{"id":23079,"date":"2000-10-26T17:33:13","date_gmt":"2000-10-26T22:33:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2000\/10\/26\/maac-column-oct-26-2000\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:53:59","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:53:59","slug":"maac-column-oct-26-2000","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2000\/10\/26\/maac-column-oct-26-2000\/","title":{"rendered":"MAAC Column: Oct. 26, 2000"},"content":{"rendered":"
What a difference a week makes. One week after the MAAC nearly got run off the ice in non-league games, two teams came within a lucky bounce of the puck of pulling off the ultimate upsets.<\/p>\n
Connecticut<\/a>, which one week earlier looked at best like a high-school varsity team while dropping a 6-1 decision to UMass-Lowell<\/a>, proved not only did they belong on the ice with “Big Four” clubs, but could also give them a run for their money.<\/p>\n After dropping a 6-2 decision to Merrimack<\/a> on Friday night, the Huskies came out of the chute with guns blazing on Saturday, and found themselves within one goal late in the third period, down 3-2. When Merrimack was caught on a careless line change, having eight skaters on the ice instead of five with just over two minutes to play, UConn had further signs of life.<\/p>\n In the end, though, conditioning won out, as Merrimack’s fresh legs helped kill the penalty and eventually battle the UConn defense to a loose puck and score an empty-net goal. But praise was high around the Volpe Complex.<\/p>\n “[UConn] played harder than us tonight and they hit harder than us,” said Merrimack coach Chris Serino. “They wanted the game more than we did and they had better chances. We had guys that could score the goals. That was the difference.”<\/p>\n Husky coach Bruce Marshall is hoping that not only his players, but his coaching staff can take something out of the first three games, all losses to Hockey East teams, and apply them as they begin league play.<\/p>\n “It’s a big thing in sports — to learn something every day,” Marshall said. “It’s our job as coaches to carry Saturday night’s [performance] into Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and into next weekend’s games.”<\/p>\n UConn wasn’t the only team to put a scare into a “Big Four” opponent. Mercyhurst<\/a>, now in its second year of MAAC play, found itself deadlocked on the road against ECAC-powerhouse Clarkson<\/a> late in Saturday’s contest. <\/p>\n But a goal with 2:49 to play by Clarkson’s Don Smith sealed the Lakers fate for the evening, as they returned to Erie, Penn., with a 2-1 loss. <\/p>\n “I thought that we needed to finish our checks if we wanted to be successful, we needed to skate, and I think we did that,” Mercyhurst coach Rick Gotkin said. “Clarkson gave us everything we could handle. I know our guys respected Clarkson’s players, I was a little concerned we respected them too much.<\/p>\n “From the feedback, though, that I got after the game, people say it was an exciting college hockey game to watch.”<\/p>\n Gotkin’s challenge, similar to UConn’s, is to hold on to the intensity.<\/p>\n “I told [the players] if we can play with that kind of focus or determination that we showed against Clarkson, we’ll be a good team,” said Gotkin. “The trick is to get up for every team that you have to play everyday. That’s what will make us a good team.”<\/p>\n ITECH MAAC Player of the Week Manitowich scored two goals in the first period, helping the Gaels to their first victory of the season, a 6-3 decision over visiting Army on Oct. 20. His first goal, a shorthanded breakaway, came at the 9:50 mark, while he added his second score with :08 left in the period on an assist from teammate Nathan Lutz. One the season, he leads the team in goals with three. <\/p>\n ITECH MAAC Goalie of the Week Eddy stopped 30 shots in the 3-2 win over Air Force as Quinnipiac won the fifth annual Q-Cup, earning him a spot on the All-Tournament Team. After two starts in his collegiate career, Eddy is 2-0 with a .941 save percentage and 1.50 goals against average. <\/p>\n ITECH MAAC Rookie of the Week Norcross began his collegiate career in fine fashion as he kicked out 25 saves while recording a 4-0 shutout over the Bentley Falcons. He was steady through two five-on-three penalty kills at critical points of the second and third periods. The freshman’s shutout marked his first career win and the first win for new Fairfield head coach Jim Hunt.<\/p>\n Only two weeks into the season, it is very apparent that one of the MAAC’s traditions from last year will continue – youth will rule this league in its own infancy. There is no question, too, that this will carry all the way to the last line of defense: goaltending.<\/p>\n Last week, three goaltenders opened a lot of eyes throughout the league — Artie Imbriano of UConn, Derek Cunha of Holy Cross, and Greg Norcross at Fairfield.<\/p>\n Imbriano got the truest baptism by fire when he was sent into Friday night’s contest against Hockey East member Merrimack with his Huskies trailing 6-1 late in the game. The freshman, though, showed no sign of fear, stopping a hard slapshot on a two-on-one rush with a brilliant glove save in his first minute of collegiate play. Imbriano finished the shortened night with 11 saves and didn’t allow a goal, leading head coach Bruce Marshall to start him the next night.<\/p>\n What the rookie did the second night was simply amazing. Not only did he make brilliant save after save, but also gave his Huskies the chance to pull of one of the biggest upsets, as they trailed the Warriors, 3-2, late in the game. A failed attempt on a power play in the final minute and an empty-net goal by Merrimack accounted for a 4-2 final, but could not overshadow the effort of Imbriano.<\/p>\n “I think Friday night [Imbriano] got tested,” Marshall said of the relief effort his rookie netminder made in his collegiate debut on Friday. “[Saturday], I thought he played real well, and now he has to build on it.”<\/p>\n Imbriano’s first two appearances came at the Volpe Complex on Merrimack’s campus, just minutes away from where the goaltender grew up. <\/p>\n “It was a welcome challenge,” Imbriano said of his opportunity to play. “I’m thankful for the chance to play, even though I’m a little disappointed we didn’t pull it out. I had a ton of people in the stands rooting for me tonight, so that we really great.”<\/p>\n Holy Cross’ Derek Cunha certainly may not appeared to have as successful a start to his collegiate career on paper, losing 5-1. But for a team that struggled to find any type of stable goaltender last season, his 38 stop performance against pre-season ECAC favorite St. Lawrence, which garnered him third-star honors, has to be a positive. <\/p>\n Head coach Paul Pearl didn’t undermine the efforts of Cunha, but thought praise went beyond his goaltender. <\/p>\n “[Cunha] played well but what we did better [as a team] was keep the puck to the outside and not allow quality shots,” said Pearl. “[Cunha] made the stops he had to – he was solid.”<\/p>\n In southern Connecticut, Fairfield University, which has its third head coach in as many years in Jim Hunt, experienced a little bit of history on Saturday night at the Q-Cup. For the first time since joining the MAAC three years ago the Stags, behind goaltender Greg Norcross, pitched a shutout, knocking off Bentley College 4-0 in the consolation game. The win put Fairfield’s record at 1-1, the first time in the school’s history in the MAAC that the Stags have held a .500 record. <\/p>\n UConn, which last year climbed from the fourth seed in the MAAC playoffs to win the postseason championship, will cap off its months of celebration this weekend when it raises the championship banner to the rafters of the UConn Ice Arena, the same place the Huskies won the championship six months ago. <\/p>\n The Huskies will take on Sacred Heart on Friday evening at 7:30ET. It will be a rematch of last year’s MAAC quarterfinals that saw UConn come back from a 4-1 deficit to win 5-4. The comeback was the beginning of the road to the title.<\/p>\n The two clubs will complete the early-season home-and-home on Saturday night when they face off at the Milford Ice Pavilion at 5:00 ET. UConn enters the game having lost three-straight non-league games to Hockey East opponents. Sacred Heart lost its season opener to Colgate before knocking off AIC in a non-league game last weekend. The contest against AIC was scheduled late in the summer when Sacred Heart was no longer allowed to keep Findlay on its schedule.<\/p>\nWeekly Awards<\/h4>\n
Ryan Manitowich, F, Iona<\/b><\/p>\n
Justin Eddy, G, Quinnipiac<\/b> <\/p>\n
Greg Norcross, G, Fairfield<\/b><\/p>\nYoung Goalies Make Their Mark<\/h4>\n
Huskies Get Set to Raise Banner<\/h4>\n
Hunt Nets First Win with Stags<\/h4>\n