Sacred Heart’s Bear Trapp is the choice for AHA rookie of the year, Jim Connelly says.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
Absolute fact. Though the league has seen some nice performances from its freshman class (Bentley’s Anthony Canzoneri, UConn’s Chris Myrho and Mercyhurst Chris Trafford, for just a few) Trapp is hands down the best rookie talent the league has to offer. He currently is tied for the national lead in game-winning goals, he’s potted 36 points in 29 games (second only to Minnesota phenom Phil Kessel in rookie points per game) and has recorded multi-point games 11 times this season. Add to that the fact that Trapp has one of the best hockey names around, and he gets my vote hands down.<\/p>\n
Weekly Awards<\/h4>\n Player of the Week<\/p>\n
Cole Koidahl, Connecticut:<\/b> A struggling UConn team seems to be back on track heading towards the finish line, and much of that is due to the play of junior Koidahl. Koidahl has scored 11 points in his last five games, including four last weekend when UConn took three of four points from Army. Koidahl is leading the team in scoring and his 29 points have already surpassed his career high.<\/p>\n
Goaltender of the Week<\/p>\n
Ray Jean, Bentley:<\/b> One weekend after Jean was put on the pine against Mercyhurst, the junior transfer bounced back with a two-game sweep of Canisius. He posted his first career shutout with 29 saves in a 1-0 win on Friday night and then followed that up with 30 saves in a 4-3 victory Saturday. The victories vaulted Bentley into fourth place and the final home-ice spot in Atlantic Hockey. <\/p>\n
Rookie of the Week<\/p>\n
Bear Trapp, Sacred Heart:<\/b> A four-point weekend for Trapp included the game-winning goal in Friday’s 4-1 victory over AIC. It was Trapp’s sixth game-winner of the year, tying him with Denver’s Ryan Dingle and Colorado College’s Brett Sterling for the national lead. <\/p>\n
Random Musings<\/h4>\n \u2022 If you need any proof of just how close things are in Atlantic Hockey, look no further than last Saturday night. Four games produced three overtime ties and a one-goal victory. The only team to sweep the weekend last week was Bentley, which faced a Canisius squad that was without its top goaltender, Dan Giffin, who is sidelined with a concussion. It was only Bentley’s second sweep of the season.<\/p>\n
\u2022 Speaking of Giffin, word out of Buffalo is that he might be able to dress for this weekend’s series against AIC. For the sake of the Griffs, let’s hope so. Canisius is 5-8-0 when he’s in net — yet only has a win and a tie from the team’s only other netminder, Max Buetow. <\/p>\n
\u2022 Atlantic Hockey and its member schools stand to save a lot of money come playoff time should the standings remain status quo. Three of the four current hosts would play one of their closest possible opponents. Right now, Mercyhurst would host Canisius (one-hour bus trip), Holy Cross would host AIC (one-hour bus trip) and Sacred Heart would host Connecticut (one-hour bus trip). The only school that would be forced to do any serious travel would be either Army or Bentley, which seem locked into playing one another; we just don’t know where (maybe they could play halfway between the two schools, at, say, the Hartford Civic Center?). <\/p>\n
\u2022 A couple of series really stick out this weekend as important. If either AIC or Canisius is going to climb above seventh place, that team will need to sweep this weekend when they meet head-to-head. On top of that, the one way that Holy Cross’ train towards the regular-season title could derail is when it faces a pesky Sacred Heart club for two this week. <\/p>\n
\u2022 I want to take this chance to thank USCHO executive editor Scott Brown, who patiently filled in for me last week. At the ripe age of 32 years old, I was told by doctors that I needed to have my tonsils out. The surgery took place last Wednesday, the 15th, and I’m still in a bit of shock that more than a week later I’m not back to 100 percent. I had just enough energy to plug out this column, but apologize that my lack of a strong voice kept me off the phones, making quotes absent. By next week I hope to be back to full strength so I can deliver the usual piece-of-crap column readers have become accustomed to. *wink*<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
Fact or Fiction? Frequent readers of this column know that I love playing the game “Fact or Fiction” at least once a year. It’s based on the ESPN segment of the same title that picks various sports topics, makes a statement about them, and then gives in-studio guests a chance to say whether they believe […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":140328,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"coauthors":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Feb. 23, 2006 - College Hockey | USCHO.com<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n