201 a ticket for the three Frozen Four games in Tampa.

“That is the thing that is the most noticeable, the price in the tickets,” said Bearden, who buys tickets through the NCAA’s annual lottery. “How affordable is that now for families?”

Furthermore, smaller venues for previous national semifinals and finals in Providence and Lake Placid, N.Y., have given way to professional facilities. NHL arenas have hosted the Frozen Four since 2002, with the exception of two years — 2006 at Milwaukee’s Bradley Center and 2010 at Detroit’s Ford Field.

“Things are different; I don’t know why,” Bore said. “Maybe there’s more of a corporate influence on things. Detroit was bad. The building was made for truck pulls and football.”

After Detroit, the Frozen Four returned to NHL facilities — including the building that continues to be St. Louis’ home.

“Being in Tampa, for me, it’s mission accomplished,” St. Louis said. “The people that were involved who worked really hard to make this happen, it means a lot. And it gives the chance for Tampa fans to see college hockey, which for some of them, they probably never have.”

First NCHC commissioner to be announced Wednesday

The new National Collegiate Hockey Conference will introduce its first commissioner at a news conference on Wednesday (Jan. 4) at the Penrose House in Colorado Springs.

The commissioner will be introduced by North Dakota athletic director Brian Faison.

Representatives from the other seven NCHC schools will also be on hand.

Riding the New Year’s rollercoaster

It has been a wild winter weekend for ECAC Hockey, as we saw a little bit of everything over the past few days. Here’s what went down, and what it might signify.

RIP, Engineers?

I’m the last person who would want to prematurely eulogize a team, but I think I have seen enough to render RPI’s season-to-date a complete catastrophe… and to deem the Engineers’ current hole too deep to surmount.

RPI is 3-15-0, on a five-game slide, and coming off a 3-2 loss to what had been a one-win (1-9-6) Army squad in the consolation game of the Toyota UConn Hockey Classic. The offense is actually improving, scoring 13 goals in its last six games and notching at least two in each of those contests, but the defense/goaltending – which had been the ‘Tute’s only saving grace – is falling apart like an H & M handbag.

RPI allowed 23 goals in its last five outings, 17 of which were even-strength (five PPGs against, one shorthanded, and one empty-net). Goalie Bryce Merriam allowed nine goals on 68 shots in his three most recent starts; Scott Diebold, 10 on 62 in two starts (albeit with seven of those coming against UMass-Lowell in the UConn opener).

There is no denying the challenges that faced the Engineers, coach Seth Appert and his staff, from the early departures last spring right on through the unimaginably tumultuous injuries that have hamstrung the team for months now. These were not simple obstacles, and while there is always hope – everyone starts at 0-0 once the playoffs roll around – this campaign is turning into an unquestionable train wreck, the likes of 2009-10 Princeton or ’09-10 Clarkson. I wish RPI all the best and would gladly be proven the fool come March, but I have to call ’em like I see ’em… and this looks like a dead team walking.

Bears aren’t hibernating this winter

I bet Brown wasn’t on your weekend radar. They didn’t seem to be on New Hampshire’s, either… or Providence’s.

Shame on Nate Leaman. He should’ve known better.

Bruno has finally flexed, stringing together three straight W’s for the first time this season with wins over Yale (before break), UNH and PC. The bruins popped home 19 goals in their last four tilts (3-1-0) following a one-goal, four-game, three-shutout drought (0-3-1) against some pretty soft opponents. The win over the Friars secured Brown’s first Mayor’s Cup since November ’06, powered by three-point nights by rookie wingers Matt Lorito (seven points in five games… recall that name?) and Ryan Jacobson (6-6–12 in 13 games). Home games against Princeton and Quinnipiac should test the Bears’ true mettle and help shed some light on exactly how dangerous they will be in 2012.

Hamilton Hockey humming along

Sick of Colgate yet? If you’re not, you’re either a member of Raiders Nation or your side hasn’t been swept by the ‘Gate yet.

The Raiders are rolling along, buzzing through a 6-0-1 unbeaten streak and enjoying a Hobey-worthy season by senior winger Austin Smith. The Texas Twister (rejected nicknames: Lone Star Legend, Texas Terror, Southern Dandy) has whipped in 19 goals in 18 games and amassed a formidable 31 points. Perhaps I spoke too soon when I anointed Clarkson goalie Paul Karpowich with premature MVP accolades.

Fellow forwards Chris Wagner, Austin Mayer and Robbie Bourdon have each chipped in at least seven goals apiece, and sophomore Wagner actually leads the Raiders in assists with 15. Netminders Alex Evin and Eric Mihalik have combined for a .924 save percentage and 2.14 goals against average, and the power play is producing ample bounty at a nearly 21 percent rate of success.

Road games at Ferris State (a deuce next weekend) followed by tests at Princeton and Quinnipiac lead into the last dozen games of Colgate’s regular season… of which seven are at home. Therefore, this upcoming quartet will likely influence the remainder of the Raiders’ regular season a great deal. Giddyup.

Men’s poll shows Minnesota-Duluth still top team in nation

Three teams received first-place votes, but Minnesota-Duluth garnered 47 of 50 top votes to stay atop the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

Ohio State earned two first-place votes and is second this week, while Minnesota had the other and is ranked third.

Boston College falls to fourth and Notre Dame stays fifth in this week’s poll.

Colorado College, Merrimack and Western Michigan remain in spots sixth through eighth, respectively, Colgate rises to ninth and Boston University rounds out the top ten.

Denver slides to No. 11, Massachusetts-Lowell jumps five to No. 12, Cornell remains 13th, Union falls to No. 14 and Michigan State falls to No. 15.

The bottom quarter has Michigan up to No. 16, Ferris State down to No. 17, Lake Superior State at No. 18, North Dakota 19th and Yale coming in at No. 20.

Seven other teams received votes.

Norwich starts 2012 the top team in D-III men’s poll

Norwich received all 20 first-place votes and remains the No. 1-ranked team in the USCHO.com Division III Men’s Poll this week.

Oswego stays at No. 2, while Plattsburgh jumps to No. 3, Castleton slips to fourth and Wisconsin-River Falls slides to No. 5.

St. Norbert holds steady at No. 6, Amherst rises to No. 7, Neumann jumps three places to No. 8, while Adrian falls to No. 9.

Utica finishes out the top ten, while Elmira, Milwaukee School of Engineering, Williams, Wisconsin-Superior and Middlebury are ranked 11-15, respectively, this week.

Midseason Awards and 20 Bold Predictions

Two Division III teams were in action this past weekend in South Burlington, Vt. to kick off 2012 at the St. Michael’s Holiday Classic. Division I Sacred Heart stole the tournament title however with a 5-2 win over Nichols and then a 3-1 victory over the host Purple Knights. Colby split the weekend with a 3-1 loss to St. Michael’s, but rebounded with 2-1 win over Nichols to finish in third place.

Three games are on tap today including the opening round of the Codfish Bowl hosted by UMass-Boston. Sacred Heart will look to steal another tourney title as they take on the host Beacons at 2 p.m. Bowdoin and Wesleyan are currently playing in the other first round game. Southern Maine meets Trinity in non-conference action as well to wrap up their two-game series. The Bantams won 3-1 last night in the first game.

Plenty of teams are taking advantage of the break from classes to get in midweek games. There are games on almost every night of the week for the next two weeks including a full slate of games this Friday and Saturday to really get things cranking on the D-III 2012 schedule.

However, before we get too far into 2012, I’d like to hand out some midseason awards from the first half, take an early look at the frontrunners for the Laura Hurd Award (D-III Player of the Year award), as well as make my popular 20 bold predictions.

 Midseason All-Americans

1st Team East:

F. Kourtney Kunichika, RIT
F. Julie Fortier, Norwich
F. Chelsea VanGlahn, Plattsburgh
D. Geneva Lloyd, Amherst
D. Madison Styrbicki, Middlebury
G. Laura Chamberlain, RIT

2nd Team East:

F. Kolbee McCrea, RIT
F. Melissa Rundlett, Norwich
F. Tori Charron, Elmira
D. Ashley Salerno, Amherst
D. Sarianne Lynn, Norwich
G. Annabelle Jones, Middlebury

1st Team West:

F. Nina Waidacher, St. Scholastica
F. Allie Schwab, Gustavus Adolphus
F. Katelyn Dold, Concordia (Minn.)
D. Anna Carlson, Bethel
D. Lindsey Hjelm, Gustavus Adolphus
G. Danielle Justice, Gustavus Adolphus

2nd Team West:

F. Kim Herring, Lake Forest
F. Kasey Evans, St. Catherine
F. Mollie Carroll, Gustavus Adolphus
D. Allie Olson, Wis.-River Falls
D. Kelly Salis, Adrian
G. Ashley Kuechle, Wis.-River Falls

 Laura Hurd Award Outlook

As always when I talk about the Hurd Award, I preface the fact that this National Player of the Year award presented by the American Hockey Coaches Association is normally a senior award rewarding a career rather than just an individual season.

Only one non-senior has ever won the trophy and that came in 2008 with Plattsburgh’s Danielle Blanchard winning it as a junior after leading the Cardinals to their second straight National Championship.

Last year, RIT’s Sarah Dagg became the first Tiger to win the award. In the 12 years the award has been given out, Middlebury has four winners, while Gustavus Adolphus and Elmira have two each. The NESCAC has accounted for half of the winners while no player from the ECAC East or NCHA has ever won the award.

Here are the five players that I see in the running right now.

Forward – (Sr.) Julie Fortier, Norwich

Fortier has been in the shadow of Sophie Leclerc for her first three seasons at Norwich. However, this year as the go to goal scorer, Fortier has been brilliant with 13 goals and nine assists for 22 points. Her goal and point tallies tie for the nation lead in both categories. So far in her career, Fortier has 75 goals and 67 assists for 142 points, which is just 22 points away from breaking the Norwich program record.

Forward – (Sr.) Allie Schwab, Gustavus Adolphus

Schwab is off to a terrific start in her senior year with a team-leading 19 points in 10 games. She’s been a big factor in GAC still being unbeaten as we enter 2012 with eight goals and 11 assists. In her career, Schwab has played in 98 games and has exactly 98 points with 54 goals and 44 assists.

Forward – (So.) Kourtney Kunichika, RIT

Kunichika has picked up right where she left off last year after a sensational freshman campaign where she led RIT in scoring on a team that featured three All-Americans and she wasn’t one of them. She has nine goals and 13 assists for 22 points so far to tie her with Fortier and St. Scholastica’s Nina Waidacher for the nation lead. Kunichika is already at 65 career points and has only played in 41 games. The only thing working against her for this award is she isn’t a senior.

Forward – (Sr.) Kim Herring, Lake Forest

Herring currently has 11 goals and six assists for 17 points so far. She has scored 61 goals and 39 assists for 100 points in 78 career games. Last year she missed the whole first half of the season with mono and was only able to play in 15 games and tallied just 10 points. It was certainly a let down after she scored 28 goals and has 25 assists for 53 points as a sophomore with the Forresters. Healthy again this year she has started to produce at a similar rate to her outstanding sophomore year when she led the country in scoring.

 Defense – (Jr.) Geneva Lloyd, Amherst

 Lloyd doesn’t get as much press as the four names mentioned above because she plays defense but for anyone that has seen her play, you quickly realize most nights she’s the best player on the ice and can control the game at both the defensive end and on offense. She has three goals and seven assists so far for a team-leading 10 points. She has led the Lord Jeffs in points in every season she has played for Amherst. So far in her career she has 24 goals and 49 assists for 73 points in 63 games.

20 Predictions

1. Gustavus Adolphus finishes regular season unbeaten.

2. St. Scholastica freshman Nina Waidacher leads nation in points at end of regular season.

3. RIT announces they are going to Division I next year before the end of the season.

4. Amherst sweeps River Falls and St. Thomas on western road trip.

5. Norwich finishes unbeaten in ECAC East play for second straight year.

6. Julie Fortier, Kourtney Kunichika, Allie Schwab, Kim Herring and Geneva Lloyd are the five Hurd Award finalists. 

7. Norwich’s Julie Fortier wins Laura Hurd Award.

8. Gustavus Adolphus’ senior goalie Danielle Justice leads nation in shutouts. 

9. RIT’s Kolbee McCrea leads nation in goals.

10. Two more schools announce they are adding D-III women’s hockey before end of the season (Franklin Pierce and Stevenson have already announced).

11.  RIT loses two games this season (playoffs and NCAA’s included). One to Elmira and one to Plattsburgh.

12. Manhattanville makes ECAC East finals.

13. One of River Falls, Middlebury, or RIT doesn’t make their conference championship.

14. St. Scholastica makes NCHA finals.

15. Castleton makes ECAC East final four.

16. Elmira wins ECAC West Tournament.

17. Amherst wins NESCAC Tournament.

18. RIT, Norwich, Amherst, River Falls make the Frozen Four.

19. RIT hosts the Frozen Four

20. RIT wins National Championship

MCHA/MIAC/NCHA wrap: Jan. 2

A handful of nonconference games finished off the calendar year and signaled the beginning of the second half of the 2011-2012 season. Three MCHA teams took to the road, and Hamline represented the MIAC at a tournament in Oswego, N.Y.
A much anticipated matchup between No. 7 Adrian and a surprisingly-tough Wisconsin-Stevens Point team lived up to expectations.  Adrian scored two goals in the third period to defeat Wis.-Steven Point, 3-1, Friday. Dan Barczuk scored the game-winning goal on a power play at 15:47 of the third. Zach Graham and Josh Ranalli also scored for Adrian. Kyle Heck scored the lone goal for Wis.-Stevens Point on a power play.
On Saturday, Wis.-Stevens Point took control in the last two periods to defeat Adrian, 6-2, and earn a split on the weekend. Scott Henegar led the way with two goals and Kyle Politz added a goal and an assist for Wis.-Stevens Point. Adrian built a 2-0 lead in the first period on goals by Shelby Gray and Lukas Ciotti.
Augsburg hosted Lawrence in another weekend series. John Lennartson exploded for four goals and Thomas Paine and Trevor Doden each had two goals as Augsburg had its most offensively-productive game of the season in a 9-4 victory over Lawrence. J.P. Perpich also had a goal and an assist for Augsburg. Brad Scurfield had a goal and an assist, while Gustav Lindgren added two assists for Lawrence.
Matt Hughes scored the lone goal of the game in overtime, as Lawrence earned a split with Augsburg during Saturday’s contest. The goaltenders had outstanding games, as both teams continued to apply the offensive pressure.  Justin Lochner made 31 saves in the loss for Augsburg, while Peter Emery stopped all 40 shots he faced in earning the shutout victory.
Johnny Van Siclen scored two goals to pace No. 8 Amherst to a 3-0 victory over Lake Forest Friday.
Hamline faced a difficult draw as it faced No. 11 Neumann in the first game of the Pathfinder Bank Tournament in Oswego. Corey Park scored the game-winning goal with three minutes left in the game to help Neumann defeat Hamline, 5-3. After Neumann tallied two first period goals, Hamline came back to tie the contest in the second period on goals by Jordan VanGilder and Sam Leslie. Dave Gervais gave Neumann the lead again at 10:14 of the third period, but less than three minutes later, Zach Johnson tied the game for Hamline.
Hamline and Connecticut College skated to a 3-3 overtime tie in the tournament on Saturday. Connecticut College took a 1-0 lead into the third before Hamline scored three unanswered goals by Zach Johnson, Jordan VanGilder and Cam Stowers. Hamline committed two untimely penalties in the final minutes to give Connecticut College a five-on-three power play. Kevin Reich cut the deficit to 3-2 for Connecticut College with the first power-play goal at 17:49, and Keith Veronesi tied the game with 14 seconds left in regulation with his power-play goal. Connecticut College won a shootout to decide the third place trophy.

ECAC East/NESCAC wrap: Jan. 2

Wow! What I learned this past weekend is that you never know where a truly great and entertaining hockey game is going to spring up. Sure, there were a number of tournaments where league teams played nonconference foes in marquee match-ups. However, the game of the week, and maybe the most exciting 24:01 of hockey I have seen this season, was at Ulin Rink in Milton, Mass., where Hamilton ended Curry’s seven-game win streak with a thrilling 6-5 overtime win that saw seven third period goals and a last-minute breakaway that decided the contest –  more on that later. First, here’s a recap of other action.
ECAC East
The big game of the weekend was the match-up of ranked teams in Plattsburgh at the Cardinal Classic, where the hosts played Castleton for the championship on New Year’s Eve. As expected, the game was low scoring, and the first period featured some impressive penalty killing by both teams, including a major kill by the Spartans midway through the period.
Plattsburgh held the territorial edge and outshot Castleton by a two-to-one margin (42-21), but needed a third period goal by Jake Mooney to decide the 2-1 contest. These teams won’t miss each other or the action for long, as Castleton is right back at Plattsburgh on Friday night. Expect another close contest, and maybe a different outcome the second time around.
Babson also played in the Cardinal Classic, but didn’t have a particularly good weekend, going 0-2, with losses to Plattsburgh, 5-0, and Utica, 6-2. The Beavers have a nonconference game against Massachusetts-Dartmouth on Saturday, January 7, before facing league rival Norwich on the outdoor rink at Frozen Fenway on Friday, January 13, at 3:30 p.m. If you are in Boston, definitely head over for an outdoor hockey treat.
Skidmore and Southern Maine both played in the Middlebury Classic over the New Year’s weekend, and posted similar results in tying Potsdam by scores of 2-2 and 4-4 respectively. The Huskies also tied the hosts by a 2-2 score, while Skidmore dropped its opener to Middlebury by a 5-0 score that ultimately saw the Panthers winning their own tournament on points, with the only game that didn’t end in a tie going in their favor.
NESCAC
Having mentioned Middlebury’s tournament win at home, let’s look at the St.Michael’s tournament just up the road, where another NESCAC team took home some hardware over the New Year.
Wesleyan leveraged wins over Becker (3-2) and Salve Regina (5-0) to take four points and beat the host team by one point for the tournament title. Sophomore forward Nik Tasiopoulos had a goal and an assist in each game for the Cardinals, including his team-leading 10th of the season in the win over the Seahawks.
Amherst shut down western opponent Lake Forest by a 2-0 score, and Trinity showed some offense in an 8-3 pasting of Nichols.
Connecticut College finished 0-1-1 at the Pathfinder Bank Classic, losing to host Oswego by a score of 5-1 before tying Hamline in the consolation game, 3-3, rallying from a two-goal deficit in the final two-and-a-half minutes. Kevin Reich scored a power-play and extra-attacker goal at 17:49. Keith Veronesi scored another power-play extra-attacker goal to tie things up at three at 19:46 of regulation. Neither team could find the net in the overtime, so the tie was a rewarding outcome for the Camels.
Now back to the Hamilton vs. Curry in Milton (photo gallery), where both teams showed some holiday rust in the first period, accounting for nine minor penalties and one power-play goal apiece in a period that saw the home team put 15 shots on Hamilton’s Joe Quattrocchi. Coming off the ice, coach Rob Davies of Curry noted that at the first period pace, his Colonels would outshoot the Continentals for the game by a 45-27 margin.
“I am not crazy about them having 27, but like our chances if we are up around 40 for the game.”
The second period saw Anthony Scarpino score his second of the game for Hamilton, as it took a 2-1 lead into the locker room. Then all hell broke loose in the third period.
The game just seemed to open up, as both goalies were tested with quality chances and a fair number of odd-man rushes by the opposition. Ian DeLong tied the game for Curry at 7:21 on a great individual effort from the side wall to the front of the goal, where he cashed in his own rebound to tie the game at 2-2.  The final 10 minutes of regulation saw six goals including four in a span of 1:31.
Mike Kavanaugh blasted a shot off the far post past Quattrocchi from the high slot to give Curry its only lead at 3-2. Just 10 seconds later, Anthony Scarpino completed his hat trick, with Michael DiMare getting his third assist, and the game was tied at 3-3.  At the 12:00-minute mark, Bryan Kelly rifled a shot over the glove of Curry’s Derek Mohney for a 4-3 lead, and just eight seconds later, freshman Pat Curtis from DiMare again made it 5-3 for the visitors. That was all for Mohney, as he was replaced in goal by Luc Montoni during a Curry timeout.
The Colonels didn’t quit, and at 16:48 Conner Hendry made it a one-goal game, sneaking a rebound through Quattrocchi’s pads. With Montoni pulled for an extra attacker, Curry captain Peyden Benning came up money for the Colonels, scoring at 18:58 to tie the game at 5-5. The track-meet pace of the game was exciting, and neither team went into any defensive shell or trap starting the overtime.
Shots were at a premium in the overtime, but a home run pass from Scarpino to his teammate DiMare at center ice sent the four-assist winger in for a chance to win the game with under a minute to play. Ironically, DiMare’s breakaway deke was the only shot Montoni faced in his almost seven minutes of play, and he couldn’t come up with it, as the Continentals stole back the 6-5 overtime win. For the combination of DiMare (1-4-5) and Scarpino (3-2-5), their 10 combined points were the catalyst for the victory, and despite giving up five goals, Joe Quattrocchi made 41 saves, many big ones early in the game, to keep Hamilton close.
It was a great way to spend an afternoon at the rink, and exciting right to the last minute of play. It just goes to show that you never know what a match-up between teams will bring, so enjoy all of the action you can find at any game this weekend or in the future.
Don’t blink, you might miss a goal — drop the puck!

SUNYAC wrap: Jan. 2

Plattsburgh wins own tournament
Plattsburgh took its Cardinal Classic holiday tournament, giving up just one goal in the two games.
First, they disposed of Babson, 5-0, with Mathieu Cadieux and Josh Leis combining for the shutout. Cadieux made 20 saves in the first two periods, and Leis stopped all eight third period shots.
After a scoreless first period, the Cardinals scored four times in the middle stanza on goals by Alex Brenton, Kyle Taylor, Alex Jensen, and Nick Jensen. Matty MacLeod rounded out the scoring in the third period. Plattsburgh committed just one penalty in the game.
“I think both teams did a little feeling out, and we got a little bit of a slow start in the first period,” Plattsburgh coach Bob Emery told the Press Republican. “It took a while to get the rust off, but I thought we played pretty good after that.”
It was a bit tougher in the championship game, as Plattsburgh needed to come back to defeated Castleton, 2-1. Cadieux went the whole way, stopping 20 shots.
Again, the first period was scoreless. The Spartans took the lead at the 11:00 mark of the second period. Five-and-a-half minutes later, Taylor tied it up. Jack Mooney’s slap shot was the game-winner with 5:08 left in the third. This time, Plattsburgh took only three penalties.
“I thought we moved the puck well in the offensive zone,” Emery said. “Puck possession was real key for us in the offensive zone.”
Kyle Kudroch, Paul Puglisi, and Alex Jensen made the All Tournament team for Plattsburgh.
Interestingly, Castleton returns to Plattsburgh on Friday.
Other highlights
– Oswego cruised in the first game of its Pathfinder Bank Oswego Classic, beating Connecticut College, 5-1. Andrew Hare made 21 saves. Luke Moodie scored the first two goals and assisted on the third. The Lakers offense disappeared in the championship game, as they lost to Neumann, 3-0. It was the first time they were shutout since January 18, 2002. Oswego committed 12 penalties, giving up two power-play goals. Taylor Farris and Moodie made the All Tournament team.
– Four appears to be the favorite number for Potsdam entering 2012. The Bears tied both their games in the Middlebury Classic, 4-4. First, they needed to come from behind against Southern Maine. After the Huskies took an early 1-0 lead, Mike Arnold and Adam Place quickly reversed the score. Southern Maine tied it in the second then scored twice in the third to take a 4-2 lead. The Bears then scored twice 57 seconds apart starting at 17:15, with Place and Bill Tsekos doing the honors.
– On New Year’s Day, it was Potsdam that was unable to hold onto a two-goal lead, three times, against Skidmore. Trevor Cope and Sy Nutkevitch gave the Bears a 2-0 first period lead. After Skidmore scored, Cope scored again for a 3-1 lead. Skidmore got one back late in the second. Nick Avgerinos scored in the third for yet another two-goal lead for Potsdam. However, the Thoroughbreds scored twice, the later with an extra attacker 48 seconds before the regulation buzzer. Kevin McFarland had his work cut out for him, as he needed to make 56 saves. Skidmore and Potsdam play again on Friday in Potsdam.

ECAC Northeast/MASCAC wrap: Jan. 2

With the close of the year, the end came for the Curry hockey team. Specifically, the end of the Colonels’ seven-game winning streak.
In a nonconference game Saturday at Curry’s Max Ulin Arena, Hamilton’s Michael DiMare scored the game-winning goal with 59 seconds left in overtime to hand Curry a 6-5 loss — the Colonels’ first loss in nearly two months.
Talk about beating the clock, both as time was winding down in the nonconference game and as 2011 was in its final hours. Curry took its first loss since November 6, when Neumann defeated the Colonels, 5-4, in the season opener for both teams.
Curry was one of four ECAC Northeast teams that resumed its schedule over the weekend after the holiday break — a weekend that included a tournament for Salve Regina and Becker. The Seagulls and the Hawks played in the four-team St. Michael’s Holiday Classic in Colchester, Vt., and both teams finished a combined 0-3-1.
The tournaments continue this weekend, as Johnson and Wales will play in the Codfish Bowl at Massachusetts-Boston — the 47th year of the tournament — joining Southern New Hampshire and Tufts.
Nichols and Becker will play in the four-team Worcester City Shootout, joining Worcester State and host team Assumption — a tournament that features programs from only the Worcester area (Nichols is about 20 minutes south of Worcester, in Dudley, Mass.).
The MASCAC resumes play tonight, as Salem State hosts Colby at 6 p.m. in a nonconference game. Of note — all of the MASCAC’s games scheduled for this week are nonconference contests. The conference schedule doesn’t resume until January 12

Women’s D-I competition resumes

Most teams get back into action over the coming week, but a quartet got an early start by closing out 2011 with Friday and Saturday games. The WCHA’s fifth and sixth place teams, Ohio State and Bemidji State respectively, wrapped up the nonconference portion of their schedules with differing results. Both were missing players due to national-team commitments, but the Beavers found a way to get wins that eluded the Buckeyes.

Minus Laura McIntosh, Annie Svedin, and Minttu Tuominen, Ohio State hosted Princeton for a two-game set. Three times over the weekend the Buckeyes took one-goal leads, but the Tigers answered on each occasion, resulting in 2-2 and 1-1 draws. Senior Rachel Weber stopped 82 of 85 shots on the weekend to gain the split for Princeton.

Meanwhile, BSU journeyed to Pittsburgh without Emily Erickson and Montana Vichorek to play Robert Morris, and the Beavers squeaked by with 3-2 decisions on successive days. Both games followed the same script:  BSU jumped out to a 2-0 lead, RMU battled back to tie, and the Beavers tallied the deciding goal in the final 10 minutes. Although the Colonials fell to 11-4-2 on the season, they can take solace in going down to the wire both days against No. 8 Bemidji State, the highest-ranked team they have seen to date.

League status checks
CHA action has barely begun, with only two league games in the books, but the other conferences offer the opportunity to compare what has transpired on the ice with preseason prognostication.

Hockey East coaches chose Boston University to take the league title over Boston College. Thus far, the third Boston team is off to the best start, as Northeastern holds a two-point edge over BC, although the Eagles have a game in hand. The Terriers sit fourth, behind Providence. The coaches don’t award individual honors before the season, but with 10 goals and six assists for 16 points, freshman Kendall Coyne of NU holds the scoring lead by three over junior teammate Casey Picket and senior Laura Veharanta of Providence.

The coaches in ECAC Hockey have been more accurate thus far, as their pick, two-time defending champion Cornell, owns the circuit’s best winning percentage. Quinnipiac and Clarkson, having played five and three additional games, have amassed more league points. Four of the league’s top five scorers in Jillian Saulnier, Catherine White, Brianne Jenner, and Rebecca Johnston represent the Big Red, with only Kelly Babstock of Quinnipiac crashing the party. Saulnier is the ECAC’s top-scoring rookie.

Voters in the WCHA tabbed Wisconsin and have proven prescient, as the Badgers lead Minnesota by two games. The coaches’ choice for Preseason Player of the Year, UW’s Hilary Knight, has 17 goals to lead the conference, while North Dakota’s Jocelyne Lamoureux has 34 points to head that category. Michelle Karvinen of UND, one of a trio of players to garner two Preseason Rookie of the Year votes, has 26 points to top the league’s newcomers.

More signings
Seven programs have announced their recruits from the early NLI signing period, in addition to the four releases reported in this blog on November 21. Boston College, Providence and Quinnipiac each inked five student athletes, Bemidji State and Wisconsin added four apiece, and Minnesota State landed three. Penn State announced 13 members in its inaugural recruiting class.

ECAC West Weekend Recap

Utica and Neumann were the only ECAC West teams in action at holiday tournaments as 2011 finished and both faced top ranked teams.  The Pioneers were at the Cardinal Classic hosted by Plattsburgh and drew a tough game against No. 3 Castleton, a team that has been climbing the polls all season long.
Utica came out flat after the holiday break, immediately getting into penalty trouble just 33 seconds into the game.  Penalties at inopportune times have been a problem for Utica so far this season and it proved true again in this game as Castleton took a 4-0 lead in the first period including three power play goals.
Jordan Hobaica and Evan Chlanda tallied in the third period for Utica but it was too little too late to prevent Castleton from winning the game 5-2.
Utica rebounded in the consolation game against Babson on Saturday, overcoming a 2-1 deficit mid game to score five straight goals on the way to a 6-2 victory.  Freshman Ridge Garbutt scored two goals and added an assist to lead Utica on the score sheet.
Neumann pushed past Hamline and Oswego to win the title in the Pathfinder Bank Oswego Classic tournament.  The Pipers gave Neumann all it could handle in the opening game of the tournament, tying the Knights at 2-2 and 3-3.  Cory Park scored with three minutes left in the contest to give the Knights the final lead of the game.  Andrew Love added an empty net insurance goal with 38 seconds remaining, his second tally of the game, to secure the 5-3 victory for Neumann.
The Knights faced host Oswego, ranked No. 2 in the nation, in the championship game.  Neumann went 2 for 8 on the power play, while holding Oswego scoreless on four man advantages.  That proved to be a key difference in the game as Neumann rolled to a 3-0 victory to win the tournament.  Steve Gervais, Cory Park, and Jordan Zalba scored for the Knights to get the second half of the season off to a rolling start.

Three tournament wins and three things learned

The annual weekend of in-season tournament madness came to an end and Hockey East fared the best of all the league involved earning three tournament victories. If you told me the league got three wins at tournaments, though, I’d have guaranteed you that Boston College had one of those victories at the GLI. Man, how wrong was I? But holiday tournaments lead the three things we learned this past extended weekend.

1. Northeastern leads league’s tournament success.

I will say it now, officially on the record, that it is time to stop picking against Northeastern. Dave and I have been hammered by Husky fans over the last few weeks for picking against this team, which now is on an eight-game unbeaten streak. But this team, and its confidence level, seems legit. To win a holiday tournament isn’t unexpected. To beat Minnesota on its home ice to earn that victory is pretty incredible. Congrats to the Huskies (as well as Maine and Massachusetts-Lowell) for earning tournament wins.

2. It looks like Boston University’s losses have added up.

I had some concerns coming into the weekend about Boston University’s loss of top scorers Corey Trivino and Charlie Coyle. They proved very real when BU was run over by Notre Dame on New Year’s Eve. When you think of the game, though, it wasn’t as much about the losses to the Terriers offense as much as the team’s defense unable to stop the Fighting Irish attack. Notre Dame reeled off five straight goals bringing into question how well the defense is playing. Yes, one game isn’t the best measuring stick, but it certainly didn’t calm any nerves of BU nation.

3. Time to press the panic button in Durham.

I think many of us have been standing by patiently waiting for New Hampshire to turn things around. There have been some signs of brilliance amidst what otherwise has been an ugly season in Durham. Optimists may have hope that playing a team that is among the bottom of the ECAC would provide a good start for UNH. But instead the Wildcats feel behind, 3-0, and then had a rally fall short losing 5-2. Goaltender Matt DiGirolamo had to be pulled from goal for the third time this season. What’s worse? UNH plays five of its next six games away from the Whittemore Center where its is winless thus far this season.

A tremendous trio of talking points to begin the year

OK, it’s a trio anyway. But, be honest, would you be here if we hadn’t dressed up the headline a bit? If you haven’t hit the “Back” button yet, below you’ll find our first three thoughts of 2012.

The WCHA takes a much-needed step forward in non-conference play

With only a handful of games nationwide pairing conference opponents over the weekend, the WCHA and fellow Division I conferences alike, returned from the winter break rested, re-charged, and prepared to battle some mostly infrequent foes. It was an important past few days for the conference as the WCHA’s non-conference record in the season’s first half left a little to be desired, relatively speaking.

Although a 29-19-5 (0.594) record doesn’t sound all that bad, it’s well below 2010-11’s 0.653 winning percentage (58-28-12) outside of the conference. Furthermore, the WCHA’s worst inter-conference record last season was its 10-8-4 mark (0.545) vs. the ECAC whereas it was 5-10-1 (0.344) against the CCHA prior to breaking for the holidays.

But the WCHA rebounded to go 9-5-2 coming out of the break to boost its non-conference winning percentage ever so slightly above the 60 percent mark. In fact, the WCHA’s 0.625 winning percentage outside the conference from Thursday through Sunday was tops in the country followed by Hockey East (0.600), the CCHA (0.500), Atlantic Hockey (0.433), and the ECAC (0.417).

St. Cloud State beat No. 8 Western Michigan 4-2 on Thursday and pushed the Broncos to overtime on Friday before dropping a 2-1 game. 10th ranked Union was swept in Colorado by No. 15 Denver and No. 6 Colorado College although CC fell to Air Force in Colorado Springs a night before the Falcons were destroyed at home by DU 7-1.

No. 18 North Dakota and Nebraska-Omaha each earned a win and a tie from teams knocking on the top-20 door in Harvard and Quinnipiac respectively as Bemidji State was sweeping Bowling Green at Sanford Center. But Michigan Tech dropped a couple of close ones to No. 14 Michigan State (3-1) and No. 3 Boston College (2-1) at the Great Lakes Invitational while No. 2 Minnesota, after routing Niagara on Friday 5-1, penalized itself into a 3-2 loss to Northeastern and failed to win the Mariucci Classic for a third straight year.

Next weekend is yet another opportunity for the WCHA to flex its muscle as 12 of the season’s final 17 non-league games are to be played including No. 1 Minnesota Duluth’s road trip to Kalamazoo, Mich. for a pair of games against Western Michigan. Also of note is CC’s home series with No. 13 Cornell and a couple of single games in Winnipeg and Minneapolis as Clarkson ventures west to play North Dakota north of the border and Notre Dame has a date with the Gophers on Saturday.

World Juniors participants return this weekend

With the members of Team USA’s U20 team returning from Alberta a day earlier than they probably expected to, their college teams will get a boost to their lineups. The United States plays two relegation-round games Tuesday and Wednesday. The medal games are set for Thursday.

Don Lucia will be a happy coach come Saturday when Kyle Rau and Nick Bjugstad return to his top line against Notre Dame. Lucia had to reconstruct his lines with Rau’s and Bjugstad’s absence, sending Zach Budish to the third line. Erik Haula, Jake Hansen and Sam Warning, Minnesota’s usual second line, got bumped up to the top line and although they accounted for four of the five goals against a weak Niagara team, they didn’t make the best of their promotion against a much tougher Northeastern squad. The trio could only scrape together six shots in a 3-2 loss.

Colorado College’s fifth-ranked power play hasn’t scored in seven power-play opportunities going back to a Dec. 17 win at Minnesota State when the Tigers PP went 3-for-6. Other than that, CC hasn’t done a whole lot on the power play, going 1-for-13 in the other four games Jaden Schwartz missed.

The Team Canada captain is such an important part of CC’s power play that should feast on a weak Cornell penalty kill this weekend when Schwartz returns to the lineup this weekend.

The North Dakota lineup will also be bolstered by the return of Derek Forbort when UND faces off with Clarkson on Saturday.

Knight re-injured

After he missed the Dec. 10 game against Nebraska-Omaha, Corban Knight started at center for North Dakota Friday against Harvard. According to the Grand Forks Herald’s Brad Schlossman, Knight fell awkwardly in his second shift, left the game, returned for one more shift in the second period and didn’t play Saturday. Knight is UND’s assist leader with 15.

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