{"id":28154,"date":"2006-03-09T17:52:02","date_gmt":"2006-03-09T23:52:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2006\/03\/09\/this-week-in-atlantic-hockey-march-9-2006\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:32","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:32","slug":"this-week-in-atlantic-hockey-march-9-2006","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2006\/03\/09\/this-week-in-atlantic-hockey-march-9-2006\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week in Atlantic Hockey: March 9, 2006"},"content":{"rendered":"
Several leagues had close races to the finish this season. None, though, could touch Atlantic Hockey. <\/p>\n
It took the final minutes of the final games of the regular season this past Saturday night in order for the league champion to be crowned. It was a Pierre Napert-Frenette goal with 1:03 remaining in regulation that broke a 2-2 tie between Holy Cross and Bentley, lifting the Crusaders not only to victory but also to the top of the Atlantic Hockey standings. <\/p>\n
The Holy Cross victory, along with Sacred Heart’s loss to Connecticut, 4-3, moved the Crusaders out of a tie for first place and into sole possession of the top spot. <\/p>\n
“It was a great feeling,” said head coach Paul Pearl, whose club has won the regular-season crown two of the last three years. “When we had scored the winner we had just found out that [Sacred Heart] lost. We were pretty excited.”<\/p>\n
Holy Cross finished the regular season at 23-9-2 overall, the most wins in the history of the program. <\/p>\n
Sacred Heart also set an all-time win mark with its 21-11-2 mark but fell just short. Its Saturday night loss, along with Mercyhurst’s weekend sweep of Canisius, allowed the Lakers to leapfrog the Pioneers and take the second playoff seed. Sacred Heart, similar to Boston College in Hockey East, fell from first to third on the season’s final night. <\/p>\n
“This league gets better every year,” said Mercyhurst head coach Rick Gotkin, whose club will host Canisius yet again this Saturday in the Atlantic Hockey quarterfinals. “It was interesting how it unfolded at the end.”<\/p>\n
Gotkin, whose game was the final of the four league games to finish on Saturday night, admitted that after hearing the score updates between the second and third periods, he didn’t know anything further until after his game was over. At that point his Lakers had fallen one point short. <\/p>\n
“Holy Cross has been a terrific team for the last three or four years,” said Gotkin. “We battled hard right to the end but now we can battle in the playoffs.”<\/p>\n
Which brings us to an interesting topic in and of itself. Two of last weekend’s four series will be repeated in this weekend’s quarterfinals, though this time it’s a one-and-done scenario.<\/p>\n
Sacred Heart and Mercyhurst will rematch against Connecticut and Canisius, respectively. The ‘Hurst might have swept the Griffs this year but won four games by a total of five goals. Sacred Heart, on the other hand, lost the season series to UConn, 3-1, which will obviously play in the back of both teams’ minds (more on that below). <\/p>\n
This year’s playoffs will change format from last season. Whereas last year the highest remaining seed after the quarterfinals hosted the league final four, this year Holy Cross will host the semifinals and finals, a choice that was made before the season.<\/p>\n
Of course, that hardly diminishes what the Crusaders accomplished in winning the regular-season title. <\/p>\n
“Eight teams set out to play 28 games and see who gets the most points,” said Pearl. “So we’re very proud of that achievement.”<\/p>\n
Last weekend brought to a close a finish in league play that almost had you believing that winning the title was taboo. Over the course of the last three weeks, Mercyhurst, Sacred Heart and Holy Cross each controlled its own destiny to clinch the regular-season title at some point. <\/p>\n
The Lakers faltered first, losing three of four points to Holy Cross three weeks ago. Sacred Heart then swept Holy Cross two weekends ago. And in the final weekend, had the Pioneers swept UConn, they’d have been co-champs with Holy Cross and taken the top playoff seed on a tiebreaker. The 4-3 shocker at the hands of UConn raised plenty of eyebrows, but most coaches will tell you its nothing but parity. <\/p>\n
“Sometimes you look at the standings and talk about parity,” said Gotkin. “But this really is a league where any team can beat anyone.”<\/p>\n
Player of the Week<\/p>\n