{"id":28798,"date":"2007-01-05T19:09:37","date_gmt":"2007-01-06T01:09:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/01\/05\/this-week-in-the-ecac-west-jan-5-2007\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:43","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:43","slug":"this-week-in-the-ecac-west-jan-5-2007","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/01\/05\/this-week-in-the-ecac-west-jan-5-2007\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week In The ECAC West: Jan. 5, 2007"},"content":{"rendered":"
Four teams from the ECAC West played in New Year’s tournaments, racking up a first, two seconds, and a third place finish against some of the top teams in the country. <\/p>\n
The team that came out of the tournaments on top was Neumann, as the Knights carried the ECAC West banner high.<\/p>\n
“We obviously cheer when we go out of conference for our conference to win,” said Neumann head coach Dennis Williams. “We love to see the other teams win, without a doubt, but when we are on the ice we concentrate just on ourselves.”<\/p>\n
Neumann not only had to come from behind in its first game against Babson and then survive an overtime with Plattsburgh to take home the title, they also had to overcome illness during the championship game on Saturday. Whether it was a stomach infection or bad food is unknown, but between fourteen and sixteen players were vomiting before, during, and after the game. The trip home took an extra long time as the bus made numerous stops along the highway for the players.<\/p>\n
Illness aside, Neumann’s play on the ice showed a remarkable resiliency as well. In the opening game, Babson scored a goal just six minutes into the contest and held that 1-0 lead through the second intermission. Neumann then ripped off three goals in a ten-minute span of the third to take control of the game.<\/p>\n
“We came out not really the way we wanted,” said Williams. “To Babson’s credit, they worked hard and got a goal on us early. It was not a great night for our power play. We were gripping the stick too much. We came in [to the locker room] after the second, and said we had been down before and told everyone to relax. It was a good gut check for our players.”<\/p>\n
A 3-2 victory over Babson sent Neumann on to the championship game against host Plattsburgh. The Knights and Cardinals traded a pair of goals in the first period, each answering the other quickly.<\/p>\n
Neumann got some daylight in the second period, before Plattsburgh tied the game 3-3 in the third to force overtime.<\/p>\n
“Plattsburgh has a great arena and great fans. It was a fun atmosphere,” said Williams. “It was back and forth right off the bat. [Plattsburgh] jumped out to a quick start on us, and that is exactly what we didn’t want to happen. We wanted to weather the storm for the first five minutes. Plattsburgh is a very good team, much better than their record.”<\/p>\n
A turnover at the blue line by Plattsburgh gave Neil Trimm and Mark Van Vliet the opening they needed to score the game winning goal in overtime to take the title home to southeastern Pennsylvania.<\/p>\n
“It was a good win, definitely,” said Williams. “It was a big win for the guys, who played hard and battled through it all. When the goal finally went in, they could celebrate like kids again. That’s what pays off for coaches.”<\/p>\n
The win over Plattsburgh could become even more important down the road, since it brought the Cardinals in to consideration as a common opponent with Elmira for both ECAC West tiebreakers and NCAA bids.<\/p>\n
Hobart almost took home the title from the Middlebury tournament. The Statesmen rolled past Trinity 5-2 in the semifinal, before tying Middlebury 3-3 in the finals. Unlike the Plattsburgh tournament which scheduled a full 20-minute overtime period, the Middlebury tournament chose to only play a five-minute extra stanza.<\/p>\n
The Statesmen and Panthers were tied after the five additional minutes, so the game went to a shootout to resolve the battle for the hardware. Middlebury outscored Hobart 3-1 in the shootout and the Statesmen settled for a second place finish.<\/p>\n
Elmira finally started to show some life in the inaugural Oswego tournament, putting a strong 7-3 thumping on St. Thomas. The Tommies put in two quick goals in the first four minutes of the game, but Elmira didn’t fold, rattling off the next six to take control of the game.<\/p>\n
The Soaring Eagles next faced nemesis Oswego in the championship game and despite a gutsy performance fell short in the third period to finish in second place.<\/p>\n
Utica had a disappointing trip to the Times Argus Tournament in Norwich, drawing the Cadets in the first round, the most difficult first-round opponent of any team in the league.<\/p>\n
The Pioneers were playing well in the semifinal game, leading 2-1, until midway through the third period when the team lost its composure after an apparent goal was disallowed. Norwich then ripped off four straight goals to take the win.<\/p>\n
Utica next took on club team Rhode Island and got a confidence boost in an 8-0 drubbing of the Rams.<\/p>\n