{"id":29956,"date":"2008-10-04T09:21:29","date_gmt":"2008-10-04T14:21:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2008\/10\/04\/200809-princeton-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:15","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:15","slug":"200809-princeton-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2008\/10\/04\/200809-princeton-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2008-09 Princeton Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
Offense<\/b><\/p>\n
The Tigers were merciless with the puck last year, scoring nearly three and a half goals per game against league opponents and leading ECAC Hockey in that category. They led their colleagues in overall scoring as well, burying 112 goals in 35 contests for a 3.2 average, and shot with a better than 10 percent success rate (opposing goalies limited to a .897 save rate).<\/p>\n
And when you’re torching ECAC goalkeepers more effectively than out-of-conference foes, you know you’re doing something right.<\/p>\n
Stankievech was the only double-digit scorer to graduate last spring, as Jubinville (12-27-39), Wilson (15-20-35) and MacIntyre (13-18-31) return as the Tigers’ trio of dozen-goal scorers. Jubinville stood out as the league’s Player of the Year and a first-team All-American, but with Wilson and sophomore Mike Kramer (8-8-16) on the same line, it proved to be an Ottawa Senators’ Heatley-Alfredsson-Spezza pick-your-poison proposition.<\/p>\n
Junior Mark Magnowsky (8-10-18) and sophomore Matt Arhontas (9-6-15) chipped in with some timely scoring as well, and the offense should have little trouble picking up its 31 shot-a-game barrage when it returns to the ice in late October.<\/p>\n
Defense<\/b><\/p>\n
This is where the Tigers could run into some trouble. Mike Moore (7-17-24) not only finished fourth on the team in scoring, but was such a force in his own end that he won the league’s Defensive Defenseman award at season’s end as well. A first-team All-American and team captain, he is a solitary but enormous departure from the Princeton locker room.<\/p>\n
“I’m not sure if there’s anything to insure that [a Reid Cashman] situation doesn’t take place,” said coach Guy Gadowsky, referring to Quinnipiac’s marked leadership void when similarly acclaimed Cashman graduated two years ago. Last year’s group is “tough to replace,” he said.<\/p>\n
“We can’t expect any one person to make up for Moore’s influence,” he concluded.<\/p>\n
Four defensemen return after a 30-game campaign, including junior Jody Pederson (3-13-16) and sophomore Taylor Fedun (4-10-14). Sophomore Cam Ritchie (3-8-11) made good use of his two-dozen appearances, and Gadowsky made mention of newcomer Derrick Pallis out of Nobles Prep. <\/p>\n