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Minnesota’s Hansen reaps the rewards after rounding out his game

Minnesota’s 5-1 start to the season can be credited to a diverse scoring output, Erik Haula’s nation-leading 14 points or possibly the more-than-solid goaltending by Kent Patterson.

From an all-around skater perspective, Jake Hansen’s transformation into one of the league’s top two-way players has had just as large of an effect on the Gophers’ success to this point.

The senior has 11 points — three goals and eight assists — going into Week 4 of the season. His six-game total last year was one assist, and he floated around the second, third and fourth lines for half the season.

“It’s definitely been a huge difference for me, getting off to a hot start,” Hansen said.

One of Minnesota coach Don Lucia’s line shuffles last season put Hansen with Haula and Jacob Cepis on the Gophers’ first and second lines, and that’s where Hansen’s transformation began. Hansen finished the 2010-11 season with 11 goals and nine assists.

With one more weekend left in the first month, Hansen is halfway to eclipsing that point total.

Lucia kept Hansen and the sophomore Haula (5-9–14) together and added freshman Sam Warning (3-3–6) to make up Minnesota’s top line and, so far, one of the most lethal in the WCHA, maybe the country.

“I got to play with Haula the last half of last year and we developed a pretty good chemistry,” Hansen said.

Hansen is a member of the top unit of the nation’s best power play (36.4 percent) and the WCHA’s second-best penalty kill (87.9 percent). Minnesota is third best in the nation for combined special teams with a success rate of 62.1 percent.

“Playing in the defensive zone and backchecking hard was something I didn’t take serious enough,” Hansen said. “You can’t just be an offensive player, you have to play both ends of the ice and that’s something I finally took more seriously.

“It’s something I take pride in — getting good plus/minus numbers, blocking shots, breaking up plays on the backcheck.”

The Gophers are off to their best start since 2008, when they opened the season 7-0-4. Hansen is a member of a Minnesota senior class in danger of becoming the to go without an NCAA tournament appearance since the late 1960s.

But Hansen said there’s an attitude in the locker room and on the bench that’s been missing the last few years.

“I feel like there was a lot better work ethic over the summer,” Hansen said. “Guys want to win and coming off this start, you can tell the confidence in this group and commitment has changed. It’s definitely been a little different than in years past.”

UNO turns the tables on UAA

Comparing Nebraska-Omaha’s sweep over Alaska-Anchorage this weekend to the Seawolves’ 3-0 shutout of the Mavericks in a nonconference game in Fairbanks, there wasn’t a major difference on the score sheet.

John Faulkner saw it all from the crease, and he said it was the little things that helped UNO.

“We took a whole new attitude going into last weekend and the whole week of practice, we worked on the little details and showed in the games,” said Faulkner, the Mavericks goaltender who stopped 38 of the 40 shots (95 percent) he faced last weekend. “We tried to win all the one-on-one battles and give 110 percent every shift.

“We looked back on how we played up in Alaska and we just wanted to be a tougher team to play against. I thought we did a good job taking care of things defensively this weekend. We didn’t really give up any offensive chances to Alaska and that was one of the biggest adjustments we made.”

Those little things led to shots on goal advantages of 28-19 and 40-21, a category in which the Seawolves held a 35-23 advantage on Oct. 14. Special teams didn’t factor into the score this weekend, with both teams going scoreless on the power play.

Though Alex Hudson didn’t show up in the box score, his return from a team-issued suspension may have sparked something as well after the Mavericks started the season 1-3.

“He’s an impact player and it hurt us not having him in the lineup right away,” Faulkner said. “Obviously, as a senior forward, he’s going to have an impact. Physically, he’s a good presence and he’s an offensive threat.”

CC opens with ‘weird’ schedule

Two exhibition games in two weeks. Sweep Bemidji State at home. Off. Fly out East to face Rensselaer. That’s the first four weeks of Colorado College’s odd schedule.

“It was kind of weird, we had the two exhibition games in two weeks,” said CC captain Gabe Guentzel. “The exhibition games and the off week gave us a chance to work out our kinks. It’s been different and hard to adjust but now we jump in and we start playing games for a while.”

Obviously, the poll voters are still waiting for the Tigers to prove whether they deserve a No. 3 ranking. After two real games, it’s too early to tell.

Jaden Schwartz had four points in those two wins against the Beavers. CC goalie Joe Howe allowed just one goal in 80 minutes.

“People are expecting us to be good but we have to take it with a grain of salt,” Guentzel said. “We have to go out and prove who we are as a team.”

All seven of CC’s upcoming road games are on NHL-sized sheets, and the Tigers are used to playing on the bigger Olympic surface. The Tigers are built on speed, a style to which the big sheet lends itself well.

“It’s obviously different [playing on the smaller sheet],” Guentzel said. “Our coaches have been talking about how RPI is going to play a physical game and try to use the smaller sheet to kind of beat us up a little bit.”

Weekend off comes at ideal time for ailing Mavericks

With Minnesota State not scheduled to play this weekend, coach Troy Jutting is taking the opportunity to go out recruiting for the future. In light of recent events, Jutting might just wish that future was now.

The Minnesota State training room has doubled as a triage unit lately, with nearly one third of the team’s skaters going down over the course of the past two weekends.

Already without senior Michael Dorr, junior Tyler Elbrecht, sophomore J.P. Burkemper, freshman Max Gaede, sophomore Danny Heath and junior Eriah Hayes for their trip to Denver last weekend, the Mavericks lost sophomore Chase Grant in Friday’s game against the Pioneers and freshman Brett Stern on Saturday.

Add it all up and Minnesota State ended the series without five of its top 11 active career scoring leaders in Dorr (17 goals, 25 assists, 42 points), Hayes (19-18–37), Grant (8-12–20), Elbrecht (1-12–13) and Burkemper (3-6–9). Not surprisingly, the Mavericks were swept by the Pioneers.

Others are likely nursing various wounds also as, according to Jutting, 11 players sat out Tuesday’s practice. Jutting said the current rash of injuries is unprecedented in his coaching career.

Although the odds were stacked heavily against them in Denver, the remaining Mavericks players gave the Pioneers all they could handle in the series opener as Zach Lehrke’s goal at 1:17 of the third period tied the game 2-2.

“I thought the kids played extremely hard and gave themselves a chance to win a hockey game against a very good hockey team,” Jutting said. “We ended up losing 4-2 with the empty-net goal, but really [had] a chance all the way down to the end of that game to get a win.”

Unfortunately for Minnesota State, fatigue set in, especially after Stern went down, and Denver rolled to a 10-2 win on Saturday.

“It’s early in the year and we had a short bench and I think that was part of the result on Saturday night,” Jutting said. “We had a short bench Friday night and an even shorter bench on Saturday night and I think we just wore down.”

Denver coach George Gwozdecky agreed.

“Scoring 10 goals was a little bit of an aberration; I know how banged up our opponent was last weekend,” Gwozdecky said in his weekly radio show. “I don’t think that there’s any team in our conference, including ours, that is eight goals better than anybody else.”

Key to Gwozdecky’s success can be found at home

Denver’s 4-2 win over Minnesota State last Friday was Gwozdecky’s 400th at the helm of the Pioneers, and Saturday’s victory gave Gwozdecky 550 wins overall in 25-plus years of coaching NCAA hockey.

Add two NCAA national championships, three WCHA regular-season titles and four WCHA playoff titles and an already-impressive resume becomes legendary.

What has been the key to his success?

“Marry a good lady,” Gwozdecky said of his wife, Bonnie, during his weekly radio show on Tuesday.

“It is so important that in this profession, in coaching, in any sport, the time away from family is so dramatic and unlike anything else,” said Gwozdecky. “You have to be able to have that foundation at home that can take care of the things and can deal with the issues that only coaches deal with.

“Whether it’s game day, whether it’s a long season, whether it’s recruiting, you name it and certainly the No. 1 principle in my life is my wife and my family. To be around long enough to win this many games, it’s rare and to be able to have the same marriage and the same family for that long period of time is even rarer.”

Gwozdecky also expressed appreciation for his daughter, whom he said “is talking trash with me now because she’s a freshman at [Boston University] and she’s a student assistant with the hockey team out there and they beat us a couple weekends ago.”

But much credit was also reserved for the many who have served under Gwozdecky throughout his career, particularly longtime assistant Steve Miller.

“He’s been with me now for over 20 years,” said Gwozdecky. “We are like an old married couple: He knows how I think, I know how he thinks. He’s one of the best recruiters in the country, one of the best coaches on the ice in the country.

“There’s reasons why people are successful and it’s not because they’re geniuses. They have great people with them, great people around them, and you let them do their thing.”

Besides Miller, Gwozdecky mentioned fellow current staff member Derek Lassonde along with former assistants Enrico Blasi (Miami), Seth Appert (Rensselaer) and Derek LaLonde (USHL’s Green Bay Gamblers) as just a few members of the Gwozdecky coaching tree who fit that category.

“[They] have done an absolutely tremendous job over the years bringing in some quality, not only tremendously skilled players, but great character players that understood the expectations and high standards that they have to live by as a DU Pioneer hockey player,” said Gwozdecky. “Those standards are exacting, they’re not easy, but the rewards can be tremendous and when we get it going it can be very magical.”

Players of the week

Offensive: Drew Shore, Denver junior forward

Shore led the Pioneers to a sweep (4-2, 10-2) of Minnesota State with a five-point weekend and a plus-6 plus/minus rating. After notching the game-winning goal on Friday, Shore’s assist on Saturday’s winner was one of four in the game for the Florida Panthers’ prospect.

Defensive: Andrew Walsh, Bemidji State freshman goaltender

Walsh entered his first collegiate game on Friday night against Michigan Tech halfway through the first period with his team trailing 3-1. Not only did the Dawson Creek, British Columbia, native help the Beavers come back for a 6-5 win, Walsh made 31 saves the following night in his first college start.

Rookie: Joel Rumpel, Wisconsin freshman goaltender

Rumpel’s 38 saves on Saturday preserved a 5-4 victory over defending conference champion North Dakota and earned the Badgers a sweep of the visiting Sioux. Rumpel made 15 saves each in the game’s first two periods alone.

Johnson, Sauer honored with Lester Patrick Trophy

Former Wisconsin, Olympic, and NHL star Mark Johnson and longtime Colorado College and Wisconsin coach Jeff Sauer were presented with one of hockey’s most prestigious awards on Wednesday night at the Xcel Energy Center.

Johnson and Sauer were among four recipients of the NHL’s 2011 Lester Patrick Trophy for outstanding service to hockey in the United States. Hockey Hall of Famer Bob Pulford and longtime USA Hockey executive Tony Rossi also were honored.

Presented to the NHL by the New York Rangers in 1966, the award honors the memory of Lester Patrick, who spent 50 years in hockey as a player, coach and general manager and was a pioneer in the sport’s development.

Johnson, a Minneapolis native who has coached the Wisconsin women’s team to four national championships, is the son of legendary college and NHL coach “Badger” Bob Johnson, who received this award in 1988 and was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 2004.

“I think he would be elated,” said Johnson when asked what his father’s reaction might be. “He was a great mentor. I got an opportunity to play for him but, most importantly, he was a mentor to me in regards to trying to do things the right way in giving back to the great game that we all love.

“So he would have certainly been excited to be here tonight and see what I have been able to accomplish over a long period of time. Once I found out I was going to receive the award, certainly driving up today [I’ve been] thinking about him quite a bit.”

Johnson said the weeks since the award was announced have given him time to reflect on what he’s been able to do as a player and a coach but, initially, it took a while to sink in.

“On a day-to-day basis you don’t think about these things, and all of a sudden you get a phone call from [NHL commissioner] Gary Bettman and, it’s like, ‘What does Gary want with me now?'” said Johnson. “He acknowledges I was going to win this award and it’s like you step back and say ‘Wow,’ and then you say, ‘Oh, jeez, I guess I am getting older.'”

An accomplished player, Johnson starred for three seasons for his father at Wisconsin but is perhaps best known as the leading scorer for the gold medal-winning 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team. Johnson scored twice in Team USA’s historic 4-3 victory over the vaunted Soviet Union team in Lake Placid.

Johnson parlayed that experience into an 11-year NHL career in which he amassed 508 points in 669 games before following his father’s footsteps into the coaching ranks, including a stint as an assistant to Sauer.

A Fort Atkinson, Wis., native, Sauer’s connection to “Badger Bob” is strong as well. Sauer played and coached under Johnson at Colorado College and followed him to Wisconsin before eventually taking the reins of the Tigers in 1971.

When Bob Johnson left Wisconsin for the NHL in 1982, Sauer replaced him and spent 20 seasons behind the Badgers’ bench, leading them to national titles in 1983 and 1990. In a NCAA Division I head-coaching career spanning more than 30 years, Sauer’s 655 victories (655-532-57) are good for eighth on the all-time wins list.

Sauer has spent more than 40 years involved with coaching the hearing impaired, and he led the U.S. Deaf Olympic Team to a gold medal at the 2007 at the IIHF Winter Deaf Olympics.  

“I’ve been involved with a lot of different teams and a lot of USA Hockey teams, and done things along the way and so forth but it was just part of the job,” said Sauer. “It wasn’t anything to get to this point in time.

“My dad always said I never had a job, and that’s true. I’ve had one of those jobs you go the office every day and it’s fun to be there.”

Sauer was recently named head coach of the U.S. National Sled Hockey Team and, after spending about two months on the ice with them, he said there isn’t a more committed group of players.

“The sad part about it is a number of our players are military guys that have been in combat situations,” said Sauer. “But the one thing is they’re much more disciplined players than Chris Chelios ever was or some of those guys. It’s yes sir, no sir, so it’s kind of refreshing from that standpoint.”

Both men were honored by the award, but equally as humbled.

“I was fortunate to have a lot of great mentors as a player and certainly I’ve had a lot of great people helping me become a better coach than I was 15 years ago and so it’s an opportunity to thank a lot of those people,” said Johnson. “I feel fortunate that, hopefully, I’ve touched some lives over the course of the last 10 or 15 years with the players I’ve had a chance to work with.”

“I was shocked but very, very honored,” said Sauer. “When you take a look at the list of people that have received this award, to be included in that company is pretty overwhelming.”

O’Callahan headlines Illinois Hockey Hall of Fame inductees

The Illinois Hockey Hall of Fame announced Wednesday the seventh class to be inducted on January 29, 2012 at the Belvedere Banquet Hall in Elk Grove Village.

The inductees this year include former Boston University defenseman Jack O’Callahan and ex-Michigan forward Blake Sloan. O’Callahan played for the Chicago Blackhawks, while Sloan is a Park Ridge, Ill., native.

O’Callahan’s son, Aaron, plays at Bowdoin.

Also being enshrined is former New Hampshire skater Annie Camins, a Chicago-area native who has also worked for the Blackhawks, and former Maine defenseman Kevin Mann in the builders category.

Tickets for the eveny are available by calling Norm Spiegel at (847) 269-2922 or by e-mail at [email protected].

Boston College’s Wey out 6-8 weeks after foot surgery

Boston College junior defenseman Patrick Wey has undergone successful surgery to repair a severed tendon in his right foot suffered during the second period of BC’s 4-3 overtime victory at Northeastern on Saturday, Oct. 22.

The surgery was performed this past Monday at St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Brighton, Mass.

Wey is expected to miss 6-8 weeks of action, putting his return around January 2012.

Proposed NHL draft rule change supported by Kelly

In an article on Canadian website Sportsnet.ca this week, College Hockey Inc. executive director Paul Kelly said that he supports Hockey Canada president Bob Nicholson’s proposed rule change regarding the annual NHL draft process.

Nicholson has suggested that the NHL should change the age of draft eligibility from 18 to 19, excluding players chosen in the first round.

This would affect college players having to play at least their freshman year if they enter college as an 18-year-old and could possibly fix the issue of players committing to NCAA schools and then going the Major Junior route.

“I do think there (are) a few teams that are doing something which is off the books and not in compliance with their league rules. I don’t think any of the other owners approve of that,” Kelly said. “From our perspective in NCAA hockey, if a kid commits and then he breaks that commitment for, among other reasons, the fact that somebody’s giving him a big bag of cash, that just shouldn’t happen.

“On behalf of the colleges in the United States, the 58 programs that I represent, they strongly favor the proposal advanced by Bob Nicholson.”

Kelly and Canadian Hockey League commissioner David Branch will meet in Toronto in two weeks from now for further discussion.

Nov. 1 edition of USCHO Live! to feature Paul Kelly of College Hockey Inc.

Paul Kelly

On the next edition of USCHO Live! — our weekly college hockey talk show — we’ll be joined by Paul Kelly, executive director of College Hockey Inc., to discuss the landscape of college hockey and his organization’s role in promoting the sport.

Join us for the conversation and information, Tuesday, Nov. 1, from 8 to 9 p.m. ET. If you can’t listen live, check out the podcast of USCHO Live! available on the player at the right (click through if you’re reading this via RSS.)

Each episode of USCHO Live! features a look at news around NCAA hockey, a look ahead at upcoming games and events, and conversation with people who coach and play college hockey and journalists who cover the sport. Your calls are welcome at (646) 200-4305, as well as questions via Twitter at @USCHO or via email to [email protected].

About the hosts

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

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

The Last Word*

… on Scheduling

I’ve taken a fair amount of flak in my time manning USCHO’s ECAC Hockey (nee ECACHL) desk. Some of it has been perfectly valid, and I’ve tried to acknowledge as much. Some has been bred of confusion or misinterpretation; some of ignorance; and no small amount has been borne of the bat**** lunatic North Dakota fringe, with which all college hockey writers are well-acquainted.

The picked-bone-du-jour (though really, it’s an issue every year around this time) concerns my treatment and perspective of the league’s (and/or individual programs’) non-conference scheduling. I’ve been criticized by representatives of every house on this one at one point or another, and perhaps I should make myself clear in a specifically devoted piece… i.e., this blog entry.

* for this week**
** maybe

As I see it

I believe that ECAC Hockey is not only a unique league, but the most unique in the college hockey universe. I don’t have figures in front of me, but I would be floored to learn that any other conference might beat this one in student GPA and/or general academic achievement (except maybe the NESCAC?). Princeton’s Landis Stankievech (’08) won a Rhodes Scholarship just three years ago, for crying out loud. The history is as deep and tenured as anywhere else, the hockey programs tend to be the athletic pride of the member institutions, the rivalries and passions invoke generations of extraordinary teams and players.

The long and short of it is, I love this league.

So when I criticize, I try to make the incisions constructive, and at the bare minimum factual. In this case, the facts are that many ECAC teams schedule a lot of Atlantic Hockey opponents. So far, the league has played 16 games against the AHA out of 33 total (all non-conference) games.

But wait, there’s more

The facts are also that it is surprisingly, even incredibly difficult to fill a 12-game non-conference schedule. AHA and Hockey East teams only have seven non-league slots each year. The WCHA and CCHA, six. While this may seem like a great opportunity to get nationwide exposure with games against far-flung foes, or to boost the ol’ RPI in anticipation of the PairWise rankings, it’s nowhere near that easy. For starters, the 14-point bucks – the real big game of the college hockey landscape – are limited in number: Boston College, North Dakota, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, Michigan State, Miami, Boston University, Maine, Notre Dame and New Hampshire draw very well and make regular appearances in the NCAA tournament. (Denver, Colorado College, Minnesota-Duluth, Nebraska-Omaha, Ferris State, and Western Michigan are on that cusp, but don’t yet have the long-term cachet.) Everybody wants them on their schedule.

But who do they want to play? Each other, of course. North Dakota has undeniably little incentive to play Colgate, Brown, or St. Lawrence, home or away… at least until the Raiders, Bears or Saints start becoming regular fixtures in the Sweet 16. Even the powerhouses of neighboring Hockey East frequently feel that they are better served by making Western road trips than by visiting or hosting local ECAC squads.

At this point in time, the ECAC Hockey programs that play the toughest non-conference opponents are a) optimally located geographically (Harvard), b) have earned recent and/or regular “contender” status (Yale, Cornell, Rensselaer), or c) play a lot of road games (Brown). It doesn’t hurt to have a well-connected coach, but it doesn’t always help, either.

So that’s why half of the league’s out-of-conference docket reads like an AHA visitors’ guide. It’s not anybody’s idea of ideal, but “optimal” is a relative term.

Bearing the barbs

As I noted earlier, I do my best to acknowledge valid critiques, and one that holds water now is that I have been too tough on programs for not scheduling more big-name opponents. Even I have a learning curve, and I have – at times – lost track of how challenging it can be to get one national power to commit, much less 10. For that, I apologize. Furthermore, isn’t a game against RIT or Air Force as likely to boost the strength-of-schedule as a game against Lake Superior State or Vermont? Maybe, maybe not – but today it’s worth considering.

Great expectations

So what do I really expect from ECAC Hockey? Where is the threshold below which teams become targets?

I’ll put it simply. Schedule all the good teams you can – gotta beat the best to be the best, as the idiom goes – but when your opponents leave you uninspired, just take care of business.

The frustrated slights come from weak results against weak opponents, because this league – and everyone in this league – is supposed to be better than that. Off nights happen. Upsets happen. Underrated opponents happen, too. But not everyone is underrated, every night can’t be an “off night”, or else the upsets are no longer upsets… and the league is diminished just a little bit more.

Right now, ECAC Hockey is 16-12-5, all against non-conference opposition. So far, teams that the ECAC has already played are 33-47-6 against everyone else. (My math may be slightly off, but to the best of my knowledge I’ve tallied correctly.) The teams the league has beaten are a combined 12-25-1 (again, against everyone else). Teams that ECAC programs have lost to are a combined 15-16-3, and the ties are 6-6-2.

That’s all I’ve got. At least I’ve avoided mentioning North Dakota in any kind of judgmental light… I think. (I hope.)

Power station up and running early for Clarkson

The Clarkson Golden Knights are rolling pretty well, but as first-year head coach Casey Jones puts it, they have been flying blind along with their opponents.

The team is 4-1-1 overall, and its power play is clicking at 29.4 percent (10-for-34, good for third nationally). However, in this early, non-conference schedule, the teams don’t exchange video for scouting purposes, making it tough for opponents to get a read on their man-up tendencies.

“We’ve been fortunate enough to have one unit clicking right now, and they’re moving around pretty well. We have a lot of guys scoring on the power play. We haven’t been too predictable,” said Jones. “We haven’t done video exchange with any teams, so they haven’t tried to take things away. When we do begin exchanging video and teams do try to take things away from us, that’ll be the telltale sign of how well we can play.”

None of the Golden Knights’ first five opponents this year had a winning record in 2010-11 (then again, neither did Clarkson). Nonetheless, Jones dismissed any notion of an easy non-conference schedule, playing mostly Atlantic Hockey schools.

“Anybody can beat anybody in college hockey,” Jones said. “That’s been proven already this season. Every team we’ve played so far plays hard. We’re learning to win games and close out games. We’re focusing on the energy level and how hard we’re working. Pucks are going in for us, guys are working hard and we’re trying to create an identity.”

Jones takes special satisfaction in seeing 16 of his players already having scored points through just six games. ECAC Hockey player of the week Allan McPherson had three goals this weekend, including both game-winners over American International.

Seven of the 16 players split the 10 power-play goals, including freshman Sam Labrecque, an invaluable piece of the extra-man puzzle. Every one of his five points thus far has come on the power play.

“Sam is further ahead than we expected,” said Jones. “He has good awareness, and he’s really afforded us an opportunity to keep him at the top.”

Kevin Tansey and James Howden were also praised for their “good size, physical play and consistency” as freshmen on the young Golden Knights’ defense.

The team has the confidence to go for broke, offensively, in part because of senior Paul Karpowich’s play in the net.

“We’ve given up a lot of shots, so we can be better at puck possession, but Paul came into his senior year in tremendous shape,” Jones said. “With a young D corps in front of him, he’s doing a really good job of not only making the first save, but not leaving a lot of pucks laying in the crease.”

On that note, Karpowich is 614 saves away from tying Dan Murphy’s career school record of 3,375, set in 1998.

On the spot: Colgate’s Austin Smith

Colgate senior forward Austin Smith is on a mission to completely turn the page on a forgettable 2010-11 season.

The Raiders finished 11-28-3 and Smith, always a dependable scorer going back to juniors with Penticton (BCHL), didn’t finish anywhere near a point per game (31 points in 41 games).

This year, his dedication to making sure the Raiders are in full bounce-back mode has been on full display through all five of Colgate’s games. He has helped the team put together a 3-1-1 record early on.

Smith was fourth in points per game among all ECAC players (non-conference stats only, so far) with 1.75, scoring five goals and seven points through five games. He hasn’t yet been silenced in a game.

USCHO.com caught up with Smith as he was just two goals away from the 50 milestone, standing with a 48-62–110 line in 119 career games.

USCHO: What do you think of the season thus far?

Smith: It’s obviously a dramatic turnaround from where we were last year. We won our first tournament [the Mutual of Omaha Stampede], as we wanted to get rolling. We didn’t want to be right back where we were last year. The next weekend, Miami won a game, but I thought we outplayed them the whole weekend.

USCHO: How much does it matter to the team to be nationally ranked [No. 16 in USCHO.com poll on both Oct. 17 and 24]?

Smith: We wanted it; we expect that of our team. It’s one thing to be there in the beginning of the season, but it’s got to be where we are midseason and where we end up that matters. It doesn’t really mean anything right now. We’ve got to keep putting wins on the board. Our out-of-conference schedule is tough and there are good teams in our league, obviously.

USCHO: How does it feel to be two goals away from 50? What are previous memorable goals?

Smith: I didn’t even realize where I was at. I reached 100 points last year, I knew that, but last year wasn’t even close to the year I should’ve had. I’ve changed my focus to doing what I need to do in practice, and the points will come. Last year, I was more expecting the points to come.

I remember my first goal pretty well. It was a home game [Oct. 17, 2008] and I threw it into the goalie’s pads with my hands — if it went in, it wouldn’t have counted — but then, the rebound was there and I knocked it in. It was a weird way to score my first goal.

That same year, I scored an overtime winner in the playoffs against Quinnipiac — we were down 3-2 and I scored three goals, including in OT, to help us come back.

USCHO: How do you rate your growth as a player under coach Don Vaughan, who is two wins away from 300?

Smith: I’m mentally stronger, mentally tougher — maybe that’s because of the seasons we’ve had. [Vaughan] has been a good teacher in terms of understanding the game and helping me defensively. He’s made me more of a two-way forward. I can play left, center and right, which will help me when I turn pro at the end of the year. I’ve always been a pass-first player, and he’s gotten me to shoot, which has helped me add a new element to my game.

Elsewhere around the league

Brown: It may not have meant anything in the standings, but Brown’s 2-0 shutout win over Waterloo (Ontario) on Sunday helped to reestablish some order to the usual dynamic of American schools beating Canadian schools in the preseason, especially after Waterloo beat No. 10 Yale the night before.

Cornell: It remains to be seen if Cornell will be fashionably late to the Division I party (i.e., win games early on). The Big Red are the second-to-last Division I team to start their 2011-12 schedule, opening Saturday against Mercyhurst at Lynah Rink. Harvard is last to open, starting Nov. 4 in ECAC play against Princeton.

Dartmouth: The Big Green had an interesting weekend. First was a 4-2 exhibition win over Western Ontario, then a 3-1 scrimmage win over Norwich. Canadian Interuniversity Sport followed by NCAA Division III. Certainly not your average weekend for a D-I team.

Harvard: Conor Morrison, Luke Greiner and Alex Killorn each had two-goal games in Harvard’s 7-4 win over Western Ontario on Friday. That is the Crimson’s only action against opposition before they jump right into league play in their Nov. 4 season opener against Princeton. They hope to avoid cobwebs before then.

Princeton: The Tigers will do whatever is needed to avoid the 0-2 start from last year’s Ivy Shootout, where it fell in 2-1 games to both Dartmouth and Brown. This year, they draw Yale (Friday) and Brown (Saturday). Yale is 5-0 in the teams’ last five meetings, while Princeton has won three out of its last four meetings with Brown.

Quinnipiac: The Bobcats joined St. Lawrence as the only two ECAC Hockey teams to be defeated by Atlantic Hockey squads when Robert Morris upset Quinnipiac on Friday. Matthew Peca was honored with the ECAC Hockey rookie of the week award for his two goals against the Colonials, including a one-timer for the game-winner in Saturday’s 4-1 victory.

Rensselaer: The Engineers are looking to break out of a three-game losing streak. Their 1-4-0 record is their worst start since 2008-09, when they started 0-4-1 after the same amount of games. Their 17 shots on goal marked the second time in three games they’ve put fewer than 20 on an opposing goalie. Compare that with their opening weekend, when they shelled Minnesota State with 74 shots in two games.

Union: Troy Grosenick earned his first career shutout victory in a 5-0 win over Rochester Institute of Technology on Saturday, giving him his first league honor of goalie of the week. After a Friday night game at New Hampshire, the Dutchmen will return to Messa Rink on Saturday and celebrate the 2010-11 Cleary Cup championship and NCAA tournament appearance with a banner ceremony before facing American International.

Yale: The Elis faced a talented goaltender in Keaton Hartigan when the Waterloo goalie turned away 41 of Yale’s 42 shots in a 2-1 defeat of Yale on Saturday. The loss came five years and a day after their last loss to a Canadian university, when they fell to McGill 3-1 on Oct. 21, 2006.

Top three recruit performances

First prize: Kevin Roy (Brown, ’12-’13), Lincoln (USHL) — After a quiet first two games, he scored a hat trick in Game 3 against Sioux City and has seven points in his last three contests.

Second prize: Ryan Hitchcock (Yale, ’14-’15), New Jersey Rockets (MJHL) — OK, people, it’s time to bring this kid up to a higher-level league, such as the Met League’s affiliate Atlantic Junior League. He has 26 points in his first 12 games with N.J.

Third prize: Connor Dempsey (Dartmouth, ’12-’13), Westside (BCHL) — It’s a long way from his hometown in Winthrop, Mass., to Kelowna, British Columbia, but with nine points in his last three games (20 points in 12 games overall), Dempsey is making the best of the trip.

Top three alumni performances

First prize: David Jones (Dartmouth), Colorado Avalanche — He’s put in five goals in five games, good enough to tie for sixth in NHL goal scoring.

Second prize: Chris Higgins (Yale), Vancouver Canucks — His three goals have him ranked tied for second on the team after the first eight games.

Third prize: Harry Zolnierczyk (Brown), Philadelphia Flyers – He was up only for a game (Oct. 18), but the first career goal for last year’s Bears captain made it to No. 2 on the NHL Network’s Top 10 goals of the week.

This just in: Allen York, last year’s Rensselaer goalie extraordinaire, made his NHL debut for Columbus in the Blue Jackets’ 4-1 win over Detroit on Tuesday, Columbus’ first win of the season. York’s appearance was a formality, as he played just 2:33 and didn’t see any shots.

Big programs at Michigan State, Ohio State in big transitions

It’s strange to think that many current CCHA series pair off teams that will in just two seasons be playing in different leagues. Hence Lake Superior’s delight two weeks ago to have beaten the future Big Ten’s Michigan State, or Northern Michigan’s glee at having swept the future National Collegiate Hockey Conference’s St. Cloud State that same weekend — or for that matter, NMU’s double pleasure in taking four points from visiting Michigan last week.

When Ohio State traveled to East Lansing last weekend, however, current CCHA and future Big Ten rivals faced off, providing a glimpse of both now and then in more ways than one.

Each program is in a state of flux, each attempting to rebuild, renew and — make no mistake about it — rebrand itself in preparation for the 2013-14 season. The teams split their Thursday-Friday series, with MSU taking the first game 3-0 and the Buckeyes winning the rematch 5-2.

Given the immediate uncertainties within each program — new season, coaches, players, strategies, identities — that split seemed nearly inevitable.

‘Success builds confidence’

Tom Anastos is synonymous with Michigan State hockey. That is the message emblazoned on every season press pass for Munn Ice Arena: a large photograph of Anastos, arms folded across his chest, staring sternly out beyond the boundaries of the plastic in which his image is encased. This is Michigan State. This is your coach. He is serious.

As a first-year head coach, Anastos is still in the processing stage of his job. He’s an iconic figure for MSU hockey, playing for the Spartans (1981-85), serving as assistant coach (1990-91) and being visible as the CCHA commissioner for 13 seasons, but he’s still learning a few things. After Saturday’s loss to Ohio State, for example, Anastos was asked what he learned from his first home weekend behind the bench. “I hate losing,” said Anastos. “More fun to win.”

He sounded serious.

Thursday’s win set up the Spartans to do something that they did just once last season, sweep a single opponent in back-to-back games in the same weekend. It took MSU all of 2010-11 to achieve that, too, with two low-scoring wins over visiting Bowling Green Feb. 25-26.

“We have to keep kicking at the can and hope to be in a position to do it again,” said Anastos. “We’re taking baby steps and I think we’ve got to continue to look at the positive gains that we make, and yet be responsible for the areas that we didn’t do so well.”

Anastos has repeatedly said that he’s looking to create a more up-tempo game, one in which every player is involved in creating offensive chances. While the MSU team is adjusting, though, the Spartans are giving up more goals than they’re allowing, having been outscored 20-16 so far this season, but it’s not for lack of trying.

“I know everybody here is going to give 110 percent, 100 percent of the time,” said junior and alternate captain Anthony Hayes. “That’s the model for our team. We’re not worried about that. We’ve just got to keep working on the mental lapses that keep ending up in the back of our net.

“He’s [Anastos] instilled that in us, regardless of if it’s a pat on the back or a, ‘Hey, you’ve got to do this,’ it is constant coaching and it’s always taking steps forward. That’s all he can ask, and that’s all we can do.”

Junior Kevin Walrod, who had both goals in the loss to OSU, echoed Hayes. “Last year, we saw things going bad and we’d give up. This year, we’re very motivated. I think that comes from the coaching staff.”

“We can win when we play good, when everybody’s dialed in,” said Hayes. “We’re a first-class team. We’re obviously very capable of being a top-tier team. We just need to keep taking steps forward.

“There’s a lot of fight in this team. Nobody’s worried about that.”

Through six games this season, the Spartans are 2-4-0; they were 3-0-3 through six last year, but they didn’t begin last season with Boston College and they played Alabama-Huntsville twice in that span. Currently, MSU is tied for 32nd nationally in scoring (2.67 goals per game) and 33rd in defense (3.33 goals allowed per game). No one on the team has more than two goals, but 10 Spartans players have found the back of the net. With a 3.02 goals against average and .902 save percentage, senior goaltender Drew Palmisano is nearly where he was a year ago statistically.

“I think the thing that I keep focusing on and our staff keeps focusing all of our attention on is [that] the players on our team, they’re working hard,” said Anastos. “I think learning how to win, to me, has a lot to do with confidence and having success builds confidence.”

Young group working

With a year in Columbus behind him and six years before that as a Wisconsin assistant, Ohio State’s Mark Osiecki is a bit more familiar with coaching at the collegiate level than is Anastos, but when it comes to his own team, Osiecki has nearly as much to learn as his Big Ten counterpart. There are 13 newcomers on the OSU roster this season — a dozen freshman and a transfer.

And the intense Osiecki is doing something that doesn’t seem to come naturally: He’s taking it all in stride.

“Yeah, you throw a cast net out there and see what happens,” said Osiecki. “Thirteen new guys. We need it. You saw where we were at [with] a lot of older guys.”

OSU’s 2011 freshman class was ranked No. 6 in preseason by Red Line Report, and so far some of those rookies are living up to their billing. Forward Ryan Dzingel (3-3–6) leads OSU in scoring and is in the mix for top-scoring freshmen nationally; two of his goals are game winners. Classmates Matt Johnson (3-1–4) and Max McCormick (1-3–4) are producing, and McCormick was named the league’s rookie of the week two weeks ago.

“The best thing that’s happened is that we’ve got a lot of guys with pretty good hockey smarts, good speed, and the compete level is very high,” said Osiecki, who wasn’t quiet about his frustration with what he saw as a lack of dedication among certain Buckeyes players last season. “That’s all we’re asking right now is that they work and compete; they can control that. I think the speed helps them do that.”

Twelve freshmen, a junior transfer — goaltender Brady Hjelle, who played for Minnesota-Duluth (2008-10) — and six sophomores make for a team that is as unpredictable as it is young. For two straight weekends in CCHA play, the Buckeyes have dropped the opening contest of a two-game set before rebounding with a win the second night, having split on the road against Notre Dame Oct. 14-15.

“Our response so far has been pretty good,” said Osiecki. “We’re looking for the consistency, and that may be hard with having so many young kids playing.”

Osiecki said that the Buckeyes didn’t have “a lot of jump” in Thursday’s loss to MSU. “I don’t know what to point to — travel, short week, I’m not sure. Monday, Tuesday were difficult for our players to come back, I think, a little bit high and mighty after Notre Dame, probably, with this young group.”

The one position where the Buckeyes have found consistency is in net. Senior Cal Heeter (2.89 goals against average, .907 save percentage) is 3-1-0. Heeter played 37 games for the Buckeyes last season with an impressive .923 save percentage his junior year.

In the second period Friday, Heeter was all alone when MSU’s second leading scorer, Lee Reimer, broke in for a prime opportunity. Heeter — a big goaltender who can occupy the whole net — never gave Reimer a chance. That was a clear momentum boost for the Buckeyes, who scored twice within six minutes to take the lead.

“Cal is such a steady factor back there,” said Osiecki. “That’s happened to us in a couple other games. Our guys see that and it’s such a huge lift for us.”

Before the season began, Osiecki joked that he’d be adding some gray to his head because of the youth of the OSU team, but he does admit to enjoying himself a little more this season — if only a little. “There’s a limit with how much we can say and how much we can push especially with a young club,” he said. “As far as response, it’s pretty good.”

As for the newcomers, Osiecki said their temperament has yet to emerge. “We’re still trying to see that. I think they just keep their mouths closed right now and go about their business. We’re not seeing the whole personality thing.

“It’s a good thing. Their mouths are closed, their ears are open, and they work.”

When is a fight not a fight?

Apparently, when blows are exchanged between the Wolverines and Wildcats in Marquette.

At 10:45 of the second period of Northern Michigan’s 5-3 win over Michigan Friday, when the score was tied at 0-0, disturbances erupted that led to game disqualifications for Northern Michigan’s Andrew Cherniwchan and Michigan’s Luke Moffatt, a game misconduct for Wolverines goaltender Shawn Hunwick and a double minor for NMU’s Reed Seckel.

Both Cherniwchan and Moffatt were called for fighting. They certainly were fighting.

The only problem I have is that Cherniwchan and Moffatt weren’t the only ones fighting. In the NCAA’s Ice Hockey 2010-12 Rules and Interpretations, Section 17.a. says that players may not fight and that punching is synonymous with fighting. The penalty, according to Section 17.b., is disqualification.

Furthermore, says Section 17.c., “When a fight occurs on the ice, all non-participating players, excluding goalkeepers, must proceed immediately and directly to their respective players’ bench at the signal of the referee.”

Now, I didn’t attend that game. I did see this video highlights montage posted by uppermichiganssource.com:

[youtube_sc url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbAbDwN9emc width=500]

In that clip, I see Cherniwchan, flying in with the puck on the left wing and ready to take a shot, upended by Michigan’s Lee Moffie. That action drives both Cherniwchan and Moffie into the Michigan net and Hunwick — and Cherniwchan never would have run into Hunwick were it not for Moffie’s uncalled cross-check.

Hunwick, on his back and clearly shaken up, kicks Cherniwchan in retaliation as he skates by after the collision. Simultaneously, a skirmish breaks out along the far side of the left circle, slightly out of camera range.

And then there are many blows thrown. Many. Punches captured for posterity include those thrown by NMU’s C.J. Ludwig and Jake Baker and Michigan’s David Wohlberg. Seckel — who earned a double minor — most definitely swings.

No one proceeded immediately and directly to their respective benches.

From the video, it appears that the referees were drawn to the boards for the altercation there before everyone rushes to the midpoint between both incidents to throw their punches and — you know — fight.

So why were Cherniwchan and Moffie the only ones disqualified?

This isn’t the first recording that’s surfaced that shows out-and-out brawling that you wouldn’t believe if you only read the box score. I do not understand why referees are reluctant to toss out everyone who deserves to be tossed. If the NCAA genuinely is concerned with concussions and other serious injuries that hockey players can sustain, sending everyone off who’s fighting would be a good way to show it.

From the recording, I can’t see Hunwick throw a punch but he is assessed a major penalty for contact to the head. Unless it was another non-punch form of contact, I can’t imagine why he wasn’t ejected for fighting as well. I am glad, however, that he was ejected, given his recorded actions alone.

That doesn’t mean that I’m slamming Hunwick, a good (and perhaps great) goaltender and a very likeable, stand-up guy. Nearly immediately after that game ended, Hunwick did something completely typical for him: He made a public apology via Twitter. Here are the two consecutive posts, word for word:

“I want to apologize to the michigan fans in attendance tonight. I play on a edge and my emotions got the best of me. It is unacceptable as a Student athlete who represents the university of michigan and college hockey as a whole.”

Now if only everything were as transparent, I might understand why a punch is not a punch and a fight is not a fight.

Players of the week

Now for this week’s kudos, once again with a couple of not-so-usual suspects.

Rookie of the week: WMU’s Garrett Haar, whose first collegiate goal opened the scoring for the Broncos in their 2-2 tie with Alaska Saturday. He also assisted on WMU’s second goal in that game.

Offensive player of the week: NMU’s Justin Florek, who had a goal and four assists in the Wildcats’ win and tie versus Michigan.

Defenseman of the week: FSU’s Chad Billins, who had three assists and helped the Bulldogs to a perfect penalty kill in a two-game sweep of Miami.

Goaltender of the week: FSU’s C.J. Motte, who blanked Miami 2-0 Saturday. It was the freshman’s second straight shutout.

My ballot

Yes, I know that polls are meaningless. I got the memo. Here’s my ballot anyway.

1. Boston College
2. Denver
3. Colorado College
4. Ferris State
5. Michigan
6. Minnesota
7. Western Michigan
8. Boston University
9. Quinnipiac
10. Union
11. Alaska
12. Merrimack
13. Miami
14. North Dakota
15. Colgate
16. Northern Michigan
17. Lake Superior
18. Michigan Tech
19. Alaska-Anchorage
20. Holy Cross

This week’s funny

Last week in a Thursday blog entry, I shared what a reader had observed in the stands at a Quinnipiac-Ohio State game, when adolescent girls got their first look at Ryan Dzingel’s golden locks.

Since then, another reader emailed to tell me about a different experience he had observing adolescent girls watching a hockey game out east — coincidentally, another game involving Quinnipiac.

“There were several teenage girls who, after two periods of play, had to move because they couldn’t stand the smell of sweaty hockey players coming from the players’ bench areas,” wrote the reader.

Those girls had sense.

This story reminded me of the first game I ever covered in 1995, an exhibition in the old OSU Ice Rink. The press box was just one level above the benches, with no glass (or heat, for that matter). About 10 minutes into the game, I turned to someone else in the box and asked, “What is that smell?” He pointed down to the bench just a few feet below and cringed.

Apparently, those girls watching out east had more sense than I did. I didn’t change my seat.

And finally …

Which one poll voter keeps voting Yale No. 1?

Back injury forces Michigan State’s Golembiewski to hang up the skates

Michigan State junior forward Zach Golembiewski has decided to end his college hockey career on the advice of medical professionals, the school announced Tuesday.

Golembiewski’s doctors have advised him to stop playing due to a back issue.

“We are obviously disappointed in learning the news that Zach’s injury will prevent him from continuing his playing career at Michigan State, yet grateful that it has been identified so that he will not be exposed to any long-term health risks,” MSU head coach Tom Anastos said in a statement. “We are fully supportive of Zach’s decision to end his competitive hockey career. Zach will continue to be a member of our team in some capacity, which will be determined over the next several days.”

“This was a tough decision,” added Golembiewski. “It was a struggle at first, because you put 12, 13 years into your passion, and all of a sudden, someone’s advising you that it’s best that you give up what you love. Playing at Michigan State was first a goal, then it became a dream come true. I am so blessed to have been able to wear the green and white jersey and be a part of this program.”

Golembiewski, a winger who appeared in 56 career games over two seasons, injured his back over the summer and it was not responding to treatment. A diagnosis revealed that the injury was not healing due to an underlying condition and subsequent advice from specialists led to his decision.

Golembiewski is expected to lead a fully functional life in which he can still participate in athletic endeavors, including pick up/shinny hockey, as well as pursue his passion for golf, according to an MSU news release.

Flaman to be inducted into Massachusetts Hockey Hall of Fame

Six men and three women will be inducted into the Massachusetts Hockey Hall of Fame on Nov. 9 at Lombardo’s in Randolph.

The class of 2011 includes legendary Northeastern coach Fernie Flaman.

Former Boston Bruins Mike O’Connell and Bobby Miller will also be enshrined, along with hockey writer Jack Falla and builders Dan Lynch, Phil Re, Gloria Heerman, Barbara Wright and Jeanette Duval.

Nominees of the Hall of Fame are chosen on the basis of accomplishments in the game of hockey, sportsmanship, character and contributions to his or her teams or organizations in college, amateur or professional hockey, or on international teams representing the United States.

Tickets are $60 and can be purchased by contacting Jim Prior via email ([email protected]) or by calling (781) 938-4400.

TMQ: Setback off ice, statement on it in college hockey

Todd: There’s plenty to talk about this week, but events developing Monday have captured our attention. Alabama-Huntsville has announced it will drop its varsity program in favor of a club team to save money. Program boosters have been raising funds to keep the program going, but interim president Malcolm Portera pulled the plug. The writing may have been on the wall for UAH since it lost conference affiliation with the end of the CHA in 2010, but the finality of it has me thinking this is a setback for college hockey as a whole. Your thoughts?

Jim: Well, to say this is a disappointing moment for college hockey is an understatement. Less than a year after the sport gets word of future expansion with Penn State, it is forced to contract with the loss of the Chargers. I know that many people will look to point blame in this situation. Truth be told, the only blame lies in geography. Huntsville, Ala., is a difficult place to get to for a reasonable cost from the north, something that made the Chargers an unattractive fit for any college hockey conference. While I give a number of teams credit for making sure they fit the Chargers on their schedule last season and this, that simply wasn’t enough. It’s proof that independent teams simply cannot survive in this sport.

Todd: To me, it’s a shame that Huntsville being geographically isolated played into the situation. Geography seems to be playing less and less of a role in college hockey conferences (I’m thinking specifically of Notre Dame joining Hockey East and the NCHC stretching from Ohio to Colorado), and schools in Alaska have been able to maintain programs in Midwest-based leagues.

But I do think this needs to be a cautionary tale for a lot of smaller schools that have supportive administrations. All it takes is a change at the top, like Alabama-Huntsville had, for drastic changes to get put on the table.

Jim: That’s so true and the same came be said about the opposite. I look at a program like Merrimack, where a president and athletic director got behind their hockey program, significantly increased funding and in turn built a competitive hockey program. Speaking of the Warriors, they are one of a handful of unbeaten teams at this point (not counting Ivies, which get under way this week). Of all the unbeaten teams, which do you think is the best right now? And are any of them, in your mind, worthy of a No. 1 ranking?

Todd: I think Ferris State made the biggest statement of the weekend among those teams, beating Miami twice to move to 6-0. In six games this season, the Bulldogs have allowed a total of five goals, with three shutouts. Ferris State isn’t a stranger to a high ranking, and this start has it up to sixth in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll. I had the Bulldogs a couple of notches higher, but I can also see how people would see them as a No. 1 team. They’ve met every challenge they’ve faced this season, and impressively.

But it speaks a little to the value of a vote-based poll as opposed to computer rankings like the Ratings Percentage Index and PairWise Rankings. All have their place — some more than others toward the end of the season — but I still vote not only on a team’s record to date but what I see as its potential to be there at the end. Without that element, the poll becomes just a recitation of the computer rankings.

Jim: It’s interesting to discuss this, particularly given Dave Starman’s column last weekend. I know in the early polls I take into account potential of a team but as the season moves on I also pay particular attention to recent results. If a team loses six straight in the middle of the season, I often feel that it’s difficult to consider it a top-20 club. I think a week where most of the top teams sweep is dangerous to a top team that can’t keep pace, particularly if that team is swept. I guess there are a number of different ways of looking at polls. I’m a major proponent of them. To me, they provide a current barometer of which teams are playing well and which are not.

Todd: And let’s be realistic here. We have 50 voters in our poll, most of them coaches. I think when you throw all of those votes in and mix them up, you’re going to come out with a fairly honest assessment of where teams are. Debatable, of course, as most things are, but that’s the fun, right?

Anyway, switching gears slightly, last week we again saw the poll’s No. 1 team tumble when Michigan was knocked off by Northern Michigan on Friday before the teams tied on Saturday. The first road trip of the season didn’t seem to go smoothly for the Wolverines, and now they come back home to play that 6-0 Ferris State team that we referenced before. Is this a bigger measuring stick series for Michigan or Ferris State?

Jim: Without sounding too much like Yogi Berra, I think the outcome will define what is defined. What I mean is that if Michigan gets a sweep, we’ll all know that it probably was deserving of a No. 1 ranking. That would also possibly show that maybe Ferris isn’t ready for prime time. If it’s the opposite, you have to think that Ferris deserves a very close look at as the best team in the country and maybe Michigan was ranked No. 1 based on success in an easy early schedule. Then again, if it’s a split, we may learn very little. No doubt, though, that’s the premiere series of the weekend. What else out West should we be watching?

Todd: The CCHA is packed with intriguing series this weekend. No. 16 Miami tries to shake off the sweep at Ferris State when it hosts No. 18 Lake Superior State on Thursday and Friday. No. 14 Northern Michigan is at No. 7 Western Michigan in a battle of teams that climbed the rankings with their play last weekend. And Bowling Green, which is starting to get some attention from voters after a 4-1-1 start, hosts No. 5 Notre Dame. What do you see out East?

Jim: Well, interestingly, the two Hockey East slayers from Atlantic Hockey, Holy Cross and Connecticut, square off this Thursday, which should be interesting to see how those recent updates translate to league play (granted, UConn got smoked by Merrimack a few nights after beating Massachusetts-Lowell). I also think that Providence, which has had a nice opening to its season, faces a pretty big test with two games at Maine. Then, of course, there is the Ivy Shootout at Dartmouth where Brown, Dartmouth, Princeton and Yale will all face off. Should be an interesting week and give us plenty to talk about next week. Until then …

Program’s demise ‘frustrating,’ Alabama-Huntsville alum Bowen says

As a former player and coach at Alabama-Huntsville, Nathan Bowen knows firsthand what the Chargers’ Division I hockey program has meant to not only the university, but to the Huntsville community.

With Monday’s announcement that UAH will be downgraded to club status starting next season, Bowen didn’t mince words when expressing his disappointment.

“It’s frustrating because we can’t get any information from the Huntsville administration,” said Bowen, a member of a local group of UAH alumni and friends that has been raising money to keep the UAH program alive. “The number $1.5 million keeps getting thrown out there, yet no one seems to know what that number entails.

“What’s frustrating us the most is that we haven’t even been given the opportunity to help and work through this. Give us three years and if it doesn’t work, we’re big boys, then shut this thing down and put it to club. If the right people ran this program the way it should be run, Huntsville could be a real gem and be a real revenue source, but it’s not being run properly and has never been given proper support from the school’s administration. Another fact, too, is that season tickets weren’t on sale until Sept. 15 and the season started Oct. 1. You do the math.”

When Bowen played for UAH from 1996 to 2000, the Chargers won the Division II national championship his freshman year and then the program made the jump to Division I.

“When I played here, the program was very healthy and a lot of really good things were happening,” Bowen said. “Even recently, with guys like Scotty Munroe, Jared Ross and Cam Talbot playing here and then playing in the NHL, there was never any indication the program going club was on the horizon. Coaching-wise, Doug Ross busted his [behind] and so did Danton Cole and now Chris Luongo.

“There is no business plan, no marketing plan and no corporate sponsorship plan here. There are so many business-savvy alumni who have pledged to help and what we pledged to do was to have the school provide the scholarships and we would fund the rest and take on the financial burden. We have to try, and even with the new president coming in Nov. 1, we’re hoping he will look at the situation and maybe this decision can be reversed.

“We owe it to the 23 kids on the roster to try and find a solution.”

Interim president Malcolm Portera announced the decision to remove varsity status on Monday. Portera, who is also the chancellor of the University of Alabama system, is scheduled to make way for incoming UAH president Robert Altenkirch on Oct. 31.

UAH athletic department officials did not respond to an interview request, but Luongo issued a statement to USCHO via email.

“It is a sad day for Alabama-Huntsville, the city of Huntsville and hockey in the south,” he wrote. “There is a tremendous hockey culture in the Huntsville area that was built on the presence and hard work of UAH hockey and it will suffer greatly from this decision. I want to thank UAH hockey supporters for the tremendous support they have shown UAH hockey over the years. Our student-athletes, alumni and our supporters are devastated by this move.”

Bowen expressed dismay that the decision to kill the varsity program was made by Portera.

“The other piece to this is that the people examining the situation spent more time outside of Huntsville than anywhere,” said Bowen. “They didn’t get a feel for the community. We have the support of the mayor and the city and county passed resolutions to support the hockey program. Those that said they would step up to help have all put their money where their mouth is.

“It seems like we have phenomenal support from everyone but administration.”

Places, polls and prodigies

Quinnipiac in first

First place in Atlantic Hockey, that is. Eight games into their regular season, the Bobcats are 6-2-0… and 5-1-0 against AHA opponents following this weekend’s split at Robert Morris. Will the 10 points be enough to hold off the rest of the pack until QU’s next Atlantic game on December 9 (in Hamden vs. Sacred Heart)? We shall see!

In the meantime, while the Bobcats hope to become the first team to take first place in two different conferences simultaneously, they are demonstrating along the way some decent consistency compared to previous seasons. Mock QU’s non-conference gauntlet all you like (I’m way ahead of you!), but at least the ‘Cats are winning these games.

Junior Jeremy Langlois has eight goals in eight games, which is awfully tough to do. Add in his four multi-point games (including a three-goal, four-point outing on the 15th against Canisius) and the fact that he’s registered a point in each of Quinnipiac’s games this year, and you have the makings of a Hobey dark-horse. Senior goalie Dan Clarke may be making his case as the team’s No. 1 with a .929 save percentage and 1.39 goals against average.

I won’t hold skepticism against you, but we’ll see real soon exactly how sharp QU’s claws really are: the Q-Cats’ next three games are at Princeton, Dartmouth and Harvard, before they return home on November 11-12 to host the North Country.

ECAC Hockey places five in latest poll

This honestly surprised me a little bit for a few reasons. First the facts: Yale (10), Union (11), Colgate (16), Cornell (19) and Quinnipiac (20) earned top-20 designations in this week’s USCHO.com poll. Dartmouth and Clarkson received votes as well, bringing seven of the 12 teams into something akin to national respectability.

Yale, Cornell, and Dartmouth have yet to drop the puck with a D-I opponent, and that makes for annual hair-pulling on the part of the pollsters. Quinnipiac climbed into the 20th spot this week after not being ranked last week, despite only splitting at RMU last weekend. Colgate has a good record, but really made its mark on the voters by splitting with Miami in Hamilton… unfortunately, Miami (2-4-0) isn’t looking half as good as many imagined it would be. Union has finally built a bit of a cachet thanks to its strong recent history, otherwise I don’t think a 2-0-3 record against Army (win), Western Michigan (two ties), Niagara (tie) and RIT (win) would get them very high.

I don’t mean to be a Debbie Downer here, as I’m as fervid a proponent of the league as I can professionally be. I guess I’m just surprised that everyone else out there is as supportive of ECAC Hockey as I am.

Young blood

We, like other leagues, have a handful of exciting freshmen who are already earning a little extra attention from opposing teams.

Quinnipiac’s Matt Peca has taken the early lead in overall scoring among ECAC players, with three goals and five helpers in his first eight games. The 5’9″ winger from Petawawa, Ontario with no – I repeat, no – relation to former NHLer Michael Peca has registered a point in every game but his first and has lit the lamp in three straight. He is playing on the Q’s top line, with left wing Scott Zurevinski and aforementioned center Langlois.

Hot on his scoring heels is Clarkson’s Sam Labrecque, who was certainly singled out in the preseason by new head coach Casey Jones as one of his frosh worth watching. It’s impressive enough that he has a goal and four assists in his first six collegiate games, until you are reminded that he’s a defenseman, which makes the feat doubly exceptional. If he can stay focused and healthy, he’ll make it a lot easier for ‘Tech fans to get over losing Bryan Rufenach and Mark Borowiecki.

Also worth noting: Three other nameplates to watch for include Colgate’s Joe Wilson and John Lidgett, with Union’s Max Novak: each has summed four points in five games.

Boston College reclaims top spot in men’s poll

After a week out of the top spot, Boston College has reclaimed
the No. 1 ranking in the weekly USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll.

The Eagles were one of six teams to garner first-place votes from
the 50 voters, with 32 ballots listing BC at the top. No. 2
Denver had 11 first-place votes and No. 3 Colorado College had
four, while No. 5 Notre Dame, No. 6 Ferris State and No. 10 Yale
earned the others.

Last week’s top-ranked team, Michigan, fall to No. 4 this week.

Western Michigan jumps four spots to No. 7, Minnesota stays at
No. 8 and Merrimack is up four places to No. 9.

Union rises one notch to No. 11, North Dakota drops seven to No.
12, Boston University is down six to No. 13, Northern Michigan
goes up three to No. 14 and Minnesota-Duluth remains No. 15, as
does Colgate at No. 16, tied with Miami.

Lake Superior State comes in at No. 18, Cornell at No. 19 and
previously unranked Quinnipiac enters the fold this week at No.
20.

Seventeen other schools also received votes.

Weekend wrap: Oct. 21-23

Dutchwomen win
Congratulations to the Union Dutchwomen on earning their first win of the season against a full-time Division I opponent by besting Syracuse on the road, 4-3 in overtime. The extra session was necessary when the Orange got another of those pesky extra-attacker goals with five seconds to go in regulation. Turnabout is fair play, as the winning goal came with just 10 ticks left in OT. Early results suggest that Union may be improved in 2011-12, as they took No. 8 Northeastern down to the wire a week ago.

Slow-starting Ivy?
Conventional wisdom would say that teams from the Ivy League would be at a disadvantage in their opening games when facing teams that already have a number of games experience. The shot chart states that was the case in Princeton, N.J., where the Tigers were badly outshot by  Northeastern, 35 to 12. The scoreboard tells a different tale; Princeton won, 5-3. The Tigers may have been slow to pull the trigger, but their aim was pretty good.

In their second game of the weekend, the Tigers warmed up to the task, outshooting Niagara 28-19. Ironically, they also lost; the Purple Eagles claimed a 3-1 victory.

Not in our house
Through the season’s initial weeks, Minnesota has featured the country’s stingiest defense, yielding six goals through eight games for an average of .75 goals per game. On home ice, their performance has been downright miserly, allowing a single power-play goal to Union and nothing else in six contests. They haven’t faced offensive juggernauts, but Minnesota State hadn’t been held to less than three goals in any game before competing in Minneapolis, and they were unable to score in 120 minutes.

Obviously, having a two-time All-American in goal is a good start in limiting goals against, but Noora Räty’s backup, freshman Shyler Sletta, hasn’t allowed a goal in four periods of work. The early success may be attributable to additional factors, such as the Gophers’ blue line. Their regular rotation of six includes two seniors and two juniors, and five of the six stand 5 feet 9 inches or taller.

“They’re good,” MSU coach Eric Means said. “When you’ve got [Anne] Schleper and [Kelly] Seeler and [Megan] Bozek, I think the biggest thing is just the way they snap the puck around. Those passes are coming hard, and they always seem to make that first pass. They control the pace of the game a lot back there.”

Parity?
Boston College 5, Quinnipiac 0; Bemidji State 8, St. Cloud State 1; North Dakota over Ohio State 11-1 and 7-1. Where is the supposed parity? Apparently alive and well in the North Country, where Boston University and Clarkson, New Hampsire and St. Lawrence each scored twice on Friday, and BU and the Golden Knights skated to one-goal triumphs on Saturday.

New week, same result: Wisconsin No. 1 in women’s poll

With all 15 first-place votes once again, Wisconsin remains the No.
1-ranked team in this week’s USCHO.com Division I Women’s Poll.

Minnesota and Cornell stay No. 2 and No. 3, respectively, while Boston
College leapfrogs Boston University by two points into the No. 4 rank with
BU falling to No. 5.

North Dakota rises one spot to No. 6 and Minnesota-Duluth drops to No. 7.

Mercyhurst is up one to No. 8, Northeastern falls to No. 9 after being
eighth last week and Dartmouth stays the 10th-ranked team in the poll.

Citing finances, Alabama-Huntsville will drop hockey to club status

Alabama-Huntsville’s time as a Division I program is coming to an end, and a school administrator is citing finances as a reason.

The 2011-12 season will be the Chargers’ final one as a varsity program, the school announced Monday. It will revert to a club program next season.

The news was initially reported by The Huntsville Times, which said Chargers coach Chris Luongo informed the team of the development Sunday night.

Interim school president Malcolm Portera met with the players Monday morning.

“In this economic environment universities must examine the value of every dollar we spend, and we must view every option to use those funds for the betterment of the entire campus,” Portera said in a statement issued to the school community. “The cost savings from this move will allow the university to enhance the operating budgets of the other 15 sports on campus, provide more student aid to a greater number of student-athletes, and, at the same time, enable us to increase our investment in high-demand academic programs to better position UAHuntsville for future growth.”

Luongo told the paper he hoped to meet with his players before they got the news from Portera.

“I don’t think it’s possible to be blindsided by a meeting [Monday] morning, but I’d rather be the one doing the blindsiding than someone who’s not there on their behalf,” Luongo told the paper.

Alabama-Huntsville is in its second season as an independent after the dissolution of the CHA following the 2009-10 season, one in which it made the NCAA tournament as the league’s final tournament champion.

The Chargers started play in 1979 as a club team and made the move to NCAA Division II in 1986, winning national championships at that level in 1996 and 1998.

The NCAA eliminated the Division II championship in 1998, making Alabama-Huntsville play a Division I schedule.

The Chargers joined the CHA in 1999 and won two regular season titles and made Division I NCAA tournament appearances in 2007 and 2010 as the league’s tournament champion.

When it became apparent last summer that the program’s future was in jeopardy, a group formed a grassroots effort to raise money needed to fund the program in the face of budget shortages.

“The community supported the Chargers for years and made their desire for a Division I program abundantly clear. We feel for those fans and especially the players, coaches and staff in the Charger program,” College Hockey Inc. executive director Paul Kelly said in a statement. “To see the support of that fanbase and the efforts of the program and its passionate alumni dismissed seems shortsighted and unfair.”

Alabama-Huntsville is 0-7-1 this season after going 4-26-2 in the 2010-11 season. It is averaging 1,546 fans per game in six home games so far this season, ranking 35th of 46 schools that have played a home game. The average is 268 better than last season’s 1,278, which ranked 49th.

Following is Portera’s statement, addressed to the Alabama-Huntsville community:

I want to share with you a decision that has been made following months of careful study. As a result of a financial analysis of our athletic program, and numerous conversations I have had with athletic directors, university presidents and commissioners of Division I ice hockey programs, it has become obvious that, for the best interest of this university, our athletic department and the ice hockey program, we move the team from the Division I level back to its original classification as a club sport at the end of the 2011-2012 season.

In this economic environment universities must examine the value of every dollar we spend, and we must view every option to use those funds for the betterment of the entire campus. The cost savings from this move will allow the university to enhance the operating budgets of the other 15 sports on campus, provide more student aid to a greater number of student-athletes, and, at the same time, enable us to increase our investment in high-demand academic programs to better position UAHuntsville for future growth.

I met with the players and coaches this morning to pledge the university’s full assistance to the student-athletes participating in our ice hockey program. We will continue to honor the scholarship commitment made to these students, and if a student-athlete chooses to transfer to another program, we will provide help in making that relocation as seamless as possible. Coaches will remain on our staff through May 31, 2012, and the university will assist them in their endeavors to seek future employment.

Charger ice hockey will very much remain a part of the culture of this university and the community. However, the opportunity to save the hockey program is much improved by reverting to a club team status. We appreciate the understanding of the campus, the university’s athletic supporters and the community, and we look forward to a robust hockey presence in the years to come.

Questions answered in Madison?

Here’s a small sampling of what caught our eyes over the weekend.

Wisconsin’s offseason goaltending questions may very well have been answered…

When the final horn sounded on Wisconsin’s 2010-11 season last March in Colorado Springs, senior goaltenders Scott Gudmandson and Brett Bennett skated off the ice for the final time as Badgers, taking their combined experience of 129 games and 7,404 minutes played with them.

Although junior Mitch Thompson returned, his game experience at the college level matched that of incoming freshmen goalies Joel Rumpel and Landon Peterson: zero minutes. Not surprisingly, one of the biggest question marks facing Wisconsin entering the 2011-12 season centered on goaltending.

But Rumpel and Peterson have split the duties thus far through six games and the rookie duo has performed remarkably well. They are a combined 3-3-0 while sporting a 2.77 goals against average and a .909 saves percentage through 368:09 minutes of play.

After losing twice in overtime to begin his career, Peterson made 24 saves in Wisconsin’s 5-3 win over No. 5 North Dakota on Friday. Rumpel took his normal turn on Saturday against the Sioux and turned aside 38 North Dakota shots in a 5-4 sweep-clinching victory.

“It starts and ends with [Rumpel],” Badgers coach Mike Eaves told USCHO’s Todd Milewski after Saturday’s win. “Without his effort in the net, we don’t have a chance. I thought he competed really hard for loose pucks. He fought to see the puck through lots of screens. His rebound control was pretty good. And when he had a chance to handle the puck he did a nice job as well. Pretty complete game for a freshman.”

The WCHA individual scoring race is wide open…

…and whoever wins it, could finish at the top of the national race as well. Minnesota’s Erik Haula is off to a ridiculous start with five goals and nine assists through six games to lead the nation in scoring. He has plenty of help from his linemate, Jake Hansen, who has three goals and eight assists.

High-scoring seems to be the theme this season for the WCHA. The league’s teams have scored 228 goals so far for an average of 3.46 goals per game. That’s the most among the five Division I conferences.

WCHA 228 goals-66 games (3.46)

ECAC 111-33 (3.36)

Hockey East 134-41 (3.27)

CCHA 207-65 (3.18)

Atlantic Hockey 96-51 (1.88)

Danny Kristo of North Dakota also has 11 points (four goals, seven assists) in six games. Jason Zucker (3-5—8) and Drew Shore (3-4—7)  are in the national top 10 for points per game in four games for Denver. Don’t forget about Jaden Schwartz. He had four points in Colorado College’s only series to this point.

UMD needed its PK to bounce back

They didn’t face the best power play in the country — that would be Minnesota — but Minnesota-Duluth’s penalty kill needed to have a good weekend after its performance last week against the Gophers. The Bulldogs managed to kill off just three out of nine penalties against Minnesota and got swept. The Gophers scored 10 goals on the weekend and six were on the PP.

The UMD kill has gotten a lot of work so far this season, leading the WCHA in penalty minutes with 122, leading to 30 power plays for the opposition. The Bulldogs allowed 12 PP chances to Providence this weekend and they killed 11 of them and that’s huge in close games like Saturday’s tie.  Of course, Kenny Reiter had to make 25 penalty-kill saves. The Friars entered the weekend with 18-percent success rate on the PP.

The next challenge for the Bulldogs kill is the nation’s fourth-best power play: Bemidji State, which is 7 for 25 on the power play (28 percent).

Weekend work-up: Oct. 24, 2011

Raise your hand if you thought you’d see Ferris State, Lake Superior, and Ohio State Nos. 1, 2, and 3 — in that order — at any point in the season.
Put it down. Liar.
No. 1? Really?
Apparently it’s a curse. In the preseason USCHO.com Division 1 Men’s Poll, Notre Dame was the top pick. First week of play, the Irish split with Minnesota-Duluth. In the second poll of the season, Boston College was No. 1 … and split the next weekend, losing to Denver and beating New Hampshire.
With Michigan the top team in the country going into last weekend’s play, it happened again. This time, the previously undefeated Wolverines traveled to the U.P. and came home with two points to show for it with a 5-3 loss and 3-3 tie.
In case you haven’t heard, there was a bit of trouble at 10:45 in the second period of Friday’s game, resulting in the ejection of UM starting goaltender Shawn Hunwick, who earned a game misconduct. The game was scoreless until that point, so backup Adam Janecyk gets the decision.
Five different Wildcats scored in the win, but Tyler Gron had three goals on the weekend and Mitch Jones had two. Reid Ellingson had the Friday win and Jared Coreau the tie.
No. 1 — really!
Yes, it’s the No. 1 Lakers — at least in the CCHA standings, with a 3-1-0 record in conference play. LSSU split against BGSU at home, but before going into the weekend, Jim Roque told me that he was nervous that the Falcons and goaltender Andrew Hammond in particular had LSSU’s number. Hammond had them Friday night, certainly, as he earned a 1-0 shutout, but the Lakers won 4-1 the following night, in spite of Hammond’s 33-save performance.
In second place sits Ferris State, who swept Miami in Big Rapids this weekend, shutting them down completely Saturday night. The Bulldogs are now undefeated in six games — and they’ve outscored opponents 21-5 this season. In three games, freshman goaltender C.J. Motte has allowed just one goal; he had 27 saves in his second shutout of the season in Saturday’s 2-0 win. Senior Taylor Nelson (1.34 GAA) is also undefeated.
Junior forward Travis Ouellette — who is among the nation’s early leaders in goals per game — scored the game winner in the second period Saturday. “Miami is always one of the best teams in the nation,” Ouellete told USCHO arena reporter John Denny after the game. “Anytime you can take one from them is huge, but taking two from them let us know that maybe we’ve got something here.”
I don’t think there’s any maybe about it. I think Ferris State has got something this season.
Second guessing?
Everyone’s played at least one CCHA series, but it’s still too early in the season to count out the four teams at the bottom of this week’s standings: Notre Dame, Michigan, Alaska and Miami. These teams were picked in preseason by coaches and media to be four of the five top teams in the league. In the early going, though, each is finding its defenses exposed. At least one coach of these teams, Notre Dame’s Jeff Jackson, expressed concern about this in preseason, saying that he thought that the perception of ND as a defensive team was incorrect.
Turns out he’s right. Of these four teams, Notre Dame and Miami have the least effective defenses at this point in the season, allowing at three goals or more on average per game. The Irish so far, though, are outscoring opponents overall. The RedHawks have been outscored 14-19 this season.
The Wolverines are allowing just over two goals per game but have allowed 11 in their last three — and that includes the three they allowed when they scored 10 against St. Lawrence. The Nanooks (2.33 goals per game) have yet to find their defensive consistency.
Paula’s picks
I said I’d call the Bowling Green-Lake State split wrong. I wish that counted for anything beyond knowing how often I’m wrong — especially about splits.
Last Weekend, including Thursday: 4-5-2
Season to date: 28-18-5
Watch for the column Wednesday, picks on Thursday for the series that begin that night and picks Friday for the rest of the weekend.
Email ([email protected]), tweet (@paulacweston) or comment below — but keep a civil tongue in your head. I know your mother raised you better than that.

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