Game of the Week
For the second week in a row, a mark-your-calendar game from the preview takes place. This time, it is Geneseo’s key game, traveling up to Oswego on Friday. I picked this game because it was the first big test for Geneseo to see if they can leapfrog to the front.
An even bigger test being in Oswego. An even more difficult test since Oswego just came off a loss to Utica. Have you ever seen a mad Laker? (Well, neither have I, but that’s besides the point…)
Oswego has shown offensive power in its three wins, scoring at least six goals a game. If that offense wakes up again, watch out Ice Knights.
Geneseo will have to rely on its tight-checking game to keep Oswego in check and avoid any neutral ice turnovers.
“They are such a deep team,” Geneseo coach Chris Schultz said. “Their forwards are so darn fast. Their defensemen are very skilled. We have to play a perfect game to win. We have to make sure we take care of the puck, especially in the neutral zone. If we don’t get pucks deep and we turn the puck over, they are rushing three to four guys. They’ll do that every time, and they will punish you every time. Everybody knows that. We just have to play a very simple style of hockey. We have to block shots. We have to play Geneseo Ice Knight hockey in order to win. It’s doable. It’s absolutely doable. But there has to be a 21-man commitment on our bench.”
It is doable, but I’m going to take the “safe” pick, and take Oswego, especially since they will be coming in knowing they can not just phone it in.
Other Picks
In the first week of picks, I was virtually perfect in the conference games, but only got one out of three in the nonconference games for a total of 7-2-1 (.750).
Another intriguing contest also takes place on Friday — Fredonia at Morrisville. A big test for both these teams, and two points that will make a big difference in February.
“It’s always a tough game,” Fredonia coach Jeff Meredith said. “It’s going to be a battle. We’re going on the road against a team that likes to play on the edge, likes to get after you, mix it up. We need to go to Morrisville with what we brought to Geneseo.”
I’m a bit biased since I’ve seen Fredonia, and I like what I saw, so I’ll take the Blue Devils.
Friday is chock full of intriguing games. Brockport at Cortland is a contest that will go a long way in determining positioning at the end of the season, and maybe even a playoff chance for one of these teams. Cortland has beaten Hobart, so on paper, the Red Dragons have been more impressive after the first weekend, so I’ll pick them to win.
Saturday sees four more conference games. Geneseo will beat Cortland, Buffalo State will take Morrisville, Oswego will have no trouble against Brockport, and Plattsburgh will win the first battle of the North Country in Potsdam.
SUNYAC picks: Nov. 4
ECAC East picks: Nov. 4
Lots of “firsts” this year for the ECAC East! First, there are games that mean something the first weekend in November. That’s about two weeks ahead of the schedule defined by the previous interlocking schedule with the NESCAC conference. While the travel partner arrangements remain intact, these games will be the first leg in what sees two match-ups among all of the league’s teams vs. the single regular season match-up that spanned the two conferences in the past. That means there should be a lot more familiarity with each other, and certainly more rivalry building, as there is always a second-chance game against all the teams in the league this year. Norwich and St. Michael’s are off, so eight of 10 teams are in action this weekend, and this is how I see it playing out.
Friday, November 4th
St. Anselm at Massachusetts-Boston
Both teams will be looking to get out of the gates quickly and build some confidence. The Beacons return the more seasoned squad, and will be looking to take advantage of the young Hawks. Home ice makes the difference. Mass.-Boston 4- 3
New England College at Babson
The Beavers and the Pilgrims always seem to start out slowly but build momentum at the right time for the conference playoffs. This one should have a great pace and a fair amount of offense. Babson has the edge in goaltending with either Testa or Peabody and that’s the difference . Babson 4- 2
University of New England at Castleton
The Spartans were more than a little disappointed to end last season before the conference championship game and will be looking to set the tone early. The Nor’easters showed a much improved game in the second half of the season and will look to build their new program on a strong group of returning players and good incoming freshman class. Coach Todd has already been where UNE is now and the Spartans will show how much further they need to come. Castleton 5- 1
Southern Maine at Skidmore
Whether it’s the regular season or playoffs, these two teams always play a close game. Both squads like the big ice so no advantage there either way. So closely matched I should pick an opening night tie, but where’s the fun in that? One visiting team has to win opening night. Southern Maine 3- 2
Saturday, November 5th
New England College at Mass.-Boston
Four-point weekends are rare at any point in the season, but especially where all of the parts are still being tweaked. Looks like a split for both teams this weekend. New England College 3- 1.
St. Anselm at Babson
Note the above as both teams had difficulty coming away with points on both nights of the weekend last season and this year looks to start the same. St. Anselm 5-3
Southern Maine at Castleton
Spartans aspire to sit at the top of the standings and a view from the first place perch after week 1 is a good start. Castleton 3 -1
University of New England at Skidmore
This one may be the most fun game of the weekend. Assuming no ill effects of the quick turnaround to the Olympic size rink, Coach Holt’s squad should love the room to move and create. Don’t call this an upset . University of New England 4 – 3
The ECAC East is off an running (preview posted separately). Enjoy the action, as it’s a whole new league this year – Drop the puck!
ECAC West Weekly Picks, Nov. 4-6
Friday, November 04
Hobart at Manhattanville
Manhattanville jumps right into the deep end with its first NCAA game against a tough ECAC West opponent, hosting Hobart. The Valiants scored a big comeback victory against the Under-18 team last weekend, while Hobart failed to do the same against Cortland. That gives Manhattanville the edge heading into this weekend’s games.
Elmira at Utica
“We had eight losses to just three teams last year,” said Utica coach Gary Heenan. “We talked about Oswego, and that was a huge game for us. We’re following it up with a team (Elmira) that beat us twice and tied us once last year. No question it has been a game that we have thought long and hard about all summer.”
Saturday, November 05
Elmira at Manhattanville
Elmira has too many offensive weapons for the young Valiants defense to handle this early in the season.
Hobart at Salve Regina
The Statesmen should be able to get rolling and gain some confidence against Salve Regina.
Saint Michael’s at Utica
This is a bit of a trap game for Utica. Coming off the highly anticipated game against Elmira, the Pioneers will have to guard against an emotional letdown with St. Michael’s.
Sunday, November 06
Curry at Neumann
Neumann finally plays its first NCAA game of the season. The Knights have had plenty of time to prepare for what is historically a very tough ECAC Northeast team.
Paula's picks: Nov. 4, 2011
Happy November! Hard to believe that a full month of the college hockey season is a matter of record.
Speaking of records, here’s mine.
Paula’s picks
Last week: 6-5-1 (.542)
Season to date: 34-23-6 (.587)
In this season of seeming CCHA parity, I will take any week over .500.
This week
There are four conference series this week with two nonconference sets scheduled. Everything is Friday-Saturday. All starts are 7:05 p.m. local except for the games in Marquette and Ann Arbor, which begin at 7:35 p.m. Michigan State has the weekend off.
FSU at BGSU
The Bulldogs lost two games to Michigan in Ann Arbor last weekend — and looked like a top-10 team anyway. Fast, disciplined, strong defensively with exceptional goaltending in the early going of the season, Ferris State absolutely has what it takes to remain in the hunt all season long. Until last weekend, FSU was scoring goals, too, but the Bulldogs were held to two goals in two games and top guns Travis Ouellette (6-2–8) and Kyle Bonis (5-1–6) were silenced in the 5-2 and 4-0 losses.
Bowling Green lost two close home games to Notre Dame, bringing their CCHA losing streak to three games after opening their league play with a split against Lake Superior State the weekend before. The Falcons are much improved this season; they bring to this series a defense that is allowing only 2.00 goals per game. They’re struggling up front, though, and have scored five goals in their four league games — after averaging 2.75 goals per game in their first four games of the season, all nonconference. Sophomore Bryce Williamson has four goals in eight games; he had five in 31 last year. Freshman Ryan Carpenter (3-5–8) brings some promise. BG’s best player by far this season is junior Andrew Hammond (1.87 GAA, .922 SV%), who is posting career numbers.
Picks: Each team has played four conference games, with FSU three points ahead of BGSU in the standings. The Bulldogs are 4-0 against the Falcons in two seasons. FSU 3-1, 3-1
Miami at UAF
At this point, many college hockey folks must be scratching their heads where Miami is concerned. Expected to reload seamlessly after graduating a talented senior class, the RedHawks have yet to find their groove. Last weekend, Miami was swept at home by Lake Superior State, a 3-2 overtime loss followed by a 5-3 decision in which the Lakers jumped out to a 4-0 lead before the middle of the second period. After allowing four goals, Connor Knapp was replaced by Cody Reichard. Numbers for both senior goaltenders are way down this season — the pair splits time in net and sports a team save percentage of .879 — but the duo doesn’t appear to be getting much help in terms of team defense or scoring.
The Nanooks return to Fairbanks with one point from a long trip to Ohio after a 2-2 tie and 6-0 loss last weekend. Another team struggling defensively, Alaska is surrending 2.75 goals per game and goalie Scott Greenham’s numbers (.894 SV%) are as off as those of his Miami counterparts. Greenham is also lacking the offensive support he needs; the Nanooks are averaging 2.25 goals per game, although junior Nik Yaremchuk (5-1–6) is doing his part.
Picks: Each of these teams is looking for its first CCHA win. With an 0-4-0 record in league play, Miami is off to its worst conference start since 1995-96. The Nanooks (0-2-2) are two points ahead of the RedHawks in league standings. Miami has to win one sometime, right? So does Alaska. Miami 3-2, UAF 4-2
ND at NMU
Notre Dame is bringing its eighth-best offense (3.86 goals per game) to Marquette after sweeping Bowling Green last weekend. Sophomore Anders Lee (10-3–13) became the first player in the nation to hit the 10-goal mark with his game-tying, power-play goal early in the third period of ND’s 3-2 Saturday win; Lee has at least one goal in each of ND’s seven games this season. He and classmate T.J. Tynan (2-12–14) ride season-long point streaks into this series, and Tynan’s scoring streak extends to the last game of last season. The Irish are getting help from more than just those sophomores, though. Freshmen accounted for three of ND’s six goals against BGSU, and senior Patrick Gaul scored the game winner in the 3-2 contest, his second of the season. That was Gaul’s third career goal, and his first of the year this season broke a drought dating back to Jan. 2, 2010.
The Wildcats lost two close games to Western Michigan last weekend, a 4-2 contest that included an empty netter and 3-2 loss in OT the following night. The only Wildcat to find the net against the Broncos was sophomore Stephan Vigier (5-1–6), who scored both goals in each contest, but Justin Florek (5-4–9) and Tyler Gron (4-2–6) have had strong starts to their senior seasons. Another senior starting strong is goaltender Reid Ellingson (2.24 GAA, .922 SV%). Although Ellingson and sophomore Jared Coreau have been splitting time in the NMU net, Ellingson’s numbers are better. He relieved Coreau in Saturday’s loss.
Picks: The Irish swept the Wildcats in Marquette last season, but the teams are 9-9-2 when NMU is home. Every team playing a league game this week has a chance to gain on Lake Superior State, but the Irish can tie the Lakers with a sweep in the Yoop. ND 3-2, 4-2
WMU at UM
Last weekend, the Broncos swept Northern Michigan in two close games, with senior captain Ian Slater netting his first goal of the season to win the game in overtime Saturday. Freshman goaltender Frank Slubowski (1.48 GAA, .918 SV%) had both wins on the weekend, although he and junior Nick Pisellini have each seen action this year. In addition to their undefeated (5-0-3) start to the season, the Broncos have posted other impressive numbers: 1.62 goals against (fourth in the nation); 3.62 goals for (tie 12th); penalty kill at 88.6 (11th). The Broncos have at least a goal from 15 different skaters, with sophomore Shane Berschbach (4-4–8) and junior Trevor Elias (4-0–4) leading in goal scoring. Elias needs two goals to tie his career-high total of six in 42 games last year.
The Wolverines swept visiting Ferris State last weekend, outscoring the Bulldogs 9-2 in the process. Senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick (1.88, .949) recorded his third shutout of the season in Saturday’s 4-0 win and UM looks good defensively, allowing 1.88 goals per game (tie ninth). Like the Broncos, the Wolverines are getting offensive production from a lot of players, with 14 skaters having scored at least a goal so far this season. Michigan’s offense is second in the nation, averaging 4.88 goals per game, although the Michigan power play (18.4/t28th) has yet to awaken. Three Wolverines — juniors Lindsay Sparks and A.J. Treais, and freshman Phil Di Giuseppe — have five goals each.
Picks: Although the Broncos come into this weekend undefeated, I don’t see them leaving it that way. The Wolverines are three points behind WMU and will be keenly aware of this early season opportunity to gain that ground and to pull closer to league-leader LSSU. Of course, the Broncos will be keen to remain ahead and with their four-point deficit to the Lakers, the Broncos could pull into first place with a five-point weekend. Neither team has forgotten their last meeting: WMU’s 5-2 win over UM in a CCHA playoff semifinal game last season. I could be wrong about many picks this weekend, not the least of which could be these. UM 4-3, 4-2
BSU at LSSU The Lakers are taking a break from their fast CCHA start by hosting future WCHA rival Bemidji State. Last weekend, LSSU swept Miami on the road (3-2, 5-3) while the Beavers lost twice to Minnesota-Duluth (6-2, 1-0). The Lakers are fueled by the excellent goaltending of sophomore Kevin Kapalka (2.00 GAA, .924 SV%). Junior Nick McParland (6-3–9) leads LSSU in scoring, having now reached his career-high six-goal total from a season ago — a feat that took him 32 games to accomplish. Two goalies have split time for BSU this season, senior Dan Bakala (3.13, .877) and freshman Andrew Walsh (3.23, .901). Junior Jordan George (4-1–5) is BSU’s leading goal scorer. The teams last met in Bemidji in 2005-06, when the Lakers won and tied. I’m banking on Kapalka. Picks: LSSU 3-2, 3-2
OSU at UAH The Buckeyes took five points from Alaska last week with a tie plus shootout point followed by a 6-0 shutout, breaking OSU’s eight-game winless streak versus UAF. That win was senior goaltender Cal Heeter’s (2.24 GAA, .927) fourth career shutout, first of the season. Sophomore Chris Crane (5-3–8) leads OSU in scoring; he has one more goal in eight games this season than he did in 37 least year. The Chargers are looking for their first win of the season after a 1-1 tie and 7-2 loss to Air Force at home last weekend. Sophomore Clarke Saunders (3.30, .909) was in net for both of those games. The Chargers are being outscored 29-8 by opponents this season. Three Chargers — Kyle Lysaght, Craig Pierce and Mac Roy — have two goals each. Picks: OSU 3-2, 4-2
WCHA picks: Nov. 4-5
Well, here we go, another week of picks in the books. Alaska-Anchorage has the week off so Bemidji State heads east to play red-hot Lake Superior State. One team aims to continue validating its start, another looks for a bounce-back weekend at home, a well-respected bench boss coaches his 500th game, one series could easily result in two ties, and unnamed sources have indicated the possibility of a heated rivalry rekindling this weekend. As always, please remember this is for entertainment purposes only.
Minnesota State (1-5-0, 0-2-0 WCHA) at No. 16 Michigan Tech (5-2-1, 3-2-1 WCHA)
Tyler: Tech is seemingly unbeaten at home so far this season and as big as a win would be for MSU, the injuries will still hurt them. Tech sweep
Brian: The Mavericks lead the all-time series 23-14-4 and have won five of the last eight meetings (5-2-1). But the Huskies’ hold an 11-10-3 edge at home in the series and stand 5-0-1 overall this season at John MacInnes Student Ice Arena, outscoring opponents 21-11 in the process. An already offensively-challenged Minnesota State team is far from healthy while MTU will be suiting up last week’s offensive and defensive players of the week in Milos Gordic and Josh Robinson respectively. Tech takes a pair.
No. 15 North Dakota (3-4-1, 1-3-0 WCHA) at No. 5 Minnesota (7-1-0, 4-0-0 WCHA)
Tyler: Both teams have a lot riding on this series. If this isn’t the weekend Aaron Dell or Brad Eidsness has the breakout performance UND needs, the Fighting Sioux is going to have to score a lot to keep up with Minnesota’s scoring attack. It’ll be interesting to see if UND eases up or plays it’s usual rough-and-tumble style this weekend. The Gophers have the best power play in the nation in the nation and the Sioux may not want to risk taking penalties. But the Gophers’ 7-1 record will be put to the test by the Sioux nonetheless. Split
Brian: The Fighting Sioux have scored 10 goals in their last 139 shots on goal. “We couldn’t put the puck in the ocean for a few games in a row”, said North Dakota coach Dave Hakstol of his team’s scoring slump. Using the same analogy, Minnesota’s Ken Patterson, conversely, has been guarding a puddle for the most part this season posting shutouts in four of the Gophers’ eight games. The Sioux are physically more intimidating, Ben Blood is a stud, and the Brock Nelson-Corban-Knight-Danny Kristo line is dynamic. But Minnesota’s scoring depth and goaltending advantages overcome that in a Minnesota sweep.
No. 14 Minnesota-Duluth (4-3-1, 2-2-0 WCHA) at No. 8 Denver (3-2-1, 2-1-1 WCHA)
Tyler: This will be a fired-up Denver team after leaving Houghton with just one point last week and scoring just three goals. The offensive firepower the Pioneers are known for will take aim at Bulldogs goaltender Kenny Reiter and his sub-par save percentage (.891). DU sweep
Brian: After an eye-opening weekend at Michigan Tech, the Pioneers received an attitude adjustment in what coach George Gwozdecky kindly referred to as “a pretty physically demanding practice.” Sounds like a bag-skate to me. To have a chance, the Bulldogs had better be prepared to weather early storms in each game as Denver tries to rectify its first-period scoring woes (shutout in the opening period of three of six games). A lot will depend on how well DU goaltender Adam Murray has recovered from last week’s injury while UMD goalie Kenny Reiter will have to resurrect the form he showed most of last weekend. Ultimately, I think the Denver Pioneers everyone expected to see from the start emerges this week which doesn’t bode well for the national champs. DU takes two.
Wisconsin (4-4-0, 3-3-0 WCHA) at St. Cloud State (3-4-1, 1-1-0 WCHA)
Tyler: Ryan Faragher is the X Factor this weekend, who will again start in Mike Lee’s place. Will the SCSU goalkeeper have the performance like last weekend’s, in which he turned away 67 of the 70 shots he faced, or will Wisconsin take advantage of an inexperience freshman goalie? Wisconsin’s offense isn’t too aggressive with the WCHA’s third-lowest shots-per-game total (24), but neither are the Huskies (25 shots per game, fourth-lowest in the WCHA) going against a pair of freshman goalies for Wisconsin. Even matchup here. Split
Brian: They are both essentially .500 teams, each team split its most recent series, a freshman goalie will start both games for each team, Wisconsin leads the all-time series 43-28-8 but the Huskies have a 16-15-4 edge in the Granite City, and the teams are 4-4 in their last eight meetings. Detect a pattern here? Split
No. 2 Colorado College (4-0-0, 2-0-0 WCHA) at Nebraska-Omaha (4-4-0, 3-1-0 WCHA)
Tyler: This one is a battle of two powerful top lines but I like CC’s defense and goaltending in this series. CC sweep
Brian: The Colorado College Tigers arrive for their first-ever visit to Omaha having played the fewest games of any WCHA team. Mavericks coach Dean Blais will coach his 500th and 501st career games this weekend but will have to wait at least one more week for his 308th overall win as CC will sweep.
Bemidji State (3-5-0, 2-4-0 WCHA) at No. 11 Lake Superior State (7-1-0, 5-1-0 CCHA)
Tyler: The Beavers only came up with three goals on 40 shots for the weekend against a UMD team that has been awfully shaky this season and Lake Superior has good numbers in its own zone. Lake Superior sweep
Brian: The two teams are 3-1 against Miami this season with LSSU sweeping the Redhawks last weekend and Bemidji State splitting at Miami to open the season. But Miami’s 2-6 record tends to temper any enthusiasm over those results. The Lakers hold a 21-16-2 advantage in the overall series but they haven’t met since 2005 when LSSU traveled to Bemidji and left with a win and a tie (2-1, 2-2). After holding UMD to just one goal last Saturday (in a 1-0 loss) BSU goalie Dan Bakala seems to have recovered from an abysmal start two weeks ago at home against Michigan Tech in which he allowed three goals on four shots. I like LSSU’s record but I simply don’t trust it and think the Beavers can get it done on the road if only once. Split
Hockey East Picks – November 4-5
Pretty solid weeks for both Dave and me last week. Hopefully at least I can keep it going this week!
Jim last week: 8-2-1
Dave last week: 8-2-1
Jim’s record-to-date: 26-14-5
Dave’s record-to-date: 27-15-5
Here are this week’s picks:
Friday, November 4
Maine at Boston College
Jim’s pick: Really like the way that Boston College is playing right now so hard to pick against them.
BC 4, Maine 2
Dave’s pick: Agreed. The Eagles are playing very much like the number one team in the country.
BC 4, Maine 2
Northeastern at Merrimack
Jim’s pick: Though I think this could be a very even matchup, I’m not picking against Merrimack at home right now.
MC 3, NU 1
Dave’s pick: I’m not picking against the undefeated, untied Warriors at home or on the road.
MC 4, NU 1
Vermont at Providence
Jim’s pick: Vermont has had good luck at Providence so I’m going with the Cats on night one.
Vermont 4, PC 2
Dave’s pick: I’m going to have to disagree with Jim on this one. Home ice prevails, at least in game one.
PC 3, UVM 2
Massachusetts at New Hampshire
Jim’s pick: It seems the Wildcats have been awoken.
UNH 4, UMass 3
Dave’s pick: The Wildcats continue to dig themselves out of the hole they’ve made for themselves in the Hockey East standings. The Minutemen remain winless within the league and sink deeper into their hole.
UNH 4, UMass 2
Saturday, November 5
Merrimack at Northeastern
Jim’s pick: Not as easy to pick Merrimack on the road, but the 6-0-0 start has me riding the Warrior wave.
MC 4, NU 3
Dave’s pick: I was hoping Jim would go with the Huskies at home here so I could widen my lead. I’m going with the Warriors until proven wrong.
MC 4, NU2
Vermont at Providence
Jim’s pick: Friars will salvage a split of this series.
PC 3, UVM 1
Dave’s pick: I’m picking the split the other way with the Catamounts needing overtime to do it.
UVM 2, PC 1 (OT)
Boston College at Massachusetts
Jim’s pick: Eagles always struggle at UMass, but I just can’t pick against BC right now.
BC 5, UMass 3
Dave’s pick: Picking the Eagles is a no-brainer. I’m good at no-brainers.
BC 4, UMass 1
Boston University at Massachusetts-Lowell
Jim’s pick: Historically, this series goes the Terriers way. But I have a weird gut about the River Hawks in this one.
UML 4, BU 3
Dave’s pick: Jim’s pick is a gutsy one, but I can’t agree. With only one game to get up for this weekend, BU comes out flying.
BU 4, UML 2
Maine at New Hampshire
Jim’s pick: Things may be going well for UNH, but this is Maine’s game to lose right now.
Maine 4, UNH 2
Dave’s pick: Perhaps the toughest game of the weekend to pick. Have the Wildcats completely gotten back on track? How strong is Maine? I see UNH with four points on the weekend to get to .500 in Hockey East.
UNH 4, Maine 3
Atlantic Hockey Picks 11/4-11/6
Last Week: 6-4-2 (I had the Niagara-Colgate split right but on the wrong nights)
On the Season: 36-13-6 (.703)
This Week’s Picks:
Friday, November 4 & Saturday, November 5:
Sacred Heart at Air Force – Sacred Heart seems to play the Falcons tough no matter what their record, evidenced by the Pioneers taking three of four points from the Falcons last season. But I think after blowing a late lead at home last weekend, Air Force will be fired up. Air Force 5, Sacred Heart 2; Air Force 4, Sacred Heart 2.
Connecticut at Mercyhurst – I think this will be the most entertaining series of the weekend and the hardest to predict. UConn swept the Lakers out of the playoffs last season. I’m picking a split here. Mercyhurst 4, UConn 3; UConn 5, Mercyhurst 4.
Holy Cross at Niagara – Both teams figure to finish near the top of the standings, so this is a big early-season series since it is the only meeting between the two schools. Niagara leads the all-time series 5-1, but I’m again thinking split. Holy Cross 3, Niagara 2; Niagara 3, Holy Cross 2.
Army at Rochester Institute of Technology – Both teams are having trouble scoring goals so far this season, and the teams have just one win between them. I’d pick a tie in at least one game if I could, but instead I think RIT rebounds at home in a pair of close games. RIT 3, Army 2; RIT 4, Army 3.
American International at Robert Morris – The Yellow Jackets have never beaten the Colonials (0-5-1) and even though they are an improved team I’m still giving RMU the advantage, especially at home. RMU 3, AIC 2; RMU 4, AIC 2.
Saturday, November 5 & Sunday, November 6:
Bentley at Canisius – The teams split at Bentley last season, and I’m picking a similar result in Buffalo. The teams have played each other close over the years, with the Golden Griffins holding a slim 21-19-3 advantage all-time. Bentley 4, Canisius 3; Canisius 5, Bentley 2.