{"id":12632,"date":"2011-03-04T23:10:22","date_gmt":"2011-03-05T05:10:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/recaps\/?p=12632"},"modified":"2011-03-05T17:30:33","modified_gmt":"2011-03-05T23:30:33","slug":"bc-tops-new-hampshire","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/recaps\/2011\/03\/04\/bc-tops-new-hampshire\/","title":{"rendered":"BC tops New Hampshire"},"content":{"rendered":"
Advantage Boston College.<\/p>\n
That’s the scenario entering the final night of the Hockey East regular season and the race for the league title thanks to a 4-0 Eagles win on Friday over New Hampshire.<\/p>\n
The win gives BC (25-7-1 overall, 19-6-1 in Hockey East) a one-point edge over the Wildcats for first place in the Hockey East standings, setting up a winner-take-all matchup on Saturday in the final game of the regular season. The Eagles would also claim their first regular-season title in 2004-05 with a tie on Saturday night.<\/p>\n
Friday’s game was all Boston College from the outset. New Hampshire (19-8-6, 17-5-4) mustered just 12 shots on the night as goaltender John Muse earned his third shutout of the season. Boston College’s defense bottled up the Wildcats and slowed their transition, particularly in the neutral zone and never allowed UNH to establish a forecheck.<\/p>\n
At the same time, the Eagles special teams were near perfect, going 1-for-3 on the power play, killing all three UNH man advantage opportunities and adding two shorthanded goals for good measure.<\/p>\n
“I thought our team played very well,” said BC head coach Jerry York. “We played solid defensively and we kept our composure and did not take a lot of penalties.<\/p>\n
“Our objective was to put ourselves in a position to play for a championship and to do that we had to have some points from tonight’s game to send us to tomorrow’s game with the trophy on the line.”<\/p>\n
The only negative in the game for Boston College came in the form of an injury as star forward Chris Kreider broke his jaw midway through the second period. With BC killing a penalty, Kreider took a clearing attempt just below the facemask and immediately fell to the ice writhing in pain. He was taken to Tufts Medical Center in Boston and it was unclear the severity of the injury or whether any surgery would be needed.<\/p>\n
“We’ll have to wait for the doctors,” said York when asked the initial prognosis on how long Kreider will be out of action. “All we know now is the jaw was broken.”<\/p>\n