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ECAC East 2011-2012 preview: Norwich should rule again

It’s a new season and a whole new feel to the now free-standing ECAC East. No longer sharing an interlocking schedule with the NESCAC conference, the ECAC East is now looking at a two-game series with each league opponent in the regular season, with each team hosting one game. The good news is you get a second chance against everyone, and with some teams that might not be a bad thing. The level of competitiveness and rivalry may be ratcheted up a notch from what we have seen over past seasons.

Another aspect of the separated league is the earlier start for teams that in the past adhered to the timing of the NESCAC start on November 1. This year, we have seen exhibitions played in October, and the first real games are coming on the first weekend in November. What that means is the action will be heating up sooner, and that is exciting for all fans.

The slate is clean and a new era for schedules and rivalries will unfold this season. What else will unfold?  That’s where the fun and prognostication comes in. Here’s a preview for each of the 10 teams in the predicted order of finish.

Norwich Cadets
2010-11 conference record: 15-1-3 (first)
2010-11 0verall record: 22-6-3
USCHO predicted finish: first
Overview: In true military fashion, Mike McShane’s troops don’t retreat, they reload. Juniors Blake Forkey, Pier Olivier-Cotnoir, and Kyle Thomas spearhead a potent offense that is backed up by an experienced defensive corps and solid goaltending from Parker Carroll. Carroll, who came in at mid-season last year, didn’t experience a loss until the semifinal game of the Frozen Four. This team has the talent and experience to make another run at a national title, but first would like to continue their dominance of the conference.

Castleton Spartans
2010-11 conference record: 15-3-1 (second)
2010-11 overall record: 22-4-1
USCHO predicted finish: second
Overview: Last year’s conference player of the year Josh Harris is back for his junior season, and is looking to lead a strong group of returning players to challenge Norwich for the league title. The Spartans are deep from the goal crease out, and will be looking for some more balanced scoring to take the pressure off Harris and Justin Alonzo. Eric Cinotti and Seth McNary were very effective in goal for coach Alex Todd last season, so look for a quick start from Castleton, which plays eight of their first 10 games at home in Vermont.

Babson Beavers
2010-11 conference record: 7-9-3 (fifth)
2010-11 overall record: 11-14-3
USCHO predicted finish:  third
Overview: The Beavers were almost last year’s Cinderella team, losing a hard-fought championship game to Norwich following a challenging regular season. This year’s team will have plenty of leadership from Mike Hoban, Cody Carlson, and PT Donato to support a roster that has 10 sophomores looking to take the next step in improving their game. The goaltending should be a strong point for Jamie Rice’s squad, with senior Andrew Peabody and junior Zeke Testa back to share the load. The past few seasons have demonstrated Babson’s resilience in playing its best hockey when it counts the most. This squad has all of the makings of one of those teams.

Skidmore Thoroughbreds
2010-11 conference record: 8-8-3 (fourth)
2010-11 overall record: 9-14-3
USCHO predicted finish: fourth
Overview: Skidmore’s core strength this season may reside in its defensive unit, which brings both experience and skill. Jack Walsh, Nick Dupuis, and Zach Menard lead a mobile defensive corps that will need to be solid early in support of emerging talent upfront that comes from the freshman and sophomore classes. Colin Bessey has the game in goal to be a difference maker for the Thoroughbreds, and he will need to bring a higher level of consistency to his game for Skidmore to compete every night.

Massachusetts-Boston Beacons
2010-11 conference record: 10-9-0 (third)
2010-11 overall record: 22-6-3
USCHO predicted finish: fifth
Overview: Coach Peter Belisle may have his deepest team skating at Columbia Point this season, and based on last year’s winning record, expectations will be high for the Beacons. A strong senior class, including forwards Anthony Fitti, Kyle Tejchma, Bryan Albert, and Jimmy Ennis, lead a quick group of forwards that should provide balanced scoring. Since the departure of Ryan Donovan, the Beacons have been looking for a consistent number one netminder. Two freshmen will be competing with Kevin Bendel for the job, which may hold the key to Mass.-Boston’s overall success.

New England College Pilgrims
2010-11 conference record: 5-13-1 (ninth)
2010-11 overall record: 7-17-2
USCHO predicted finish: sixth
Overview: 19 of 36 players on the roster hail from Canada or Europe. In fact, this may be the most diverse roster in college hockey, with players coming from Sweden, Finland, Croatia, Quebec, Ontario, Russia, England, and the Czech Republic. I wonder if coach Tom Carroll does the Rosetta Stone thing. Two of last year’s bright spots lead this year’s team from the blue line, as  Aki Uola and Jarkko Leppanen bring their strong skating and offensive games to backstop a roster that has 13 freshmen. Goaltending will be a heavily-contested position and a key to the Pilgrims’ start to the season. A freshman, two sophomores, and a junior are all battling for playing time, starting with Babson on Friday night.

St. Anselm Hawks
2010-11 conference record: 7-10-2 (sixth)
2010-11 overall record: 13-11-2
USCHO predicted finish: seventh
Overview: The Hawks find a heavy dose of sophomores and juniors on their roster, which should lead to some good things this season if the consistency is found each game. Junior forwards Tucker Mullin and Tim King, along with senior defenseman Ryan Holley, lead this team, and if the rest of the cast matches their intensity, coach Ed Seney will have a formidable team this season. Robert Kang returns in goal and looks to build off a successful freshman season for the Hawks.

Southern Maine Huskies
2010-11 conference record: 5-11-3 (eighth)
2010-11 overall record: 8-13-5
USCHO predicted finish: eighth
Overview: Captain Dan Rautenberg is one of just three seniors skating for the Huskies this season, and his leadership will be a key to their success. Lots of young talent will be on display, including freshman forwards Sam Guimond, Matt Tucceri, and Ben Pearl. Both Mason St. Hilaire and Braely Torris return in goal for the Huskies, and they will need to stay healthy to help this young team develop to their full potential over the course of the season.

University of New England Nor’easters
2010-11 conference record: 3-16-0 (tenth)
2010-11 overall record: 6-19-0
USCHO predicted finish: ninth
Overview: As one would expect from a program entering just their third season at the varsity level, UNE has continued to improve, and comes into the season with a few veterans and a lot of new faces. Brad Holt’s team has been challenged scoring goals over the past two seasons, so look for veterans like Matt DelGiudice, Tyler Fleurent, and Sean Sullivan to show the freshmen the way in the offensive end of the ice. Goaltending is a key for every team, and the Nor’easters find themselves with four goaltenders battling for ice time. Look for several guys to get the chance to prove themselves early on.

St. Michael’s Purple Knights
2010-11 conference record: 6-12-1 (seventh)
2010-11 overall record: 11-15-1
USCHO predicted finish: tenth
Overview: St. Mike’s is led by a talented group of juniors, including Josh Geary, Mike Dizgun, Morgan Bell, and Dan Evarts. They will need to lead by example on and off the ice for a team that is likely to regularly dress six-to-seven freshmen per night.  The Purple Knights will get an early test on the road, as they open at Utica. The Pioneers have already upset Oswego this season, and will require St. Mike’s to bring their A-game early.

Every team is excited about their prospects for success this season. With the slates clean, optimism abounds on campus and in the locker rooms. The real test is but a few hours away. Let the games begin — drop the puck!

Oswego’s goalie dilemma

Oswego ascended to the top of the USCHO.com rankings for the first time in this young season. However, they now face a tough obstacle to stay there — the loss of their number one goalie for an indeterminate amount of time.

Paul Beckwith sustained an injury to his right knee in the season opener against Elmira. Since then, he has not suited up for the Lakers. The extent of the injury is not fully known, and thus no return date has been set.

According to the Oswego student newspaper, the Oswegonian, Beckwith plans to also get examined by his personal doctor when he returns home during the Thanksgiving weekend.

“It could be a month, or it could be the entire season,” Beckwith said.

Oswego has been in this situation before. In Beckwith’s rookie season, an injury left the Lakers with only Chris Hyk, so they looked for a replacement. They wound up bringing in two transfers for the second semester — Tim Potter from Clarkson and Kyle Gunn-Taylor from Buffalo State.

Potter didn’t work out and didn’t return the next year. It was now down to Gunn-Taylor, who was a senior, Beckwith, and a freshman, Dan Jones.

Gunn-Tylor wound up with most of the playing time, as Beckwith suffered from nagging injuries, leading Oswego to the national semifinals.

When he graduated, it was now Beckwith and Jones. Beckwith finally got to play a full season healthy, leading the Lakers to yet another national semifinal.

There was another transfer midway through the year, Andrew Hare from Niagara University. He played in only two games for Oswego.

Now, with Beckwith out again, it will be down to Hare and Jones … unless of course another transfer is found during the holiday break.

So far, Hare has played in all but the most recent game since the opener, going 4-1-0 with a 1.72 GAA and a .937 save pct.

“He’s been consistent in net,” Oswego coach Ed Gosek said. “He’s very sound technically.”

Jones played against Brockport, letting up one late goal on 28 shots, earning Goalie of the Week honors.

“He came in against Brockport, and played very well,” Gosek said.

With Beckwith conceivably gone for the year, the team will have to rely on Hare and Jones.

“They both are capable,” Gosek said “They both worked hard in the offseason to up their play. Both have the support of their teammates. They are very confident with both of them in net. It’s nice to have that depth.”

That depth has allowed Oswego to weather Beckwith injuries in the past. They will have to do it again this season.

Is the Jinx Over?
There’s been a running joke on the USCHO message boards about how it always appears whenever something malfunctions at a hockey rink, I’m there.

I’ve been in three different rinks when fire alarms went off (Geneseo, Brockport, and Oswego). I was at a Geneseo game when the glass shattered, causing a lengthy delay. For an RIT game, it was glass falling out.

The problems seemed to magnify last year. I was at an RIT game when the Zamboni broke down midway through cleaning, sitting powerless on the ice. Then, to top it all off, on my first trip to Potsdam in many, many years, a coolant pipe burst during the first intermission, causing a leak. The damage was too great to continue, and the game had to be postponed for a day and moved to Clarkson’s Cheel Arena.

USCHO photographer Angelo Lisuzzo jokes that rinks will start putting my picture on the entrances to inform security not to allow me in. At least, I think he’s joking…

This year, I believe the jinx may actually be gone. There’s been a fire alarm at the Oswego-Utica game, and I was not there. A Zamboni broke at last weekend’s Plattsburgh at Potsdam game, and again I was not there.

However, I am currently knocking on wood and plan on bringing a rabbit’s foot to games.

Beware Buffalo State and Fredonia this weekend.

SUNYAC Players of the Week (selected by the conference)
Player of the Week: Trevor McKinney, Buffalo State (F, Jr., Oakwood, Ontario). Netted two goals and added an assist to lead Buffalo State to a 7-2 victory over host Morrisville State. Buffalo State struck first when McKinney scored a power-play marker for the only goal of the first period. McKinney added another power-play marker early in the second period before assisting on the final goal of the period to put the Bengals up 5-1.

Rookie of the Week: Nick Zappia, Cortland (F, Manlius, N.Y.). Helped lead the Red Dragons to a 1-1 weekend. He scored three points on two goals and an assist in a 7-5 win versus Brockport on Friday night. Zappia netted his first career goal late in the second period to tie the game at 5-5, and added an empty-net insurance goal with 44 seconds to play to seal the win.

Goalie of the Week: Daniel Jones, Oswego (Jr., Richmond Hill, Ontario). Registered a 7-1 win over Brockport in his first appearance of the season. Jones stopped 27 of the 28 shots he faced, including 13 in the first period as the Lakers were on the penalty kill for nearly 10 minutes of the frame. The goal allowed by Jones came in the final two minutes of the game.

North Country crossroads

Quick — what team won the first women’s hockey NCAA tournament game?

Admittedly, the title of this article, coupled with the fact that Clarkson didn’t even have a varsity women’s team until 2003, kind of gives it away, but yes, the St. Lawrence Saints upset top-seed Dartmouth to advance to the first NCAA Championship in 2001. That was the first of five Frozen Four appearances and seven NCAA tournaments for the Saints, including six tourney bids in succession, the last coming in coach Chris Wells’s inaugural season at the St. Lawrence helm in 2008-09.

The Clarkson Golden Knights got their only taste of the NCAAs in 2009-10. Last season, they dropped to sixth in the ECAC, while the Saints came in seventh. When neither was invited to last season’s dance, it marked the first national tournament without North Country representation since 2003 — back when the Golden Knights didn’t even exist.

So what are the prospects for the two upstate New York neighbors to return to the NCAA tournament, or at least get back to hosting an ECAC quarterfinal series?

“I think everybody starts the league, their first goal is to get home ice in the playoffs,” Wells said.

The Saints started out with promise, scoring 19 goals as they opened 3-0-1, but then saw the flip side of the coin as the offense dwindled to five goals over an 0-3-1 stretch. Scoring remained elusive for SLU through a 2-1 win at Rensselaer and a 2-2 tie at Union.

“We had a lot of early success, and the puck got some favorable bounces in our direction, and we were able to capitalize on those and make good decisions with those pucks that bounced our way,” Wells said after the team’s first two league games hosting Harvard and Dartmouth. “I don’t think it’s for a lack of effort the last couple of weekends. We’ve hit posts and some great saves by the goalies, and they just haven’t gone in as much, but I think we’re getting as many quality chances.”

Brooke Fernandez of St. Lawrence (Tim Brule)Especially early in the season, what a coach sees on the ice can be more important than what is displayed on the scoreboard. Wells felt that was the case over the recent skid that included a tie with New Hampshire and single-goal losses to Boston University and Dartmouth.

“I just think that’s the landscape of the game right now, except for a few that have kind of distanced themselves from others, is a group of teams in that five to 20 range, five to 21, 22 range in the country, that any given night is going to be a one-goal game,” he said. “We’re happy with where our team is at and the effort that’s been put forward, and where we feel we can go.”

One facet of the Saints’ game that looks to need some improvement is their penalty kill, as opponents have already reached double digits in power-play goals for the season.

“I’m in charge of that, so I guess I’d better either figure it out or fire myself and get somebody else in there to do it,” Wells said. “That’s been a key; I think if you look at a lot of our goals, almost half of our goals have been given up on the penalty kill. There’s a couple of things that probably have to bend there, and that’s a little bit more discipline and just doing the little things on the penalty kill that can keep the puck out of the net. Ten is a number that you want to strive for the entire year almost, 10 to 15 to compete at the level that we want to compete at, and we’re already there. So we better either shut it down or stay out of the box.”

Although the Saints rank in the top 10 in penalty minutes through the early weeks, history seems to be on his side in that regard.

“That’s been one of our strengths my first three years here,” Wells said. “We’ve always been one of the least-penalized teams in the country.”

A successful penalty kill revolves around goaltending, and the Saints look to youngsters Carmen MacDonald, a freshman, and sophomore Caitlyn Lahonen.

“We’ve been comfortable with both of them in the net,” Wells said. “They’ve both been given a chance, and they’ll continue to be given a chance over the next couple of weeks. We feel that’s a strong point in our game.”

Up front, SLU lacks the high-octane superstars of some teams, instead relying on good balance and contributions from throughout the roster.

“I think just a slight increase in everybody’s performance will get us to where we’d like to be,” Wells said. “Certainly with the effort that they’ve put forth and the space for improvement, I think that’s what has us excited about this team for the season.”

The jury is still out on whether St. Lawrence (4-3-3, 1-2-1 ECAC) will ascend the ECAC standings, but Wells is optimistic.

“I like the way that our team plays, and we feel like we can compete with anybody any given night, with our speed and the components that we have.”

Roughly 10 miles to the north and east from Canton, where the Saints hope to hang more banners in Appleton Arena, is Potsdam and Cheel Arena, home of the Golden Knights. Clarkson is attempting to rebound from a 2010-11 season doomed by a slow start.

“We graduated a very good senior class the year before that kind of led us to the NCAAs, and we brought in eight freshmen,” said Clarkson co-head coach Matt Desrosiers. “We had a pretty young team. It always takes a while for freshmen to get up to speed, and even though the kids that we brought in had Canadian national team experience and that, it’s still an adjustment to make the jump to the college level. We expected that, at the beginning of the season, that we were going to take some hits here and there, just kind of learning how to play the game at the college level.”

To borrow from late basketball coach Al McGuire, “The best thing about freshmen is that they become sophomores,” and that’s been apparent at Clarkson. The Knights (5-3-4, 1-2-1) have started much better this time around.

“They have that year under their belt, and they kind of changed things around a little bit at the end of last year, and they’re kind of carrying that over into this season so far,” Desrosiers said.

Two of the sophomores vital to Clarkson’s fate are goalie Erica Howe and forward Jamie Lee Rattray.

“Erica is a really strong goaltender,” Desrosiers said. “That’s why she got invited to the Canadian under-22 program. She kind of started putting a little bit more focus into practice and that, and all of a sudden she started turning it around. Now we’re playing hard, we’re not giving up those second, third opportunities, and Erica’s standing in tall, making the saves that she’s got to make. She’s playing really strong for us right now.”

While Howe works to keep opponents silent on the scoreboard, her former teammate with the Ottawa Senators, Rattray, is doing her part to increase the total for Clarkson. The Kanata, Ont., native leads the team with five goals and 10 assists through the first 12 games, after finishing tops in points with 25 as a rookie.

“She came back in great shape,” Desrosiers said. “She’s a lot quicker, a lot stronger. I think this year, she’s a little more focused, and as long as she’s creating those opportunities and just keeps doing it, we’re going to start putting some of those in. I think she’s just a little bit more mature, both on and off the ice, as far as what she needs to do and how she needs to prepare going forward.”

The Knights don’t have that same maturity yet across their blue line, as they have three rookies playing defense.

“We’ve had the luxury of dressing seven ‘D,’ so we’ve been able to ease them in,” Desrosiers said. “We haven’t had to have them be the go-to players right away, and I think that’s helped them out quite a bit. It’s always difficult coming into your college career as a defenseman as it is, but then you start getting three of them on there, it kind of puts a lot more pressure on them.”

Clarkson had a run of tight contests to kick off ECAC play. An extra-attacker goal by junior Danielle Skirrow earned a 2-2 tie with Dartmouth, but it came up short versus Harvard, falling 2-1 in overtime. On the road for a second weekend of league action, the Knights were upset 2-1 by Union before winning by the same score over Rensselaer. An uptick in offense would go a long way to improving outcomes.

“It’s been a major focus for us leading into this week is trying to bury our opportunities,” Desrosiers said. “The nice thing is, we are creating a lot of opportunities, scoring chances, which is nice, but at the same time it’s got to get to the point where now we’ve got to start burying some of those chances.”

If the Golden Knights can put away enough pucks, perhaps they can find a way back onto home ice for the playoffs and even into the NCAA field.

Tournaments prepare teams for schedule rigors

Take a look at the calendars — it’s tourney time.

No, not that tourney time — we’ll have plenty of that come February, when the ECAC Northeast and MASCAC teams will be playing for conference championships and NCAA tournament berths.

However, if you take a look at the schedules for this weekend, you’ll see a few groupings of four at rinks around New England.

Worcester State will host the four-team Pepperidge Farms Tournament, while Fitchburg State will host the four-team Fitchburg Shootout.

Suffolk, in particular, is one of the ECAC Northeast teams that relies on early-season tournament play to help prepare for the rigors of the remainder of its 24-game regular-season schedule.

“We like to open the season in tournaments because it shows the guys right away the need to compete, and it gives them the chance to play for something,” Suffolk Coach Chris Glionna said. “We’re trying to set the tone right away.”

The Rams (2-0) opened the season by winning the Becker Ice Breaker tournament in Marlborough, Mass., with a 3-1 win Friday over Assumption and a 4-1 win Saturday over Becker. This weekend, the Rams get right back into tournament mode when they open the Pepperidge Farms Classic tournament at 4:30 p.m. Thursday against Worcester State.

The four-team Pepperidge Farms Classic also includes Johnson and Wales (2-0) and Western New England (0-1).

Fitchburg will face Southern New Hampshire at 8 p.m. Friday in the second game of its tournament, and will face either Franklin Pierce or Wentworth on Saturday.

Winning the Ice Breaker Tournament, however, proved some early-season truths to Glionna about his team. His top line was hit by injuries, forcing several of the younger players to contribute immediately — a baptism by fire, of sorts. In stepped sophomores Josh Goryl and Charlie McGinnis, who combined for a goal and five assists in Suffolk’s two tournament games.

Developing depth will be crucial this season, not just for Suffolk, but for any team.

“Teams start to rely on the top guys, and they need to show that everyone contributes,” Glionna said. “We’re only going to win when all four lines contribute.”

Suffolk went 2-5-1 in November of 2009; the Rams finished 12-11-3 that season. Last November, Suffolk went 4-5 in November, but finished 8-16.

“Two years ago, when we had a great season, we rolled four lines and had people step up every night,” Glionna said. “Last year, we didn’t.”

Refining that depth will be key for the Rams, who open their ECAC Northeast schedule Wednesday, November 16, at Johnson and Wales, then host conference opponent Salve Regina three days later (Saturday, Nov. 19).

“We’re trying to get the guys to understand that every game is important,” Glionna said. “Next week we have two league games, so how better to prepare for it than a tournament like this?

Time to rewind in the MASCAC and ECAC Northeast
One thing I’ll take a look at each week are numbers that jump out from each game.

Salem State 4, Wentworth 3: Kyle Phelan scored a pair of third-period goals to break a 2-2 tie and lift the Vikings to their first win of the season Monday in an ECAC Northeast-MASCAC crossover game, the season opener for both teams. Casey Shade scored two goals for Wentworth.
Number of note: Salem State and Wentworth went a combined 0-for-10 on the power play, with the Leopards finishing 0-for-6.

Westfield State 3, Nichols 3: Frank Zuccaro’s power-play goal with less than four minutes left in the second helped Westfield State (1-0-1) forge a tie at Nichols (0-0-1) in a crossover game.
Number of note: The most remarkable number out of this match-up? The fact that Westfield State goalie Eddie Davey made 49 saves.

Salve Regina 4, Franklin Pierce 2: Chad Goodwin had a goal and an assist for Salve Regina (1-1).
Number of note: Salve Regina won its first game since February 8, a 5-4 win at Stonehill.

New England College 4, Fitchburg State 2: Travis Bertolotti had a goal and an assist for Fitchburg State (0-1) in its season opener.
Number of note: Goalie Shawn Sirman, who played the past two years at Maine, made 25 saves for New England College.

Road comebacks

Elmira hit the road for a pair of games on the first weekend of league play and came away with two come-from-behind victories.  On Friday, Utica held a 1-0 lead in the third period before Elmira stormed back for a 3-1 win.

Saturday, Manhattanville led the Soaring Eagle 2-0 and 3-2, only to fall eventually, 6-3.

“It was a great road trip for us,” said Elmira coach Aaron Saul. “We played a solid six periods on the road early in the year. I was happy with the guys’ effort.”

Utica’s goal and one of the Valiants’ three goals were scored on power plays.  While that was only two goals on 14 power plays from Elmira’s opponents, the extra-attacker goals added to the height of the hill the Soaring Eagles needed to climb.

“We know early in the year that there will be a lot of penalties called,” said Saul. “It gives an opportunity for teams to take advantage on the power play. We’re just trying to weather the storm in the beginning. We are confident that we will be able to come back.”

The confidence that coach Saul mentions has its roots in a very experienced team. Fifteen players are either juniors or seniors who have played in the NCAA tournament every year of their collegiate careers. Not much rattles these players.

“We are a veteran team for sure with 10 seniors,” said Saul. “These guys have played in an NCAA tournament game for three consecutive years, so they have the experience that if we do get down there is no panic. If we stick to our game plan, good things will happen for us.”

Three weeks ago, Elmira began the season with a disappointing weekend against Oswego. The Lakers dominated Elmira in a home-and-home pair of games, outscoring the Soaring Eagles 13-5 on the weekend.

So what was the difference between the Oswego weekend and the games at Utica and Manhattanville?

“Practice,” said Saul. “We had two weeks to prepare for our two league games, compared to four practices going into Oswego. It affects everybody early. It just isn’t enough time to prepare for anybody. With the two weeks of practice, we regrouped and got refocused, and are now on track.”

The first round of league games comes early on the schedule for all of the ECAC West teams. Neumann and Hobart each only played one game before the league began, while Utica and Elmira completed two warm-up games.

“It’s tough to play league games right away,” said Saul. “You wish you had more warm-ups. But it is a really good test early in the year to measure up against other teams to see where you are at. It is a little more wide open when you play at the beginning of the year.”

Tough Start
Manhattanville jumped right into league play without any NCAA games. The Valiants only practice game came in an exhibition, where they came back from a late deficit to defeat the USA Under-18 team.

“In years past, we’ve always warmed up a bit before getting right into it, but no excuses though,” said Manhattanville coach Eric Lang. “We have to be ready to play. Those games are mini-wars. It is a play here or there that is all the difference.”

Manhattanville got off to a tough start to the season last Friday. Hobart scored a pair goals in the first six minutes of the game and rolled over the Valiants 4-0.

“Friday night, we got outworked from the drop of the puck to the last buzzer,” said Lang. “Hobart played a good high-energy, high-effort road game. We knew what we were getting, but they just outworked us. We got a little better as the game went on, but not much.”

Saturday, Manhattanville came out better, built a quick 2-0 early advantage, and held onto a 3-2 lead seven minutes into the second period. Then wheels came off the proverbial bus and Elmira scored the next four goals to win 6-3.

“I was more encouraged by Saturday’s effort,” said Lang. “Five-on-five we were pretty good. Elmira got a couple of power-play goals. They are super skilled. We missed a couple of backchecking assignments, and Elmira scored a couple of the prettiest goals I have seen in a long time. At times, we could skate up and down the ice with them.”

An extra challenge Manhattanville faces is coach Lang learning about the players, and the players learning his new systems, after taking over the reins just over a month ago.

So what kind of style does coach Lang want for his hockey team?

“We are trying to pursue the puck a little more,” said Lang. “We have some guys that can skate here and we want to play in teams’ faces. We want to pursue the puck, pressure the puck, and take away time and space. But it’s not a complete overhaul.”

ECAC West Weekly Awards:

Player of the Week:
Kevin Willer (Sr.) — Elmira
Kevin Willer tallied six points on four goals and two assists during a 2-0 conference road weekend for the Soaring Eagles, who defeated now-No. 7-ranked Utica 3-1 on Friday and Manhattanville 6-3 on Saturday. Willer assisted on an insurance goal against the Pioneers, and then erupted for four goals and five points against the Valiants to help Elmira erase a 2-0 deficit after the first period.

Goaltender of the Week:
Nick Broadwater (Jr.) — Hobart
In his only action for the week, Nick Broadwater stopped all 30 shots he faced in Hobart’s 4-0 ECAC West-opening triumph at Manhattanville on Friday. It marked Broadwater’s first shutout of the young season. He now ranks second in Hobart history with four career shutouts.

Rookie of the Week:
Ryan Michel — Hobart
Ryan Michel registered a goal and two assists to help the Hobart Statesmen to a 2-0 week that included a 4-0 ECAC West win against Manhattanville on the road and a 5-1 nonconference victory at Salve Regina. Michel notched his first collegiate goal against Salve Regina.

An 18-year oversight

In Wednesday’s column, I took a moment to celebrate Colgate head coach Don Vaughan’s landmark 300th win, which came on Friday at Brown. I also made sure to acknowledge the other active 300-win mentors of ECAC Hockey, in St. Lawrence’s Joe Marsh (469 wins), Cornell’s Mike Schafer (314); and Dartmouth’s Bob Gaudet, who won No. 300 two weekends ago and has since improved to 302.

I clearly didn’t spend enough time combing the records, because I overlooked another completely active, assuredly successful coach with more career wins than Vaughan, Gaudet or even Schafer: second in the league in career wins among active coaches, Quinnipiac’s Rand Pecknold (324 victories) is also second among that group in career winning percentage (.588, trailing only Schafer’s .628).

Pecknold, now 18 years into his tenure at the only program he’s ever led, has earned every inch of his status as the 10th-most-victorious active D-I coach, only four wins behind Notre Dame’s Jeff Jackson. The Bobcats haven’t suffered a sub-.500 season in 15 years and counting under Pecknold, a streak that has survived Quinnipiac’s jump to D-I in 1999, the program’s transition from the late MAAC to Atlantic Hockey in 2003, and its acceptance into the ECAC two years later.

The absolutely outstanding players he has guided, the stellar student-athletes, and the truly good citizens of the world who spent four years under his tutelage are too numerous to count, but they – and any team he’s ever coached against – can attest to the fact that 18 years is a lot to overlook. Especially Rand Pecknold’s 18 years.

Leaman sees more than just baby steps at Providence

Providence missed the playoffs each of the last three years, during which the Friars compiled a cumulative 13-52-16 record in Hockey East. They then lost their top three scorers and five of their top seven.

Small wonder that Hockey East coaches, in their preseason poll, picked PC to finish last.

So what exactly is Providence doing in third place? The Friars are one of the best surprises of the new season, posting a 4-2-0 record within the league.

They got it started with a stunning opening weekend in which they toppled Boston University 5-3 on NESN, and then followed that up with a 6-4 win over Massachusetts. PC coach Nate Leaman — hired during the offseason because of his considerable success building Union into an ECAC power — appeared to be a miracle worker right out of the chute.

“Obviously, I was happy to get four points in Hockey East because I know how difficult that is,” Leaman says. “But I felt like we got some bounces. I just felt like we had a lot of work to do. You’re happy to have success, but you see how much work you have to do.”

The following weekend wasn’t quite as successful, but the Friars still got a tie against the defending national champions, Minnesota-Duluth, currently ranked 10th in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

“They’re not the defending national champions for nothing,” Leaman says. “The first night, they out-competed us and I was really unhappy with that. I was really unhappy with our battle level.

“The second night I thought we played pretty well and managed to come back when we were down in the third period and tie the game up against a pretty good hockey club. We got better over the weekend.”

A weekend at Maine, baptism by fire for any young team, resulted in PC’s first two league losses, the first coming in overtime and the second a one-goal game until a last-second empty-netter. Close, but no cigar.

The losses dropped the Friars’ league record to .500 and overall record below that mark, but their strength of schedule after those games stood at eighth in the country.

“The first night, we were really rattled in the first period from the crowd,” Leaman says. “I thought we lost our composure and we were running around a lot, but from then on I thought we played pretty good hockey. We came back twice in the third period and played a good overtime. We had a couple of opportunities that we didn’t bang home and they banged it home on their first opportunity.

“The second night, I thought we played well, but I didn’t think our transition to offense was that good. We played much better defensively, but we didn’t execute our transition to offense and they did.

“But overall, hey, that’s Hockey East and it’s getting back to work on Monday and not putting our heads down. You can’t get too high or too low; there are 27 games.”

Jaded PC fans might have been forgiven if they assumed that the opening weekend had just been a mirage, but it wasn’t. Last weekend, the Friars swept Vermont, outscoring the Catamounts by a collective 10-3 margin. Keep in mind the Cats had earlier defeated top-ranked Minnesota, the only blemish to the Gophers’ record.

“I thought that [maybe] things had a way of evening out,” Leaman says. “Maybe we deserved a little bit better in Maine, maybe we didn’t, but we found a way to win the two games. Now it’s just important that we stay even-keeled, we stay in our process, and understand it’s about our work ethic and our standards.”

In the preseason, Leaman challenged senior goaltender Alex Beaudry to raise his level of play, saying, “It’s an open battle right now.”

Not any longer. Beaudry has played every minute in the PC crease and has earned that time. Last weekend, he stopped 59 of 62 shots.

“Our goaltender has been our best player, there’s no doubt about that,” Leaman says. “He’s hiding some of our mistakes. Our focus right now is making sure we’re improving upon those mistakes, because I think Alex has played terrific.

“He’s given us a chance to win every game. I really like the way he’s playing.”

At the other end of the ice as well as the experience spectrum, two freshmen have provided much-needed offensive firepower. Ross Mauermann leads the Friars in scoring with a 3-6–9 scoring line. Stefan Demopoulos was another leader with a 2-4–6 line before missing last weekend with concussion-like symptoms.

“We came into the season with only one player that had more than 10 career goals,” Leaman says. “That could be a concern, but we’re getting good contributions from everyone. That’s going to have to continue for us to be successful. We’re a team where everyone has to contribute.”

All in all, it’s been a highly successful start to Leaman’s rebuilding program for Providence. And with only a single league game in November, there’s time for the Friars to grow before mistakes start showing up in the standings.

At Union, Leaman took over a program that had enjoyed only two winning seasons since joining the ECAC in 1991. (The Dutchmen had finished last four times and next-to-last twice before his arrival.) Over the course of eight years, Leaman steadily built it into a 26-10-4 power, the ECAC regular season champion, and an NCAA tournament team.

He’ll be looking to apply that same recipe for success at Providence.

“I thought we were successful at Union because we took it one day at a time,” he says. “We just tried to take baby steps in improving the program one day at a time, one month at a time, and one season at a time.

“That’s completely our focus here as well. I’ve been very encouraged by the support of the administration. Right now, my focus is on just really looking at it one day at a time, showing up tomorrow, and figuring how can we improve.”

At the top again

Boston College headed into last weekend as the nation’s No. 1 team and looked every bit the part in dominating Maine 5-1 on Friday night. Although Massachusetts upset the Eagles one night later, knocking them down to No. 2 nationally, the early indications are that they’ll once again be a favorite to reach the Frozen Four and challenge for their third national championship in five years.

“We had some major concerns [coming into this season] because that particular senior class of Gibby [Brian Gibbons], Joe Whitney and Johnny Muse was so instrumental in our success the last number of years,” BC coach Jerry York said after the Maine game. “[We’d be missing] that leadership; a goaltender who played almost every game; Cam Atkinson, our leading goal scorer; Jimmy Hayes, who was really starting to be a dominant player at our level; and even Philip Samuelsson. So all of a sudden we had a lot of voids as we analyzed our team coming into this year.

“But players have really stepped up their game. [Goaltender] Parker Milner, for sure. I think we’re getting excellent play from our defensive core, even though it’s a small number: Brian Dumoulin, Patch Alber, Tommy Cross and Edwin Shea. They’ve really picked up their game.

“We’ve really got some dynamic players on all three lines. When I looked at it [in the preseason], I wasn’t really sure where our offense would come from because Gibby and Joe and Cam produced so many goals. But they’re all contributing very well.

“It’s still early, but it’s been a good start for us. Some of my concerns [now] aren’t the concerns I had in September.”

What possible concerns could York have now? After all, his team is ranked second in the country. It’s at the top of the Hockey East standings. The Eagles have the league’s No. 1 overall offense (4.30 goals per game), the No. 2 defense (2.40 goals against per game), the No. 1 power play (27.3 percent) and No. 2 penalty kill (90.6 percent).

Yeah, coach, that team really sounds like a heartburn special.

In truth, though, York did have concerns going into last weekend that at least the Maine game allayed.

“We’ve been giving up a lot of shots on goal, 36 or 38 shots on goal, but I thought tonight our structure and defense was much better,” he said after the Eagles held Maine to 21 shots.

Milner had also been giving up too many rebounds, a flaw he remedied with focused practice throughout the week.

“Parker controlled his rebounds so much better this evening,” York said.

With the flaws disappearing, was York becoming like Alexander the Great, who found himself left with no worlds to conquer? Even the injury sustained during the Maine game, a shoulder injury to fourth-liner Danny Linell, will sideline the freshman for only a couple of weeks.

“I’m a typical coach,” York said. “I always want us to get better. We’ll review the film and talk to the club about some different areas.

“I’m always one for moving the puck quicker and faster. I think we’re pretty good at it, but there’s still some improvement we can make in that area. We have good skill players. They move pucks very well. Now I’m saying, ‘Let’s move them even quicker.'”

Even quicker?

That sound you hear is of other Hockey East coaches groaning.

Still hasn’t found what he’s looking for?

Coming into the season, one of Maine’s biggest concerns was its goaltending. The top save percentage among its netminders last year was .894 and arguably no team can win at this level with that caliber of performance between the pipes. Maine coach Tim Whitehead, however, expressed confidence in sophomores Dan Sullivan and Martin Ouellette.

“I’m very confident that these two guys are going to really surprise people this year,” Whitehead said before the season started. “We’re going to be very determined to play great team defense in front of them to give them the opportunity to take the next step. I love those two guys and am very confident down the road they are going to be elite.”

Going into last Friday’s game against BC, Sullivan and Ouellette had split time, with Sullivan elevating his stat line to a promising .914 level.

He did not, however, look very good against the Eagles, giving up four goals before getting the hook 2:16 into the second period. Clearly, it was a big step backward.

Ouellette played well in the relief role and stopped 25 of 28 shots the next evening against New Hampshire, but the weekend leaves him at an .891 save percentage and Sullivan at .882.

Should Maine fans begin singing the U2 classic, “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” and looking ahead to next year? Whitehead remained optimistic after the BC game.

“Martin came off the bench and played quite well and made some big stops,” Whitehead said. “He had a good game.

“Obviously, it wasn’t [Sullivan’s] best night. On a couple of goals, he looked pretty sloppy. I’m not going to lie and say he was playing his best. This was a tough night for him, but it’s the first tough game he’s had.

“He’s been great and it’s not an accident. He paid the price over the summer, training extremely hard, him and Marty both.

“They’re both way ahead of where they were at this point last year. It’s tough to say that after a 5-1 loss, but they are. They’re practicing better and playing better. [Sullivan] will bounce back. He’ll play better next time.”

Quick hits

• Congrats to Massachusetts for a huge win over BC on Saturday night. Not only was that the first league win for the Minutemen, but it also should have given that young team an injection of confidence.

• Congrats also to Massachusetts-Lowell for its thrashing of Boston University, 7-1. No, that’s not a typo, 7-1!. The River Hawks outshot their nationally ranked foe 15-3 in the opening period and never let the Terriers get off the mat.

“It was a great outing for our guys,” new Lowell coach Norm Bazin said. “We certainly got our confidence and took advantage.”

Not surprisingly, BU coach Jack Parker was disgusted with his team’s performance.

“It was a horrible game; not one guy played well,” he said. “They [BU players] played like they are better than they are and they need to give themselves a long look and live up to that because they don’t play the game the way it is supposed to be played.

“Give Lowell credit, but we were a pond hockey team tonight. We think we’re good, real good, but we’re not a good team. [The BU players] need to realize that they’re playing like a last-place team in this league. They think they’re better than they are.”

• That series between Merrimack and Northeastern had its plusses for both teams. The sixth-ranked Warriors (who got two first-place votes in the poll) remained undefeated and took three of four points on the weekend, never a bad thing. From the Huskies’ perspective, at least they were able to salvage a point (though they certainly wanted more) and took a top-10 team into overtime both nights. Getting a tie at the Lawler is a feat these days.

• A big-time congrats to New Hampshire for continuing to rebound from that brutal start.

• Here’s hoping that Vermont can crawl out of the hole it’s dug for itself. The Catamounts have an 0-4 league record, getting outscored 18-6. It’s hard to believe that its lone victory is also the lone loss by top-ranked Minnesota.

Reiter, defense spark Minnesota-Duluth’s quick turnaround

The mood after Minnesota-Duluth’s 5-4 loss to Minnesota on Oct. 15, which completed a sweep by the Gophers, was as expected.

“We were not happy, especially with that happening on home ice,” said Bulldogs goaltender Kenny Reiter. “We tried to keep it in the back of our heads that that’s what happens when you don’t play a full 60-minute game both nights.”

The Bulldogs haven’t lost since that sweep by Minnesota made them 1-3, and a lot of it has to do with a rejuvenated Reiter and the defense in front of him.

Reiter allowed 13 goals on 88 shots (.852 save percentage) through three games at the completion of the Gophers series. He has given up just seven goals in the six games since, with a pair of shutouts on 155 shots (.952 save percentage), and the Bulldogs are 4-0-2 in that time.

But it’s important to also note the UMD penalty kill, which has allowed one power-play goal over the six-game stretch on 25 opportunities. The Bulldogs’ PK went 13-for-18 in the first four games.

“I don’t think it’s been as much of a difference for me but the guys in front of me have really tightened up the defensive zone and limited scoring chances,” said Reiter, the WCHA defensive player of the week whose Bulldogs host Alaska-Anchorage this weekend. “Everything has been really smooth.”

Dineen PP play earns weekly honor

If Colorado College scored a power-play goal last weekend at Nebraska-Omaha, Nick Dineen was part of it. The senior earned WCHA offensive player of the week honors. 

Dineen scored two power-play goals in Fridays’s 7-5 loss. He scored another goal on the man advantage Saturday night and then assisted on two more power-play goals. The only even-strength goal he was part of was CC’s last goal Saturday. The Tigers’ PP allowed a short-handed goal in each game but Dineen was on the ice only for the goal Saturday.

Dineen has been one of CC’s top-line centers going back to last season and has played a key role on a CC power play that brings a lot of attention to the Schwartz brothers, Jaden and Rylan. The Tigers power play finished 2010-11 first in the WCHA and is second in the conference this season, behind Minnesota, at 27.3 percent.

Minnesota State freshman winger Jean-Paul LaFontaine’s offensive burst Saturday night helped the Mavericks salvage a split at Michigan Tech. His two goals and an assist also helped him garner WCHA rookie of the week honors.

Goofy goal in Houghton

Michigan Tech’s goal in a 1-0 shutout of Minnesota State last Friday wasn’t planned. It was a dump-in from the red line. But the puck took an awkward bounce on the ice in front of Mavericks goaltender Austin Lee.

The puck skipped over Lee’s shoulder for the only goal of the game.

Tech goalie Kevin Genoe, sitting on the bench, must’ve felt some kind of relief. He allowed a goal last season, shot the length of the ice by Denver’s David Makowski, that he appeared to not see until it hopped over his right pad.

Somewhere, Jeff Frazee is smiling. The former Gophers goalie gave up this bouncing-puck goal to North Dakota’s Robbie Bina in 2007.

WCHA alum still atop NHL in offense

Phil Kessel has been a scoring machine for the Toronto Maple Leafs, leading the goals column all season. Now, the former Minnesota player leads the NHL in points as well with 22.

Thomas Vanek, who also played at Minnesota, is right on Kessel’s tail with 10 goals and 18 points for Buffalo. Former Wisconsin star Joe Pavelski has nine goals for San Jose. 

Meanwhile, Brian Elliott hopes he finally found his home in St. Louis. The former Wisconsin goalie bounced around from Ottawa to Colorado and now to St. Louis in his four NHL seasons. His goals against average (1.72) ranks fourth in the league and his save percentage (.941) ranks fifth.

Panning for gold

Last week we looked at the storied rivalry between Minnesota and North Dakota, and the most recent clash between the two resulted in a fantastic weekend of college hockey. However, in all reality, nearly every weekend of the WCHA season features matchups between schools with bitter histories.

This weekend, for instance, Minnesota travels to Wisconsin for its border battle with the Badgers; proximate foes Minnesota State and St. Cloud State meet in Mankato; and even a short-lived but burgeoning rivalry resumes in Bemidji between the Beavers and Nebraska-Omaha.

Although cross-state rivals No. 12 Denver and No. 3 Colorado College play just once each this weekend, it is against each other in the first of four games that mean more than just points in the standings.

Competed for since 1993, the Gold Pan trophy was conceived by the collaboration of then-coaches Frank Serratore of Denver and Don Lucia of Colorado College, and is awarded to the team which wins the regular season series between the Tigers and Pioneers.

“It used to be just an old prospector’s pan that they kind of found and put a tag on it. And now it’s kind of morphed into a real nice trophy,” said Colorado College coach Scott Owens, who was Lucia’s assistant when the trophy was born. “It was something that at the time was just something to kind of rekindle the excitement … between the two programs.

“I think it’s really added to and jazzed up the whole series.”

The prized possession, which was replaced when the original was lost after the 2003-04 season, must be won outright, meaning a minimum of five points must be acquired in the four games in order for the pan to change hands.

The Tigers have either won or retained the Gold Pan 10 of the 18 years of its existence, but it’s been in the Mile High City the last two years after three straight seasons in Colorado Springs.

Colorado College (5-1-0) heads to Denver (3-3-2) for this weekend’s lone game fresh off of a weekend split with Nebraska-Omaha, a series about which Owens said he felt pretty good.

“The split was not a bad split for us,” said Owens. “They were two very good games against I think a little bit of an underrated UNO team, to be honest with you. They’ve got some firepower up front.

“We’ve only played six games so we’re still kind of getting a feel for things with our club but, for the most part, we’ve liked what we’ve seen.”

“They are coming in here with a lot of confidence and playing well and feeling good about their chances, not only against DU but within the WCHA this year,” said Denver coach George Gwozdecky. “We’ve got our hands full, there’s no question about it. I think in their minds they’re probably hitting us at the right time but I also think in our minds we’re hitting them at the right time so it should be a great battle.”

Preseason WCHA favorite Denver, on the other hand, limps into Saturday’s game winless in its last four games at Michigan Tech and at home against Minnesota-Duluth.

“I fully expected something like this to happen at some point in the year,” said Gwozdecky. “We’ll continue to work in practice and do some of the things that will help us get through this and certainly to be able to play our archrival might come at a very good time for us.

“We don’t like them, they don’t like us. We respect them, but there is no love lost when we step on that ice.”

Arch rival indeed. The all-time series stretches back to 1950, encompassing 279 games in which the Pioneers own a 156-109-14 advantage. But Colorado College is 14-8-4 in 26 games at DU’s Magness Arena.

“It doesn’t really matter how one team is playing at the time or what’s going on,” said Owens. “This is a series that you can’t really factor in anything that’s happened previously. You’ve just got to go out there and play because it will probably be a totally different deal.”

“The games that we play against them have always been extremely intense,” said Gwozdecky. “You go to the edge of losing a little bit of control of your emotions, of your discipline, but it’s usually the team that holds their emotions best, holds their discipline best, that usually comes out on top.

“It is as fun and as intense and as challenging as any game we play all year long.”

Between the dots …

The Wisconsin trio of junior defenseman Justin Schultz (4-10–14) and sophomore forwards Mark Zengerle (4-9–13) and Tyler Barnes (5-6–11) are all riding nine-game point scoring streaks. … Alaska-Anchorage’s four-game losing streak to start the league season is its worst since coach Dave Shyiak came aboard in 2005-06. … The Seawolves’ 9.2 penalty minutes per game average is second only to Colorado College (9.0) among WCHA teams and ranks as the ninth-fewest in the nation. …

St. Cloud State freshman defenseman Andrew Prochno has been hot of late with three goals in the Huskies’ last four games, including tallies in SCSU’s win and tie against Wisconsin last weekend. … Bemidji State’s Brad Hunt edged ever closer to the 100 career point plateau (21-72–93) last weekend with his team-leading fifth assist of the season against Lake Superior State. … North Dakota is idle this week after allowing Minnesota’s league-leading power play just one goal in 14 attempts. The Sioux have killed off 21 of 22 opponent power plays over the last 14 periods. … UND is just three goals shy of reaching 10,000 in the program’s 75-year history. …

Also idle this week is Michigan Tech, which has already played nearly half of its home schedule (eight of 17 games). … When Nebraska-Omaha coach Dean Blais coached his 500th game last Friday night against Colorado College, it marked 17 years to the day since Blais earned his first win as head coach in guiding North Dakota to a 6-4 victory over Denver. … UNO’s Matt White’s 16 points (5-11–16) ranks second in the nation to former Omaha Lancers (USHL) teammate Erik Haula’s 17 (7-10–17) for Minnesota. … Minnesota’s four sweeps this season (Sacred Heart, at Minnesota-Duluth, at Alaska-Anchorage, North Dakota) equals its sweep total from all of 2010-11. …

Minnesota State’s 6-3 win over Michigan Tech on Saturday snapped the Mavericks’ six-game losing streak, and MSU’s six goals and 45 shots were season highs. … After stopping 82 of 86 shots against MTU, Mavericks goalie Austin Lee’ .931 save percentage is good for 14th in the country. … Minnesota-Duluth forward Jack Connolly’s three-point weekend at Denver has him sitting at 150 career points (50-100–150), which leads the nation among all active players.

Connecticut, Holy Cross exploring conference options, but move would require investment

The game of musical chairs that wreaked havoc throughout most of college hockey has settled down, but may not be over. For the 2013-14 season, Hockey East has lined up 11 members, an undesirable number from a scheduling and postseason standpoint.

Included in the list of candidates for a potential 12th team are Holy Cross and Connecticut. Atlantic Hockey commissioner Bob DeGregorio confirmed reports that both schools are exploring applying to become the 12th member of Hockey East. The key word, according to DeGregorio, is “exploring.”

“We know they’ve made inquiries,” said DeDregorio. “They’re doing what a lot of teams did over the summer. They’re looking at options and seeing what’s out there. They’re making sure they understand what options may be available to them.”

In both cases, it would mean a substantial financial investment. UConn’s rink is unsuitable for Hockey East, and the school does not offer athletic scholarships. Holy Cross’ rink is also on the small side, and while the school does offer scholarships, the amount is nowhere near the 18 it would have to grant to compete in Hockey East.

The Crusaders would seem a more viable choice, considering the.
City of Worchester has pledged support if the team moved off campus to the DCU Center downtown.

“It’s not me personally, but I do know we went to [Atlantic Hockey] and told them that we were exploring things,” said Holy Cross coach Paul Pearl. “That’s what the four western teams [Canisius, Niagara, Mercyhurst, Robert Morris] did.

“I don’t think it should come out as a negative about Atlantic Hockey. It’s a great league and we’re happy to be here.”

Should Hockey East make a move to add a 12th team, it will probably impact Atlantic Hockey in some way. If Hockey East takes an ECAC Hockey team such as Rensselaer or Quinnipiac for its 12th member, that would likely mean that a team like Rochester Institute of Technology or Niagara would be interested in a spot in ECAC Hockey.

So the music hasn’t stopped yet.

Players of the week

From the home office in Haverhill, Mass.:

Atlantic Hockey co-players of the week:
Andy Starczewski, Army

The junior recorded his first career hat trick on Saturday, accounting for all three Black Knights goals in a 5-3 loss at Rochester Institute of Technology.

Brandon Nunn, Holy Cross

Nunn had a goal and three assists to help the Crusaders earn a split at Niagara.

Atlantic Hockey co-goalies of the week:
Ben Meisner, American International

The junior from Halifax, Nova Scotia, made 75 saves on 77 shots to help AIC to a split at Robert Morris. His 33-save 2-0 shutout on Saturday was the first victory for the Yellow Jackets over the Colonials.

Max Strang, Mercyhurst

Strang won his third and fourth games in a row, making 71 saves in a sweep of Connecticut. That included a 2-0 win on Saturday, Strang’s first career shutout.

Atlantic Hockey rookie of the week:
Brad McGowan, RIT

The freshman from Langley, British Columbia, had a pair of goals to help the Tigers to a split with Army.

Duel of the Steves

Last weekend’s series between Air Force and Sacred Heart featured strong goaltending performances by both teams. The Falcons’ Stephen Caple came out with a pair of wins, stopping 13 of 14 shots in Friday’s 2-1 victory and then making 28 saves in a 3-2 win on Saturday.

At the other end of the rink, The Pioneers’ Steven Legatto also came up big in defeat, making 36 and 39 saves, respectively, to keep his team close in both contests.

Home Komming

Buffalo, N.Y.., native Branden Komm had a successful homecoming on Saturday when the Bentley goaltender stopped all 24 shots he faced for his first career shutout, a 2-0 blanking of Canisius.

Coming up short

RIT senior forward Mark Cornacchia scored a short-handed goal in Saturday’s 5-3 win over Army. The Tigers trailed 3-1 at the time and it turned the momentum of the game in RIT’s favor.

It was the fifth career short-handed goal by Cornacchia, a school record in RIT’s Division I era. But the more impressive, and strange, statistic is that Cornacchia has 12 career goals, so almost half have come while a man down.

“When Mark is leaned on so much to kill penalties, I bet half his ice time is on the penalty kill,” said RIT coach Wayne Wilson. “When you have a lot of penalties, which we tend to do … he’s out there a lot. His speed is what creates his opportunities.”

Power outages

For the most part, AHA teams are struggling on the power play so far this season. Conversely, penalty killing has been exceptional:

• Canisius has killed off 19 power plays in a row.

• RIT has stopped the last 20 power plays it has faced.

• Air Force has killed off 13 in a row.

• AIC is 20-for-21 in penalty killing in league play so far.

• Robert Morris has the best penalty kill in Division I at 95 percent (39 of 41).

On the other hand, Holy Cross has the best power play in the nation, converting on nine of 28 chances so far (32.1 percent).

Fast starts

It’s early, but Mercyhurst and Air Force are off to their best starts in a while. The Falcons are 4-0-1, their best start since the 2008-09 season, when they won their first 11 conference games. Mercyhurst is 3-0 in league play so far, its fastest start since 2005-2006.

Five Northern Michigan freshmen face trial for bike thefts

Five Northern Michigan freshmen will go to trial next month on misdemeanor charges involving stolen bicycles.

Dylan Walchuk, Mitch Jones, Jake Baker, Eric Walker and DJ Vandercook are all alleged to have committed the crimes on or about Sept. 23.

“They all involved thefts of bikes on campus and people who were in possession of those bikes,” Marquette County assistant prosecuting attorney Glenn Sarka told the Marquette Mining Journal. “We’re set for trial, there was no (plea) agreement at pretrial.”

All five players are being represented by Marquette attorney George Hyde III. They waived their arraignments and a pretrial conference was held Oct. 27.

According to NMU, the players are all going through the NMU student discipinary process for university code violations as well as an athletic review committee for disciplinary infractions.

Jones has two goals and two assists this year, Baker has one assist, and Walchuk leads all NMU freshmen in scoring with a goal and four assists.

Walker and Vandercook have not appeared in any games this season.

Wednesday Women: Experience served

Candace: In last week’s entry, we discussed the Terriers missing Marie-Philip Poulin, but it didn’t seem to slow them against BC. Do you think losing twice to Wisconsin helped BU?

Arlan: Any time a team plays against a top-quality opponent, I think that there is a benefit. The games are at a fast pace that just can’t be simulated in practice or against teams of a lesser caliber. How much can we read from the BU and BC game though, when the Eagles outshot the Terriers 31-15 despite losing 4-1?

Speaking of teams playing Wisconsin, the last time I saw Minnesota-Duluth, it was against the Badgers. In that one, UMD came out very strong and controlled the play early. Their first meeting of the season with in-state rival Minnesota on Friday started much the same. The Bulldogs didn’t have as many shots in the first against the Gophers, but they had several Grade A chances. They didn’t break through on those, but did get the first goal of the weekend on a nice tip in the second period. Thereafter, a rash of penalties blunted their momentum, and I’m sure the absence of Haley Irwin didn’t help.

Another team missing a star was Ohio State. Were you surprised that the Buckeyes were able to stay close to Wisconsin as long as they did without Natalie Spooner?

Candace:  I think that the evidence from the BU-BC game reinforces what you said last week about the Eagles missing Schaus. The offense seems there, but they need Corinne Boyles to really step up, and in her first two years, she hasn’t had the opportunity, because Schaus was so dominant.

Regarding Ohio State staying close to Wisconsin, I was surprised, but Mark Johnson has indicated the Badgers are a work in progress, and Alex Rigsby has faced a lot of shots, including facing 30 or more in four games so far. It seems that the Badgers are counting on their high-flying offense to keep them in the win column.

Speaking of Duluth, every time I think they are ready to turn a corner, they come up empty. The Gophers certainly dismantled them Friday night. What do you think about the Bulldogs’ progress?

Arlan: Comments that we’ve made regarding other teams definitely apply to the Bulldogs; with the number of young players that they feature, they will also be a work in progress. I was very impressed with how they started Friday’s game minus Irwin. Year in and year out, UMD will be one of the faster teams in the country, and that was on display. They move the puck well, and for a team with so much youth on their blue line, it is impressive how successfully they were able to break out of their zone against Minnesota. It does seem that Jessica Wong is on the ice a ton, and freshman Brigette Lacquette was much more of a force than she was a couple weeks back versus Wisconsin. Their other high-impact rookie, forward Jenna McParland, did not have the best game Friday versus the Gophers, and seemed to get frustrated. She had three penalties, Lacquette had a couple as well, and Shannon Miller voiced her displeasure afterward regarding their ill-advised infractions. I think it is part of the package with young players, no matter how talented. Rachel Ramsey, who has been Minnesota’s best freshman to date, picked up a could minors of her own in game one. Young players make mistakes, and then in trying to make up for them, compound them with penalties.

Veteran players are huge. Gophers sophomore Kelly Terry had at least three top-quality chances in the second period alone on Friday night that she couldn’t convert; had Minnesota lost, she’d have seen them in her sleep. Minnesota won the opener against UMD because they got three goals from their senior captains and an empty-netter from junior Megan Bozek, who is playing great hockey for them. Both teams’ goalies stoned a few shots that easily could have been in the net in that game. For example, Jennifer Harss stopped both Amanda Kessel and Sarah Erickson on third-period breaks to keep her team in it. Harss was much better than she was against Wisconsin. You mention the Badgers’ firepower, but another plus they’ve had is that Alex Rigsby is far ahead of where she was 12 months ago, and she keeps Wisconsin even until that big offense gets rolling.

That is what BC needs from Boyles. I can’t tell the difference in a box score between soft goals and defensive breakdowns, so the blame doesn’t fall all on her. She isn’t going to be Molly Schaus overnight. Even when a goalie’s defense fails her, she has to be able to erase most of those mistakes and make them quickly forgotten.

Some notable upsets this weekend. What surprised you the most?

Candace: For me, it would have to be Union beating Clarkson. Even though I picked Bemidji to beat Minnesota State, I thought the Beavers might be flat after beating Minnesota. Clarkson however, is supposed to be one of the better squads in the ECAC, and Union one of the weaker. I found that result a stunner. Kate Gallagher stopped 33 against Clarkson and 52 against St. Lawrence, while Émilie Arseneault scored the game-winner. What do you think of Union beating Clarkson?

Arlan: Good for the Dutchwomen. I watched them twice back on opening weekend, and whatever their failings, lack of effort isn’t one of them. I also saw a little of their meeting with Northeastern via webcast, and if Union is supposed to roll over when playing teams like the Northeastern, Minnesota, or Clarkson, it didn’t get the memo. As with many teams, where the goals will come from on any night is a question. That likely helped trip up Bemidji as well. The Beavers will work for 60 minutes, although Friday required a few seconds beyond that, but they don’t have a lot of pure goal scoring. What I found remarkable about the Minnesota State win is that the box score shows the Mavericks getting five shots on goal in 17 seconds of full-strength OT. Were the Beaver skaters even on the ice?

Candace: Hard to say how Bemidji gave up so many shots so quickly. Maybe the Mavericks simply had an extra jolt of energy. It is a disturbing stat though. Looking back east, we see that Northeastern has continued to win, but I’m more interested in Maine and Providence. the Friars especially were expected to do well, with many picking them second in the conference. What do you see out there?

Arlan: When it comes to Hockey East, it seems that so many games wind up being unpredictable. Before Maine met Providence, I felt that either team could sweep or be swept and it wouldn’t surprise me, because they both seem to have good days and bad days, and the separation between those levels is fairly evident. That they played to a 3-3 tie on Saturday is also typical, because Hockey East seems to produce ties frequently. Perhaps that is because on a league average, the defenses tend to be ahead of the offenses. Hockey East seems to be a goalie conference, where most teams have a solid netminder in any given year, but you don’t see as many Agosta and Knight types that were born to score. I think Jenn Wakefield being the first 100-goal scorer that the league has had speaks to that. I don’t know if the coaches in the conference like to pack it in around the net to a greater extent, or if there is some other strategy that contributes. Under Maria Lewis, Maine has shown some willingness to open it up a bit more.

The 3-3 game from Maine and PC, while featuring a touch more offense than some contests, still was one of those back-and-forth affairs. Nobody led by more than a goal. There was more offense in the second, because there were a lot of penalties called, and the teams combined for three power-play goals.

Candace: That’s a good point about Hockey East offenses Arlan. Aside from a few standouts, like Wakefield and Kelli Stack, the conference seems to be tight defensively. Perhaps that’s why you don’t seem to have teams dominating the conference. Speaking of, Boston College then rebounded to beat archrival Boston University at Agganis Saturday, as I thought they might. We talked about BC’s shot advantage in its loss Wednesday. The Eagles launched another 30-plus shots against Terriers goalie Kerrin Sperry Saturday. Is that an indication that BU needs to tighten up defensively, or is BC just that strong offensively?

Arlan: The Eagles are speedy, and when a team can fly up and down the rink, it puts a lot of pressure on the opponent. Innocent plays can become dangerous in a hurry. BC has a lot of youth as well, so it is likely we have yet to see the full impact of their offense. As far as the BU defense, I’m anxious to get a look at the Terriers and see if the absence of Catherine Ward has left a hole. Obviously, any time you lose a gold medalist, she isn’t replaced overnight.

On the topic of speed, Minnesota finished off its sweep of UMD in a back-and-forth game that saw both teams go end-to-end well.  I’d say that when the Bulldogs and Gophers meet, it is consistently some of the more entertaining hockey in the game, and the 3-2 Minnesota win was no exception. As has been the case in most of their wins, the Gophers’ first line was the difference, with each member contributing a goal. UMD got a couple of power-play goals, but despite pulling their goalie for the last minute plus, they couldn’t draw even. Both teams will be a factor come March.

We spend a lot of time talking about the top teams in the country, but one has to be encouraged by strides made by those who have been stuck near the bottom. Union tied St. Lawrence, 2-2, as a follow up to their win over Clarkson, and Brown came up with an unexpected tie at Quinnipiac by the same score.

Every silver lining has a cloud — do you think the Bobcats will ever get any traction this season?

Candace: It’s tempting to pin the blame for Quinnipiac’s woes on Kelly Babstock having a sophomore slump. While her scoring is down from 1.59 points per game to .9 points a game, I don’t think that’s the case. I think it might be more that Victoria Vigilanti is having an off year, or the team defense is down. If they can shore that up, it will bring good results back to the Q. You mentioned Union having a big weekend and it possibly giving them some confidence, and that’s true. When I think of confidence-boosting though, the Gophers sweeping Minnesota-Duluth and splitting with Wisconsin has to have Amanda Kessel and company feeling pretty good. To finish off this week, is this the year we see the Gophers reclaiming their first title since 2005, or are the Badgers poised to win again?

Arlan: The Badgers seem to always be poised to win again. From what I’ve seen, this is the best Minnesota team since 2005, but it still has some question marks. The second line of Emily West, Sarah Davis, and Kelly Terry has been a little snake bit. Were they to start finishing on a more regular basis, it takes some pressure off of the Schoullis line. Becky Kortum rejoined the team this weekend after missing about a month due to illness, and she added some experience to the third unit. The Gophers can get offense from their veteran blue line, where Megan Bozek is off to a good start, and of course, Noora Räty in net will be crucial to any title aspirations.

Past troubles fading as Colgate starts strong behind large senior class

It took the 2010-11 Colgate Raiders nearly three months — 11 games — to get their first two league points. Those points were the result of two ties, 77 days apart, the latter coming on Jan. 21 against Cornell.

The Raiders didn’t earn their first league win for another two weeks, on Feb. 5 against Clarkson … the team they tied in their conference opener, way back on Nov. 5.

This year’s team has been a tad more successful.

The No. 18 Raiders are 5-3-1, ranked for the fourth straight week, and already have their first win in ECAC Hockey action following a 5-3 victory at Brown on Friday night. (Last year’s squad didn’t win a conference road game until Feb. 11.) Colgate has already defeated a talented Nebraska-Omaha team on the road and split with annual contender Miami at home.

One of the biggest indicators of change so far is that Saturday’s 2-0 loss at champion Yale was seen as a setback, rather than an inevitability. Expectations are high in Hamilton this year. The team’s attitude is building toward that bar.

“Obviously coming off of last year, there were still some question marks even though we finished strong,” said 19-year coach Don Vaughan. “We still thought there were some lingering effects of a difficult regular season, but I think we put that behind us pretty quickly. I think our energy has been good, we’re getting real solid goaltending, and our power play has been — not exceptional, but much better than last year. Pretty good. Those are things that I see right away here have been a real plus for us.”

Vaughan cited the returning roster’s offseason trip to Italy and Switzerland as the perfect segue between seasons. Part sightseeing vacation, part practice and game action, the tour was all team-building.

“Our trip to Europe had a real positive influence on the team; I don’t think that could’ve come at a better time. We had a chance to bond, to talk about last season, and start looking forward and work on some line combinations and special teams play,” Vaughan said. “We really had a great experience, both on the ice and off, and I think that set the tone for a real positive mind-set coming back.”

It was an especially significant experience for the Raiders’ seniors. Nine men strong, the team’s largest class is finally stepping out into a spotlight all its own, and is excelling in the leading role.

“You know, it’s interesting, because the senior class is a big class, and as they’ve come through the program — even though they were big in numbers — there were some pretty talented and strong personalities ahead of them,” Vaughan said. “It was really interesting to see, because we were wondering what kind of impact that big class would have on the program, having not had a real strong sort of influence in the locker room [until this season]. It’s been kind of fun: they’ve taken the challenge of putting their own stamp on it, there are some characters in the group … and I think that the younger guys have looked up to them.

“The biggest thing is that even though there are some characters there, they’ve come to the rink every day with a real serious work ethic. They’re leading the way in all the drills. That’s been really fun for me to see, since every team changes, whether you graduate three like last year or nine as we will this year; the chemistry and the makeup of your team changes. It’s always a little bit of a wait-and-see attitude, but I really like the way this senior class has really put their stamp on this season early on and has brought the younger guys along with them.”

While a star like Austin Smith naturally will draw the most attention of anyone in his class, Vaughan says that senior forward Matt Firman exemplifies what quality leadership is all about.

“Matt doesn’t say much,” Vaughan said. “He’s got a handful of eight or nine guys that are close to him and that really look up to him. He’s a quiet guy, a big guy — got a big presence — and he just comes to the rink every day and works hard. He’s a great citizen off the ice. He’s a premed major — so he’s got a tremendous workload academically — but here he is, every day, that is one of those guys who’s at the rink early, he’s at the top of the line in all the drills at the weight room or at the rink. I think that the younger guys have kind of latched on to him because he carries himself that way.”

That said, Smith is no paper tiger. The top overall goal-scorer in the league so far (nine in nine games) channeled his frustration from last year into a most productive pursuit: kicking butt this year.

“Austin came in with a real great attitude after last year. I think he was disappointed with his own season, but clearly with the way things went for us during the regular part of the season [as well],” Vaughan said. “I think in fairness to him, he was coming off major hip surgery, the rehab for which was probably a little bit accelerated from what we would have ideally liked, so he probably was not where he needed to be or should’ve been last year to start the season, and that set him back. He had surgery again this year at the end of last season, but he had a longer time to recover and he was ready to go by the trip to Europe.

“He came in very determined; it all starts between the ears. He talked about it at the end of last year, he worked hard over the summer to get back in top condition, and he wants to be the go-to guy. I give him full marks for that. He’s taken it as a direct challenge to himself, and so far he’s been able to do it. His energy level’s been incredible, he’s hounding the puck like he’s never done before, and the bonus is that he’s finishing on some great opportunities. He’s got big goals for us so far. He’s a great player. He’s dynamic. He’s one of the smartest players I’ve ever coached. He sees the ice in a different way. … He can really analyze a game at full speed better than most.”

Vaughan and the rest of the Raiders realize that they shouldn’t take Smith’s current pace for granted, and that they can’t expect to be successful with one player accounting for roughly a third of the team’s scoring. Colgate has 28 total goals this year.

“It’s something that we’re not going to hide from,” he said. “We’ve talked about it and we’re going to continue to address it with our team. We have some other guys that don’t have the same skill set but have an opportunity to be on the ice in different situations, and they have to find a way to manufacture goals.

“I don’t think it was ever more evident than it was at Yale on Saturday night. We fired a lot of rubber at the kid [Jeff Malcolm, 39 saves], he made some big stops, but we didn’t manufacture goals and we should have, and could have. We have to stick around, we’ve got to get to the net, we’ve got to create traffic, and we didn’t do that well.”

While the team is uniting and demanding more of itself from the get-go, there is still one part of the game that is up in the air. Goalies Alex Evin and Eric Mihalik are battling for starts, with neither earning the de facto No. 1 nod from Vaughan just yet.

“It’s been solid and very competitive. We came back with Eric on Saturday simply because we thought he played pretty well at Brown the night before, but I’m not sure what we’re doing this weekend,” Vaughan said. “We may go back with Alex, we may split them. We’re just going to continue to take a look at that day by day. Alex’s numbers are good, he’s played well in the games we’ve put him in, so again, it’s just a very competitive situation which I think is very healthy for us right now.”

CCC and counting

With the victory over Brown, Vaughan also achieved career win No. 300. He became the first coach in Colgate history to reach that mark, and the fourth active ECAC Hockey coach to get there (after St. Lawrence’s Joe Marsh, with 469; Quinnipiac’s Rand Pecknold, with 324; Cornell’s Mike Schafer, with 314; and Dartmouth’s Bob Gaudet, who won No. 300 two weekends ago and sits at 302).

He is one of 17 active Division I coaches to win 300 games, and of those, one of only 13 to do it with a winning record (now 300-299-69, following Saturday’s loss).

Overall, Vaughan — who has served his entire head coaching career at Colgate — joins a group of 39 current or past D-I coaches to sum 300 victories, and becomes the 71st member of a growing group of NCAA men’s hockey coaches to hit that number. (Cortland’s Joe Baldarotta is next in line for that honor with 299 career W’s; Maine’s Tim Whitehead is the closest D-I coach with 195 wins.)

“It certainly does speak to a little bit of longevity, obviously,” Vaughan said. “It also gives you time to reflect. And the place I went when I get to these sort of milestones, is I think of all the guys that have played for me and come through this program, and what they’re doing now, and the coaches I’ve had an opportunity to work with both within our program but also in the athletic department here.

“Obviously, on the coaching perspective, Andrew Dixon, Stan Moore, [Terry] Slater when I first started here, Chris Wells. There are so many people that have worked within this program, along with the current guys — Brad [Dexter] and Jason [Lefevre] — but there’s also guys who have influenced my career that I didn’t work with here.

“I worked for a great coach in Joe Marsh at St. Lawrence. I wouldn’t be here without him. I was hired by Mike McShane. I didn’t get a chance to work for Mike, but I played for him at St. Lawrence. Brian McCutcheon at Cornell, and Mike Schafer — someone who we do battle with on a regular basis, and at least for us and our program is a pretty big rivalry, I learned a lot from Mike. We worked together as assistant coaches at Cornell, and we remain very good friends. All those people had an influence on my career. That’s what I think of.”

Vaughan has also had the pleasure of mentoring some of Colgate’s more recognizable alums, but it’s not what they did for him on the ice that he values most.

“Some of the great players we’ve had here — obviously, Andy MacDonald, Bruce Gardner and Jesse Winchester, Mike Harder, our all-time leading scorer — they’re all great players, but they’re probably better people. I consider all of them close friends. Those are the things that Joe Marsh was so good at — to me, anyway — was keeping things in perspective, and that’s what I think of. Yeah, we’ve had some ups and downs. We’ve had some great wins and some tough losses, but at the end of the day, it’s who they are as people that — that’s where I go.”

The coach, approaching his third decade behind the Raiders’ bench, has amassed his fair share of stories and has seen a lot of change since his playing days in Canton. The strategies and style of game play have evolved with the times, of course, but that’s not the part of his job that he feels he has had to adjust most significantly.

“I think it’s as much about managing the ‘new generation’ as it is about the game and the strategies on the ice. The ‘millennium generation,’ if you will, you just deal differently with these kids,” Vaughan said. “Everything from, like, communicating. You communicate so differently now with the guys on the team. It used to be email. Email, that’s gone by the wayside. If you don’t text now, to the kids on your team, you’re not getting to them. I used to send emails, and the guys would look at me and say, ‘Coach, no one answers emails anymore.’ And that was two years ago! I had to get with it!

“They’re so hands-on with technology. There used to be a time when it was easier for me to get a message across by going to the grease board and drawing X’s and O’s. These kids would much rather see it on a video, or the animation stuff you see in the NHL. We don’t have that kind of quality, but we do do a heck of a lot more video with these kids than we’ve ever done. We rarely go to the grease board anymore, actually. Communication with these kids is so, so important. The game on the ice has changed, for sure. It seems to be a little more out of control at times. It’s fast-paced, it’s high-energy, the kids are bigger and stronger and faster, it’s not as much about puck control as it used to be. We don’t have the puck on our stick much anymore, or not for long, so it’s different strategies on the ice. But the bigger impact, to me, has been the other stuff that I mentioned. Managing a different generation.”

Around the league

It’s a mess already!

It may as well be a motto emblazoned on ECAC Hockey’s logo: “Strength, Skill, Parity.” The league is off to another tangled start, with only two undefeated teams (Dartmouth and Union) and one point-less side (Rensselaer) after the first week. Will the Big Green or Dutchmen be able to match Yale’s 9-0-0 start from last season? Perhaps, but not both of them: The programs meet for the first time on Jan. 7, which is league game No. 9 for each squad.

Big Red rookies making big splash

Cornell freshman forward Brian Ferlin has scored two goals with three assists to start his NCAA career on the right foot. Meanwhile, teammate Joakim Ryan has three goals and a helper from the blue line, Joel Lowry has potted two goals and an assist of his own, and John McCarron has a quartet of assists. All told, the freshest faces on Schafer’s bench have accounted for 16 of Cornell’s 37 points.

Scoring big, scoring early

Jeremy Langlois at Quinnipiac and Colgate’s Smith immediately jump off the page on account of their nine goals apiece (tied for second in the country), but there are some other players who are racking up the stats in their own right. Union’s Kelly Zajac has amassed 14 points in nine games, with a dozen helpers. His 1.56 points per game is better than Langlois’ or Smith’s. Bobcats sophomore Connor Jones also has 14 points, albeit in 11 games so far.

But what about St. Lawrence’s Kyle Flanagan? The junior forward has five goals and five assists in only six games played. His 1.67 points per game is the best mark in the league among non-Ivy players. (As a bonus stat, Flanagan has scored on one-third of his shots on goal this season. Talk about sniping!)

Keith who?

Troy Grosenick is already proving to Union fans that there are plenty of fish in the sea. The sophomore has stepped into the monstrous pads of the departed Keith Kinkaid and hasn’t batted an eye as he’s guided the Dutchmen to a 4-1-2 record in his starts, while leading the nation with a .949 save percentage and 1.24 goals against average.

Consider this your warning

Harvard may not be a “circle-the-date” opponent for anyone outside Ithaca, N.Y., just yet, but senior center Alex Killorn may prove to be worth the price of admission all on his own. With two goals against Princeton on Friday and an assist against Quinnipiac on Saturday, he is a sniper on a mission. Commanding the ice during his shifts, Killorn is doing the little things right as well: He won 21 of 34 faceoffs last weekend, for a stellar 62 percent success rate.

Like stats? Like this!

ECAC statisticians (which is to say, our esteemed and underappreciated sports information personnel) have been instructed to begin tracking blocked shots this season, along with the litany of other figures already being processed on a regular basis. Not all such numbers are posted online — faceoff percentages aren’t there, either — but hopefully that will change sooner rather than later.

Western Michigan a changed program, down to its ‘greasy-grimy’ roots

It was Saturday night, and Western Michigan had just lost its first game of the season.

“Last night, we didn’t play as well as we thought we should have,” said first-year Broncos coach Andy Murray. “Tonight, our game was actually better but the bottom line is it wasn’t good enough.

“I think the days of Western Michigan coming up here and being happy with a split are gone. There’s an upset group in there because we wanted to win the first game, we wanted to win the first period, the first shift and we came here on a mission and we didn’t get it done.”

“Up here” was actually Ann Arbor, Mich., and — like it or not — Michigan is still the litmus test against which many CCHA programs measure themselves. The mission to which Murray alluded was a sweep of the Wolverines in Yost Ice Arena, something the WMU program has never accomplished.

Before splitting with Michigan last weekend, the current Western Michigan senior class was 2-7-0 against the Wolverines, including three postseason games. It was a better record than many past classes of Broncos players had compiled in their first three seasons; after last weekend, WMU is 28-68-10 all-time against Michigan.

Last weekend, perhaps nobody wanted two wins over Michigan more than WMU’s captain, senior Ian Slater, a forward from Satellite Beach, Fla., who played three seasons with the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders (USHL) before joining the Broncos. While a complete change of coaching transitioned the Broncos from bottom-dwellers to top tier last season — and the hiring of Murray to replace Jeff Blashill signals WMU’s continued commitment to the growth of the program — no one has been more pivotal in the overhaul of Broncos hockey than Slater, whom Murray referred to as an unofficial fourth coach before the start of the season.

Slater is clear that the desire to change the culture of hockey at Western Michigan preceded the changes the program saw in 2010-11.

“It goes back to the season before Coach Blashill,” said Slater. “You get to a point where you’re content where you are within an organization … content within your everyday life, or if you ask more from yourself, you ask more from your group of guys and not be satisfied with where you’re at.”

Slater said that in his first year as captain, he and assistants Max Campbell and Ryan Watson — both seniors last season — were dissatisfied with the status quo in Kalamazoo. “We knew we had a group of guys that could do it,” said Slater. “Blash came in with Coaches [Pat] Ferschweiler and [Rob] Facca and they were the cherry on top. They really implemented a winning mentality in us.”

This season, that winning mentality continues with the addition of Murray, said Slater, sounding as much coach as captain.

“It’s the mental makeup of the athletes I have in my locker room,” Slater said. “They want to win. We all came from winning programs. We know what it takes to sacrifice. We’re not from losing teams or losing organizations. We know what it takes to win — it’s whether or not you want to believe in the systems, believe in the people and place and yourself and you can do it. Self-sacrifice starts with putting others and school and your lifts — everything has to be put before yourself and what you believe in on and off the ice.

“That’s what it takes. Those guys [coaches] implemented a system, absolutely provided us with structure. We’ve continued that process, we’ve continued that mentality. It’s businesslike. It’s nothing new. Every day we show up at the rink with the same common goal, with the same mentality.

“It’s our roots now. It’s nothing else. We are individuals. We don’t think the same, we don’t work out the same, we don’t train the same, we don’t eat the same, we don’t go to bed at the same times [but] we sacrifice. To everyone else, that makes us a bunch of weird individuals.”

Those weird individuals play “in your face” hockey, said Slater, and that elevates their game from the kind of hockey that earned WMU six overall wins and a last-place finish in 2009-10.

“Greasy-grimy,” said Slater. “Blue collar. I’d say we do the little things, and that is defensive. Making that sharp chip off the boards, taking a hit to get a hit, taking a hit to make a play. It might not be the prettiest, it might not be the most finessed, but it works. We didn’t invent the wheel. We stick to hard-playing hockey. It gets done. You go to work every day. Punch in, punch out.”

This week, the Broncos punch in at second in the CCHA, one point behind league-leading Lake Superior State, and are fifth in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

All that and personality, too

When I first talked to Murray by phone this summer, I was immediately impressed. He was sharp, unpretentious, direct and he laughed easily.

When I met him last Saturday night for the first time, I was immediately delighted. “You picked us to lose here, didn’t you?” he said. Ha.

Even though Murray clearly was upset about dropping the second game to the Wolverines, he never dropped that sense of humor. When a student reporter from Michigan — someone who admittedly had never traveled to Kalamazoo for a college hockey game — asked Murray what he thought of the famous Yost atmosphere, Murray replied, “It’s great. It’s what college hockey’s all about. You been to Lawson Arena yet? Come there. You’ll see what a crowd’s all about, too.”

A few moments later, the student reporter asked Murray how college hockey had changed since Murray last coached it. In the 1980-81 season, his second year of coaching at his alma mater of Brandon University (Manitoba), Murray led the squad to the championship game of the Canadian Interuniversity Sports (CIS), the Canadian counterpart of the NCAA.

“That was back in 1978-79, ’79-80,” said Murray, “so players that I coached back then would be a little bit slower than these guys are on the ice right now because, like me, they’d be about 50 years old or so.”

Players of the week

This week, Miami earned its first player-of-the-week honors after it recorded its first league wins of the season with two 2-1 victories at Alaska. Through six weeks last season, four Miami players had received weekly honors — all for offensive player of the week. Times have changed.

Rookie of the week: Miami forward Tyler Biggs, who had an assist in each of the first goals that Miami scored against Alaska.

Offensive player of the week: Ferris State senior Jordie Johnston, who had two assists in Friday’s 4-0 win over Bowling Green plus the opening goal and winner in Saturday’s 5-3 decision. Five of Johnston’s 15 career goals have come this year.

Defenseman of the week: FSU senior Brett Wysopal, who matched his offensive output of the entire 2010-11 season with a goal in each game against BGSU. Wysopal also blocked six shots in the series against BG and finished the weekend plus-5.

Goaltender of the week: Northern Michigan senior Reid Ellingson, who in two ties with Notre Dame had a 1.58 goals against average and .958 save percentage. He stopped all six shots he faced in the weekend’s two shootouts.

My ballot

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

“I can’t even figure these rankings out,” Murray said. “How can they rank teams so early in the season? I think the only time I’d be worried about rankings is the end of March.”

It’s a mystery

For the first time since we released our preseason poll, Yale has lost its lone first-place vote. Apparently, when the Bulldogs weren’t playing — or when they were 1-0-1, as they were after their first week of play — they were first-place worthy. Now that they’ve lost their first game of the season and “dropped” to 2-1-1, their days of glory are over.

Well, for one voter, at least.

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TMQ: Another new No. 1; strange start for Massachusetts; whither Cornell?

Todd: Well, Jim, I’ll have to eat my words from last week about Boston College settling in for a long run as the No. 1 team in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll. After a 4-2 loss at Massachusetts last Saturday, the Eagles are out of the top spot and Minnesota is in for the first time in nearly three years. Entering the season, I sure didn’t have the Gophers pegged as a team that would have been in the position they’re now in, did you?

Jim: Minnesota has really impressed me to date. The Gophers’ one loss was to Vermont — definitely a bad loss. But they have swept teams like Alaska-Anchorage, Minnesota-Duluth and now, most impressively, North Dakota. Personally, I left Boston College at No. 1 on my ballot, but Minnesota was an easily swappable second. Now, though, the Gophers have to do what few teams have done well this year: Sustain a No. 1 ranking. Wisconsin may seem like a pushover, but two road games could spell nightmares. Remember, no one expected BC to lose at Massachusetts on Saturday.

Todd: That loss to Vermont was definitely a bad one, and, as time goes on, a more and more curious one. Minnesota has seemed to have a good blend of solid goaltending from Kent Patterson, timely goals and good special teams, but on that Sunday afternoon things just didn’t come together. I do think, though, that if you’re starting to look for your players of the season after a month, Patterson has to be pretty high on the list. He has five shutouts in 10 games.

Jim: That is almost getting towards Miller-esque numbers, which, should he remain on that pace, will make him the first legitimate goaltending candidate for the Hobey Baker Award in quite some time.
 
The team that Minnesota unseated at the top of the poll, of course, is Boston College. The Eagles put forth a great performance on Friday and then lost on the road at Massachusetts on Saturday. I’m not as concerned about the UMass loss as I am curious at the UMass win. The Minutemen have had such a strange start to their season. Last weekend, they took multi-goal leads against Boston University only to blow both and take home a tie and loss. Now they beat the No. 1 team in the country one night after getting routed by New Hampshire (which has had its own struggles this season). I guess what I’m saying is Hockey East is one strange little league right now.

Todd: Looks like Hockey East will give us plenty to talk about this season. How important a season do you think this is for Don Cahoon at Massachusetts? The Minutemen haven’t had a winning record since 2006-07, and their 6-23-6 season a year ago was a big disappointment on the heels of a .500 season.

Jim: I actually think that Toot Cahoon is fine. He’s very well liked on the campus, has a proven track record and has taken that program from the lowest of lows and proven he can succeed. I’d be very surprised to see him on the hot seat, at least this season.
 
Speaking of hot seats, two coaches who replaced those who fell off hot seats — Providence’s Nate Leaman and Massachusetts-Lowell’s Norm Bazin — have both shown flashes of brilliance in their teams recently. I have seen each team play in the last two weekends and both are significantly different clubs under their current head coach. We’ve talked about other new coaches that have done similar, like Michigan Tech’s Mel Pearson. Don’t know what it is but it seems to happen often that a little new blood can go a long way for programs.

Todd: I think as much as anything, a new coaching staff often brings a new sense of belief out of players. Now, an early string of losses is going to shake that belief just as much as it would under any coach — old or new — but if a new coach can get a few good wins early, it goes a long way toward building the bonds needed for a quality season. Whether quality in that statement means merely a .500 record or an NCAA tournament spot depends on the situation. I’d guess Providence and Lowell are in the former category for this season, wouldn’t you?

Jim: Oh, there’s no doubt about that. Both Leaman and Bazin have told me that the team has a long way to go to be successful. But you’re so correct: A couple of big wins — particularly at home, where you can energize a fan base — go a long way.
 
Getting back to last weekend, there was one score in the ECAC that caught my eye: Cornell 6, Yale 2. The game was played in New Haven and it seems the Big Red felt they had something to prove after a disappointing performance in last year’s ECAC title game. I wondered if this would be a miserable season in Ithaca after they lost to Mercyhurst but last Friday’s convincing win was a positive (though a loss to Brown the next night makes me feel like we’re seeing yet another Jekyll and Hyde).

Todd: It feels like the step forward from the win over Yale was negated by following it with a loss, especially a loss in which the Big Red had the lead with eight minutes to play. But it’s still early for Cornell — earlier than most other schools, of course, because of the late start to the season — and they have time to show whether the victory over Yale was the rule or the exception.

Let’s turn to this week’s slate of games. Minnesota puts its No. 1 ranking on the line in another rivalry series, at Wisconsin. That’s a tough couple of weeks for the Gophers, with North Dakota and the Badgers back to back. Colorado College and Denver open their season series with a single game Saturday in Denver. And the CCHA has a bunch of series to watch, including league-leading Lake Superior State going to Ferris State. What has your eye this week?

Jim: Well, the obvious game to watch out East is the renewal of arguably college hockey’s best rivalry: Boston College and Boston University. Though it’s being played on a Sunday afternoon in football season, the Patriots aren’t playing so the game is sure to attract a packed house. Another one to watch is Union and Yale on Saturday night. These are both teams that had incredible seasons last year. So it will be interesting to see what happens in their first meeting of the season. Until next week …

NCHA 2011-12 Season Preview

Northeastern Wisconsin once again is thinking about a repeat championship season, and this time we’re not talking about football. Beginning the year as the nation’s top-ranked D-III team, according the USCHO.com poll, the St. Norbert Green Knights are going to be the team to beat in the NCHA and the country.

The annual NCHA coaches’ poll awarded St. Norbert the top spot with five first place votes. Last year, the Green Knights won the NCHA regular season crown, the NCHA playoff championship, and the NCAA championship.

Wisconsin-Superior and Wisconsin-Eau Claire joined St. Norbert as the lone teams receiving first-place votes in the poll. Wis.-Superior earned the No. 2 seed in last year’s Peters Cup playoffs and an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. Wis.-Eau Claire tied for fourth place last season while playing 10 teams that were ranked at the time of their contest with the Blugolds.

St. Norbert Green Knights
2011-12 Coach’s poll: First
2011-12 USCHO prediction: First
2010-11 Overall record: 25-4-1
2010-11 Conference record: 14-3-1
2010-11 Finish: First
Outlook: Led by coach Tim Coghlin, the Green Knights of St. Norbert are coming off a national championship season in 2010-11, their second. St. Norbert was ranked No. 1 in the preseason NCAA Division III Poll for the 2011-12 season. The Green Knights made their seventh NCAA Division III Frozen Four appearance while winning their 12th NCHA regular-season title and ninth NCHA Peters Cup championship. Forward Johan Ryd led the team in scoring, netting 10 goals and 18 assists for 28 points. Seven of his goals went for game-winning scores. Cody Keefer had 14 goals and 13 assists for 27 points, while Seth Soley had nine goals and 15 assists for 24 points. Mike Martin is the only returning goaltender, and was 3-2 with a 2.18 goals against average and .917 save percentage a year ago. St. Norbert traditionally has the strongest defensive team in the nation. The Green Knights allowed three or more goals just 10 times last season, and four or more only three times. Newcomers Travis Bosch (So.), a transfer from Bemidji State, and David Jacobson (Fr.) are expected to contribute to the Green Knights this season

University of Wisconsin Superior Yellowjackets
2011-12 Coach’s poll: Second
2011-12 USCHO prediction: Second
2010-11 Overall record: 16-13-1
2010-11 Conference record: 10-8-0
2010-11 Finish: Third
Outlook: Yellowjackets coach Dan Stauber found his team ranked in the top 10 to begin this season. A year ago, they finished the season at No. 11, and this year they opened the year at No. 9. The Yellowjackets bounced back from a last-place finish in 2009-10 to finish second in the NCHA last year, and received an at-large bid for the NCAA tournament, losing in the first round to Hamline University of the MIAC. The Yellowjackets graduated four seniors from last year’s team and four other players decided not to return. Superior expects top-notch performances to come from Tom Budziakowski, Pat Dalbec, Colton Kennedy and Joey Massingham.

University of Wisconsin Eau Claire Bluegolds
2011-12 Coach’s poll: Third
2011-12 USCHO prediction: Third
2010-11 Overall record: 15-11-1
2010-11 Conference record: 8-9-1
2010-11 Finish: Fourth
Outlook: Wis.-Eau Claire returns a core group of experienced players for the 2011-12 season. The Blugolds return 21 players, only losing three to graduation. Leading scorer Jordan Singer returns to see if he can exceed last year’s 13-goal, 16-assist season. Kurt Weston will attempt to put together another stellar season; he had 22 points last season. Tyler Romasco will co-captain the Blugolds and add to the firepower, as another player who reached the 20-point mark last sesaon. Coach Matt Loen also has six transfers, four from D-I schools, at his disposal.

University of Wisconsin-Stout Blue Devils
2011-12 Coach’s poll: Fourth
2011-12 USCHO prediction: Fourth
2010-11 Overall record: 16-11-0
2010-11 Conference record: 10-8-0
2010-11 Finish: Second
Outlook: Wis.-Stout returns an experience team, with four seniors and eight juniors. With 18 players that are either freshmen or sophomores, the signal might be out that this is a rebuilding year for a program that has seen a good deal of success the last six years. Coach Terry Watkins’s squad tied for second in the NCHA and returns six of their seven leading scorers, including 2011 All-American Branden Gay (Sr.). Wis.-Stout was second in the NCHA in goals (95) and first in goals-scored-per-game (3.52). Gay led the NCHA in scoring with 16 goals and 18 assists for 34 points, and recorded a league-high seven power-play goals. Also returning among the leading scorers are Kevin O’Donnell, who led all freshmen in scoring in the NCHA, Charles Lachance, Sam Carr, Jason Cohen, and Dan Cecka. Added into the mix are freshmen Zach Vierling, Luke Dillon, Scott Bell, Matt Millis, C.J. Pullar, and Micky Knox. Watkins calls his offense and goaltending the team’s strengths. Stout will play one “home” game at the Xcel Energy Center when they host St. Norbert College, Saturday, January 21 for a 1:30 p.m. game as part of Hockey Day Minnesota.

University of Wisconsin River Falls Falcons
2011-12 Coach’s poll: Sixth
2011-12 USCHO prediction: Fifth
2010-11 Overall record: 12-14-2
2010-11 Conference record: 7-10-1
2010-11 Finish: Sixth
Outlook: Team speed is what Coach Steve Freeman wants to improve for the Falcons this season. More speed will create more offensive opportunity. Justin Brossman and Alec Hagaman will provide the returning offensive power. Goalie Scott Lewan will be back in the nets to anchor a solid defensive core.

University of Wisconsin Stevens Point Pointers
2011-12 Coach’s poll: Fifth
2011-12 USCHO prediction: Sixth
2010-11 Overall record: 13-14-1
2010-11 Conference record: 8-9-1
2010-11 Finish: Fifth
Outlook: New Season, new coach. Chris Brooks will serve his first year at Wis.-Stevens Point. Kyle Heck, Nick Kenney, and Kevin Gibson will provide the offensive spark, while Nick Graves will be the primary goalie for the Pointers.

St. Scholastica Saints
2011-12 Coach’s poll: Seventh
2011-12 USCHO prediction: Seventh
2010-11 Overall record: 9-17-1
2010-11 Conference record: 4-14-0
2010-11 Finish: Seventh
Outlook: Coach Mark Wick and the St. Scholastica men’s hockey team will look to improve on last season’s disappointing finish, which saw the team finish on a six-game losing streak. This season looks to be a promising one for the Saints after a disappointing 4-14 record in the Northern Collegiate Hockey Association (NCHA) last season. The Saints only lost two seniors from last year’s team, and are led by five in the upcoming season. Seniors Jeremy Dawes, Carter Davis, and Stephane Phaneuf will provide the leadership. Sophomore transfer Colin Rundell will try to establish his presence between the pipes.

BU, through and through: Coyle has deep roots with Terriers

Former Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda frequently said how he “bled Dodger blue.”

The same could be said of Boston University sophomore forward Charlie Coyle, who, for all intents and purposes, bleeds — and has bled — Terriers red and white.

For starters, one of his cousins, Tony Amonte (who enjoyed a long NHL career and is ranked 11th in points scored by American-born players), played for the Terriers. Among other things, Amonte was voted to the 1991 Frozen Four all-tournament team.

Coyle also grew up in Weymouth, Mass., which is a long slap shot (about 18 miles) from Agganis Arena, and he played for the Boston Junior Terriers.

“I always was more of a BU guy because Tony went there and I grew up right outside the city,” said Coyle. “I said to myself when I was getting close to going to college that I always wanted to go to BU. When it got to that time, BU was the first school that talked to me. I didn’t talk to any other school.”

Then there was the matter of the Beanpot tournament. Given the Terriers’ success (BU has won 29 tournament titles since the 1952-53 season), it had a major impression on a young Coyle.

“I went to a bunch of Beanpots when I was little because I wanted to come here and play,” he said. “There’s nothing like it with four local teams going after the Beanpot trophy.

“It motivated me to keep working hard so I could [play for BU]. By that, I mean I was motivated not only to play hockey but also to do well with my studies. I knew the whole school thing that comes with it.”

Coyle played so well last season that he was named both the Hockey East and New England rookie of the year as he posted seven goals and 26 points. Five times, he was named Hockey East’s top performer.

Amonte and another cousin, Bobby Sheehan (who played three seasons in the NHL), played a role in Coyle’s development.

“Tony used to help me when I played at Thayer Academy,” said Coyle, who was named the 2010 EJHL rookie of the year after finishing fifth in scoring with 21-42–63 totals in 42 games. “He would give me tips here and there … just little things in practice and throughout a game.

“Tony and Bobby always say enjoy where you are and keep working hard because you only get four years in college to show your stuff.”

Coyle certainly has “showed his stuff” with USA Hockey.

Besides playing in the 2008 USA Select Festival, he later played for the 2009 U.S. National Under-18 Team in the Four Nations Cup in Pori, Finland, scoring the winning goal in Team USA’s final contest against Switzerland.

He later played for the U.S. Under-18 Team that competed in the 2009 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament in Slovakia and during his freshman year at BU he starred for the bronze-medal winning U.S. Team at the World Junior Championship Tournament in Buffalo (Coyle was named Team USA’s top forward).

In 2010 he participated in the USA Hockey National Junior Evaluation Camp and recorded three goals and three assists in seven games against teams from Finland, Sweden and the United States.

And earlier this year, he suited up for the U.S. National Junior Team, which earned the bronze medal at the World Junior Championship.

“I’ve been lucky to put on the USA jersey,” said Coyle. “I watched the World Junior tournament on TV when it won the gold medal two years ago. I thought it was unbelievable and it was some of the best hockey I’ve ever seen.

“Then, actually participating in it earlier this year … it’s hard to put into words what it was like. But that benefits you more because you’re participating in it yourself [as opposed to watching in front of a TV]. That’s the best way you learn … by going through it. Playing in those games and getting those experiences really benefitted me.”

Coyle eventually experienced being selected in the NHL Entry Draft.

San Jose picked him in the first round in 2010 and one year later traded his draft rights to the Minnesota Wild in a draft-day deal.

“Going into the [2010] draft it was rumored I would be a late first or early second-round pick,” said Coyle. “I ended up going late in the first round. It was exciting. [San Jose] saw I’m a big body [6-foot-3, 215 pounds] and I had a pretty good year in the EJHL.

“When Minnesota made the trade, they saw the same thing. San Jose had a choice to make and Minnesota really saw something they wanted in me and I’m going to Minnesota.”

Eventually.

Despite all the accolades Coyle has received and the subsequent hype, especially leading up to the 2010 draft, coach Jack Parker didn’t have Coyle’s head measured for a larger helmet.

“You’re always going to have that … people talking you up,” said Coyle. “You have to block it out. That’s what I’ve tried to do all my life and keep improving. I just try to stay focused, keep a clear head and keep working hard.”

Minnesota ascends men’s poll to No. 1 ranking

With 32 of 50 first-place votes this week, Minnesota is the new No. 1 in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

Last week’s top-ranked team, Boston College, slides to No. 2, but also received 15 first-place votes.

Colorado College is down one to No. 3, Michigan falls to No. 4 and garnered one first-place vote. Western Michigan is No. 5 this week, down one place from last week.

Merrimack, the nation’s only undefeated team, rises one to No. 6 and had the other two first-place votes.

Notre Dame, Ferris State, Union and Minnesota-Duluth round out the top 10.

Lake Superior State holds steady at No. 11, Denver falls four spots to No. 12, as does new No. 13 Yale. Northern Michigan jumps three to No. 14 and Michigan Tech rises one to No. 15.

Boston University falls four to No. 16, previously unranked Dartmouth enters the rankings this week at No. 17, Colgate and Quinnipiac remains No. 18 and No. 19, respectively, and North Dakota drops five to come in at No. 20 this week.

Wisconsin remains top-ranked team in women’s poll

As it has been all season, Wisconsin is again the No. 1-ranked team in the USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll.

Wisconsin received 14 first-place votes, with No. 2 Cornell getting the other No. 1 vote.

Minnesota is again the third-ranked team, while Boston College is up two to No. 4 and Boston University stays at No. 5

Minnesota-Duluth drops two places to No. 6, North Dakota remains No. 7, Northeastern (No. 8) and Mercyhurst (No. 9) flip-flop from one week ago, and Harvard holds steady at No. 10.

D-III men’s poll sees Oswego assume top spot

Oswego is the new No. 1-ranked team in the USCHO.com Division III Men’s Poll, up from No. 2 last week, and received seven first-place votes.

Four other schools received first-place votes, including No. 2 Norwich (six), No. 3 St. Norbert (four), No. 4 Adrian (one) and No. 5 Plattsburgh (two).

Castleton is No. 6 this week, followed by Utica, Bowdoin, Elmira and Neumann.

Milwaukee School of Engineering is up three this week to No. 11, previously unranked Wisconsin-River Falls enters at No. 12, Wisconsin-Superior drops four to No. 13, Geneseo falls two to No. 14 and Wisconsin-Eau Claire climbs into the rankings this week at No. 15.

Fifteen other teams received votes.

RIT new No. 1 in D-III women’s poll

With all 15 first-place votes, RIT is the new No. 1 team in the USCHO.com Division III Women’s Poll this week.

Norwich, the top-ranked team in the last poll, drops to No. 2, while Middlebury stays third.

Plattsburgh and Wisconsin-River Falls remain No. 4 and No. 5, respectively.

No. 6 Gustavus Adolphus and No. 7 Amherst switch places from the last poll.

Elmira jumps two places to No. 8, Trinity holds steady at No. 9 and Manhattanville drops two to No. 10.

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