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Penn State and Neumann head outdoors to play in Philadelphia

The Penn State ACHA team will head outdoors to Citizens Bank Park on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2012, to play Division III Neumann.

Game time is set for 8 p.m. at the home of the Philadelphia Phillies.

Penn State is in its last year competing at the club level and is the top-ranked team in the ACHA. Neumann is ranked No. 15 in this week’s USCHO.com Division III Men’s Poll.

“Many of my fondest memories of growing up playing hockey come from playing outdoors,” said PSU head coach Guy Gadowsky in a news release. “There is something really special about the feel of the air and the sound of the ice.It will be an unforgettable experience for o ur entire team.”

General admission tickets are $10 each and are available here. Fans can enter ‘PSU’ or ‘NU’ when prompted for a promotion code.

In addition to the Penn State-Neumann matchup, the 43,000-seat stadium will host the fifth annual Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic between the New York Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers on Jan. 2, as well as the American Hockey League’s Adirondack Phantoms and Hershey Bears for the third-ever AHL outdoor game four days later.

Atlantic Hockey Picks Dec. 9-11

Last Week: 7-3-2
On the Season: 70-31-13 (.671)

This Week’s Picks:

Friday, Dec. 9 and Saturday, Dec. 10
American International at Rochester Institute of Technology – This is the only two game series of the weekend. RIT is 17-3-1 all-time against AIC, including 9-1-1 at Ritter Arena. I think that trend will continue. RIT 4, AIC 3; RIT 3, AIC 1.

Friday, Dec. 9
Sacred Heart at Quinnipiac – The Pioneers have an upset on the books this season (a win over Yale), but I don’t think the Bobcats will be taking the Pios lightly despite their record. Quinnipiac 5, Sacred Heart 2

Bentley at Connecticut – Something has to give here as neither team has lost in their eastern “pod”. I think the Huskies will be the team that keeps its streak going. UConn 4, Bentley 2.

Niagara at Robert Morris – The Purple Eagles made a swing through the Keystone State with games against Robert Morris and Mercyhurst. I think this will be the best game of the weekend, with the Colonials pulling out a close one. RMU 4, Niagara 3.

Mercyhurst at Canisius – This will be the 68th meeting between the two schools, dating back to their days in the Division III ECAC West. I like the Lakers to pick up a road win. Mercyhurst 2, Canisius 1.

Saturday, Dec. 10
Army at Holy Cross – The Crusaders should take this one at home, where they are 5-0 against AHA competition so far. Holy Cross 4, Army 1.

Niagara at Mercyhurst – This is a budding rivalry now that both teams are in the AHA. Mercyhurst took two of three games last season against the Purple Eagles, but I have a hunch Niagara is going to come out on top on the road. Niagara 3, Mercyhurst 2.

Sunday, Dec. 11
Sacred Heart at Dartmouth – Another ECAC opponent, and I think another loss for the Pioneers. Dartmouth 4, SHU 2.

Canisius at Robert Morris – This should be a good contest, pitting RMU’s hot offense against Canisius’ stingy defense. Special teams will be key and the Colonials have a big advantage in the penalty-killing department. RMU 4, Canisius 2.

 

Take Me On
Feel free to chime in by posting your picks in the comments.

Hockey East picks: December 8-10

Well, how was that for one week wiping out an entire season of picks that hadn’t been lighting the world on fire in the first place?  Both Jimmy and I went down in flames with all the underdogs sweeping the favorites, though I’d be surprised if anyone publicly listing his or her picks (before the games are actually played, of course) showed good results.

A great week for Hockey East underdogs. A bad one for Jimmy and me. Let’s see if there’s a bounce-back within the two of us.

And those of you who like to chide us for picking against your team, please make your own picks (all of them) in the comments. Before Jimmy and I either look like fools, geniuses, or somewhere in between.  Seriously.  It’ll be fun.

Dave last week: 4-8-1
Jim last week: 4-8-1
Dave’s record-to-date: 54-35-9
Jim’s record-to-date: 53-36-9

Here are this week’s picks:

Friday, December 8

Boston University at New Hampshire
Dave’s pick: I’ve been a believer in the Terriers, and their ability to win at BC last weekend makes me believe they’ll do the same at the Whitt.
BU 4 UNH 3
Jim’s pick: I’m with Dave. BU is the better team right now. But barely.
BU 3, UNH 1

Friday, December 9

Boston College at Massachusetts-Lowell
Dave’s pick: I’ve been so consistently wrong about the River Hawks this year, their fans have begged me to continue to pick against them. As a result, I’ll comply. (That, plus even though the Hawks have made me believers that they could be serious contenders at home ice, the Eagles have made me believers — recent inconsistency notwithstanding — that they could be serious contenders for the national title.)
BC 4 UML 3
Jim’s pick: And here I will go against Pops. Too easy to try to pick up a game in the standings. Plus, after last Friday, I expect Tsongas to be rocking.
UML 4, BC 2

Saturday, December 10

Massachusetts-Lowell at Northeastern
Dave’s pick: I have to disappoint my River Hawk “fans” this time and pick for their team. Both teams have played surprisingly well — very surprising to me — but the Hawks have done it more than the Huskies.
UML 3 NU2
Jim’s pick: I actually think this may be the most difficult game of the week to predict. I think that Northeastern is playing well. My only issue is the Huskies haven’t played well at home.
UML 4, NU 3

Boston University at Maine
Dave’s pick: The Black Bears did sweep last weekend, but I’m putting that more on their opponent (Vermont) than themselves. They’ll need to show more over a longer stretch before I go for them even at home against the (5-1 in their last six games) Terriers.
BU 4 Maine 2
Jim’s pick: I like Maine’s mojo. Sorry, Pops, you’re going down.
Maine 5, BU 3

Merrimack at Colgate
Dave’s pick: The Raiders have won five in a row and the Warriors did get swept last weekend. Call me stubborn (my wife does all the time),  but I still believe in Merrimack. Even on the road. And it didn’t take the rebound win on Wednesday.
Merrimack 3 Colgate 2
Jim’s pick: I don’t even think it will be as close as Dave predicts. This could be a blowaway.
MC 6, Colgate 2

Women’s picks: Dec. 8

Well, aside from getting splits on the wrong days, I did pretty well last week, going 13-3-2 (.777), to move to 89-29-11 (.732) on the year. Arlan went 12-4-2 (.722) to move to 86-32-11 (.709). We’re closing in on the end of the first half of the season, so let’s see how we can do this week.

Thursday, December 8

Harvard at Providence
Candace: The Crimson broke a three-game losing streak last week by beating Dartmouth. I don’t see them falling here, but it will be a close one. Harvard 3-2
Arlan: Did the Crimson discover something in Hanover that will serve them well in Providence? Harvard 2-1

Friday-Saturday, December 9-10

Quinnipiac vs. Princeton
Candace: This home-and-home provides a potential pitfall for the Bobcats. I think Princeton might have enough to pull off a home win, but for now, I’ll go with the Bobcats, who have been playing well lately. Quinnipiac 2-1, 3-2
Arlan: In nature, Tigers are mightier than Bobcats, but I don’t think that applies in the ECAC. Quinnipiac 3-1, 2-1

Wisconsin at Bemidi State
Candace: What I said a few weeks ago about always picking Wisconsin still applies. Wisconsin 3-0, 4-1
Arlan: I don’t think the Beavers get swept, but win or tie, first or second game? Too many variables, so I’ll be boring and get at least one right. Wisconsin 3-2, 4-1

Mercyhurst at Boston College
Candace: Mercyhurst served notice last week by splitting with Cornell. This has split written all over it to me. Hopefully I’ll get the nights right. Mercyhurst 4-2, Boston College 3-1
Arlan: If the Eagles get strong goaltending, then this result could be a complete opposite. Mercyhurst 5-3, 4-3

Friday, December 9

New Hampshire at Harvard
Candace: Harvard ends the first half on a strong note. Harvard 3-1
Arlan: The road hasn’t been too kind to UNH of late. Harvard 4-2

Saturday-Sunday, December 10-11

Ohio State at Minnesota
Candace: I thought the Buckeyes might be moving toward pushing upper-echelon WCHA teams, until they tied Niagara last week. Plus the Gophers are dominant at home. Minnesota 4-1, 4-0
Arlan: Ohio State has lost 17 straight to the Gophers. That will end at some point.  Minnesota 3-2, 4-1

Minnesota-Duluth at North Dakota
Candace: I’ve generally gotten Sioux split dates right. Hopefully that still applies. Minnesota-Duluth 3-1, North Dakota 2-1
Arlan: My upset special. Two evenly-matched teams, but I think UND’s goaltending is less consistent. Minnesota-Duluth 5-4, 4-2

Clarkson at Niagara
Candace: Niagara might have enough to get one tie against Clarkson, but there’s no percentage in picking a tie. Clarkson 3-1, 2-0
Arlan: In case you haven’t noticed, I’m running my own private Sweeps Week here, otherwise, I’d give Niagara some love. Clarkson 3-2, 3-2

Sunday, December 11

Dartmouth at New Hampshire
Candace: I’m guessing that the Big Green really want revenge for losing the earlier in-state match-up. Dartmouth 2-1
Arlan: I’m probably giving the Wildcats’ win at Dartmouth more emphasis than it deserves. New Hampshire 3-2

Astedt finding success

Each press release reads almost the same: Jack Astedt, Plymouth State, MASCAC Goalie of the Week.

For the third time in four weeks, the junior has received the honor — this week, after going 2-1 with a 1.63 goals against average, a .945 saves percentage, and a shutout in three games from November 29 to December 3.

But Astedt, a junior at Plymouth State, credits his early-season success to the fact that in the past two summers, he has made a stronger dedication to off-season training. In his native Sweden, he worked as a goalie coach at summer youth camps and trained every day, whether it was skating, weight training, or running on the beach near his hometown of Osby, about two and a half hours northeast of Copenhagen, Denmark.

“I’d never really taken being physically strong and going to the gym seriously,” Astedt said. “I rode on my talent. You reach a point where you can’t do that, and you reach a point where you have to develop in another way. You can’t just survive on your talent. For me, that was the biggest difference, compared to last year.

“I came into the season and I knew I worked harder. I definitely worked just as hard as the other goalies in the league.

But Astedt’s early-season success is also part of a bigger journey. In Sweden, he went to high school in Angelholm and played club hockey for the Rogle BK Super Elite U-18 and U-20 teams. After Astedt graduated from high school in 2009, he did not make the pro-level team of the organization that owned his club team — the team needed two goalies, and he was the third man out.

Astedt took his next step: Pursue college hockey opportunities in the United States.

“I had no idea whatsoever about college sports,” Astedt said. “How am I going to do this? Who am I going to talk to?”

He met with Bluechip Education, a Swedish firm that helps place Swedish students in American colleges and universities.

“The organization sent out some information for me, and I started getting e-mails from different schools all over the United States,” Astedt said. “I had no idea what school was good, what league was good. What would it cost me? Will I get a scholarship?”

After staying in contact with several coaches from New England, ultimately, he chose a Division III state university in central New Hampshire.

Sight unseen.

“I went with my gut feeling,” Astedt said.

Two years ago, Plymouth State coach Craig Russell met Astedt at Boston’s Logan Airport — the first time Astedt had ever been to the United States. The initial adjustment was overwhelming. He didn’t have the comforts of home. He went from having his own room to sharing a dorm room with two American students. He had to learn to balance his schoolwork with playing hockey. He had never even heard of Plymouth, N.H., and he had no idea about his new team.

“I learned more in my first year than what I’d known my whole life,” Astedt said.

In 13 games in his freshman year at Plymouth State, Astedt finished 8-4 with an .899 saves percentage and a 3.37 goals-against average. Last year, Astedt finished 13-5-5 with a .920 saves percentage, a 2.18 goals-against average, and three shutouts.

In eight games this season, Astedt is 6-2 with a .928 saves percentage, a 1.97 goals against average and two shutouts — he’s one of three Division III goalies who lead the nation with two shutouts.

Likewise, Plymouth State is one of three teams tied for ninth in the nation in team defense, allowing an average of two goals a game.

“With the team, we have faith in ourselves that we can play against the best,” said Astedt, whose team hosts Massachusetts-Dartmouth on Thursday and Fitchburg State on Saturday, before the holiday break. “Our program is getting so much better each year, but you don’t know where you stand going into the season. We’ve been working really really hard off the ice throughout the preseason. But we didn’t really know what to expect. Winning those first couple games was a good feeling.”

Trinity’s new coach Matt Greason: “And Away We Go!

As one of three new coaches to join the NESCAC ranks this season, Trinity’s Matt Greason joined the party late, and is now starting to see the collective buy-in and performance improvement from his Bantams as we approach the end of the first semester. The results are starting to come, but oh what a ride it has been getting to this point.

When former coach Dave Cataruzolo departed Trinity to become director of hockey operations for the Harvard men’s program, former coach John Dunham was inserted on an interim basis while the search was conducted for only the third coach in the program’s history.  Greason, who is a Trinity alum, was hired in October and has been catching up ever since.

“It has been a wild ride,” stated Greason. “This isn’t like the USHL, USNDP or a D-I program where you have operations and support personnel dealing with logistics and equipment and scheduling etc. It has been extremely busy since the day I arrived in October in terms of equipment, sticks, practice uniforms, game schedules, and teaching a new system on the ice to a great group of young men. I wouldn’t have it any other way, and now I feel like we are past the organizational stuff and am now focusing on our quality of play on the ice in the Trinity tradition.”

Having played, and coached as an assistant, at his alma mater, Greason comes to Hartford knowing the traditions established by his predecessors, and looks to maintain many of the prior traditions while building his own version of success on the ice.

“Both Coach Dunham and Cat (Cataruzolo) always emphasized the off-ice aspects of campus leadership, maturity and responsibility, which will remain unchanged in my working with these talented student athletes,” Greason said. “The differences will likely be more on the ice, where my overall experience, including the past two years with the USNDP and U-17 and U-18 programs, has definitely had an impact on my preferred style of play.

“Working with great coaches, very detailed and skill-oriented coaches like Ron Rolston and Danton Cole, really has grounded my focus on improving our overall skill levels. We have practices dedicated to continuous improvement on fundamental hockey skills, in addition to our more routine tactical and conditioning workout activities. I think it helps our team improve the level of overall skill, as well as keep practices fresh and uptempo. Right now, I think we are still getting the collective buy-in on the system, but we are progressing in a positive direction, and it is nice to see things coming together.”

Last weekend, the Bantams split games with Hamilton and Amherst while surrendering just two goals in the two games. The strong defensive game has Trinity’s new bench boss happy, but he still sees the overall picture and the need for more scoring and the players getting to positions to take advantage of second- and third-chance opportunities.

“I think any coach, at any level, would be thrilled giving up just two goals in two games on the weekend,” said Greason. “I think our progress overall in the detail and focus on our team defense has taken root, and we are seeing it get better each and every time out.  We focus on a simple four-word motto: “Hard, Fast, Physical and Disciplined.” That is how we approach the game, and it is definitely coming together defensively, as we see the players now understanding the impact of getting to certain places on the ice in certain situations, and the likelihood that they will be around or battle for the puck.

“We certainly were pleased overall with our defense and goaltending last weekend against Hamilton in our win and Amherst in a 2-1 loss. Offensively, we are getting shots but we aren’t getting to the places where we need to be for the all-important second and third chances that you need to take advantage of to be successful. Goalies today are well-coached, and the positioning and pads don’t give you much to shoot at with the initial shots, so you need your players to go to the net, create traffic, screens, tips and rebound opportunities. We are still working on getting that part of the offense going, and I am sure we will be fine, as this is a great group of kids to work with.”

If it sounds like Matt Greason has come home, in a lot of ways he has.  His roots in the NESCAC Conference run deep, back to his childhood, where he grew up in Maine as a devoted fan of Bowdoin College and coach Terry Meagher.

“My grandfather was the president of Bowdoin College from 1980-1990,” said Greason. “I have followed hockey up there since I was four years old, and spent a lot of time in the old arena there growing up. I met Coach Meagher as a kid with hockey camps and other on-campus activities, so I feel like I grew up in the NESCAC hockey world. Of course, I applied and was accepted to Bowdoin, but when I first stepped onto the Trinity campus on a visit, I knew that was where I wanted to be. It was a great experience to be a student and player here. It was a great experience to be an assistant coach here prior to working with the USNDP, and now I am thrilled to be the head coach at Trinity, continuing the tradition of success that was built by Coach Dunham and Coach Cataruzolo.”

As one of three new coaches in the conference this season, Greason has a lot of respect for his peer group, and has been pleased with the support he has received from coaches he has interacted and played against to date. The coaching fraternity is more often than not a collegial one, and the group at NESCAC has embraced the newcomers as part of the family.

“Rob Haberbusch (Hamilton) and I know each other from the recruiting trail and a number of hockey camp interactions over the years, so it was fun reconnecting with Rob last week when we played Hamilton. Going back to even when I was a player, Jack Arena at Amherst has always been a role model for me as a coach, so it was a real pleasure to spend some time with him last weekend and now have that relationship grow in my new capacity coaching in the league. I really haven’t spent time with the other coaches yet, since we haven’t played their teams yet, but I am looking forward to reconnecting with guys like Jim Ward and Chris Potter, as well as the coaches whom I have not had the fortune of interacting a lot with in my hockey path.”

This Friday night, the Bantams faceoff in a nonconference game with Manhattanville on the road. Like any other game where his team pulls on the Trinity sweater, Greason is looking for his team to give their best effort and represent the colors well.

“We don’t treat any opponent differently,” stated Greason. “Whether it’s a league game or nonconference game, we are going to put our best lineup out on the ice and go after it hard, fast, physical and disciplined. We have been a successful program, and want to represent Trinity and NESCAC well wherever and whomever we play against. I think Manhattanville will be a good test for our guys. I saw they tied with Williams, 1-1, and the Williams goalie stood on his head, so we know we have a challenge coming up at the end of the week. Again, it is a chance to build on the collective experience and build confidence in our style of play. The kids have been great to work with, and I am really looking forward to an exciting game Friday and great second half after the holiday break.”

If anything, Greason is disappointed the first half is coming to a close so quickly after the mid-November start, especially when he is seeing more tangible signs that his team is embracing the system of play and having more success in their results.

“We are starting to see things coming together, so stopping for a couple of weeks is not the best timing, but a reality of college hockey. We will be coming back on December 27th to start getting ready for the second half of the season, so hopefully we won’t lose too much over finals and the break for the holidays.”

Greason and his Bantams return from the break with two nonconference home games, against Nichols College and Lake Forest on New Year’s Eve and January 2, respectively. The following weekend signifies the return to conference play, and hopefully a move up the standings from their current position, currently tied for seventh.

Early reviews of the four-man officiating system

At the Division I level, they don’t see what all the fuss is about, but at the Division III level, it’s breaking new ground.

I’m talking about the four-man officiating system. It was put into place a few years ago. However, with concern over the financial impact to Division III schools with their smaller budgets, the rules makers allowed the three-man system to remain in Division III if the conferences choose to.

This year, the SUNYAC was the first, and so far only, Division III conference to go to the four-man system.

Buffalo State coach Nick Carriere saw the obvious difference when the Bengals played in the Adrian Tournament over Thanksgiving

“We were in Adrian, Michigan and they had the three-man system going there. It was so evident that system was set up to just get Division III schools by until they can figure out how to pay for the four-man system, because it is a flawed system. You can never call an offsides and be in position to call for a goal. It’s physically impossible, so they miss more offsides, and they are just not in position to make calls.”

That’s not to say it was smooth sailing from the start. With many of the officials never having worked a four-man system, there were quite a few teething problems. Especially when, in the opinion of some, they affected the outcome of a game.

After a hard fought 2-1 loss to Geneseo early in the season, Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith was in a sour mood.

“We got all this coverage for experienced officials to make experience plays. The flaw in the four-man system is with the inexperience of the linesmen. You are going to look at a tooth-and-nail hockey game and it comes down to an icing. There’s time left on the clock. So now the biggest plays of the games, which are the smallest plays of the game, come down to the least-experienced officials. How crazy is that? We’ve gone backwards, and it took me four games to figure it out.”

Since then, Meredith changed his tune. After another hard-fought game, this time the recent 3-3 tie against Buffalo State, Meredith had nothing but praise for the referees. When asked if the officiating has gotten better, he said, “Oh, yeah.”

“I think the first weekend or so, the linesmen really stood out,” he continued. “They needed some work. I don’t think there were any calls you could argue with tonight. I thought the officiating was excellent.”

Carriere is definitely one who sees the benefits.

“I think what our conference did, and the leadership we took to get that done, makes our game easier for officials to ref and put them in the best position to see the play. You always have a referee with the play coming to them, and you always have a referee trailing the play, and line-ees are always on the line. To me, that’s pretty darn simple.”

Carriere also acknowledges the coaches have a responsibility, too.

“Yes, we need more guys and there’s more of a field that we need to pull from. I think as coaches, we have to do our due diligence sending video tapes to Jeff Fulton [head of SUNYAC officials] helping to educate those guys, as well as our players, on the rules.”

Early feedback indicates the four-man system is here to stay in the SUNYAC. Will other Division III conferences find the financial resources to follow suit?

Tossing Teddies
Teddy Bears that is. What did you think I meant?

Geneseo is running a Teddy Bear Toss charity event this Friday against Salve Regina. All fans are urged to bring a new or gently-used stuffed animal to the game and toss it out onto the ice following the first goal scored by the Ice Knights.

Geneseo President Christopher Dahl, Vice President for Student and Campus Life Robert Bonfiglio, and Livingston County Chamber of Commerce President Cynthia Oswald are among the dignitaries who will aid skaters from the Livingston Blues Youth Hockey organization in picking up the toys from the ice.

They will then be donated to three local charities — Catholic Charities, Focus on the Children, and Foster Children of Livingston County.

Let’s hope Geneseo does not get shutout…

SUNYAC Players of the Week (selected by the conference)

Player of the Week — Ian Finnerty, (Sr.), Brockport. Tallied four points in Brockport’s 7-6 win over Morrisville. Finnerty opened the scoring for the Golden Eagles at 6:59 of the first. Morrisville took the lead twice in the third period, but Finnerty responded each time, keeping the game tied and completing the hat trick. The senior forward also assisted on Brockport’s sixth goal at 8:35 of the final period.

Rookie of the Week — Trevor Cope, Potsdam. Had another strong weekend, helping the Bears to a 1-1 weekend. Cope had two assists against Cortland in Potsdam’s 5-1 win on Friday. On Saturday, Cope netted two goals against Oswego. Cope’s 14 points, an average of 1.56 points per game, continues to lead all conference freshmen.

Goalie of the Week — Dylan Ellis (Fr.), Potsdam. Recorded 82 combined saves in a 1-1 weekend for Potsdam. On Friday, allowed one goal on 36 shots to guide the Bears to their third straight win — a 5-1 victory against Cortland. Ellis made 47 saves the following night against Oswego, including 21 saves in the second period, despite a 6-4 loss to the Lakers.

ECAC West first half review

By the end of this weekend, all ECAC West teams will have played just about half of the games on their schedule as they take a break for the holidays.

It seems like an appropriate time to take a look at the strengths of each team and what they might be working on to improve as they get ready for the stretch run.

Elmira finished the first part of the season a perfect 5-0 in league play, but 2-3 outside the league.  All three losses came to teams ranked No. 1 in the nation at the time of the game, including two against Oswego to start the season, and the third to Norwich in the Primelink Tournament.

What has been the key ingredient that led Elmira to the top of the standings?

“It is our depth in all three areas, forwards, ‘D,’ and goaltenders,” said Elmira coach Aaron Saul. “We haven’t been this deep in years.”

Fifteen different players have scored goals this season, and freshman goaltender Ryan deMelo has contributed in net during key situations, including a win over Hobart.

Even the best teams are constantly looking for ways to improve, and Elmira is no exception.

“When we have the lead in games, we need to continue to be aggressive and put the pressure on,” said Saul. “We can’t let off. We’ve had certain situations this year where we have been up by a couple and let teams back in it, instead of burying them.”

A killer instinct would make Elmira an even more dangerous foe in the second half of the season.

Manhattanville and Neumann are tied for second place in the standings, although the Valiants have a game in hand.

Last year, Manhattanville went a perfect 10-0 outside the league, but struggled in conference play. After getting off to a 0-2 start against Hobart and Elmira this year, the Valiants turned it around with convincing wins against Neumann and Utica, but Manhattanville has struggled outside the league, with a loss at Western New England and a tie against Williams.

“For us, it is all about our effort,” said Manhattanville coach Eric Lang. “Every night, it is about us, and we are not consumed with whom our opponents are. We need to control our effort and execution. If they are very good, we are going to win more often than we are going to lose.”

Speed is the magic ingredient that has helped the Valiants get going.

“Our speed is as good as anyone in the country,” said Lang. “We have six defensemen that can skate, and 18 forwards that can flat out go. We are trying to push the pace and tempo of games. In the games that we have done it, we have been very successful.”

Special teams have been anything but special for the Valiants. Neither the power play nor penalty killing is where coach Lang would like to see them.

“Our special teams has got to get better,” said Lang. “Right now, they are below average. If we can get over 20 percent power play and 80 percent kill for a night, that is the starting point for us. Our goals are much loftier than that though. It is a combination of systems and execution. When we try to get cute, that doesn’t work for us.”

More balanced scoring has helped Neumann go 3-0 in nonconference play. Last season, Michael Rey tallied 15 goals for the Knights, nearly twice as much as the next most prolific scorer.

Rey has drawn a lot of attention from opponents this season, limiting him to only a single goal, but Rey has added nine assists, helping to diversify the Neumann offense. Fourteen different Knights have scored goals so far this season.

“This year, we have had a little bit of balance,” said Neumann coach Dominick Dawes. “Stats-wise, we don’t have anyone running away with it. Everyone has been consistently contributing; that has helped us have different guys step up on different nights.”

The balance means that everyone has to be ready to jump in and make the critical play for the team, instead of relying on a few to carry the load.

“We have been working on our mental toughness, for guys to handle the highs and lows of the game,” said Dawes. “That is something that we have talked about all year. In this league, every game is essentially a playoff game. As the guys have gotten older, they have realized a little more what college hockey is about. They have been able to adapt to that.”

Utica and Hobart round out the standings at the midpoint of the season, tied for fourth place. Each has only managed a single conference win so far, but Utica earned a perfect 5-0 nonconference record, while Hobart went 4-1.

Utica is another team that has struggled in league play, going 1-3, with the sole win on the road at Hobart.

“Our disciplined approach to games, penalty killing, and defensive play have been strong,” said Utica coach Gary Heenan.

Utica leads the league killing penalties, with an amazing 90.5 percent, and is first in goals scored. While The Aud is always friendly, the Pioneers are only 1-2 on the road, which Utica needs to work on during the second half of the season.

“Playing on the road and not making the big mistake are areas for improvement,” said Heenan.

Hobart got out to a quick start in the conference with a 4-0 road win at Manhattanville, but struggled through the remainder of the first part of the league schedule. Outside the league, the Statesmen are averaging scoring nearly a goal more per game, and are 4-1.

“There are a lot of strengths,” said Hobart coach Mark Taylor. “Tightness as a group and keeping an eye on the mark are certainly there. I am happy with our focus, commitment, and the direction we are going.”

Hobart has always been well known for its defensive soundness, and this year it is even more on display, as the Statesmen dress nine defensemen per game. Hobart leads the league in team defense, but is keeping the focus firmly on that area of the game.

“We are trying to improve our five-man defense, from the start of the transition all the way back into our zone,” said Taylor. “That is something that we are constantly trying to perfect.”

ECAC West Weekly Awards:
Player of the Week — Marcus Van Sydow (Sr.), Manhattanville. Led Manhattanville to a 6-3 win over No. 8 Utica on Friday night. The senior opened the scoring early in the game, giving the Valiants a 2-0 advantage, and ended the scoring in the first period with his second goal of the night.

Goaltender of the Week — Darren MacDonald (Jr.), Elmira. MacDonald had a standout weekend in two Soaring Eagle wins, making 26 saves Friday in a 3-2 overtime win against No. 13 Neumann. The junior then made 23 saves Saturday, allowing one goal in a 4-1 win against SUNY Fredonia.

Rookie of the Week — Mark Rivera, Manhattanville. Scored his first collegiate goal in the second period of Friday’s game against No. 6 Utica. His tally proved to be the game-winner in a 6-3 victory for the Valiants.

Harvard back in the mix

“Get pucks to the net and good things will happen.” So goes the time-honored mantra of nearly every hockey coach.

On the final day of November, Harvard found itself mired in a three-game losing streak, down a goal on the road versus Dartmouth, with just over seven minutes to play, and in desperate need of something good to happen. Sophomore defenseman Marissa Gedman dumped an innocent-looking shot on net from the blue line as she entered the offensive zone, and the saying proved true once more. The Big Green goaltender allowed the puck to carom off her stick with a bit more life than desired, and it slid several feet in front of her.

For a team to take advantage of a break like that, they need to continue to anticipate a favorable bounce, even when they are in the midst of a stretch where the puck is seemingly always bouncing the other way. Sophomore center Elizabeth Parker did just that, timing her break from the blue line perfectly with Gedman’s release, winning the race to the exposed puck and snapping a forehand low past the goalie’s glove for the tying goal.

“What I think we take away from Wednesday night is staying on it,” said Katey Stone, now in her 18th season guiding the Crimson. “Down late in the third period, keep playing our game and keep hustling, good things happen.”

Lyndsey Fry backed up the goal with a seeing-eye backhand of her own 65 seconds later, Harvard held on for a 2-1 win, and the losing streak was over.

“We were happy to get away from Hanover with a win on Wednesday night,” Stone says.

Having secured the victory and thus a season split with the Big Green, the ECAC race appears to be shaping up favorably for Harvard. The Crimson are tied with Quinnipiac for the league’s second-best winning percentage at .750 and have completed play against Clarkson, Dartmouth, and St. Lawrence, all teams with winning records within the conference. The contest that is left with league-leading Cornell comes on home ice. Eight games remain with Brown, Rensselaer, Union and Yale, the teams with the worst ECAC results to date.

“We don’t think of it that way, honestly; we just think about who is next,” Stone says. “We know that we have some tough battles ahead of us with Princeton, Quinnipiac — everybody has good wins against other teams, and tough losses. So we’re just going to take it one at a time. We’ve got to play Providence and UNH here before 2011 closes, so our focus is very small right now, one game at a time.”

That Harvard is in contention is not surprising, given their history. Beginning with the 2002-03 season, when the current ECACH was formed from what had been the ECAC North the prior year, the Crimson have finished first in the league five times, with two seconds and two thirds.

Yet the composition of the roster presents another challenge, with one sparingly-used senior to go with seven juniors, five sophomores, and five freshmen. Such a class distribution and a rather short bench suggests that Harvard may be better suited to accomplish great things next season, rather than this one.

“That’s certainly something that our staff has talked about; we haven’t talked about it with the kids, because they obviously want to do the very best that they can all of the time and overachieve,” Stone says. “But as far as depth of roster and so forth, I think we are a year away.”

That’s not to say that the Harvard roster is devoid of impact players. Junior defenseman Josephine Pucci won a gold medal at the World Championships in April with the United States.

“She’s a difference-maker,” Stone says. “She’s tough defensively, and she’s a factor offensively for us. Oftentimes, we go as she goes. She plays pretty tough, and she’s a great player for these young kids to emulate and try to match her intensity.”

Junior forward Jillian Dempsey, who leads the team with six goals and shares the points lead with 11,  joined Pucci on the U.S. roster at the Four Nations Cup last month.

“She just keeps getting better,” Stone says. “She still has plenty of room to grow, as all these kids do. There’s no quit in her, she’ll do whatever it takes. You can’t go wrong with kids with that kind of work ethic and determination.”

Another Harvard player taking her game up a notch this season is junior goaltender Laura Bellamy. She has her save percentage up to .914 through the early going, after stopping pucks at an .895 clip a year ago.

“Laura Bellamy is a huge reason why we are where we are right now, 6-4 having played a pretty tough schedule thus far, and missing some kids for Four Nations,” Stone says. “Lou Bellamy is at this point our most improved player by far. She’s keeping us in games when we are slow starting, and she’s won some games for us. That’s exactly what you want your goaltender at this level to do.”

The Crimson have needed Bellamy to stand tall in their net, as she is the only goalie on the roster with any NCAA experience. Unlike a few years ago, where a team like Harvard enjoyed a huge advantage over some opponents, affording opportunities to work in an untested backup or rest a regular, current schedules yield no such luxury.

“Particularly in the Ivy League, when you only have 29 contests, so you play your 22-game league schedule, and then there’s seven games and we play in the Beanpot, there’s very little flexibility to play an up and comer like Lindenwood or Penn State,” Stone says. “Those days are over for us. You have to be very calculated about who you play, when you play them. And you’re absolutely right, it becomes very difficult to experiment. You’ve got to go with what works, because otherwise the beginning of your season could be the end of your season if you don’t perform the way you need to.”

Teams such as Boston College and Cornell, that once offered a respite in the schedule, now challenge Harvard on the recruiting trail as well as the ice.

“Whether it’s Cornell or BU or BC or whoever it is making a greater commitment to their women’s hockey program in whatever fashions they choose, you can’t be concerned with that,” Stone says. “You just have to keep going out there and trying to win the recruiting battles and ultimately win the games you need to win.”

To date, Harvard has won enough of both to stay in the mix.

“I think we are a lot farther ahead than we were last year as far as being able to put certain things into our game plan,” Stone says. “We have such a great dynamic in the locker room; our kids are awesome. It makes it much easier to coach and get a lot accomplished, and there’s no shortage of hard work there. I feel really good about where we are.”

Concordia (Minn.) chasing first place

In my preseason review of the MIAC, I picked Concordia (Minn.) to win the MIAC. I made that prediction because the Cobbers had the luxury of two solid goaltenders returning and played good team defense and special teams. Although the Cobbers finished fourth in the MIAC last season, the team made it to the title game of the conference tournament, where they lost to conference champion Hamline, 5-2.

In the MIAC Preseason Coaches’ poll, the Cobbers were picked to finish third, but in the process received three first places votes.

After taking three out of a possible four points against St. Thomas last weekend, Concordia is only one point behind St. Thomas in the MIAC standings. St. Thomas has a conference record of 4-1-1, which is good for nine points and the conference lead.  Meanwhile, Concordia’s (Minn.) conference record is 3-1-2 which puts the team on the heels of St. Thomas with eight points.

“St. Thomas is a great team, and we always feel that if you are going to have a chance to contend in our league, you have to play well against them,” Concordia (Minn.) coach Chris Howe said.

St. Thomas jumped out to a 2-0 lead Friday. Concordia tied the score 2-2 in the second and put the game away in the third on a goal by Ben Payne.

“We had to come back from two goals down to win,” Howe said. “We were gritty and played with a lot passion.”

Concordia was 12 seconds away from sweeping St. Thomas on Saturday, but a late third period St. Thomas goal forced overtime, and the teams settled for a 2-2 tie.

“That stung a bit!” exclaimed Howe. “We took the lead early, but we ended up taking 11 penalties and we just tried to hang around.”

The Cobbers had to kill off a pair of five-on-three power plays on Saturday.

“We played the game that we needed to play both nights,” Howe added. “All in all though, we feel good about the weekend. We know that we have a long way to go. We have yet to play a full game this year, and our guys know it. However, we always feel good about playing well in our rink. Anytime you can go into a long break in league play and be near the top, you feel good, not satisfied, but good.”

Concordia (Minn.) has not lost in its last five games against St. Thomas.

The performance of goalies Kelly Andrew and Chris Neamonitis has been stellar this season, and the reason the Cobbers are a contender in the MIAC.

Andrew has a 3-2 record on the season, a goals against average of 2.29, and a save percentage of .929. Neamonitis has a 3-1-2 record, a goals against average of 1.89, and a .945 save percentage. They both have recorded a shutout in the season so far.

“Kelly and Chris are solid goalies,” said Howe. “They have a great relationship, and challenge each other to play well.”

The coach works with both goalies during the week, in a “goalie skate” skills day on Wednesday.

“I always tell them that Wednesdays are one of my favorite days,” he said. “One, I get to shoot on them, and two, we work on skills that sometimes get missed during the normal week.”

Offensively, Concordia is led by defensemen Caleb Sunderman and Erick Galt, a 2010-2011 second team ACHA All-American, and forwards Aaron Wheeler, Nick Thielen, and Payne.

The defensemen lead the team in scoring. Sunderman has eight points on one goal and seven assists. Galt is second with two goals and five assists for seven points.

Payne has two goals, both being game-winners, while Wheeler leads the team in goals scored with four. Thielen has one goal and five assists this season.

Concordia’s (Minn.) success does depend on defense. The team has allowed, on average, just over two goals a game. The team has scored three goals only twice this season, but has not been shut out.

“I think that our league is extremely well-coached, and if you are not defensively minded, you are going to get beat,” Howe said.  “At Concordia, we pride ourselves on playing great team defense.

“I tell our players that scoring comes and goes, like a cat, but defense is like your hunting dog, it is always by your side.”

Weekly Awards

MCHA
Player of the Week — Zach Graham (Jr.), Adrian. Graham registered two goals and two assists on Friday, then followed that up with two more assists on Saturday in a series with Concordia (Wis.).

Defensive Player of the Week — Logan Bauman (Fr.), Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE). Bauman had five assists in the series against Lake Forest, and was a key member of the penalty kill unit that held off a pair of five-minute penalties in Saturday’s game.

Freshman of the Week — Brian Berger, Marian. Berger nabbed the award for the second consecutive week. He had three goals and three assists last weekend in a series with Northland.

MIAC
Athlete of the Week — Jake Kogler (Sr.). Bethel. Kogler received the honor for his performance in Bethel’s sweep of Hamline last weekend; he scored four goals in the two games.

NCHA
Player of the Week — Scott Lewan (So.), Wisconsin-River Falls. Lewan surrendered just two goals over the weekend, leading Wis.-River Falls to a road sweep of Wisconsin-Superior.

Denver’s Brittain on schedule, but taking nothing for granted in comeback

Call it a comeback — one very long in the making. Nonetheless, goaltender Sam Brittain is right on track to make his return to the Denver Pioneers exactly when he, the coaches and trainers planned.

“Things are going very well,” said Brittain, who had his ACL and meniscus surgically repaired mid-summer. “Everything is right on schedule.”

The target date for the Denver goalie’s return: Jan. 27 when the Pioneers travel to Alaska-Anchorage for a series with the Seawolves. 

Brittain’s goals against average (2.40) and save percentage (.920) ranked second in the country among rookie goaltenders last season, and helped him get named to the All-WCHA rookie team. He helped lead the Pioneers to the WCHA Final Five championship game, and then within a game of the Frozen Four. 

But it was during Denver’s double-overtime loss to North Dakota in the Final Five title game that Brittain first realized he injured his left ACL and meniscus.

“It got progressively worse to the point where I had to get [surgery] done,” Brittain said. “I thought I could play on it the last few games of the season. After that I was hoping it might be OK but the more I trained on it, the worse it got.

“It was my decision the whole way. I decided I had to get it done.”

Brittain decided to undergo surgery in June, causing him to miss the first 24 games of the season. Although he’s a fixture in Denver’s dressing room and training room, he doesn’t travel with the team on road trips. Instead, he settles for watching road games via webcast with Denver’s other inactives. 

The injury caused Brittain to miss his chance at playing for Canada’s team in the 2012 World Junior Championship. He was expected to at least make the preliminary camp roster.

“That was pretty frustrating, having the chance to represent Team Canada and having the opportunity to be invited to make that team,” Brittain said. “It made my decision to have surgery that much more difficult, for sure.”

But Brittain’s work ethic to get back to the Pioneers has shown over the past six months. He has advanced his training to strength and speed rehab workouts, five days per week, two hours each. He’s skating again, but he won’t be in goalie pads until late December.

“As of last Tuesday I was able to get back on the ice again,” Brittain said. “I’m getting stronger, more flexible and back into that goalie position and back to play.”

Adam Murray (5-2-1, .902 save percentage, 3.40 goals against average) has seen the bulk of the minutes between the pipes for Denver this season but has been injured himself lately. That left Juho Olkinuora (1-3-2, .923, 2.20) in the spotlight.

“Before Murray got injured, he was playing really well and Olkinuora’s playing great,” Brittain said. “It’s going to be extremely tough to battle and get back in the lineup.”

Murray’s good record isn’t reflective of his save percentage and goals against average, and the Pioneers haven’t translated Olkinuora’s numbers into victories. 

It will be interesting how the situation looks when Brittain returns to the lineup and whether he’s automatically thrown into the starting role full time.

“No one will be handed anything,” Brittain said. “It’s going to come down to hard work, performance, pushing each other to hopefully get the start.”

Forty years later, former Bulldogs goalie’s heart remains in Duluth

Those fortunate enough to subscribe to the NHL’s Center Ice package on their local cable or satellite provider may recognize Glenn Resch as Mike “Doc” Emrick’s long-time color-commentating sidekick calling New Jersey Devils games on New York-based MSG Network.

Still others might remember his 15-year career as an NHL goalie, making stops on Long Island, Colorado, New Jersey and Philadelphia, including winning a Stanley Cup with the Islanders in 1980.

Some, however, will recall Resch’s run as a stalwart in the Minnesota-Duluth net from 1968 to 1971. As a senior, Resch served as captain of the Bulldogs and earned second-team All-WCHA honors for his efforts.

But 40 years later, the man whom Islanders teammate Doug Rombough dubbed “Chico” after a fictional 1970s sitcom character, has no trouble recalling, with great fondness, his time in Duluth.

“I thought, ‘Wow, these guys really seem to get it,’ like they understand I’m more than just a knucklehead hockey player,” Resch said of his first impressions of the school and its staff. “When I went to Duluth and I saw the enthusiasm of the fans and the sellouts and the way they were treating people … I thought, ‘They get it here,’ so that is what was fun.”

The Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, native, who played junior hockey prior to arriving in Duluth, talked about how impressed he was with the WCHA’s quality of play at the time.

“Remember, there wasn’t a lot of teams in college hockey so you were getting some real good, top-end players,” said Resch. “All those things made you feel like, except for the NHL, you were playing in the best environment possible.”

Resch, who earned a four-year degree in education from Minnesota-Duluth, could not say enough about his collegiate experience, both as a person and a player.

“In the ’60s and early ’70s, college hockey was run about as well and as classy as it gets,” said Resch. “Players were treated, except financially, probably as well or better than NHL players. We weren’t living under the pressure of, ‘Hey, if you don’t perform you’re going to the minor leagues,’ being traded, being intimidated. In college hockey, the attitude was we’re going to develop these players as players and as people.

“That’s what the NHL’s gotten to now because, with long-term contracts, you’ve got to develop your players in all different areas.”

Although eager to do so, the 1991 UMD Athletics Hall of Fame inductee and member of the All-DECC Team as chosen by Bulldogs alumni has yet to see UMD’s new home at Amsoil Arena. A scheduling conflict prevented him from attending UMD’s final game at the DECC last Dec. 4.

“They brought back [the All-DECC Team] last year and they wanted me to come in,” Resch said of the ceremony honoring him and his All-DECC teammates. “But I’d never missed a game [on MSG] so I just couldn’t.”

Resch’s Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs are atop the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll for the first time since defeating Michigan to win the 2011 NCAA Frozen Four in St. Paul, Minn. Resch kept a close eye on his alma mater over the course of the championship run while staying in close contact with former Bulldogs assistant Brett Larson.

“We were starving for a long time for a national championship,” said Resch, who still maintains an offseason residence in northern Minnesota. “It just kind of is a finishing touch on what we always thought was one of the best places to play college hockey.”

Could Sioux surge already be under way?

After a 1-5 start in WCHA play, the North Dakota — final reference, we promise — Fighting Sioux have won five of six to climb back to .500, which puts UND right about where you’d expect in the Dave Hakstol era. The nearly annual second-half surge could be well under way.

Before last season, when North Dakota entered the new year 14-4-1, UND had averaged a 7-6-1 conference and a 10-8-2 October-December record overall from 2004-05 to 2009-10. In those six seasons, however, North Dakota reached four Frozen Fours and one title game.

Although former North Dakota forward Zach Parise’s teams never had to rely on the surge, his family could not escape the ritual early-season swoon.

“A couple years after I left, my brother [Jordan] was there and they started off real slow,” Parise said during a stop in St. Paul for his New Jersey Devils to play the Minnesota Wild. “Everyone was wondering, ‘What’s going on?’ and all of a sudden they’re in the championship game.”

It’s a phenomenon for which Parise has no explanation.

“UND’s always had a strong second half and they always seem to heat up at the right time heading into the playoffs,” said Parise. “I don’t know what it is; they just seem to jell at the right time.”

When asked about last week’s announcement that as of Jan. 1, his alma mater will no longer use either the Fighting Sioux (OK, we lied, one more) nickname or logo, Parise was caught by surprise and expressed his disappointment with the decision.

“It’s a great logo and we only wore it with pride,” said Parise. “I don’t know why people are making a big fuss about it. We never disrespected anything about it — anything about the logo, anything about the name.

“They need to find something else to do rather than pursue getting rid of that.”

Players of the week

Milestone night earns BSU’s Hunt WCHA defensive player of the week honors

Heading into the season, seven Bemidji State players had reached 100 career points since the program elevated itself to Division I status. That number rose to eight last weekend when Brad Hunt became the latest member — and first defenseman — of BSU’s D-I 100-point club.

Hunt’s feat also makes him just the sixth defenseman in the program’s overall history to reach the century mark.

“It was very gratifying for him to get that point tonight and it was a big point,” BSU coach Tom Serratore said after last Saturday’s game. “It was a vintage Brad Hunt shot from the point and it got through.

“I’m very happy for him.”

With a slap shot past St. Cloud State’s Ryan Faragher on Saturday night, Hunt reached the 100-point mark with his third goal and team-leading 14th point of the season. The goal turned out to be the winner in Bemidji State’s 3-1 victory over SCSU.

“It feels great, but it feels even better that we got the win,” Hunt said. “If we didn’t win that game, the 100-point mark doesn’t really feel as special.

“It’s great to get the win and reach that milestone. It’s really cool.”

Hunt’s next assist will be his 79th and establish him as the BSU’s all-time D-I assists leader, breaking the record he shares with former Beavers player and current Philadelphia Flyers forward Matt Read.

Offensive player of the week: North Dakota sophomore Brock Nelson

Nelson’s recent tear (he was co-offensive player of the week last week) continued in Anchorage last weekend with five points (4-1–5) in UND’s sweep of the Seawolves. With his performance, Nelson took over sole possession of North Dakota’s scoring lead with 22 points (14-8–22) and his 14 goals overall rank him second among WCHA players.

Rookie of the week: North Dakota forward Brendan O’Donnell

Like Nelson, O’Donnell contributed a pair of goals to lift UND to a 5-2 win last Friday over Alaska-Anchorage. The goals were O’Donnell’s second and third in six games since his return from absence due to injury.

WCHA at the World Juniors

Of the 29 players listed on Team USA’s U20 roster, 19 are currently playing collegiate hockey and six are playing on WCHA teams.

Denver forward Jason Zucker (8-12–20 this season) and goalie Jack Campbell, of the Ontario Hockey League, are the only two members of the 2010 gold-medal team. 

North Dakota defenseman Derek Forbort (1-3–4) and Minnesota forward Nick Bjugstad (15-11–26) are going for their second years on Team USA.

St. Cloud State defenseman Kevin Gravel (0-4–4), Minnesota forward Kyle Rau (11-8–19) and Nebraska-Omaha forward Josh Archibald (7-4–11) are all in competition for their first appearances on the team.

Former Minnesota-Duluth defenseman Justin Faulk will make his second straight appearance pending a release from the Carolina Hurricanes.

Colorado College forward Jaden Schwartz was a key player for Team Canada last year before he fractured his ankle.

Rookies finding their place at Robert Morris

Last week, Atlantic Hockey chose a pair of netminders from Canisius as co-goalies of the week, a rarity. This week, the league again took a pair of players from the same team to share an award. Robert Morris freshmen Scott Jacklin and Cody Wydo each had three goals and an assist to help lead a 15-goal outburst by the Colonials in a 5-2, 10-4 sweep at Sacred Heart. They were named co-rookies of the week by the league.

While seniors make up the top four leading scorers on the team, four of the next five spots are held by newcomers.

“It’s good to see [Jacklin and Wydo] and all our freshmen stepping up,” said Robert Morris coach Derek Schooley. “It bodes well for the future with 10 seniors on the roster.”

The Colonials are on a five-game unbeaten streak, all in league play, that’s seen them move from eighth place to fourth in the standings in three weeks.

“When you lose the players we did, it takes some time to adjust,” said Schooley. “Freshmen have difficulty adjusting, figuring out their roles and place.

“I thought we played well from the blue line out. I think we need to settle down defensively. Giving up 45 shots [on Saturday], the game kind of got away from us in the third period, and we can’t let that happen.”

I asked Schooley about the large number of goals scored around Atlantic Hockey last weekend, a change from the low-scoring affairs we’ve seen for most of the year. The league lost a bevy of high-scoring players to graduation and the pros in the offseason.

“I don’t think the league is weaker,” he said. “If anything, I think our non-conference record is a tad better at this point [than last season]. Some years are the year of the goal scorer and some years it’s the year of the goaltender. We have such strong goaltending around the league, which means that there’s a lot of parity, and we’ve seen that.”

While many teams are winding down the first half of their seasons, the Colonials still have four games left before the end of 2011, three league contests (Niagara, Canisius, Rochester Institute of Technology) and then a game against No. 4 Ohio State at the Consol Energy Center in downtown Pittsburgh on Dec. 30.

“Niagara has done well against us in the past and Canisius and RIT are in the top half of the standings,” Schooley said of his upcoming league opponents. “And Ohio State should be a great game. When you make up your schedule you never know but we’ve been fortunate to play some highly ranked teams in the past, and this is another opportunity.”

The Colonials got off to a hot start last season but this year look to be slowly building as their players, especially the new ones, find their roles.

“We’re constantly trying to find the right mix,” said Schooley. “We started off well last season and kind of sputtered. I’d rather start slow and figure it out now so we are a better team at the end of the season, like Air Force last year. The key is to get better every week.”

Players of the week

From the home office in Haverhill, Mass.:

Atlantic Hockey player of the week:
Kyle De Laurell, Air Force

The junior forward had a whopping six points (three goals and three assists) to lead the Falcons to a road sweep at American International. De Laurell has tallied a point in six straight games and leads the team and the league with 21 points so far this season.

Atlantic Hockey goalie of the week:
Matt Ginn, Holy Cross

Ginn, a freshman from Lindsey, Ontario, allowed only a pair of goals last weekend to help his team sweep Canisius. He won 3-2 on Friday, picking up an assist as well as making 30 saves, and pitched a 14-save shutout on Saturday.

Atlantic Hockey co-rookies of the week:
Scott Jacklin and Cody Wydo, Robert Morris

Jacklin wins the award for the second straight week. This time around he had three goals and an assist in a road sweep of Sacred Heart. Wydo also had three goals and an assist last weekend, and, like Jacklin, has a point in his last five games.

Men of the month

The league also announced its players of the month for November:

Atlantic Hockey player of the month:
Alex Gerke, Connecticut

A junior defenseman, Gerke finished November with nine points on four goals and five assists. Three of the goals came on Nov. 16 in a win over Sacred Heart, all on the power play. Gerke led his team with a plus-5 for the month.

Other players nominated: Tim Kirby, Air Force; Brandon Nunn, Holy Cross; Derek Elliott, Mercyhurst; Michael Colavecchia, RIT; Nick Chiavetta, Robert Morris.

Atlantic Hockey goalie of the month:
Branden Komm, Bentley

Komm had two shutouts in November, going 3-2-1 overall. He has a 2.25 goals against average and a .936 save percentage, second in the league.

Other goalies nominated: Stephen Caple, Air Force; Ben Meisner, American International; Tony Capobianco, Canisius; Max Strang, Mercyhurst; Cody Campbell, Niagara; Shane Madolora, RIT; Brooks Ostergard, Robert Morris.

Atlantic Hockey rookie of the month:
Daniel Bahntge, Mercyhurst

The Westlake, Ohio, native had a great November, recording eight points in eight games. He’s tied for the team lead in scoring with 10 points.

Other rookies nominated: Chad Demers, Air Force; Matt Garbowsky, RIT; Scott Jacklin, Robert Morris.

Camouflaged

The jersey Holy Cross will wear Dec. 10, 2011, against Army. (Holy Cross Athletics)
Holy Cross will wear these sweaters Saturday against Army (photo: Holy Cross Athletics).

At Saturday’s game between Army and Holy Cross, the host Crusaders will be wearing special camouflage jerseys as a fundraiser for the Massachusetts Soldiers Legacy Fund (MSLF). The fund provides educational assistance grants to the children of Massachusetts service members who were killed in action. The jerseys will be auctioned off throughout the game, with all proceeds going to the fund. Commemorative T-shirts also will be sold.

“This is a great opportunity for our program to support an outstanding fund that honors fallen service members and helps their children,” Holy Cross coach Paul Pearl said in a statement announcing the fundraiser. “The team is very excited to honor the Armed Services and support this cause.”

There will be 27 game jerseys available to bid on during the silent auction with a minimum bid of $150.00 for each jersey. There is no online bidding, but you can make donations online at the MSLF website.

Getting even

While Air Force has enjoyed huge success as members of Atlantic Hockey, Frank Serratore’s earlier years at the Academy were not as successful. During the Falcons’ nine years in the CHA under Serratore, they had just one winning season.

Last Saturday, Serratore hit the .500 career mark in a 7-3 win at American International. He is 243-243-46 all-time at Air Force in 15 seasons. His teams have had a winning season every year so far in the AHA with an average winning percentage of .606.

Strange factoid of the week

Canisius has the second-best defense in Atlantic Hockey, allowing just 17 goals in nine games. But the Griffs are struggling on the penalty kill, allowing eight of those 17 goals when a man down.

Working overtime

Niagara tied Bentley 2-2 on Saturday, its fifth tie already this season. The school record is six, set in 2006-07 and 2008-09. The Purple Eagles have been to overtime seven times so far, losing both games that didn’t end in a tie. Eleven of their last 14 games this season have been decided by a goal or less.

Home and away

Some strange trends of note after RIT and Connecticut split a pair of games last weekend at Freitas Ice Forum:

• RIT is 12-1-1 at home against UConn since joining Atlantic Hockey, but just 3-4-1 at Freitas.

• The Tigers are usually a dominant team at home (29-2-6 record against AHA opposition over the past three seasons), but have already been shut out three times this season, a record in the school’s 47-year history. And all three have come on home ice. Two were non-league contests while the other was a 0-0 tie with Niagara.

• The 2-1 win at UConn was RIT’s first road win of the season. The Huskies are looking for their first true road win as well. They are 3-1 at home and 1-7-2 away from home, with the lone win coming on neutral ice.

Tweet of the week

[blackbirdpie id=”143158492218392577″]

— Schooley, after I incorrectly picked his Colonials to lose to Sacred Heart on Saturday.

Drawn-out faceoffs just one sign of battles at every turn in Hockey East

If anyone had a chance to make their way to Kelley Rink last Friday and Agganis Arena last Saturday, they saw two hockey games that, for the most part, lacked the excitement of a typical Boston College-Boston University rivalry.

Take away that neither game was close most of the way. Both of these games felt like Red Sox-Yankees games in terms of length. Friday’s game, albeit a nationally-televised game on CBS Sports Network, nearly cracked 3 hours in length. Saturday, a non-televised game, was exactly two-and-a-half hours.

A culprit in extending these games was faceoffs. Without actual statistics to back up this claim, it seemed as though every single faceoff contested over the two nights took about a minute to get the puck dropped.

In 2002, college hockey took steps to speed up the game with the 15-second faceoff. It became mandated that 15 seconds after any whistle (except in the case of a TV timeout), lines needed to be changed and both centers had to be ready for the draw. The punishment for not approaching the faceoff dot within 15 seconds was the violating team’s center being waved out.

Hockey East has done a decent job enforcing this since its implementation. But more recently, the draws have been delayed by the actual protocol of dropping the puck. Centers fail to square off. Wingers encroach into the faceoff circle. The result is an immediate whistle, the ejection of one or both centers from the faceoff and the need to begin the whole process over again.

This most certainly was a major factor in lengthening the games last Friday and Saturday between BC and BU.

“It’s been a league mandate to try to clean up faceoffs,” BC coach Jerry York said. “It certainly adds a lot more to the length of the game. In the BU-BC games, we very rarely had one clean drop.”

York attributes the problems to teams doing whatever they can to get any extra edge possible.

“The players are always trying to get an edge, whether the center or the wings on the side,” said York. “God bless ’em, though, you should try to get an edge, I guess.”

Commissioner Joe Bertagna has noticed, indeed, that every team seems to be looking for that extra something, that “edge” that might help in victory. He said it’s far from just faceoffs where he’s seeing this throughout the league.

“I had a conversation with a coach the other day about how close these games are and how close the standings project to be,” said Bertagna. “There’s a rhythm to a season that I’m used to from doing this so long. And you know when you get to January, there’s a heightened level of tension that you can almost feel because the standings start to take shape. Coaches are starting to realize they’re either on schedule to be where they thought they’d be or they’re not.”

Bertagna said it’s usually about that time that his office begins to get calls from coaches with complaints about either officials or other team’s tactics that they feel are unfair.

This season, that timeline has significantly accelerated.

“The pressure seems to be on people earlier,” said Bertagna. “There are more expectations and coaches have to win. In an odd way, the success of Merrimack puts pressure on other schools where people are saying, ‘They’re doing that. Why aren’t we doing that?'”

Bertagna said that one of the biggest complaints his office has received is about players embellishing and diving in the attempt to, as he put it, “sell a call.”

“I never heard of guys talking about selling a call 10 years ago,” said Bertagna. “Now it’s part of the language. I’ve had people say that you can hear people on the bench telling people, ‘Go down! Go down!’ I don’t think it’s a good development.”

“Diving,” as BU coach Jack Parker likes to call it, was a major part of Friday’s postgame news conference for both Parker and York.

Parker flat out accused BC’s players of diving, saying “[BC’s] diving all over the place. … It’s pathetic that stuff that’s going on out there.”

BC’s York was asked about Parker’s harsh words and turned the tables quickly, intentionally misunderstanding the question.

“The BU players were diving a lot,” he said. “That was a problem all night long.”

For Bertagna, that repartee was simply one more peg in the frustration of players trying to gain the edge through embellishment.

It’s hardly players diving that has Bertagna’s phone ringing so early in the season. A perceived increase in major penalties, partially because of the NCAA’s emphasis on contact to the head penalties, has led a number of coaches to vocalize their ire.

“The NCAA has gone down the road of the automatic five [minutes for certain penalties],” said Bertagna. “There are a lot more calls that, if the officials see them, the player is out of the game. It’s automatic.”

He said his office is consistently receiving video clips for review from coaches asking why a major penalty, and an associated game misconduct, was issued.

“You look at a lot of clips and after a while you realize two people can look at something and come away with an entirely different viewpoint,” said Bertagna. “These are clips you’re slowing down and looking at in the comfort of an office on a Wednesday. The [official] making the call only gets to see it once, in real time.”

Still, he said most times he feels the Hockey East officials are getting the calls correct. He does, though, understand the pain such a penalty can cause a team.

“I had one coach who has lost players five or six times already,” Bertagna said. “So you get coaches saying that this has a huge effect on the game and that we need to put the discretion back into the hands of the officials so they can call two[-minute minors].

“But the rules committee hasn’t seemed like it wants to go in that direction with such calls like hits to the head or hits from behind.”

As for whether he sees such rules changing soon, Bertagna said no. Contact to the head and hitting from behind both are leading causes for concussions. The increased focus that the NCAA is putting on eliminating as many concussions as possible likely will prevent any leniency on these types of calls.

That being the case, it’s likely that Bertagna and his staff will soon have to begin reviewing more video even earlier in the season. Just hope someone brings the popcorn.

Fans flocking to early-season Hockey East games

Anyone take a look around Hockey East last weekend, not at the quality of games but at the quality of crowds? Chances are you may have been one of the 37,658 people who attended one of the eight league games last weekend.

On the weekend, the league had a 91 percent capacity rate in its arenas for the eight league games, led by Friday night, which saw the four host arenas 97 percent full. Boston College’s Kelley Rink, the league’s second-largest venue, was at capacity of 7,884 for its game against rival Boston University. Massachusetts-Lowell, bolstered by bringing the Stanley Cup to its building for fans to have their photo taken with the Cup, had to sell standing-room-only seats and significantly surpassed capacity, packing 6,826 fans into Tsongas Center (capacity 6,496).

“Lowell was one of the attendances that jumped out to me,” said Bertagna. “I know UNH is one of the better traveling [fan bases]. But Lowell has been really working hard to promote the Tsongas Center.

“Nothing like having that crowd and then delivering [a win]. So it was a great weekend for them.”

Now, large attendances aren’t completely abnormal for Hockey East. What is most significant about these numbers is the timing. Generally, the best crowds of the year are seen after Feb. 1 when there is less competition. The NFL season is all but over, the Celtics and Bruins are in mid-winter doldrums and the race for the Hockey East regular season title — as well as playoff positioning — is in full force.

“We’re playing games when people are still thinking football and the warm weather has not exactly shouted out hockey season to people,” said Bertagna. “But we’ve had some compelling games and some new buzz to these places, and that’s been good.”

What has been a big part of Hockey East’s early-season interest is the abundance of interesting story lines. The league, which for years seemed like a four-team race each year between BC, BU, Maine and New Hampshire has morphed slightly over the last few years with success of programs like Merrimack and Northeastern. Thus far this season, there have been additional great stories spurring interest.

“You have BC and Merrimack which have been the flag bearers [this season] and those are two schools that a few years ago were at the opposite end of the spectrum,” Bertagna said. “You’ve got everybody watching these new coaches. Providence and Lowell have had some success and Northeastern has made a huge flash in their last three games.”

If there has been any downside for Bertagna, it’s been his hesitation to build the 2013-14 schedule. That season will see the addition of Notre Dame, the reduction of league games played between each team from three to two and the possibility there still may be a 12th member. Combine those factors with an ongoing difficultly in predicting which games will be the marquee ones and the schedule for two years from now is on Bertagna’s back burner.

Quick hits

• How about the performance for first-year Hockey East coaches last weekend? Providence’s Nate Leaman grabbed the biggest headlines with a sweep of top-ranked Merrimack. Northeastern’s Jim Madigan followed a win last week at Michigan with a two-game road sweep of Notre Dame. Almost lost in all of that was Lowell’s Norm Bazin and his team sweeping New Hampshire, something that on any other weekend would’ve turned many heads. Hats off to the entire trio.

• One has to wonder whether Boston College is headed toward a goaltender controversy. While starter Parker Milner was solid for most of the early season, he is being overshadowed a bit by rookie Brian Billett. After Milner lost back-to-back games to BU and Notre Dame, York gave Billett the start two weekends ago at Yale, where he posted 35 saves for his first career win. After Milner made just 10 stops on 14 shots last Friday against BU, Billett got the road start in Saturday’s rematch and made 40 saves in a 6-1 win. It wasn’t overly shocking, then, that Billett was back in goal on Tuesday in a 4-1 win over Providence. Though many coaches might love Milner as their starting goaltender, he may be taking a back seat to a red-hot freshman.

• One of the most underrated defensemen in Hockey East might be Lowell’s Chad Ruhwedel. The sophomore leads Hockey East in points per game for defensemen and is probably the most stable player on the River Hawks’ blue line.

• Think Providence got under the collars of Merrimack last weekend? After the Warriors took their first loss on Friday night, they lost their cool in Saturday’s rematch as was evident on the penalty sheet. Merrimack took 72 minutes in penalties to Providence’s 16. Providence was 5-for-14 on the power play, the deciding factor in the 6-1 Friars win. Among the penalties for the Warriors were two separate five-minute majors (with accompanying game misconducts), a 10-minute misconduct and a rare ejection to coach Mark Dennehy.

• Almost lost in all of the excitement of last weekend was Maine road sweep of Vermont. The wins were much needed for the Black Bears, who jumped from a tie for eighth to sixth place, just two points behind second-place Merrimack and BU.

• Finally, this will be the final notes column for the first half of the Hockey East season. We will continue to blog throughout the week and make sure we publish all of our predictions each Friday morning. To all of our loyal readers, whatever holiday you celebrate, accept a hearty “Happy Holidays” from Dave and me. We will be back with our next column on Dec. 29.

With new life, Alabama-Huntsville ready to start scheduling for next season

When the news broke Tuesday night that the Alabama-Huntsville administration was going to do an about-face and work toward keeping the Chargers’ Division I program afloat after this season, supporters, players and coaches alike were ecstatic.

The university announced earlier this season that it would discontinue the sport at the D-I level starting next year.

And while there is nothing in concrete writing that says the team will definitely be D-I next year, UAH coach Chris Luongo said it’s just a matter of time.

“I’ve been given the go-ahead to start scheduling teams for next season,” Luongo said Wednesday afternoon. “There is still work to do, but getting that news last night was exciting and certainly something we’d been hoping to hear.”

Alabama-Huntsville junior captain Curtis deBruyn was in agreement with his coach.

“Because the news is so recent, we still have not heard of all the details that have developed and have not been informed of any of the particulars,” said deBruyn. “This announcement is incredibly important for the UAH community. Having Division I hockey here at UAH is something that really sets us apart from other institutions in the area and has helped the school create something special.

“Obviously, the guys on the team are all relieved and excited as most were worried about the uncertainty of their futures. We are very happy to have received the news and are all looking forward as to see what transpires.”

Said freshman forward Tyler Kotlarz: “The announcement is great news that the players are very happy to hear. Hockey is a big part of the UAH community. You can tell that by all the support we have and all the people working and fighting for the team to stay.”

Several players on the current roster had reportedly already made plans for next year at other schools, choosing not to stay at UAH and use any scholarships they may have received.

“I think we’re in an unprecedented position where we were working with the players to find teams for next season and now this decision changes that,” said Luongo. “I think the large majority of our players will stay. This is a great place to play and a great school.”

Luongo was an assistant coach with Wayne State when that school announced it was folding in September 2007. When UAH initially pulled the plug, it was déjà vu of sorts for Luongo.

“There are few comparisons,” said Luongo. “The support UAH has here is unlike what Wayne State had, so that wasn’t the same, but getting the news that we were going away was very similar. Your immediate focus turns to the players.”

Geof Morris, a UAH alum and longtime program supporter who operates saveuahhockey.com, was more than elated at the school’s announcement.

“I’m glad that the university was willing to reconsider its decision to end the program and I’m even happier that they’ve decided to reverse it,” said Morris. “Hockey is unique to UAH among southern universities and UAH should use distinctions to draw interest to the school. Hockey is key to the UAH experience and it’s wonderful to see that it will continue past this season.

“I was, am, and always will be proud to be a Charger, but this decision makes it a whole lot easier to have pride in my alma mater.”

So what’s the proverbial next step for Alabama-Huntsville?

“Details still need to be worked out with the administration, but there has already been some good conversation,” Luongo said. “Like I had said, I’m already starting our schedule for next season. I think beating Nebraska-Omaha over the weekend [in Nashville] had no bearing on [Tuesday’s] announcement, but just shows what kind of team we have and what a win like that can do to raise awareness to our program.”

The Chargers travel to Minnesota State this weekend, and Luongo expects some added jump to his squad.

“This whole season, we’ve never been a team to just go through the motions,” said Luongo. “Whether or not the players were playing for a spot on this team or another, they have always worked hard and played that way each time we step on the ice.

“I would expect that the fact the program is sticking around might give the players a little added jolt. I know they’re excited.”

NCHC expecting to hire commissioner before end of year; 24-game schedule eyed

The new National Collegiate Hockey Conference may have its first commissioner hired by Christmas, Colorado College athletic director Ken Ralph said Wednesday.

25 Nov 11:    Jeff Collett (Colorado College-21)Brad Eidsness (North Dakota-31)Andrew MacWilliam (North Dakota-2)  The University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux host the Colorado College Tigers in a WCHA matchup at Ralph Engelstad Arena in Grand Forks, ND. Subway Holiday Classic. Final Score:North Dakota 7- Colorado College 6. (Brad Olson)
Colorado College and North Dakota are two of the eight members of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference, set to start in fall 2013 (photo: Brad Olson).

The top choice of the three finalists, a group that includes former United States Olympic Committee chief executive officer Jim Scherr of Colorado Springs, will get an offer letter from the league soon, said Ralph, who has led the search committee. He is confident that the contract will be negotiated and signed and the hire announced by Dec. 31.

“We’re hoping to have it all done by the holidays,” Ralph said. “There’s no way of knowing how long the contract negotiations may last. We’re in a win-win. All three finalists would be excellent choices.”

The league announced its formation in July with charter members CC, Denver, Miami, Minnesota-Duluth, Nebraska-Omaha and North Dakota. St. Cloud State and Western Michigan joined on Sept. 22.

The NCHC likely will have a 24-game league schedule when it begins play in fall 2013, allowing for 10 nonconference games, Ralph said. That allows the teams to keep up traditional rivalries, play all its league foes and establish regular nonleague series with foes all over the country.

“That will be good for the sport,” he said.

Once hired, the NCHC commissioner will hire a director of hockey operations, who will oversee officials, deal with coaches and the league scheduler along with all other on-ice concerns, as well as a public relations director who will heavily promote the league across all platforms, especially social media, and through the league website.

The conference realignments started with the announcement of Penn State’s new Division I program, which prompted the other Big Ten schools to form a six-team conference that starts play in 2013.

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

Those schools’ departure and concern over losing ground in recruiting and prestige prompted the original six members to form the NCHC in Colorado Springs, where the league is based.

Later, Notre Dame announced it would move from the CCHA to Hockey East, while the WCHA absorbed the remainder of the teams from the depleted CCHA, which will cease operations after the 2012-13 season.

ECAC gives Colgate forward Wagner one-game suspension

The ECAC announced Wednesday that Colgate sophomore forward Chris Wagner has been suspended one game as the result of his actions in the game against Clarkson last Friday (Dec. 2) at Starr Rink.

The league’s action was taken after review of an incident that occurred at the 16:26 mark of the second period where Wagner was assessed a major penalty and game misconduct penalty for contact to the head.

Wagner is not eligible to compete in Colgate’s next game this Saturday (Dec. 10) when the Raiders host Merrimack.

Wednesday Women: Here come the Lakers

Candace: Well, Mercyhurst sure served notice over the weekend. I guess after graduating Bendus and Agosta, and then losing to Minnesota State at the start of the year, I’d kind of written the Lakers off. Yet with a split with Cornell, the Lakers are right back in the conversation. However, after playing BC this weekend, they’ve got one game with Cornell in February, and otherwise get to beat up on other CHA squads the rest of the year. Will the lack of competition hurt them if they get to the NCAA tournament?

Arlan: I would have thought so before this weekend, but prior to Cornell, the highest-ranked team by the computer models that Mercyhurst had played was Quinnipiac back in their first series, and even the Bobcats are down around No. 14 and 15 in Rutter’s Rankings and KRACH, respectively. Did that lack of top-flight competition hurt the Lakers? Not perceptively.

In my mind, the Lakers serving notice that they are not only a candidate to make the tournament, but will also be a factor once they do, was the biggest story of the past week. Not only did they lose the Kazmaier winner and the four-time top-three finalist, but they also graduated Scanzano and two stalwarts from their blue line in Schols and Lacroix. When I watched their Frozen Four games, Scanzano’s size allowed her to make more of an impact in those games than Bendus. Obviously Agosta is one of the more talented players in the world, but I’m not sure how well her game fit Mike Sisti’s preferred style. For years, Mercyhurst teams grabbed their lunch bucket and went to work; grinding out puck battles along the boards in her own zone wasn’t really Agosta’s forte.

So maybe Mercyhurst is back to playing more of a selfless, team-first style. They returned some highly-talented forwards like Bailey Bram, Christine Bestland, and Kelley Steadman, and Hillary Pattenden looks to be on top of her game in net in her senior season. We can’t dismiss their CHA rivals, given both Robert Morris and Niagara have new coaches, and we have no prior knowledge of what their conference approach will be.

On the other side of the coin, I expected a bit more from Cornell. Losing a game is permissible to a team that’s as strong as Mercyhurst every year, but I didn’t think the Big Red would be touched for nine goals on the weekend after they allowed a more dynamic Lakers team only four in two games last season, one of which came in overtime. Do you think that Cornell took Mercyhurst too lightly?

Candace: I don’t know if Cornell took Mercyhurst too lightly, but I’m beginning to wonder if once again Cornell has been slightly overrated. While they have been 1-2 for most of the year in the USCHO poll, I have ranked them third in every vote I’ve had, until last weekend, when I put them fourth behind Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Boston College. I think the loss to Dartmouth last month is significant. Even without Rebecca Johnston, Brianne Jenner, Laura Fortino and Lauriane Rougeau, I would have thought Cornell would have the firepower to top a Dartmouth squad that has demonstrated zero consistency, yet they got torched for five goals. In fact, that game is the only time Dartmouth has scored five all season (although the Big Green did score four against Northeastern and New Hampshire). That Dartmouth game showed me that Cornell might not be as defensively sound as previously thought. Perhaps Amanda Mazzotta is struggling with her confidence in tight games. Given that Cornell doesn’t play again until January, it’s possible this loss may shake them when they start play again.

I mentioned voting for Boston College over Cornell this week, which might raise some eyebrows. The Eagles just traveled up to Maine, where they didn’t look great, but found a way to get it done, which to me seems to be the theme for BC this year. Aside from a last-second slip to Quinnipiac and an inexplicable blowout loss to Maine early in the year, BC seems to find a way to win. The Eagles’ other two losses are to Minnesota-Duluth and Boston University, in series they split. BC faces a stiff test in the aforementioned Lakers this weekend. Are you thinking split, or is there any possibility that home ice could give the Eagles a chance at a sweep?

Arlan: Are you trying to get me to reveal my cards early in the picks contest? Backing up for a second regarding Cornell and BC, I guess we’ll have to agree to disagree. It seems that you’re giving the Eagles a pass for several bad outings while punishing the Big Red for a loss to Dartmouth while minus four top players plus their coach. The split on the road at Mercyhurst was against a better team than the Eagles have played to date. Given UMD is Jekyll and Hyde and BC got blown out by the Jekyll version, BC split with a wounded BU, and the Eagles at full strength had their hands full with a Dartmouth squad playing its first game of the season, I think BC is more potential than performance to date. I’d put them sixth after Cornell, UND, and Mercyhurst, which is why nobody wants me voting in any poll.

So to answer your question, prior to last weekend, I was thinking split for Mercyhurst at BC. Now the question becomes, did the Lakers empty the tank emotionally, or will they have something left this weekend? Who knows, maybe the Eagles were drained while wrestling with the Black Bears. Unless I have a “Eureka! I have found it!” moment in the next couple of days, and those tend to elude me in our contest, my belief is that if anyone sweeps at Kelley Rink, it will be the visitors.

Northeastern and Providence became the latest teams to take advantage of the Terriers’ plight, pushing BU down to fourth in Hockey East. The Terriers still have games in hand with the teams ahead of them, so they are in better shape than it appears, but games in hand only have value if you can win them. How many teams do you see being in the hunt for the HEA championship when we get down to the wire?

Candace: Hockey East drives me crazy more than any other conference, because it is so up and down that I never know what to make of it from one week to the next. In regards to voting, I have to look at previous week’s results, and that is why for the first time I put BC over Cornell. You can only beat who is in front of you. I don’t read too much into the loss to the Terriers, because I feel that just like the men, when those two teams face each other, all bets are off because of the rivalry factor. Even though BU beat BC once, in that game the Eagles outshot the victors by more than a two-to-one margin (31-15), and they piled on the shots again in their win a day later (38-23). When you’ve got a long and storied rivalry, it seems to me that regardless of how much “better” one team is over another, you can never count the other out. As far as winning Hockey East is concerned, I still feel it is a two-horse race. Poulin won’t be out forever, and when she gets back, it gives BU an added dimension the other teams lack. I guess I could see Northeastern and Providence having an outside chance, but frankly, BC dominated Northeastern in two games, and they also I think beat Providence pretty handily. Aside from the win against BU this past weekend, the Friars have consistently come up short against better teams, so I don’t think they have the consistency to challenge for Hockey East. They’ve lost to Brown and Vermont, hardly powerhouse teams.

You mentioned putting North Dakota ahead of BC in your personal poll. As we’ve discussed, the Sioux are a dangerous team. They shrugged off a 7-2 thrashing on Friday night to come back and blank the Gophers, 3-0, the next day. Any team with the high-flying Lamoureux twins is dangerous, but aside from Michelle Karvinen, the others struggle to put points on the board. It seems to me if you can shut down the Lamoureux twins, you will beat the Sioux, because they still don’t have enough depth. What is your take on the Sioux?

Arlan: I think you’re both right and wrong regarding the Sioux going as the Lamoureux sisters go. In Saturday’s game, Brian Idalski moved Monique back to defense, and UND has a totally different look with that line chart. While each sister had a goal in the second game, they were essentially empty-net goals; the damage had already been done by a couple of the UND additions, with Karvinen connecting with Andrea Dalen. Karvinen adds another dimension, because while the twins are a lot of things, they aren’t fast, and Karvinen doesn’t need a lot of time possessing the puck to be dangerous. Plus, she hasn’t displayed quite the same affinity for sitting in the penalty box.

In my opinion, the fate of the Fighting Sioux — the team, not the nickname — will be determined on the other end of the ice. They went through wobbly patches in net at times last season, and that has continued. Junior Jorid Dagfinrud got the start on Saturday, only her fourth appearance on the season, and she turned in a shutout. But she came into the season with a career save percentage barely over 90, so whether it be Dagfinrud or senior Stephanie Ney, someone is going to have to solidify the position. Of course, goaltending is only a piece of the defensive equation, and the skaters shared a lot of guilt on Friday, prompting the move of Lamoureux-Kolls to the blue line. The Sioux don’t have long to wait for their next test, as Minnesota-Duluth skates into the Ralph on Saturday fresh off using St. Cloud State for target practice.

The WCHA offers another series that looks very intriguing. No, I don’t mean Minnesota State at SCSU, although the Huskies quest for that first conference win is always a gripping tale. I doubt too many circled Wisconsin at Bemidji State when the schedules came out, but it may prove to be the Badgers’ biggest road test of the first half. Do you think the Beavers have a shot at defending their home ice against UW?

Candace: I just knew you were going to ask me about the series. I’ve had my eye on it for about a month now. With Zuzana Tomcikova in net, I give Bemidji a shot against anybody. Wisconsin though, I have a hard time seeing the Badgers losing to anybody, not just Bemidji. They have a fearsome offensive attack, led by Ammerman, Prévost, Knight and Decker. Alex Rigsby is solid in net, and Kelly Jaminski and Stefanie McKeough bring poise to the back line. Plus, I give Wisconsin an extra point in every game for having one of the best coaches in college hockey, Mark Johnson. I expect what we will have is one game with Wisconsin romping (Friday) and one game that is closer, with Bemidji throwing a scare into Wisconsin, but falling short. Wisconsin swept Minnesota-Duluth on the road already, so it’s not like the Badgers are weaker on the road. Interestingly enough, Wisconsin has to run a gauntlet to start its second half, starting with road series against Minnesota and North Dakota, and then home series against Minnesota-Duluth and Bemidji, before ending with a comparatively easier schedule with Minnesota State, St. Cloud State, and Ohio State. I think it works out well for them, because the Badgers will be battle-tested, but have time to rest their top players ahead of the playoffs.

I’d like to get your take on the Badgers overall, and also, Ohio State, a team which has played well, yet perhaps showed a lack of consistency or leadership in tying Niagara on Friday night.

Arlan: Can I take a raincheck on Ohio State? After watching North Dakota on television last weekend, the Buckeyes are the one WCHA team that I’ve not seen at all this year, but I get to watch them live on Saturday and Sunday. My column in another week will focus on Ohio State.

As for the Cardinal and White, you’re right, they don’t lose often, and Johnson is one of the game’s best. I blogged back in October that the Badgers with Johnson had played 82 games against teams not representing a branch of the University of Minnesota without a loss. That string has now increased to 92 games, so the odds are against BSU. But as far as coaches go, I don’t think Steve Sertich has to take a backseat to anyone. His players are talented enough to execute his instructions, yet humble enough to want to. Tomcikova is terrific, but the Beavers are far more than just her. The Badgers are an excellent road team, but I think their opponents are much more comfortable when they aren’t forced to adjust to the size of the ice in the Kohl Center, and that’s something everyone but SCSU must do. Prévost was hurt against the Huskies and didn’t play last weekend versus the Mavericks, so for the present, that looks to be one missile missing from the Madison arsenal. With both Cornell and Minnesota stumbling last weekend, Wisconsin has opened a gap over the closest pursuers. A familiar scenario is unfolding, with the Badgers rolling down the track and other teams tripping over the railroad ties and losing ground.

It’s unfortunate that both teams will have players competing internationally when the Badgers and Gophers meet in January. I spoke to Katey Stone last week for this week’s story on Harvard, and she made the point that it isn’t good for college hockey when key players face conflicts with their national teams, something we see on the men’s side as well, but almost never in other college sports. I realize that athletes such as wrestlers or swimmers may miss a season due to Olympic competition, but in sports like basketball, the international competition is held in the offseason. Stone spoke of trying to eliminate those conflicts down the road in hockey as well. We’ve seen the World Championships pushed back to a date that doesn’t conflict with NCAA competition. Do you see that as feasible with other events at some point?

Candace: I honestly don’t know. It would make sense on the surface, but holding it at the end of the season would compress everything. The World Championships are held in April, the Twelve Nations at the end of August, and the Four Nations in November. It doesn’t leave a lot of time to reschedule things. I guess the only way to do it would be to have a lead-up, with the Twelve Nations in April, the Four Nations in late June/early July, and then the World Championships in September. Moving the Meco Cup around though, I just don’t see it happening. I haven’t heard any talk of it happening in the men’s game with the World Juniors, and teams like Denver, Boston College, Minnesota, etc., know they will be losing players to the World Juniors every year around Christmas. It’s a nice theory, but with so many international competitions already, I just don’t think it can happen. Also, I think it can help those teams when those players return having faced stiff international competition. At least, I’m sure that is the argument that is made to the coaches.

On another note, last week in our picks blog, we called out Clarkson for having an anemic offense. They then unloaded for 10 goals against Rensselaer and six against Union. Yes, those are two of the weaker teams in the ECAC, yet they are capable of playing others tough, as Wisconsin found out around Thanksgiving. The Knights are currently second in the ECAC, yet have received little attention so far. Perhaps it’s time to take a look at them again?

Arlan: Both the Golden Knights and the Bobcats are healthier in the ECAC than some of their early results suggested. Clarkson is perfect but for a one-goal loss to Harvard over its last seven games, and Quinnipiac is on a 10-2-1 stretch. Both are teams that rely on younger players for much of their offense; neither has a senior in the team’s top five-point producers. Young players tend to be a bit more inconsistent, but they hold the potential for improvement over the course of the season as well. The Bobcats are home-and-home with Princeton this weekend, while the Knights travel to Niagara for a pair. These are key contests for teams on the cusp of contention, because losses in games that at least on paper appear winnable can sap all of the momentum heading into break.

Speaking of the break, I’m betting that the Terriers have been hoping to make it to the holidays without their season completely imploding. After the game at Northeastern, BU is off for a month. As much as teams don’t like the rust that can come from being idle, it is an opportunity to get rested and get healthy. Is there anyone else that you think is looking forward to a vacation more than most?

Candace: I’d have to agree on Boston University. I’d bet they are praying that Marie-Philip Poulin comes back to the lineup as quickly as possible. It’s hard to imagine that ECAC teams, which play a shortened schedule, are looking forward to a break, but I’d imagine that Dartmouth might, since the Big Green have really struggled with consistency. It might give them time to work on some of the things that have plagued them, like offense. I mentioned earlier that the only game they scored five goals in was against Cornell, but they have some pretty severe offensive woes. They’ve been shutout twice, scored a single goal in two other games, and scored only twice in two games. That means in more than 50 percent of their games, the Big Green has two or fewer goals; that’s just not going to get it done come playoff time. The power play is clicking at a meager 11.5 percent, and the penalty kill is only at 87 percent; I think Dartmouth could use the break to shore up its special teams, and that might help them. Harvard may also welcome the break, if only to shore up its horrific penalty kill, which is currently successful only 85.2 percent of the time, a big problem for them. If you look at the rest of Harvard’s game, they’ve been doing well, but penalty killing is hurting them.

Let’s end this by looking at surprises from the first half. We’ve already looked at Robert Morris. I’d suggest Niagara as another team doing better than expected; they played tough against Ohio State his last weekend. On the flip side, New Hampshire has definitely fallen off, and I’m sure we expected more from Minnesota-Duluth. Anything stand out for you?

Arlan: Each league has a team that has been worse to date than I thought. St. Cloud is not just losing, but getting drilled regularly, and if they don’t get points off of MSU this weekend, it could really get to be a dismal season for the Huskies, with little promise of improvement. I’d expected Syracuse to be a little better by this point, but I have to remember that it is still just the fourth season for the Orange. You mentioned the Wildcats, whose efforts in Hockey East have been futile to date, but overall UNH has as many wins as Vermont and Connecticut combined. UConn’s struggles aren’t unexpected, but if I had to single one out, I’d say the Huskies have the dimmest long-term prospects. Yale seems destined for the ECAC cellar, although for a team that played Wisconsin tough, RPI has made a hash of some other games.

On the positive surprises end of the scale, I’d say that North Dakota has delivered. I knew that they’d be more talented this year, but I thought they had overachieved and snuck up on some teams last year, and they’ve clearly taken another couple of steps forward. I’d add Mercyhurst to the list, but most of that surprise came in one weekend. Then there are teams like Northeastern and Bemidji State that are close, really close, but we’ve seen teams like this before that just kind of fade away as the season drags along. The surprise in the ECAC is that there hasn’t been one, so it will be interesting to see who gets inspired in the second half.

Ohio State surging, but taking precautions to avoid complacency

Ah, December. It’s a month of diminishing daylight, old and varied traditions, introspection and assessment. As we approach the end of the calendar year — and, more importantly, the middle of the 2011-12 season — we tend to reflect on the immediate past and look ahead to the near future.

I hope that’s not what you want from this, the last notes column before the holidays, because those things will have to wait. This week, let’s take a look at those who give credit where it’s due, give credit to those who take one for the team and credit those who learn from their mistakes.

On top for a reason

With a home sweep of Lake Superior State last weekend, Ohio State solidified its position at the top of the CCHA standings by what passes for a sizeable margin in this season of parity, seven whole points. The Buckeyes’ 5-2 and 2-1 wins extended their current unbeaten streak to 11 games (10-0-1), the second-longest in the nation, giving them plenty to crow about.

Second-year coach Mark Osiecki, however, wants to make sure that they don’t believe their own press. After the 5-2 win Friday — which may have felt like it came too easily — Osiecki and the coaching staff called a team meeting Saturday morning and had a little chat with the players.

“It was probably the first once since the first game at Notre Dame [Oct. 20], and our guys responded well. They really did,” said Osiecki. “I thought they took the criticism well. Hats off to our captains who grabbed the team after and settled the players down and really hit some points home. I thought our guys responded very well.”

OK, so I am not exactly certain what was said in that meeting to require settling down of players, but whatever it was, it worked.

“I think that they were getting a little full of themselves,” Osiecki said of his players. “I think that they were reading the situation of where we’re at. Our bad habits were creeping in and as soon as those bad habits creep in you’re in trouble. We wanted to nip that in the bud quick.”

The result was a much more solid win Saturday, said Osiecki, in spite of the scoring difference between the games. “I think our guys played a solid team game and did a lot of the little things well. It was fun to see that response.”

Kudos to Osiecki and his staff for keeping his team in check and for crediting them publicly.

Believing for a reason

Ohio State is a team that is surprising me this season in its ability seemingly to turn around a program so quickly. Michigan State is another one. While Osiecki clearly had growing pains with the Buckeyes last season — players dismissed at midseason, a ninth-place finish — things in East Lansing are different for Tom Anastos in his first year.

Anastos has inherited a team of Spartans players ready to buy into what he’s selling, and that’s translating into good things for MSU. Consider what the Spartans have done recently. First they defeated and tied then-No. 3 Minnesota, and then they swept last-place Bowling Green the week before their home-and-home series with Michigan.

Getting players to perform at the level necessary to compete against a top team is one thing, but getting them to maintain their focus on their next opponent — someone lower in the standings and easily overlooked — while anticipating a home-and-home series with their biggest rivals is quite another.

Who gets the credit? Anastos, according to senior Brett Perlini.

“I think Coach Anastos did a great job in our mental preparation with that Minnesota series and obviously Michigan next week,” Perlini said. “It was a good weekend for us. We’ve got to play hard no matter who it is. We wanted obviously to play some good games this series and ride that momentum into next week.”

Taking the fall

After those two losses to Michigan State, Bowling Green coach Chris Bergeron dished a little perspective.

“I think there are some nights when we’ve been better than others defending lines, but tonight was not one of them,” he said. “It’s not our lack of working on it, or teaching it, or trying to coach it, but obviously we’re not doing something right. The message isn’t getting across.

“The execution level is nowhere near good enough for Division I hockey, and obviously that has to change.”

Bergeron wasn’t the only one taking responsibility for a team’s losing performance last weekend. After Notre Dame lost at home 9-2 to Northeastern Friday, coach Jeff Jackson told reporters to look no further than the head coach himself.

“I think this may be the worst loss that I’ve experienced since I’ve been here,” said Jackson. “I wasn’t very fond of the effort but I have to take responsibility. I didn’t have the guys ready to play tonight.”

Learning from experience

With a home sweep of Miami, Northern Michigan earned six points and extended its win streak to three games — both important, both impressive. As impressive and important, though, is the way in which the Wildcats kept their tempers in check against the most penalized team in the league and fourth-most penalized team in the nation.

At the end of the Wildcats’ 2-1 win over the Spartans on Nov. 19, a fight erupted that cost both teams key players for their following weekends. When things got rough at the end of the game, coach Walt Kyle did everything he could to get his players off the ice; when all was sorted, however, NMU’s final penalty minute total for the whole contest was 65, inflated by the disqualifications earned by defensemen Wade Epp, Kyle Follmer and Scott Macauley as the buzzer sounded. The three sat out the Wildcats’ 2-1 win over Miami Friday night.

In Saturday’s 5-1 game, the RedHawks took 14 penalties for 39 minutes, and rather than finding themselves in the box as much as well, the Wildcats capitalized on three of their power plays.

Sophomore Stephan Vigier told esteemed colleague Matt Wellens of the Marquette Mining Journal that Kyle was instrumental in helping the team maintain its composure. “We knew we had to be smart and it helped us big time in the end,” said Vigier. “Missing three of our top D-men is a tough thing to go through. We learned from it and I think it helped us tonight.”

Another coach that continues to impress me with his ability to keep his team focused is Alaska’s Dallas Ferguson. In the CCHA column the day before Thanksgiving, I wrote about Ferguson’s ability to keep his team focused through early injuries and many one-goal losses. After another one-goal loss last weekend — a heartbreaking 1-0 overtime loss to Michigan a day after beating the Wolverines 4-3 — Ferguson’s ability to keep his team on track was evidenced in assistant captain Aaron Gens’ postgame comments.

“One thing we talked about in the locker room was that we were in a lot of one-goal games,” Gens told the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. “Now we’re a better team because of it, because we know what it feels like to be there. We won four of six and it’s going to be a great break because of it, and I think we’re going to do nothing but go up from here.”

Players of the week

Rookie of the week: Michigan State’s Brent Darnell, who had a goal and three assists against Bowling Green.

Offensive player of the week: Northern Michigan’s Tyler Gron, who had the first goal in NMU’s win over Miami Friday and three assists Saturday.

Defenseman of the week: Western Michigan’s Matt Tennyson, for the second time this season. Tennyson had two goals in WMU’s 4-2 win over Ferris State Friday, including the game winner, and an assist Saturday.

Goaltender of the week: Ohio State’s Cal Heeter, also for the second time this season. Heeter had 58 saves (.951 save percentage) in OSU’s sweep of Lake Superior State.

My ballot

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

If the season ended today, by the way, seven CCHA teams would make the NCAA tournament, according to the PairWise Rankings.

On the way

As I said at the start, this is the last notes column of the first half of the season. During our little down time, though, I’ll blog a few times with at least one entry looking back at the first half of the season.

My first column back from the break — between Christmas and New Year’s Day — will be a look ahead at the second half of the season.

Somewhere in all of it, too, will be my mother’s recipe for cutout cookies so that you can enjoy the cookies that I know several current pro players made in the past with their own moms, from this very recipe, while they were mere lads in the CCHA.

As always, hit Twitter (@paulacweston), email ([email protected]) or just comment below. Try to avoid the naughty list, though, OK?

Home shutouts becoming the norm for Iles, Cornell

When you think Cornell, you think defense.

But this is just getting ridiculous.

Mercyhurst’s Nardo Nagtzaam tallied the game-winner at 12:49 in the third period of Cornell’s 5-4 home loss to the Lakers on Oct. 29. Since then, it’s been a clean slate for 312 minutes, 11 seconds and counting without giving up a goal at Lynah Rink, including a 0-0 tie with Clarkson Saturday night.

“Five straight shutouts at home … we’ve never had that at Cornell,” Big Red coach Mike Schafer said. “We’re going to win a lot of games if that keeps up.”

Sophomore Andy Iles has been in net for not only the entirety of the streak, but the whole season as well after splitting time with Mike Garman last year. Garman graduated a year early, leaving Iles as the only Big Red goalie with collegiate experience entering this season.

“He’s elevated his game,” Schafer said. “He was the best goaltender at the World Junior tryouts this summer and he’s been able to put up some phenomenal numbers. It’s great to see.”

But Iles (1.62 goals against average, .930 save percentage) was quick to credit his teammates. “I’ve never played for a team before that’s made so many good defensive plays,” he told CornellBigRed.com after Saturday’s game.

OK, so the Big Red haven’t been allowing goals. But what about the offense?

For the most part of the year, that’s been there, too, although Cornell ended the pre-holidays part of the schedule in a bit of mini-slump, scoring only three times in its last four games.

Despite that, it’s still second in scoring in ECAC play, and Schafer isn’t concerned heading into the holiday break.

“The times when you’re not producing scoring chances, that’s when you get concerned,” he said. “We’ve had more than enough opportunities. We need to show a little more poise and make that one extra pass or have more of a presence around the net.”

You can create chances, but when you face goalies like Clarkson’s Paul Karpowich or St. Lawrence’s Matt Weninger, there’s a likelihood chances will be just that: chances.

“We’ve done enough defensively to carry us through,” Schafer said. “We’ve scored three goals in four games and we’re 2-1-1.”

After losing seniors Joe Devin and Tyler Roeszler and their nearly 50 points to graduation, Cornell has been led offensively by a blueliner and a freshman, with junior defender Nick D’Agostino (7-6–13) and rookie forward Brian Ferlin (5-7–12) topping the scoring charts. D’Agostino leads the conference with four power-play goals.

One goal, two viewpoints

Saturday’s game between Quinnipiac and Rensselaer featured two teams near the bottom of the standings looking to turn things around.

In dramatic fashion, one of them did just that.

Down 2-1 early in the final period, the Bobcats got their first conference win in just over a month when Yuri Bouharevich launched a shot from the point with 2.4 seconds left to give QU a 3-2 win.

“Oh, man, that was long overdue to say the least,” a relieved Bouharevich said after the game. “That goal was huge for the team; it was a much-needed win for us.”

On the flip side, the loss exposed an RPI breakdown and continued a frustrating early part of the season for the Engineers, who last season made their first NCAA tournament appearance since 1995.

“They’re all tough. This one sucks,” RPI coach Seth Appert said after the game.

RPI is entrenched in last place with a 1-6 record in ECAC play, and Saturday’s loss in Hamden featured multiple turnovers and several breakdowns, including a final one that left Bouharevich wide open in the closing seconds.

“It’s a great example of why you’ve got to play out every shift,” Appert said. ‘We talk about it all the time about finishing your shifts and not going mentally dead within shifts for five or seven seconds. I thought the last play was an example of that. We had some guys that were just waiting for the horn to blow.”

The loss ruined an outstanding outing for RPI freshman Scott Diebold, who finished with 35 saves, and was put to the test during a penalty-filled second period for the Engineers.

“Their goaltender was very good,” Bouharevich said. ‘We had a lot of shots on him and he made some big-time saves.”

Alumni report

Former Colgate forward David McIntyre made his NHL debut on Nov. 29 for the Minnesota Wild, centering the fourth line that include former Massachusetts standout Casey Wellman. Even in the pro ranks, McIntyre, who posted 131 points in 151 games for the Raiders from 2006 to 2010, still keeps tab on his former team.

“I follow them on Twitter,” he said. “I’m pretty excited; I think they can do some great things this year.”

McIntyre said he was able to work on his defense while at Colgate, and cited this as a reason for his quick rise up the ladder in the pro game.

“Our coach stressed defensive play when I was there so my defensive game got to develop,” he said. “When I made the transition to the [AHL] and this league, I was able to put defense first. That’s my role; to play ‘D’ and be tenacious.”

He made his mark felt immediately, seeing 8:22 of ice time against Tampa Bay in his debut and laying out former Boston University defenseman Matt Gilroy with an open-ice hit, according to the St. Paul Pioneer Press.

Around the league

• USA Hockey announced the preliminary roster for the for the 2012 U.S. National Junior Team that will play at the 2012 World Junior Championship. Eighteen NCAA players made it, including three ECAC members: Ferlin and Yale sophomore forward Kenny Agostino, while Iles was listed as an emergency goaltender, leaving his coach a bit miffed.

“He’s clearly shown he’s capable, especially at the BU game in front of 18,000 people,” Schafer said, referring to the Red Hot Hockey matchup against Boston University Nov. 26 at Madison Square Garden.

Iles is the only collegiate goalie listed.

“It’s great for Brian; he was kind of an underdog, a last-minute replacement in the summer and he came through,” Schafer said. “Brian has produced and performed and was named and Andy has produced and performed and he wasn’t.”

The final roster will be announced on Dec. 22, with the tournament starting Dec. 26.

• The Ivies swept the conference’s weekly awards, with Princeton’s Jack Berger (4-1–5) earning player of the week, Brown’s Ryan Jacobson (1-3–4, plus-4) taking home rookie of the week, and Iles (1-0-1, 36 saves) claiming goaltender of the week.

• Yale wraps up its pre-exam portion of the schedule with a non-conference matchup at Massachusetts Wednesday night, while Brown and Cornell are done until after Christmas.

“We have to be very committed over the next three weeks between exams and going home for a week,” Schafer said. “[The players] need to keep up their work ethic, especially away from the coaches’ vision.”

• The latest edition of the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll sees four ECAC teams ranked. Union leads the way at No. 10, while Colgate (12), Cornell (16) and Yale (17) are all among the top 20. Quinnipiac and Harvard received votes as well.

Don’t forget me

A lot of this week’s space was devoted to Iles and Cornell. And rightfully so. But another one of the conference’s goaltenders is among the national leaders as 2011 draws to a close. Clarkson senior Paul Karpowich leads the nation in minutes played (1,152:53), and is seventh in goals against average (1.82) and second in save percentage (.942).

In fact, three of the top four stingiest goalies in the country reside in the ECAC. Colgate’s Alex Evin has made the most of his limited time, giving up nine goals in 364 minutes, 9 seconds, which translates to a Division I-leading 1.48 goals against average and .948 save percentage. Iles (third, 1.62) and Union’s Troy Grosenick (fourth, 1.76) are also in the top four in goals against average.

In case you missed it

Harvard coach Ted Donato was a guest on USCHO Live last week, talking with Ed Trefzger and Jim Connelly about Harvard’s recent play as well as the challenges of recruiting at an Ivy League school.

Alabama-Huntsville now looking at keeping D-I program

After a meeting Tuesday night with a grass roots effort group to save the hockey program at Alabama-Huntsville, the school released a statement seemingly changing its stance on the decision to end the D-I program it announced earlier this season.

UAH spokesman Ray Garner told the Huntsville Times that the school is committing to nothing beyond the statement below.

Members of The University of Alabama in Huntsville administration met this evening with hockey supporters, following discussions with Chancellor Malcolm Portera, and came to a consensus to work closely together to pursue institutional and community support to continue UAH hockey at the Division I level.

Several scenarios were discussed to ensure recurring support is in place, and the two groups will continue to meet in the coming days to finalize a workable plan.

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