{"id":48901,"date":"2013-02-07T12:36:17","date_gmt":"2013-02-07T18:36:17","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=48901"},"modified":"2020-08-24T21:03:35","modified_gmt":"2020-08-25T02:03:35","slug":"for-quinnipiac-new-levels-of-success-dont-change-outlook","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2013\/02\/07\/for-quinnipiac-new-levels-of-success-dont-change-outlook\/","title":{"rendered":"For Quinnipiac, new levels of success don’t change outlook"},"content":{"rendered":"
Inside the Quinnipiac locker room, the mood is calm and confident. The only signs of national success have come from cameras, increased attendance and a few mustaches stemming from an unbeaten streak that dates to November.<\/p>\n
The Bobcats are unbeaten in their last 19 games, No. 1 in the PairWise Rankings<\/a> and the ECAC Hockey standings (12-0-2), and No. 2 in the USCHO.com Division I Men’s Poll<\/a>.<\/p>\n After Minnesota and Minnesota State split a weekend series in late January, some thought the Bobcats would jump the Gophers for the top spot in the poll. Quinnipiac came about as close as a team can, gaining 20 first-place votes over a weekend when it did not play.<\/p>\n Last weekend Minnesota was dormant and the Bobcats picked up three points — a 1-1 draw with Brown and a 6-2 win over then-No. 8 Yale. But the three-point weekend was not enough for the top ranking.<\/p>\n “For us it is about where we are in the PairWise and where we are in the conference standings because that is all we can control,” Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold said. “The polls are great for the fans and the media and maybe a little bit on recruiting, but ultimately we are first in our conference and in the PairWise and that is what we want. We want to put the hammer down and win a regular season championship.”<\/p>\n Any perceived slight on the Bobcats is something for which only the voters can answer, but what is apparent is that Quinnipiac is on the rise.<\/p>\n But who are these guys playing for a school that most people can’t even pronounce?<\/p>\n “I didn’t even really know what Quinnipiac was until I came to visit here,” senior goaltender Eric Hartzell said, smiling.<\/p>\n After over 20 years as a Division II team, Quinnipiac (pronounced KWIN-uh-pe-ack,) entered Division I as a member of the MAAC in 1998 and won the regular season title its first two years. In its second season Quinnipiac exploded, going 27-6-3 and scoring 5.42 goals per game.<\/p>\n In its third year playing Division I the Bobcats won the MAAC tournament to earn a spot in the NCAA tournament. Cornell welcomed the Bobcats to the tournament with a 6-1 loss.<\/p>\n In 2005, Quinnipiac left the group that reformed as Atlantic Hockey, joining ECAC Hockey.<\/p>\n “I think for most of those years we were a high-offensive team. We were always a high-end offensive team with a high-end power play,” said Pecknold, the Quinnipiac coach since 1994. “But what’s happened in the last couple of years is that we’ve transitioned into a much better defensive hockey team. I think that was a problem our first couple of years in the ECAC where we weren’t good enough defensively.”<\/p>\n Quinnipiac has found success in the ECAC but nothing to the tune of a regular season title or another NCAA berth. The Bobcats have put together five 20-win seasons and have never won fewer than 16 games since their latest conference move.<\/p>\n