Kendall Coyne<\/a> just starting her college hockey career, I see a lot of potential in that squad. Actually, I think Boston University has been the biggest disappointment. You would have expected them to build on their appearance in the title game against Wisconsin last year, especially since the core of the team was back. Perhaps that is due to Marie-Philip Poulin being out since the second game of the season. I know she’s an impact player, but the Terriers still have Jenn Wakefield and Kerrin Sperry. I think we might learn a lot about both BU and BC when they play each other in a home-and-home this week. What’s your take on the Boston teams?<\/p>\nArlan:<\/strong> Without Poulin competing in their home-and-home, I’m afraid we won’t learn as much as we’d like about either team. Yes, the Terriers still have Wakefield and Jenelle Kohanchuk, plus Isabel Menard has been a nice addition for them, but Poulin is special, and we won’t glimpse the team’s true potential until she is back and healthy. Speaking of Sperry, her save percentage is almost the same as it was last season, but she’s allowing an extra goal a game. Whether that is due to the graduation of Catherine Ward or the caliber of competition she has faced to date remains to be seen, but if the Terriers are going to improve on last year’s result, the GAA has to head in the other direction. Regarding BC, there was discussion last spring as to whether the Eagles would miss Stack or Schaus more. At that time, I thought that the answer was Schaus, and I still do. They clearly have a great rookie class, with Alex Carpenter and Emily Field leading their scoring and likely to improve, although they are going to have to get more out of their veterans up front like Mary Restuccia and Ashley Motherwell. The Eagles don’t make it back to the Frozen Four, and maybe not even the NCAA tourney, with a goaltender that stops 90 percent of the shots she sees, because upsets like the one to Maine will occur too frequently. The goaltending in Hockey East figures to be one of its strengths, assuming people like Florence Schelling, Genevieve Lacasse, and Alexandra Garcia play like we’ve come to expect, so a team needs to be strong in their own net to fare well.<\/p>\nA couple of teams that have had better results than I expected this soon after coaching changes are Robert Morris and Niagara. Neither have attention-grabbing wins, but Mercyhurst is going to need the other CHA schools to grab all the nonconference victories they can if the Lakers are going to secure an eighth-straight NCAA berth. Mercyhurst’s early losses to Quinnipiac and Minnesota State leave the Lakers vulnerable. Do you see MC being able to get wins off teams like Cornell and BC down the road to improve its prospects?<\/p>\n
Candace: <\/strong>I knew Mercyhurst would be vulnerable this year. You don’t lose players like Vicki Bendus and Meghan Agosta and just replace them. I think Mercyhurst might be able to split with BC, but I think Cornell will be too strong for them, and this might end up being the year that the Lakers don’t make the NCAA tournament, because losing to Minnesota State, who will probably get swept by North Dakota, Minnesota-Duluth, Minnesota, and Wisconsin will hurt their PairWise ranking. Speaking of, to finish this first edition off, can ANYBODY stop Wisconsin? I’m beginning to think Mark Johnson is up there with Jerry York as a coach. With players like the Ammerman sisters, Brianna Decker, Carolyn Prévost, and Hilary Knight, Wisconsin looks awfully strong once again. What’s your take on the Badgers?<\/span><\/span><\/p>\nArlan<\/strong>: The Badgers are like an expensive diamond; they may have flaws, but my untrained eyes can’t spot them. I thought that they would miss Meghan Duggan. I knew Decker would take up some of the slack, but it looks to me like Prévost has reeled in a bunch of it as well. Their young third line isn’t equal to what they had last March, but four more months of Johnson’s practices will have them close. Alex Rigsby is much improved in net, their blue line is more seasoned, and I wouldn’t be surprised if a coach or two around the country has dreams of Johnson taking his prowess to men’s hockey and matching wits with York. Having said all that, the Badgers won’t run the table from this point on. UMD will take points off of them; they always do, but were just too green to do so last month. I think either North Dakota or Minnesota beats them at some point. Bemidji State can at least give them a battle. But in terms of denying them the title, it will be tough. I’d give UMD the best chance, followed by Cornell and Minnesota in that order. Coach Shannon Miller and a Frozen Four in Duluth are a tough combination. The obstacle for Cornell is preparing for a team like Wisconsin if the ECAC doesn’t challenge them, as we discussed. The Gophers have enough talent, but they have to fully believe that they can upend the Badgers in March, and that’s a mental block that they have yet to overcome. <\/span><\/span><\/div>\n <\/span><\/span><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Cornell is off to a fast start, Hockey East is still in transition, and Wisconsin looks in good position to repeat as champions. Candace Horgan and Arlan Marttila discuss in this week’s edition of Wednesday Women.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":29,"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":[4,1513],"tags":[],"coauthors":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
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