{"id":25315,"date":"2002-11-28T15:56:00","date_gmt":"2002-11-28T21:56:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2002\/11\/28\/this-week-in-the-ccha-nov-28-2002\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:19","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:19","slug":"this-week-in-the-ccha-nov-28-2002","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2002\/11\/28\/this-week-in-the-ccha-nov-28-2002\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week in the CCHA: Nov. 28, 2002"},"content":{"rendered":"
Talking Turkey<\/h4>\n
That would be me. It’s a short week this week, and a brief column.<\/p>\n
Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.<\/p>\n
And Then There Were None<\/h4>\n
Going into last weekend’s games, two teams — Michigan and Ohio State — were undefeated in league play.<\/p>\n
OSU was swept by Ferris State, and Michigan split with Notre Dame at home, leaving no undefeated conference teams.<\/p>\n
Michigan head coach Red Berenson was disappointed with the loss to Notre Dame, a team he said was the best the Wolverines have played since they took on North Dakota.<\/p>\n
“We were outshot in both games,” says Berenson. “We had the lead in the third period and gave it up, and we usually don’t do that.”<\/p>\n
The Wolverines led 2-1 going into the third, when the Irish scored two unanswered goals to go up one. Michigan finally tied it at 16:05, but Rob Globke netted the game winner just 15 seconds later.<\/p>\n
“It was untimely goals that killed us,” Berenson says. “To lose at home is disappointing, and of course, Notre Dame hasn’t had much success in here, and to give them any confidence is also disappointing.”<\/p>\n
Before last weekend’s 4-3 win, the Irish had won 18 times in 51 tries in Yost Arena. Michigan still leads this all-time series, 56-37-5.<\/p>\n
Meanwhile, in the two games at Ewigleben Arena in Big Rapids last weekend, the Bulldogs and Buckeyes earned enough penalty minutes to become the two most-penalized teams in the league, each team now averaging more than 18 minutes per game.<\/p>\n
Check The Stick Before<\/i> The Shot<\/h4>\n
In Nebraska-Omaha’s 5-4 win over Northern Michigan last weekend, Wildcat Chris Gobert scored on a penalty shot, using an illegal stick.<\/p>\n
Apparently, the UNO bench didn’t challenge Gobert’s stick until after he scored — and by that time, it was already too late.<\/p>\n
From the NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Rulebook:<\/p>\n
“Rule 3-1(d): If a goal is scored with a stick that is found to be illegal, the goal is allowed and the penalty is assessed and begins immediately.”<\/p>\n
So after Gobert scored at 18:19 in the third period — pulling the Wildcats within one — he spent the remainder of the game in the box.<\/p>\n
College Hockey Showcase<\/h4>\n
This is the 10th annual Showcase, which features four of the five Big Ten schools with men’s hockey programs. The Showcase was originally played in neutral venues, with all four teams playing in the same place, on the same day.<\/p>\n
Now the Showcase is played in campus arenas, and you’d need to have astral projection capabilities to see all four games. <\/p>\n
Berenson says that moving the event to campus arenas was necessary because of low attendance in the neutral sites. “Since we went on to the campus sites [attendance] has probably been better. We used to do it in a major rink, and you’d have all four teams right there. It wasn’t as successful in Joe Louis or in the Palace as it was in [Milwaukee’s] Bradley Center.”<\/p>\n
You have to wonder now if the growing popularity of college hockey would attract a significant audience in a single arena, over the course of two days.<\/p>\n
This year, Wisconsin and Minnesota host, so Michigan and Michigan State travel. For the WCHA side of things, check Todd D. Milewski’s WCHA column<\/a>.<\/p>\n