{"id":1937,"date":"2015-11-22T18:36:28","date_gmt":"2015-11-23T00:36:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/atlantic-hockey-blog\/?p=1937"},"modified":"2015-11-22T18:36:28","modified_gmt":"2015-11-23T00:36:28","slug":"three-things-compelling-action-grips-ahc-landscape","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2015\/11\/22\/three-things-compelling-action-grips-ahc-landscape\/","title":{"rendered":"Three things: Compelling action grips AHC landscape"},"content":{"rendered":"
Heading into Friday night’s games, I had a feeling the potential best weekend series would come from the series between Niagara and American International. Any time there are two teams needing to avoid falling behind their league brethren at a critical early juncture, they begin to produce high energy action as both identify opportunities to jump start their respective motors.<\/p>\n
That’s exactly what happened inside Dwyer Arena. On Friday, a see-saw, overtime thriller turned in favor of Niagara.<\/p>\n
In the first period, the Yellow Jackets struck first blood behind Jackson Dudley’s third goal of the season, before the Purple Eagles tied the game 90 seconds later on the first of the year by Stephen Pietrobon.<\/p>\n
In the second period, Niagara broke the 1-1 stalemate with two goals, including one on the power play, to take a 3-1 lead with eight minutes left. But after Sam Rennaker’s goal gave the Purple Eagles their two-goal lead, Dudley again scored, pulling AIC within one. In the third, Austin Orszulak scored to tie things up.<\/p>\n
Niagara scored at the 6:26 mark to retake a 4-3 lead, only to see AIC come back once again with just over nine minutes remaining in the game. In overtime, Matt Chiarantano notched his first of the season with 18 seconds left, lifting the hosts to their first game of the season with a 5-4 victory.<\/p>\n
Then came Saturday’s encore.<\/p>\n
The teams went into the first intermission scoreless despite Niagara outshooting AIC, 16-1. That helped boost the Yellow Jackets to two power play goals, then a third on even strength circumstances. Down 3-0, it was Niagara’s turn to play comeback, scoring one before the end of the period and adding a second late in the third.<\/p>\n
It would fall short, however, as AIC’s Chris Porter added an empty net goal, resulting in a 4-2 result and a weekend split.<\/p>\n
In total, Niagara and AIC combined for 15 goals, 143 shots on goal, 34 penalty minutes, and seven power plays, delivering on all promises from Friday of exciting hockey.<\/p>\n
Getting (Army) stronger<\/strong><\/p>\n Heading into the weekend, both Chris and I reasoned that Army West Point would, at some point, take at least one point from Robert Morris. After seeing the Black Knights shut out Connecticut<\/a> on the road, we both figured that the Colonials were further along but were also traveling on the road to face a Black Knight team now growing the seeds of progress.<\/p>\n