Showing posts with label Bemidji State. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bemidji State. Show all posts

Monday, March 29, 2021

16 Thoughts From NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament Regional Weekend

If the big, non-pandemic-related story coming into the NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament was the return of college hockey's blueblood programs at the top, it is no longer a story. North Dakota, Boston College, Minnesota, and Wisconsin were the tournament's top four overall seeds.

None of the four will be going to Pittsburgh.

Instead, the continued rise of the sport's new blood rolls onto the Steel City. The last two teams to play in the Frozen Four - two-time champion Minnesota Duluth and 2019 national runner-up Massachusetts - are joined by two of the sport's most consistent schools over the past 5 years in St. Cloud State and Minnesota State. Only Minnesota Duluth sponsored D1 men's hockey before the mid-1980s. The Bulldogs appeared in as many Frozen Four appearances this decade as the other three teams have in total.

These four being 2021's remaining four is not quite due to parity. Taking out Michigan, who withdrew from the tournament prior to its opening game due to Covid protocol and positive tests, and the four Frozen Four participants were the next four highest seeds playing after the No. 1 seed quartet. Each had plenty of recent NCAA Tournament experience, both good and bad. 

Experience matters over pure skill. It showed this weekend compared to the No. 1 seeds, each of whom returned to the NCAA Tournament after multiple years away. Besides UMass, none of the four remaining schools played its best hockey over the final two weekends before the NCAA Tournament. Those went down one after another. The No. 1 seeds, talented as all are and looked at times, were unable to adjust or find that extra goal in single-elimination hockey.

This Frozen Four may be compiled of familiar names and stories, however, for several, it comes after years of squads with higher ceilings falling short. Coincidentally or not, these four teams were the four No. 1 seeds in 2019.

These are not the most talented recent teams from each of the four Frozen Four schools. Minnesota State finally got its elusive NCAA Tournament win, a year after its upperclassmen-led squad 2020 missed out on a chance to end the 0-6 streak. St. Cloud State beat back the narrative of three massive upsets in five seasons. UMass returns with Cale Makar, Mario Ferraro and John Leonard. Even Minnesota Duluth, the two-time champion, goes for its third with a team that features more question marks than any of the three previous Frozen Four squads.

But none of that matters. What does, and what was given importance in this year, is that in the current age of parity and the fine line between winning and losing, the NCAA Tournament does not reward the best teams. It rewards the best teams to handle the situation. 

These four have the experience to do so.

Here are 16 more thoughts from a wild NCAA Tournament regional weekend.

1. Minnesota State ended the West Regional celebrating while Van Halen's "Top of the World" played over the Loveland speakers. Honestly, it came a little over 24 hours late.

After two straight NCAA Tournaments where the Mavericks led by multiple goals early before collapsing late, Mike Hastings' squad came from behind late to defeat Quinnipiac in overtime. Ryan Sandelin's OT goal ended a 25-year long streak to put Minnesota State and its fanbase on top of the world.

And to be honest, getting the first win led to an easier second. The Mavericks, after being a minute away from another loss and coming off being blown out by Northern Michigan, looked more like the team that shut down the WCHA, besting Minnesota at its own game a day after the Gophers blew out Omaha. Dryden McKay had an easy night for his 24th career shutout.

That's the difference one game can make. That's the difference one night can do for a generation of perception.

2. Can the North Star College Cup come back?

Even before this weekend, the past decade has been a golden age of men's college hockey in Minnesota. Since college hockey's last realignment in 2013, there has not been a year where multiple Minnesota teams finish in the top-10. Dozens of recent banners from the three western conferences hang in arena rafters. 2019 had the top-3 NCAA Tournament seeds all be from the "State of Hockey."

Herb Brooks would be proud for years before this weekend. Still, this might be the best three days in the state's history. All five schools made the same NCAA Tournament for the first time. All five schools won at least one game. Three will represent the state in the Frozen Four, becoming only the second time one state has had three representatives (Michigan in 1992 being the other).

Outside of them not playing nice with one another, the biggest disappointment among the Minnesota schools has been not getting the attention and respect the schools deserve. College hockey has never been better in the state and, up until this season, attention has never been lower. Hopefully, this weekend changes that.

3. The first-game crazies continued this year with Bemidji State upsetting Wisconsin. Since 2007, eight upsets have taken place in the Friday afternoon slot. That does not include crazy opening games where the favored team eventually won, like Yale taking Boston University to OT in 2015, or Michigan Tech nearly upsetting Notre Dame in 2018. Whether it is the afternoon time or added attention, that slot seems to bring out weird results.

The Beavers also added to the streak of at least one No. 4 seed upsetting a No. 1 seed every tournament since 2006. Might be something to remember for next year's bracket when the rest of your pool has four No. 1 seeds playing in the Frozen Four. (Signed, someone whose bracket had a perfect Bridgeport Regional.)

4. There was no better summary of Wisconsin's season than the Badgers playing six forwards in an attempt to overcome a two-goal deficit. As good as Cole Caufield's season was - his 30 goals in 31 games were the best goal-scoring per game margin of any D1 men's college hockey player in the 21st century - Wisconsin needed its forward group to overcome the "cold" days of its hot and cold goaltending. Caufield had two goals, several more chances, and was a pro before the first round was over.

5. What is left to say about the Minnesota Duluth-North Dakota 5 OT Classic? The longest game in NCAA Hockey Tournament history, men's or women's, became one of the few college hockey events that broke through to the casual sports fan. It passed the "non-hockey friends and parents text you about it" test.

For those up Saturday night, the Fargo Regional final was a magical event where Sunday morning you felt like part of a club for staying up to 1:40 AM ET. This game, from start to end of regulation to the goalie change to the posts and no goals to Luke Mylymok's winner, will be brought up for years to come. 

The longer the Bulldogs and Fighting Hawks battled, the higher the tension became. North Dakota looked like it would end the game multiple times, hitting three posts in OT after coming back from 2-0 down with less than two minutes to play. UND also had the luxury of a potential Minnesota Duluth game-winning OT goal called off for the slimmest of offsides.

In the end, UMD's OT streak lives on for another day. The Bulldogs have won nine straight OT games in the NCAA Tournament dating back to 1985. It's the fifth straight tournament where the team needed an extra period to win its opening game. Scott Sandelin prepares his team for the occasion and finds ways to win.

It's unfortunate someone had to lose because for the fans watching, everyone won. 

6. Massachusetts forward Carson Gicewicz was the player of the weekend, scoring four goals. The Sandelins (Ryan and Scott) easily end up being the family of the weekend with a pair of Frozen Four trips and legendary stories.

7. More than any of the other No. 1 seeds, North Dakota showcased the cruelty of single-elimination hockey. The Fighting Hawks had the talent and ability to score in bunches, doing so both against AIC and Minnesota Duluth, and the majority of overtime chances in the Fargo regional final. Like the Minnesota State win over Quinnipiac where the Mavericks controlled play late in the third and OT, no one would be surprised to see the Fighting Hawks end UMD's NCAA Tournament streak and dethrone the national champion. Unfortunately, two years of being the top team in college hockey end short of a Frozen Four appearance.

8. Speaking of single-elimination hockey cruelty, College Hockey News' Greg Cameron tweeted this photo of Quinnipiac's seniors taking their time in what could be their last collegiate game.



It's a common reality in a sport where all except 1 team ends the year with a loss. This time of year is full of awkward and difficult postgame press conferences where seniors come in still wearing their uniforms 10-15 minutes removed from their final appearance. I need two hands to count the number of times I've had to console players. Anyone who says they don't care has no idea what they are saying.

While this season is different than all other seasons because of the extra year of eligibility, it's still a reminder the rosters will be different next year. Players will be graduating and moving on with their lives.

9. And now for something somewhat similar: The WCHA is not dead yet.

For a while on Saturday afternoon, it looked like the WCHA's nearly seven decades of sponsoring men's hockey would be coming to an end with almost simultaneous losses by Bemidji State and Minnesota State. The Mavericks came back to buck the trend and in the process became the first WCHA team post-realignment (and first since St. Cloud State went to Pittsburgh in its only other Frozen Four appearance in 2013) to make the Frozen Four. 

It was a big weekend for the WCHA, which saw more wins in three days than it had in the seven previous seasons post-realignment. Only Ferris State (2014 and 2016) had won NCAA Tournament games.

When given the chance for the thing casual sports fans in Minnesota wrongly have been saying for a while - that Don Lucia (now the commissioner of the CCHA that 7 of the remaining WCHA schools are reviving) and the Gophers - to technically happen, the Hockey Gods said see you on next Thursday.

10. The moment I knew this was a different St. Cloud State team than in years past came Saturday afternoon following Boston University's opening goal.

After failing to score on a five-minute first period major and going down 1-0 eight seconds into the second period, the Huskies spent multiple shifts creating chances. David Hrenak made a couple of good saves. The energy was different on the bench than in 2016, 2018 and 2019, where once things went wrong there was almost a panic by St. Cloud State to make it right. Goalies can steal games this time of year (and that pretty much happened in 2018 against Air Force), however, teams can make it easy with shot selection and scoring chances. I knew once AIC went up 2-0 in 2019 that this was doomed for a repeat.

SCSU did not play tight. There were no heads down. The Huskies continued to work to create chances. It paid off with a pair of goals inside a minute against BU, a penalty shot goal, and a similar performance the next afternoon after going down 1-0 against a rested Boston College team and losing Easton Brodzinski to injury. 

Speaking of the two Boston teams, I am curious to see how each looks next season. Both could see several players leave for the pros. As of this writing, one - BU defender David Farrance - already signed an NHL entry-level contract after returning for his senior year. BC's Matt Boldy, Alex Newhook and Spencer Knight could all leave early. BU's Jay O'Brien is a first-round pick three years removed from being selected by Philadelphia.

10a. The aforementioned penalty shot goal.



10b. That bit about St. Cloud State being at its best when expectations are lowest turned out to be accurate. The same can be said with how Wisconsin could be upset and Massachusetts can win. Let's not discuss the part about the Gophers getting better as the weekend goes on, though.

11. For the first time in a long time, I did not spend the weekend at a regional. Following along on TV, two standouts were Leah Hextall doing play-by-play at the Fargo regional with Dave Starman, and Colby Cohen being the third man in at Bridgeport and the studio Sunday. It would be great to see both get expanded roles when ESPN gets the NHL rights back next season.

Ben Holden and Fred Pletsch were fantastic in the West Regional. It's been a blast getting the pairing back this season on BTN for Big Ten games. Having a studio with live coverage to react made a big difference. It could get repetitive by the end of the weekend watching 10 games but original commentary beats showing the same segment 10 times.

12. On the other hand, there were way too many errors in graphics and player names for what should be college hockey's premiere weekend. I understand that storylines are going to be promoted and simplified for people who are not following along all season. This was not the case. Too many small mistakes brought down what was a good weekend of coverage otherwise.

Also, has anyone else ever abbreviated Nebraska Omaha as NEOM?

13. This might need to be a bigger future article diving into Massachusetts but Greg Carvel's team's regional success of late is the "win close games" exception that proves the rule. In the four regional games in 2019 and 2021, the Minutemen outscored its opponents 17-1. Ashton Calder's goal Friday night for Lake Superior State is the only one Filip Lindberg has given up. 

Alongside Carson Gicewicz's four goals (including his first collegiate hat trick that John Buccigross willed into existence - the first natural hat trick in the NCAA Tournament since Jarid Lukosevicius in the 2017 National Championship Game), Lindberg was outstanding all weekend. Splitting time with Matt Murray, he may not get the respect or award nominations that several others of Lindberg's contemporaries do. After another weekend performance like this, Lindberg should. 

14. Another thought that likely needs to be its own article is where Minnesota goes from here. The Gophers took a massive step forward in Bob Motzko's third and the program's 100th season. Minnesota built upon past success and a solid 2019-20 second half to return to the country's elite. 

Minnesota is going in the right direction mixing skill and veteran players. Of all the Big Ten teams, Motzko is closest to perfecting his ratio. I thought the Gophers utilized its depth well against Omaha before having no answer for Minnesota State. Scott Reedy and Sampo Ranta scored, but so did Mason Nevers (0 entering the game) and Ryan Johnson (1 ENG in two seasons). 

There will be changes for next season even before the opening of the transfer portal and the possibility of an extra senior season. While early departures and seniors leaving are to be expected, the defensive core should remain intact, which is good news on both sides of the ice. Jared Moe will get his chance in goal after a Mike Richter Top-3 season (and possibly more) from Jack LaFontaine. 

It's a team that has a lot to look forward to yet also a season that will sting with how it ended. There's a missed opportunity while three other Minnesota teams play onward. Those do not come along every year.

At the end of the weekend, the Gophers had one outstanding performance and one that was anything but. We all know which one will be remembered more.

15. One issue that seems to be a yearly one is ice conditions at regionals. When it's a problem at multiple regionals, as it was at Albany and Bridgeport (and Loveland to a lesser extent), something needs to be done. There are no large crowds. There really should be no excuses. Six months of games should not be decided on bad ice.

If the NCAA just wants to hire Fargo's ice team to oversee all future regionals, please go ahead. Scheels Arena was the exception to the rule despite having a five OT game thanks to putting in the extra effort months beforehand. Have to think Spencer Knight would rather play there than kick the net off its moorings a half-dozen times and St. Cloud State seeing leading scorer Easton Brodzinski go down with what appeared to be a major injury. He wasn't the only player who took an odd spill in Albany.

16. Finally, I'm not sure if we learned everything we would want to from this weekend. Half the Big Ten teams - Michigan and Notre Dame - withdrew before the NCAA Tournament began due to Covid protocol. Add in St. Lawrence and it's 3 of 17 teams. 

Playing in a pandemic was likely going to bring complications. Unfortunately for this year's tournament, it did, and then some. I can't imagine the disappointment for the Wolverines and Fighting Irish players to achieve their goal and see it snatched away by something out of their control. It would not surprise me to see either team reach the Frozen Four if they were able to play. Sadly, we'll never know how well each would fare.

Finding the middle ground between taking lessons from what happened on the ice and knowing that nothing is guaranteed is as fine of a line as winning and losing. (It makes the sweeping generalizations made from one game look like concrete opinions.) I am looking forward to the UMass-UMD rematch and seeing Minnesota State and St. Cloud State finally each get their due. 

However, I know nothing is guaranteed during a time where the United States is still experiencing 70K new cases of Covid daily.

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Thursday, March 25, 2021

2021 NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament: Why Your Team Can Win It All (Bridgeport Regional)

Enough parity exists where at least one No. 4 seed has upset a No. 1 seed in every NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament since 2005. The unexpected is more than expected. It is no surprise, in an era where the final at-large bid has won three of the last seven national titles, to see any of the 16 teams reach the Frozen Four.

Makes bracket challenges fun and impossible, even before playing in a global pandemic that already cost one team its chance for a title.

So with that in mind, I thought it would be best to preview the 2021 NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament by showcasing two non-pandemic extremes. First, why each team can win the national championship. Second, why each team will be upset and lose in round 1. Add three players to watch and a "chip on their shoulders" ranking (1 being none and 10 being wanting to prove the world wrong) and there's a preview that covers the bases for your bracket challenge. 

Yesterday (Wednesday) featured the Fargo regional. Tomorrow (Friday) will feature the Loveland regional while the Albany regional goes up later today (Thursday).

Bridgeport Regional

No. 1 Seed: Wisconsin

Why the Badgers will win it all: Two words: Cole. Caufield.

Need more? Caufield, with 28 goals in 30 games, is on pace to have one of the best goal-scoring seasons in the last 20 years of college hockey. The sophomore forward needs the tiniest of openings to change a game and makes an impact on both sides of the ice. Likewise, Dylan Holloway has taken major steps in his sophomore season to become a top collegiate player in his own right. Few NCAA Tournament teams can match Wisconsin (20-9-1) there.

Still need more? Okay. Tony Granato has solved his goaltending issue with the Cameron Rowe-Robbie Beydoun goalie platoon. Both newcomers (Rowe a freshman, Beydoun a graduate transfer from Michigan Tech), are stopping pucks at above a .920% save percentage. The Badgers enter the NCAA Tournament 11-2-1 since January 29th. With high-end talent and a number of upperclassmen leading the way, Wisconsin went from worst to first in the Big Ten. Despite early losses, Wisconsin is finally being that team many were waiting for UW to be - one with the pieces of a national title contender.

Why the Badgers will be upset in round 1: Wisconsin's opponent has seen top offenses and gone Jon Taffer on them. Bemidji State is the only team to defeat Minnesota State (7th in goals per game - Wisconsin sits 3rd) twice this season, finding success shutting down the Mavericks and going toe to toe offensively in victory. The Beavers also went 3-1-0 against Bowling Green (9th in goals per game). 

It would not be a surprise to see Tom Serratore's team find a way to slow down the speedy and skilled Badgers team playing its first NCAA Tournament game. It's a different style of play than Wisconsin played against all season in the Big Ten. Meanwhile, Wisconsin enters giving up a combined nine goals in an overtime win against Penn State and loss to Minnesota. That opening NCAA game brings strange results.

Chip on their shoulder ranking: 4. The Badgers seem hungry in its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2014. This is what Caufield came back for when he had the opportunity to turn pro last season. However, it is tough to say Wisconsin is not getting the respect it deserves between earning the final No. 1 seed over other teams (including UMass) and Caufield being the presumptive Hobey Baker nominee.

Three Players To Watch: #8 F- Cole Caufield (MTL), #4 F- Dylan Holloway (EDM), #21 D- Ty Emberson (ARI)


No. 2 Seed: Massachusetts

Why the Minutemen will win it all: Two words. Cale....wait sorry, this isn't 2019. 

Two more years of experience brings a more mature, experienced Massachusetts (16-5-4) team compared to the 2019 national runner-up. The top three scorers, defender Marc Del Gaizo and goaltenders Filip Lindberg and Matt Murray are all upperclassmen. Greg Carvel has a veteran-laden group, which can be needed to go far in the NCAA Tournament.

At the same time, there is plenty of talent. Bobby Trivigno was the Walter Brown Award winner as the best American playing in New England. Carson Gicewicz put up 13 goals while Zac Jones has been one of the best all-around defenders in college hockey on a defense that allows the second-lowest goals per game. Massachusetts has found different ways to win. The Hockey East conference tournament champions are undefeated (14-0-1) when scoring the first goal. Entering the tournament on a 10-game unbeaten streak (7-0-3) and it is no surprise to see New Mass being a trendy new national championship pick.

Why the Minutemen will be upset in round 1: It's not 2019. Sequels do not always match the highs of the original and it is easy to see Massachusetts come up against a tougher path to the Frozen Four. Lake Superior State is the first western school UMass will see all season and offers a different matchup than the team has been seeing. The Lakers are also undefeated (13-0-1) when scoring first, however, the team has a better record than Massachusetts when playing from behind.

Then there is the fact Massachusetts went 1-4-0 against the two other Hockey East NCAA Tournament teams, Boston College and Boston University. (The record does go to 3-4-2 when including Providence, who was the first team out.) Credit to the Minutemen for beating the teams they need to because it is not easy, but it's a worse record against top teams compared to those in the same tier.

Chip on their shoulder ranking: 8. Massachusetts has a few factors to give the Minutemen a chip on their shoulder, whether it is not getting the No. 1 seed, being the only Eastern team in an east regional, or being doubted after Makar, Mario Ferraro and John Leonard departed early. Anyone surprised at this point just hasn't been paying attention.

Three Players To Watch: #24 D- Zac Jones (NYR), #35 G- Filip Lindberg (MIN), #8 F- Bobby Trivigno (undrafted)


No. 3 Seed: Lake Superior State

Why the Lakers will win it all: Furthering the theme of the Bridgeport regional, WCHA Conference Tournament champion Lake Superior State (19-6-3) enters the NCAA Tournament on a bit of a hot streak. Why not continue?

Damon Whitten's team played its way into the NCAA Tournament, winning six straight and 12 of 14 en route to the Lakers' first tournament appearance since 1996. Ashton Calder has a pair of March hat tricks among his 15 goals this season. The offense is at a high point of late, sitting at 2/3 of a goal higher over the last 10 games than the season average. 

Defensively, Lake Superior State has a Mike Richter Award finalist in goal in Marek Mitens. The Lakers senior is sixth nationally with a .933% save percentage and tough for opposing offenses to solve. Since the winning ways began in mid-February, LSSU has allowed more than two goals only twice.

Why the Lakers will lose in round 1: Perhaps it's fitting that Lake Superior State plays Massachusetts because LSSU faces a team who shares a lot of similarities, several of which can be seen in the UMass section. Both are playing its best hockey. Both won conference tournament championships. Both can win games with goaltending and defense. Both have not lost when scoring the first goal of the game.

From a Lakers perspective, it also means Lake Superior State faces a team whose similar strengths are higher nationally, at least on the stat sheet. The Minutemen have allowed less than two goals per game on the season and a slightly better goal margin (+21) over the last 10 games than LSSU (+19). Massachusetts has the experience edge as well, which can come into play when the two teams face off.

Chip on their shoulder ranking: 3. Yes, there's the "WCHA does not get enough respect" card all three conference schools can play this season. However, there are three WCHA teams and Lake Superior State is a No. 3 seed. Add in the fact this is the first NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament appearance for LSSU in 25 years - Jeff Jackson coached the last team before starting up the USNTDP - and the return of a 90s dynasty makes for a fun story without the chip.

Three Players To Watch: #30 G- Marek Mitens (undrafted), #16 F- Ashton Calder (undrafted), #26 F- Pete Veillette (undrafted)


No. 4 Seed: Bemidji State

Why the Beavers will win it all: Playing in a regional situated two blocks from the P.T. Barnum Museum, Bemidji State (15-9-3), the school hailing from Paul Bunyan's fictional hometown, is no stranger to the circus that comes with shocking the world. Tom Serratore's shining moment in his two decades being behind the Nothern Minnesota bench is leading the No. 16 overall seed Beavers to the 2009 Frozen Four, winning two games by a combined 9-2 score.

This season, BSU has been at its best when playing against the WCHA's best. Goaltender Zach Driscoll is the latest in a run of Beavers goalies who can steal games, starting 26 of 27 games and entering the NCAA Tournament with a .924% save percentage. 

The team thrives defensively in low-scoring games, winning five of 15 games this season by a 2-0 or 2-1 score (excluding an empty-net goal). BSU won another 4-1 while being outshot 36-10. In a tournament where every goal matters, being comfortable playing in that environment can be a recipe for history repeating.

Why the Beavers will lose in round 1: The low-scoring defense will be tested by Wisconsin's high-scoring offense. As good as the WCHA's top offenses have been, Bemidji State has not faced an individual player like Cole Caufield and Dylan Holloway. Trying to stop one opens up opportunities for the other. With Caufield averaging almost a goal per game, it will take an elite defensive performance. While BSU has been at its best in the third period (+9 goal margin), it might be too late against the Badgers.

Bemidji State plays as a team to the sum of its parts compared to a group of individuals. It shows as BSU features the lowest goals per game of any NCAA Tournament team playing (St. Lawrence is lower), with its 2.81 average being 29th nationally. Ethan Somoza is the only Beaver with double-digit goals on a team that already played 27. 

Chip on their shoulder ranking: 7. This was going to be a 3 like LSSU, but a pair of misspellings in the NCAA Tournament Selection Show puts "Bimidji State" up to a 5 for the Beavers' first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2010. Add in being on the bubble and getting in to the surprise of some, along with being the only team without an NHL Draft pick, and it goes up to a 7 for Bemidji State.

Three Players To Watch: #33 G- Zach Driscoll (undrafted), #14 F- Alex Ierullo (undrafted), #9 F- Ethan Somoza

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Monday, March 22, 2021

Bracketology Postmortem: Answering The 2021 NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament's Biggest Questions

The bracket is out and it is time for a little bracketology postmortem.

Here's the actual bracket:

Fargo:
1. North Dakota vs. 4. AIC
2. Michigan vs. 3. Minnesota Duluth

Albany:
1. Boston College vs. 4. Notre Dame
2. St. Cloud State vs. 3. Boston University

Loveland:
1. Minnesota vs. 4. Omaha
2. Minnesota State vs. 3. Quinnipiac

Bridgeport:
1. Wisconsin vs. 4. Bemidji State
2. Massachusetts vs. 3. Lake Superior State

All in all, I am happy with my results considering the circumstances. Taking out St. Lawrence, who sadly announced after posting the final bracket that it would not be appearing in the NCAA Tournament due to a positive Covid case (always a possibility this year), means 14 of the 15 teams appearing on my list made the NCAA Tournament. It would be 15 of 16 taking out St. Lawrence, as my first team out was Bemidji State and I had the Beavers replacing the Saints. The committee did have BSU higher than me, meaning it was an easy call to include Bemidji State and have all five Minnesota men's hockey D1 schools in for the first time in history.

Omaha was in fact the fourth NCHC team. Michigan was in fact the highest of the third teams, earning the last No. 2 seed. Michigan-UMD in Fargo will be happening, and Boston College did end up in Albany instead of Bridgeport due to crowds being allowed in the former. Quinnipiac got in as a No. 3 seed, even before jumping up and taking the ECAC automatic bid. Several other ideas happened, just with different teams.

The only miss was Notre Dame getting in as the fourth Big Ten team instead of the fourth Hockey East team. While I had UMass Lowell getting in over Providence, the selection committee had PC ahead (the Friars are an alternate if any other team withdraws before Monday night) and went with the "neither" option. That was a miss. I was also more positive on the Fighting Irish's chances than most and am not surprised to see ND get in, but at the end of the day, I can't claim to have Notre Dame in my field.

There were also subjective misses in seeding. And I did not expect so much travel or an 11/5 West-East split from the selection committee based on what the committee had been saying pre-tournament.

So let's get into answering the questions. Mike Kemp, the NCAA Tournament selection committee chair, spoke to several outlets and cleared up some of the subjective criteria the committee used to decide the final at-large bids and seeding. You can check that out at both College Hockey News and USCHO.

1. Omaha, Denver, or both?

It was in fact Omaha. The Mavericks' record and performance were enough to get in over Denver having the better head-to-head record and a better resume than its record indicates. Looking at how the bracket turned out, the option for both and five NCHC teams was not a popular one.

2. Bemidji State, Bowling Green, both, or neither?

The Beavers get the nod over Bowling Green. According to Kemp, Bemidji State's better record against Minnesota State and Lake Superior State put the Beavers ahead of the Falcons. BGSU had a slightly better RPI and wins over Quinnipiac, which in a non-subjective year helps its case, but not this time around. That made all the difference in the world. In the end, a third WCHA team this season was ahead of the fourth team in other conferences, but a fourth was below the other conference's fourth team. Bemidji State is slated as the best of the "final three" at-large bids without Quinnipiac.

Credit where it's due to the WCHA fans and writers that correctly had the case for a third WCHA team - something the league has not had since realignment - being stronger than it appeared. I had it lower.

3. Providence, UMass Lowell, UConn, or how does the East/West split go?

So it turns out the answer was "Neither." UMass Lowell was playing for, in hindsight, either Omaha or Boston University's spot with the Hockey East automatic bid. Despite the RiverHawks reaching the conference tournament championship game and losing 1-0, the committee kept Providence as the fourth HE team. However, the Friars' record and other factors that will be discussed later kept PC behind other conferences.

11 Western teams versus 5 Eastern teams is a win for western politicking. Perception has the west as the better side of the country this season, however, perception does not always equal reality. Pre-St. Lawrence news, the split was 10/6 West-East, which is on the high side yet makes more sense than 11/5. When given the chance to replace one eastern team with another, the selection committee chose a western team in Notre Dame. All three of the final at-large spots were western teams.

As much as the final at-large spots are tough decisions, I figured politicking would make the East/West split closer.

4. Can a second team from a conference get a No. 1 seed? Does Minnesota State's loss to Northern Michigan knock the Mavericks out of the top four?

Yes and yes.

This section features several compromises and shows how small decisions change the bracket. The committee was open to ranking a second team from the same conference as a No. 1 seed, as Wisconsin earned the fourth No. 1 seed alongside Big Ten conference mate Minnesota.

Not only that but Massachusetts, the second Hockey East team, was ahead of the top WCHA team, Minnesota State. The Mavericks ended up sixth and head to No. 3 overall seed Minnesota's region, Loveland. If the compromise is a lower top overall seed for Minnesota State and three WCHA teams in the NCAA Tournament overall, it's a good one for the league. The Big Ten gets two No. 1 seeds of the four but the two hardest paths to the Frozen Four.

I also like how the decision of whether Wisconsin or Massachusetts should earn the last No. 1 seed ends up with both teams in the same region. That was something I also had in my bracket (albeit Minnesota State and Wisconsin) and think it's important in this subjective year. 

In addition to the two Big Ten teams, North Dakota was named the No. 1 overall seed while Boston College is No. 2 overall. BC being ahead of Minnesota is something I did not have yet completely understand based upon the entire season of work. It was a close call. Either option can be justified while not changing the locale of the two (thanks to Denver being out).

5. Does the committee go with bracket integrity or try and limit travel as much as possible?

Integrity by a landslide.

There were absolutely no attempts to limit travel and flights in a global pandemic. 11 of 16 teams will be flying, including three into Bridgeport. Quinnipiac is playing in Loveland while Lake Superior State goes to Bridgeport, Bemidji State is Bridgeport and AIC in Fargo, and Michigan heads to Fargo while Minnesota State goes to Loveland. 

If travel was truly an issue, the number of flights could be cut down by 2-6 while staying in the seeding bands. With North Dakota being the No. 1 overall seed and placed where it would be regardless, and knowing how the rest of the No. 1 seeds are ranked, it's pretty safe to say that the bracket is a straight 1-16, 2-15, etc. ranking. Kemp insinuated as much on the USCHO podcast.

(Obviously, a different selection committee, but I'm going to remember this choice the next time Minnesota/Wisconsin/Minnesota Duluth all have to play one another in the NCAA Women's Hockey Tournament to save a flight or two. Those years where it was a #2 vs. #5 overall look 100x worse now.)

6. How does the committee sort out Michigan/Boston University/Minnesota Duluth?

Michigan, Minnesota Duluth, Boston University in that order. 

Selfishly, I am a fan of Michigan and Minnesota Duluth playing one another on the ten-year tournament anniversary of the two meeting for the 2011 NCAA national championship.

7. How badly does Quinnipiac's loss to St. Lawrence hurt the Bobcats? Does it cost QU an at-large bid?

Turns out the committee kept Quinnipiac in the above tier, or just outside, as the Bobcats were slotted right below Boston University.

8. Who gets the last at-large bid?

Notre Dame. Well, Omaha first. Then Notre Dame.

St. Lawrence dropping out slotted in the Fighting Irish, which should be something to watch out for in a tournament filled with enough party where the final at-large bid has won three of the last seven NCAA Tournaments. (Only slightly joking: Road Notre Dame is a tough out.)

The Fighting Irish, and Omaha and Bemidji State before that, were beneficiaries of the committee putting record against teams in the NCAA Tournament ahead of other factors. Notre Dame was 4-7-1 against the other three Big Ten NCAA Tournament teams. Bemidji State was 4-5-2. Omaha, meanwhile, had a 3-6-1 record against the top-three NCHC teams compared to Denver's 2-9-0 record.

Providence had a 1-5-2 record against the three Hockey East NCAA Tournament teams (and the one win came against BU), which dropped the Friars below the "in" crowd.

So what did we learn?

We learned quite a few things.

We learned that the selection committee values wins against top teams more than the Pairwise. There used to be a "Teams Under Consideration" component that played a role in ranking, but it has not appeared in recent years.

We learned limiting travel is overrated.

We learned the WCHA can get in three teams just in time for the CCHA. We learned Hockey East can in three teams just in time for the ECAC to get back all its teams.

We learned the Hockey Gods have a sense of humor with Minnesota Duluth-Michigan, Minnesota State-Quinnipiac, and Boston College-Notre Dame.

We learned gifting teams by part of the country was not something the selection committee wanted to do. When tasked with comparing one another, the region did not matter.

We learned that for all the fears of the Big Ten being such a powerful conference and taking over the sport, it was a big surprise to see the league get everything to go its way. Two of four No. 1 seeds, the last No. 2 seed, and a fourth team for the first time over the fourth team from other conferences. The selection committee certainly thought highly of the Big Ten this season.

And we learned that, while flawed at times, the Pairwise rankings and knowing the criteria in advance are things the college hockey world needs. Maybe with some changes taking the good from this year to improve the flaws, however, it wasn't the worst thing to have a one-year break to better appreciate what we already have.

Thank you everyone for following along with bracketology this year.

Friday, March 19, 2021

Bracketology: Why Your Team Deserves To Make The 2021 NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament (Or Not)

For the first time in a generation, NCAA hockey teams need to showcase their body of work and sell accomplishments to the selection committee. 

It's new. It's different. College hockey coaches on the NCAA Tournament bubble have stopped being polite and started using postgame pressers to stump for why their team is worthy and their opponents should be sitting at home eating popcorn and watching TV. 

And honestly? Not every team knows how to do it.

Take this attempt by Bowling Green, one of several WCHA teams fighting for 1-2 NCAA Tournament spots.



Active scorers? The NCAA Tournament does not constitute a lifetime achievement award. This isn't the Hobey Baker. 

C'mon Bowling Green, lead with the fact the Falcons beat Quinnipiac twice at Quinnipiac! Lead with the 20 wins, or the 10-4-1 road record, or the sweep over Michigan Tech, or the 3.48 goals per game and +10.03 shot differential that is second in the WCHA behind Minnesota State! Don't bring up active scorers. It helps BGSU as much as bringing up the 6-8-1 finish, first-round series loss to Northern Michigan, and losses to nearly every WCHA team in the hunt. You need to sell yourself, Bowling Green. NCAA Tournament bids are not just handed out!

As a public service, I am going to help 14 other teams on the NCAA Tournament bubble with their resumes. Unlike the rest of these programs, I come with plenty of experience writing resumes. #HireNate

In alphabetical order:

Army: 

Point out: Atlantic Hockey has won three straight first-round series. In a year where there are few true non-conference games and a limited ECAC, why shouldn't Atlantic Hockey get a second bid? The league has proven itself in the NCAA Tournament. The Black Knights are 15-5-0 this season, a better win/loss record than many on the bubble, and help shore up the East-West split if the team beats Canisius and proves it is the second-best AHA team. (This blueprint can also be used for Canisius if the Golden Griffins beat Army Friday.)

Avoid: Discussing the 1-3 record against AIC, who hasn't played since January, or the loss to a first-year LIU. The Sharks did not exist this time last year. Maybe the committee does not know about Long Island in the way the Hobey committee (but not Toronto fans) do not about Colin Bilek.

Bemidji State:

Point out: Of all the WCHA teams fighting behind Minnesota State for a spot, Bemidji State has the best record. Of the Mavericks' three losses, two came against Bemidji, who also went 3-1-0 against Bowling Green. The win total is not boosted by Division III wins or four games against Ferris State and Alabama Huntsville. It is a legit WCHA strength of schedule. Maybe sweeten with Zach Driscoll's performance in the net or the fact that the state of Minnesota has never gotten all five schools in the men's NCAA hockey tournament.

Avoid: Being swept by Northern Michigan, or losing two of three in March to Lake Superior State if the Lakers go on to win Friday in the WCHA Conference Tournament semifinal. Or that one of those Minnesota State wins saw the Beavers outshot 36-10 and score 4 goals on 10 shots against not Dryden McKay.

Boston University: 

Point out: How the Terriers' lack of experience is not a detriment. Boston University only played 15 games this season and was without key players for several. Finishing 10-4-1 with wins over UMass and Boston College helps immensely. Plus with that record and results, which also includes a sweep of Providence, who else out East deserves a spot over Boston University? Hockey East is not getting only two teams.

Avoid: Discussing the Hockey East tournament loss to UMass-Lowell. Even though rival BC also lost, it's not a good look. Nor is the -7.47 shots on goal margin per game (43rd of 51 teams). BU has won yet those wins come at the expense of a possession stat that sees the Terriers surrounded by bottom feeders.

Connecticut:

Point Out: The better Hockey East record and wins in regulations. All 10 victories came in regulations. The Huskies have a 0-3-2 record in overtime and a 1-1-1 record against Boston College. Against Providence in the regular season, Connecticut went 2-1-0. Maybe also bring up the season Jonny Evans is having since it flew a little under the radar.

Avoid: Saying anything about the 6-1 Hockey East quarterfinal loss to Providence, who is in position with the Huskies to take a fourth Hockey East bid. Or how it dropped UConn below .500 this season while UMass Lowell sits above .500 even with a loss in the Hockey East championship game. 

Denver:

Point out: Head-to-head matchups. If the NCHC deserves four teams, and the argument comes down between Denver and Omaha for that fourth spot, well the Pioneers went 3-2-0 against Omaha. DU also won at the most important time, playing with 16 skaters in the NCHC Conference Tournament. Add two wins over North Dakota and no one being quite sure how overtime losses work - Denver is 0-3-1 with the extra period - and DU can punch above its weight to try and extend the nation's longest NCAA Tournament streak. It would not be the first time someone gets a job without the qualifications.

Avoid: Bringing up the full sub-.500 record or the bad with the good. Say nothing about how the two North Dakota wins can be contrasted with losses to the two worst NCHC teams, Colorado College and Miami. Same with the 0-4-0 record against Minnesota Duluth and St. Cloud State. A lot of teams just missing the NCAA Tournament in a normal year look to be among the top-16 best teams while ending up on the outside, a bad loss or two away from being a No. 3 seed. That is exactly where Denver sits, but this is a year where Pairwise does not make the math rules.

Lake Superior State:

Point out: Play down the stretch. The Lakers are 11-1-0 in its last 12 games. While that is technically not a part of the criteria, the subjective human element seems to be a fan of how teams leave last impressions. Not only that, but the Lakers can avenge the one loss by defeating Bemidji State in the WCHA semifinals. Doing so might be enough to end one of the longest NCAA Tournament droughts, as Lake Superior State has not been in since 1996 when Jeff Jackson still coached.

Avoid: Discussing how the 17-6-3 record looks better on paper than in reality. Two of those wins come against Division III Adrian. Four came against Alabama Huntsville and three more were against Northern Michigan. The Lakers did not play Minnesota State on the road and went 1-2-1 against Bemidji State. LSSU did play well against Bowling Green, but so did several other teams. Not that Lake Superior State needs someone to tell the Lakers, but avoiding a loss Friday would help the resume stand out big time.

Massachusetts Lowell:

Point out: How things are coming up Milhouse for the RiverHawks. The new skill of upsetting Hockey East teams named Boston (University and College) when it matters makes UMass Lowell an at-large spoiler for a potential fourth Hockey East bid. One more win over Massachusetts and it's a guarantee. If last impressions make a difference, playing while Providence and Connecticut sit at home make a final statement.

Avoid: Making comparisons. No matter what happens Saturday night, UMass Lowell finishes above .500, doing so with a lineup without a double-digit goal scorer, and in a time where the options for Eastern teams are limited. If the RiverHawks lose, there are plenty of comparisons that put Providence ahead of UMass Lowell for a fourth Hockey East spot. Asking for a fifth might be a bridge too far for the RiverHawks.

Northern Michigan: 

Point Out: Multiple wins against Bowling Green, Bemidji State, and a win over Lake Superior State. Sing the praises of that 2021 WCHA conference tournament semifinalist appearance (at worst) in the "accomplishments" section.

Avoid: Losing? Honestly, the Wildcats sit in a spot where the team needs an automatic bid to get in the NCAA Tournament. Losing to either Minnesota State or the Bemidji State/Lake Superior State winner does very little to help those options. 11-17-1 will not put Northern Michigan in an at-large bid 

Notre Dame:

Point out: It's been a good year for the Big Ten and the Fighting Irish, with a 14-13-2 record, end the season with a good record. Notre Dame swept Minnesota and Michigan on the road. None of the wins in OT while several losses did. If finishing strong matters, Jeff Jackson's current team ended the year 4-1-1 with dominating wins. If location matters when deciding whether a fourth Big Ten team makes sense in an NCAA Tournament searching for eastern teams, Indiana is further east than Nebraska or Colorado.

Avoid: Bringing up why there is a mid-March gap in accomplishments, or why there is a gap in accomplishments at home. Minnesota ended up with as many wins (5) in Compton Family Ice Arena this season as Notre Dame. Luckily, there is no regional in South Bend. The 9-2-1 road record helps, however, an extra home win or two would make an easier argument for a fourth Big Ten team.

Omaha:

Point out: The record. The Mavericks sit above .500 and have a better record (14-10-1) than Denver and several teams on the bubble. Perception matters and it helps UNO. Outside of an early 1-0 loss to Miami, Omaha has a consistent season with only the one bad loss, going 6-0-0 against Colorado College. The Mavericks also took two wins against North Dakota, going 2-4-0 in six games against the Fighting Hawks. UNO also has a higher goal margin than DU. Many of the arguments for the Mavericks are also the same ones that the women's hockey committee saw in Minnesota Duluth's favor. Maybe bring that up?

Avoid: The record. The math is closer than it seems because four of the wins came in overtime (compared to zero OT losses), leaving Omaha with 10 regulation wins. Denver, as mentioned previously, has the better head-to-head record with the Mavericks. Conference tournaments continue to be a thorn in the Mavericks' side, as an NCAA Tournament bid would be the fourth for Omaha since its last conference semifinal appearance two conferences ago. Two players on this year's Omaha team were not even born when the streak began (s/t Chris Dilks for this tidbit).

Penn State:

Point out: The Big Ten conference tournament results like this week is the only thing that matters. Hammer that home. Say nothing else. Just point out that and how the Nittany Lions beat Wisconsin the time before losing in OT. That Notre Dame win showed Penn State can play when healthy and not missing a month of play. If you guilt the committee about 2020 and say the Big Ten deserves four teams, and that the Nittany Lions are the fourth-best, maybe it will work? Stranger things have happened.

Avoid: Mentioning the 0-5 start, being swept by a combined 12-3 score to Notre Dame the week prior to the Big Ten conference tournament, the sub-.500 record, the fifth-place finish, the six regulation victories, and...at this point I've said too much. Brevity is key.

Providence:

Point out: How head-to-head put the Friars ahead. Against UMass Lowell, Providence won the only game. That helps when the two teams are competing for what might be one at-large bid. PC would also have a better record and zero OT wins compared to the RiverHawks. Against UConn, the Friars split the series, but took the all-important Hockey East conference tournament game and finished with the better record. While it does not need to be pointed out, PC has made its brand on finding ways in the NCAA Hockey Tournament.

Avoid: Bringing up weaknesses like bad losses. Math and RPI only care whether a win or loss occurs, but a human selection committee might look at 9-0 and 8-1 losses to BC and UMass, respectively and ask a few extra questions. At the same time, it would help if Massachusetts wins the Hockey East championship after defeating PC in the semifinals. Not much the Friars can do there besides pray and hope an at-large spot remains for Providence. It's just best to avoid. 

Quinnipiac: 

Point out: Of the remaining ECAC teams, Quinnipiac is by far the most deserving to make the NCAA Tournament. Even without an automatic bid. QU's 17-6-4  record stands out in most conferences. Leaving the Bobcats out if St. Lawrence wins pushes the boundaries of how many Eastern teams can make the 16-team NCAA Tournament.

Avoid: Mentioning that Bowling Green sweep. Yes, it keeps coming up, but the Bobcats are one of the few teams who played a true non-conference schedule, which includes a two-game sweep over three-loss AIC. Normally, that would be a good thing. This year? Take the gift and discuss the ECAC.

St. Lawrence:

Point out: A top-two ECAC conference tournament finish for future generations. The ECAC automatic bid if the Saints defeat Quinnipiac for its fifth win of the season. 

Avoid: Failing to win the ECAC automatic bid. Yes, it's a weird year. No, it's not that weird.

Related: 

2021 NCAA Men's Hockey Tournament Bracket 3.0

Bracketology 101: Five More Selection Questions + NCAA Tournament Locks & Bubble Teams

Bracketology 101: How Many Teams From Each Conference Make The Men's NCAA Hockey Tournament?

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Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Feature: State Is Forever (Minnesota Hockey Journal)


For the March 2020 edition of Minnesota Hockey Journal, I wrote the cover story on a pair of Division 1 men's hockey captains in Minnesota Duluth's Nick Wolff and Bemidji State's Tommy Muck.

The pair of defensemen are friends and high school teammates. In 2014, they helped lead Eagan HS (MN) to the Minnesota Boy's High School State Tournament, an event that still plays a major role in the development of both Wolff, who signed an NHL contract with Boston after the season, and Muck.

There are plenty of gems on both throughout the entire feature, which also focuses on the leadership gained from a state tournament run and how they use it on their college teams. Minnesota Hockey Magazine can be found at local Minnesota rinks and wherever available (when available to go), along with online.

Website: https://www.minnesotahockeyjournal.com/news_article/show/1091151

Digital Magazine: http://read.uberflip.com/i/1212390-march-2020/15?m4=

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Monday, August 12, 2019

60 Days. 60 Teams. 600 Words (or Less): Bemidji State

Bemidji State

2018-19 Record: 15-17-6 (13-11-4, 5th in WCHA)
Head Coach: Tom Serratore, 18th Year
Top returning scorer: Charlie Combs (11G-11A)
Top returning goaltenders: Zach Driscoll (Jr.) and Henry Johnson (Jr.)

Welcome to the series, state of Minnesota.

Paul Bunyan's Pimp Chalice may no longer be contested among its teams, but it's fitting to begin our trek of Minnesota schools in the land of Bunyan, where the Beavers play up north in Bemidji.

To use a comparison that Minnesotans would like, Bemidji State's season was like a potluck. It had a bit of everything. The Beavers were hot (5-1-1 to start 2018-19), cold (0-5-1 to end 2018-19) and freezing (-15 degree outdoor hockey for Hockey Day Minnesota). When BSU scored first, the team played well (12-5-3). When BSU trailed after two periods, the team did not (0-14-3).

In between the hotdish start and jello salad finish, Tom Serratore's team being fairly consistent remains impressive. Bemidji State went into the season needing to try a few dishes to see what works after losing several core impact players throughout the lineup. The Beavers do need to replace several defensemen this time around, but it's not as much of an issue for 2019-20.

What's New: Bemidji State adds seven freshmen this season. As expected with Serratore's team and the WCHA, they aren't young. All were born before the year 2000 (...before the year 2000...).

Four are on the blue line, including Bemidji native Nick Leitner, who helped Bemidji HS to a pair of state tournament appearances, and Will Zmolek (whose father Doug was a former Gopher who played eight years in the NHL). Up front, Slovakian Samuel Solensky had 86 points (24G-62A) in 55 games for Johnstown (NAHL).

While the North Star College Cup is no more, its spirit lives on in this year's return of the Mariucci Classic. The Beavers join Minnesota, Minnesota State, and St. Cloud State contesting for in-state bragging rights. That's in addition to a non-conference trip to Grand Forks and welcoming St. Cloud State back to the Sanford Center after the two teams played at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center.

Closing Thoughts: There aren't as many questions about Bemidji State that need to be answered. It's not that type of year where the Beavers enter with uncertainty. If things go well and the young blue line can get up to speed, Bemidji State should be contending for WCHA home ice and more.

The best and worst thing for BSU is that by the end of last season you knew what you were going to get yet weren't sure which team you were going to get. The Beaver offense outshot its opponents by nearly five shots per game but had streaky moments throughout the season. Not surprisingly, it's led to a middle of the pack finish.

A real reason for optimism is Zach Driscoll (coming in after transferring from St. Cloud State) and Henry Johnson both serve as a sensible goaltending platoon, continuing Bemidji State's run of solid play in net. When Serratore's teams have been successful, the main dish's recipe of success has come thanks to its defense and goaltending. That's no guarantee, but it wouldn't be surprising if the team can go back for seconds.

Recent 60 Days. 60 Teams. 600 Words (or Less) Features
RIT
Dartmouth
Miami
Vermont
Every Team So Far

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Monday, July 1, 2019

BLOG: Welcome to the Next Chapter of Conference Realignment

Turns out the next chapter of college hockey realignment began, not with a shot across the bow, but with a Friday afternoon news dump.

There was no massive declaration. Instead, it took a six-paragraph press release put out at the latest possible time to watch the whole idea of western conference stability disappear.

Seven like-minded WCHA teams - Bemidji State, Bowling Green, Ferris State, Lake Superior State, Michigan Tech, Minnesota State, and Northern Michigan - are exploring forming a new men's hockey conference beginning in 2021-22.

Each would be leaving at the expense of the conference's two Alaska schools and Alabama Huntsville, all of whom were surprised to find out they were not on the Midwest cool list despite years hanging out together. So was longtime parent WCHA. All four have been left with questions of their future.

Honestly, the same can be said about the departing group of 7. With this newest realignment saga, all is new and up in the air. Yet it feels like history has repeated itself. Schools not happy with the direction of the conference leaving the WCHA to form an elite hockey conference, letting the smaller ones fend for themselves.

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

10 Initial Thoughts on Minnesota's 2019-20 Men's Hockey Schedule

Minnesota, along with the rest of the Big Ten, released its 2019-20 schedule on Wednesday (June 5, 2019). Several of these dates were known based on other schools already releasing schedules, but it's official now.

The full slate of 34 games can be found below:

University of Minnesota 2019-20 Men's Hockey Schedule


All dates Friday and Saturday unless noted otherwise
Oct 6: Mount Royal (Exhibition) (Sunday)
Oct 11-12: at Colorado College (NC)
Oct 18-19: vs. Niagara (NC)
Oct 25: vs. Minnesota Duluth (NC)
Oct 26: at Minnesota Duluth (NC)

Nov 1-2: vs. Notre Dame
Nov 8-9: at Michigan
Nov 15-16: vs. Penn State
Nov 22-23: vs. Wisconsin
Nov 28-29: vs. North Dakota (Thursday-Friday) (NC)

Dec 6-7: at Ohio State
Dec 28: vs. Bemidji State (Mariucci Classic) (Saturday) (NC)
Dec 29: vs. Minnesota State/St. Cloud State (Mariucci Classic) (Sunday) (NC)

Jan 10-11: at Michigan State
Jan 17: vs USA U-18 (Exhibition)
Jan 24-25: vs. Ohio State
Jan 31-Feb 1: at Wisconsin

Feb 7-8: vs. Michigan State
Feb 14-15: at Notre Dame
Feb 21-22: at Penn State
Feb 28-29: vs. Michigan

Here are 10 initial thoughts coming to mind on Bob Motzko's second Minnesota schedule. TV and times come at a later date, usually in September.

Friday, March 29, 2019

BLOG: Remembering the 2009 NCAA Tournament (and the craziness it brought)

Time flies. It's hard to believe nearly 10 years passed since Boston University defenseman Colby Cohen's overtime winner ended the craziest NCAA Tournament in memory.

Cohen's goal wasn't too crazy. In terms of the 2009 NCAA Tournament, a deflected puck off a diving defender fluttering past the Miami goaltender could be considered normal.

It came in a national championship game where BU trailed the RedHawks by two goals entering the final minute of regulation. It came in a tournament where the Terriers weren't the first team to claw back from two goals down entering the final minute of regulation. It came in a tournament when Air Force upsetting Michigan in Friday's opening game was both a major deal and forgotten about 48 hours later.

The 2009 NCAA Tournament was the tournament that, looking back, helped shape its perception of unpredictability, where the last at-large team to get in has won as many times in the last six years as a No. 1 seed. This tournament had everything.

On the 10 year anniversary, let's take a look back at the craziness.

Monday, October 1, 2018

WCHA Women's Preview: Influx of Olympic talent boosts a loaded group (The Athletic)

College hockey is back. In the WCHA, so are several of the sport’s top players.

If the topsy-turvy turnover nature that surrounded 2017-18 was an opening for several teams then 2018-19 is a return to the status quo. The year is a bit of a comeback season for the conference. Despite three teams in the eight-team NCAA tournament and two Frozen Four finalists, the year ended empty. For the first time since women’s ice hockey was sponsored by the NCAA in 2000, no WCHA team made the championship game.

It’s also a comeback in the fact that many top collegians are returning after spending a year centralized with their country training for the Olympics. Several teams restock with leaders. Others are getting Olympians as freshmen.

Of the four players given votes for Preseason WCHA Player of the Year, none played college hockey in 2017-18. (Even two of the three nominees for the Preseason Rookie of the Year award delayed their enrollment by a season.) Maddie Rooney gives UMD stability in net. Kelly Pannek, Sarah Potomak and Amy Potomak give Minnesota a top line. The end result is four WCHA teams ranked in the top 9, including one that finished below .500 last season.

Read the full preview, including in-depth looks at the Gophers and all seven WCHA teams here. (subscription required)

Friday, May 18, 2018

May 2018 College Hockey Mailbag (The Athletic)

This week I participated, along with a few others, in answering questions from Athletic subscribers and Twitter followers. We ended up enough college hockey questions to split the whole thing into three parts based on schools. (Part III also has a couple more general college hockey questions.) I can't thank everyone enough for sending such thoughtful questions. Hopefully, we do something similar soon.

They can be read below.

Part I: On Mankato, Bemidji, North Dakota and the NSCC

Part II: On the Gophers' men's and women's programs

Part III: On the national champions and St. Cloud State


Wednesday, January 24, 2018

BLOG: RIP North Star College Cup, 1 year later

This weekend should be the fifth annual North Star College Cup. It's not. Sadly, no one will be playing for Paul Bunyan's Pimp Chalice at Xcel Energy Center.

Photo: Nathan Wells

The event, Minnesota's version of the Beanpot or GLI, came to an end by mutual agreement as teams would rather have home games against in-state schools than tournament bragging rights.

(No really. UMD head coach Scott Sandelin joked after winning last year's NSCC that they'd throw the trophy in the fire as kindling wood.)

Honestly? It's too bad. Even with all of its flaws, the North Star College Cup helped show off the growing greatness of Minnesota college hockey throughout the state.

Monday, December 4, 2017

Game Story: Bemidji State snaps Minnesota's 9 game winning streak (Zone Coverage)

MINNEAPOLIS- Having played the Gophers close three times this season in a losing effort, Bemidji State was not denied in the fourth and final attempt Saturday afternoon at Ridder Arena.

A night after defeating the Beavers in the final minute of overtime, Minnesota could not find the energy to push past and get a sweep in the two-game series. Jacqueline Kaasa and Emily Bergland scored third period goals 46 seconds apart to put the visiting Beavers ahead 4-2 for a series split

The loss snapped Minnesota’s nine game winning streak.

“I was really proud of our group after suffering a really, really tough loss last night. To come back tonight, I’m really proud of them,” said Bemidji State head coach Jim Scanlan.

Kaasa finished with two goals and an assist, including the game-winner 5:16 into the third period. Her first was matched 23 seconds later in the first period by Alex Woken, whose effort led to Minnesota fans throwing stuffed animals over the boards during the team’s annual Teddy Bear Toss.


Click here to read the rest!

Monday, February 27, 2017

Game Story: Gopher women's hockey team tops Bemidji State to advance to WCHA Final Faceoff (St. Paul Pioneer Press)

2/27/2017 Game Story

Bemidji State 2
Minnesota 3
FINAL

MINNEAPOLIS- Kelly Pannek and the rest of the Gophers women’s hockey team were aware of the stakes Sunday against Bemidji State.

Facing elimination and the pressure of a must-win Game 3, the Gophers needed a victory in the first round of the WCHA playoffs to continue controlling their own destiny. Without a win, Minnesota could have lost an opportunity to host a NCAA tournament quarterfinal. It would also leave getting a chance to defend its national championship in doubt.

Minnesota (25-6-5) brushed off a pair of scares, getting top performances from its top players. The Gophers defeated Bemidji State 3-2 at Ridder Arena to win the best-of-three series two games to one and live to play another weekend.

“Before this week even started, we knew what we had to do,” said Pannek, who finished with two goals Sunday set up by linemate Sarah Potomak. “This series shows our season, the ups and downs that we have had and fighting back from adversity in a way. Bemidji’s a great team, and they are so tough to play against. They play such a disciplined style of hockey.”

The Gophers emphasized getting out to a quick start Sunday. Following Saturday’s loss in a game it never led, Minnesota began with an 8-1 advantage in shots, testing the BSU defense with several chances by Pannek.

She was rewarded with the opening goal 10:35 into the game. Afterward, the Gophers did not trail.

Click here to read the rest 

Game Story: Minnesota falls to Bemidji State 2-1, forcing Game 3 of WCHA Series (St. Paul Pioneer Press)

2/25/2017 Game Story

Bemidji State 2
Minnesota 1
FINAL

MINNEAPOLIS- With its season — and for six seniors, their college careers — on the line, Bemidji State defeated the Gophers 2-1 on Saturday to force a deciding Game 3 in the first-round WCHA series at Ridder Arena.

Ciscely Nelson’s goal with 8:51 left in regulation broke a 1-1 tie, and Bemidji State held on to snap fourth-ranked Minnesota’s 11-game unbeaten streak.

“They came out flying today,” said Sarah Potomak, who scored for the Gophers (24-6-5). “They just played unbelievable and had a great game.

“It’s unfortunate. We just need to be better and get to the dirty areas in front of the net. We’ll be looking to do that tomorrow.”

Brittni Mowat stopped 33 shots on goal for Bemidji State (12-19-3).

“We just got to get those second chances. She makes unbelievable first saves,” Potomak said.

Click here to read the rest

Monday, January 30, 2017

Radio: WCCO Radio on Steve Thomson Show (January 29, 2017)

Once again I was on The Good Neighbor, WCCO 830, yesterday with Steve Thomson to discuss Gopher hockey.

I broke down Minnesota's weekend at the North Star College Cup, what lies ahead as the Gophers return to Big Ten play and how a loss Friday to Minnesota Duluth helped fuel Saturday's victory over Bemidji State.

Direct: http://minnesota.cbslocal.com/audio/steve-thomson-and-eric-nelson/

iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/steve-thomson-and-eric-nelson/id403228796?mt=2

My segment begins at the 31 minute mark during the 4pm hour on Sunday January 29th.

Sunday, January 29, 2017

Game Story: Schierhorn stops 3 breakaways in opening minute of win (St. Paul Pioneer Press)

1/29/2017 Game Story

Minnesota 4
Bemidji State 0
FINAL

ST. PAUL- On the opening shift of Saturday’s North Star College Cup consolation game, Minnesota goaltender Eric Schierhorn gave a preview of things to come.

Schierhorn stopped Bemidji State forward Gerry Fitzgerald on a breakaway. Then he did so again. Then one more for good measure that also drew a Bemidji State penalty.

Three times in the opening minute of Minnesota’s 4-0 victory, the sophomore was forced to shut down chances by the Beavers before his team found its legs at both ends of the ice. Schierhorn stopped all 25 shots he faced for his fourth shutout of the season. The Gophers added three goals in the third period to break through and win at the tournament for the first time since 2014.

“I don’t know if breakaways are really what you want on the first shot on the game,” Schierhorn said. “Both games (this weekend), I had those shots to help get me into a rhythm and the shots kept coming.”

Click here to read the rest!

Saturday, January 28, 2017

Pregame Blog: Minnesota-Bemidji State Line Combinations

Once again Minnesota plays at 4 p.m. on the second day of the North Star College Cup.

It's the third straight year the Gophers will contend for the consolation championship at Xcel Energy Center. Minnesota got two goals by Brent Gates Jr., but fell to #1/#2 Minnesota Duluth 3-2 and now face Bemidji State. UMD will play St. Cloud State for the championship at 7.

Weirdly only Minnesota's game is televised on Fox Sports North. The championship will not be, which in a way is fitting for the way the tournament is ending.

If you missed last night's game my recap focusing on the little mistakes and glass half full attitude Minnesota had following the loss can be read here by clicking on the ridiculously long hyperlink.

From watching the early game I thought the WCHA-leading Beavers out-played SCSU for much of the last 40 minutes. Jeff Smith made a couple timely saves and Bemidji State hit a post in the second period that would have changed course.

It's not an easy game in the final North Star College Cup. As Minnesota knows, there's a difference leaving the tournament without a win, having done so each of the past two seasons with second-day letdowns.

Will this year be different?

University of Minnesota Golden Gophers lines

Forwards
Rem Pitlick (#15) - Justin Kloos (#25) - Tyler Sheehy (#22)
Leon Bristedt (#18)- Vinni Lettieri (#19) - Taylor Cammarata (#13)
Brent Gates Jr. (#10) - Mike Szmatula (#9) - Luke Notermann (#11)
Ryan Norman (#23) - Darian Romanko (#26) - Jack Ramsey (#16)

Defense
Jake Bischoff (#28) - Ryan Lindgren (#5)
Steve Johnson (#4) - Jack Sadek (#2)
Ryan Zuhsldorf (#20) - Ryan Collins (#6)

Goaltenders
Eric Schierhorn (#37)
Nick Lehr (#34)
Brock Kautz (#1)

Minnesota's only change from Friday's lineup is Luke Notermann returning in place of Connor Reilly.

Bemidji State University lines:


Once again I'm covering for the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Pick up a copy and read my coverage to support if you can.

Friday, January 27, 2017

North Star College Cup Never Took Off (St. Paul Pioneer Press)

(This originally appeared in Friday's St. Paul Pioneer Press.)

This weekend’s fourth annual North Star College Cup at Xcel Energy Center will be the final one contested between the five Division 1 schools in Minnesota.

After meeting this summer and fall, the schools’ five head coaches elected to discontinue the tournament after the initial four-year rotation, citing attendance issues and a reluctance to give up home games.

“I think the idea was to hopefully get the alumni involved and replicate what the old WCHA playoffs was like, but that never seemed to happen,” Gophers coach Don Lucia said Wednesday. “It just probably wasn’t worth giving up home games for so many people.”

The tournament was created after the splintering of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association. The Gophers became part of the six-team Big Ten Conference, and St. Cloud State and Minnesota-Duluth became charter members of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference. Minnesota State Mankato and Bemidji State remained in the WCHA.

Click to read the rest here!



Tuesday, January 24, 2017

BLOG: North Star College Cup comes to an end + 2017 Nonconference Schedule



(Photo Credit: Nate Wells)

Enjoy this weekend's North Star College Cup. It will be the last one for a while.

The demise of the NSCC after the fourth year of the original deal has been rumored for a while and was confirmed earlier today. Paul Bunyan's Pimp Chalice, as I fondly like to call it, will soon be a memory, a nostalgic piece of hardware going the way of the DQ Cup.