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

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Tigers Fall 3-1

The Tigers failed to get a sweep in the first series of the 2nd half of the season as they were stuffed by Mankato's backup goalie Dan Tormey. Links from the game below:
USCHO Box Score
CC Athletics (with old pic of course)
Gazette

Saturday, January 10, 2009



The Tigers won their first Friday night game in 3 months over Minnesota State Mankato last night in a solid 5-2 win. The Tigers kept the momentum rolling on offense from last game and put up 5 goals on the Mavericks. I've posted the USCHO recap of the game below and some links to all the coverage from last night.

  • The biggest thing I noticed right away was #2 was back on the ice. For those of you who don't remember, that's Cody Lampl, who has been suspended for a whopping 47 games due to a "violation of student conduct" which is both puzzling and gross. The Gazette ran a good story on him (minus the details of why he was suspended) on December 29 that I missed. So if you missed it too, check it here.
  • Notes from the Gazette here, including Sweatt out last night with an upper body injury, Hobey Voting and some other small game notes.
  • David Ramsey looks at the potential this season's team has for a great finish.
  • CC Athletics recaps the game, complete with a picture from the second game of the season. Oops!
  • Even though I wasn't at the game I still have a Uni note from the game I noticed in Missy J's pics. Why did Cody Lampl have soooooo much tape on his shin pads?

USCHO Game Recap

Three months was the last time the Colorado College Tigers had won a game on Friday until Friday night’s game against the Minnesota State University, Mankato Mavericks, a 5-2 Tigers’ win.

“It’s a strange feeling actually to win on a Friday; we don’t know with our Saturday prep out there,” quipped CC coach Scott Owens. “No, you know what, it was a good 60 minutes; it was a good team win. We did a lot of things well tonight so it just feels good to see everybody contributing and distribute the minutes well.”

The Tigers started off strong, getting the majority of the early chances. However, Mavericks’ goaltender Mike Zacharias (24 saves) stood strong, stopping a few two-on-ones, including a short-handed one 11:14 into the second period.

Instead, the Mavericks scored on that same man advantage 45 seconds later when Kael Mouillierat wristed a shot from the slot over the glove of Tigers’ netminder Richard Bachman (31 saves).

The Tigers tied it up about three-and-a-half minutes later with a power-play goal of their own however, when Andreas Vlassopoulos shot a Brian Connelly pass from the right side faceoff dot in past Zacharias.

Exactly one minute later at 16:25, CC took a 2-1 lead on another power-play goal. Eric Walsky, behind the goal line, passed the puck to Tyler Johnson, who tucked it five-hole on Zacharias. The goal was reviewed, as the puck barely trickled across the line, but it was deemed good.

The Mavericks made it a 2-2 game 5:10 into the second period when Blake Friesen blasted a slap shot from the right point past Bachman.

At about the midway point of the period, MSU looked to have taken the lead, but the apparent goal was waved off, as forward Zach Harrison was called for interference behind the play.

From that point on, it was all CC.

The Tigers retook the lead at 12:32 of the middle frame when Brian McMillin one-timed an Addison DeBoer pass five-hole past Zacharias, their first even-strength goal against the Mavericks all year.

“We’re wide open in the middle of the slot and they end up with a three-on-two on it,” said Mavericks’ coach Troy Jutting, referencing forward Andrew Sackrison. “We’re wide open in the slot, should have a great attempt to score, we fan on the puck, they come down on a three-on-two and score. That’s a huge, huge change in the game.”

About five minutes later, the Tigers scored their third power-play goal of the game when Stephen Schultz fired a shot from the high slot past Zacharias. Overall, the Tigers went three-for-seven on the power play.

“We switched the one [power play unit] around, we opened it up a bit, and you know what, they did a pretty good job,” said Owens. “We were just as happy with the other units.”

CC finished off the scoring 4:52 into the third period on McMillin’s second of the night. DeBoer won a puck battle along the boards and dished it to McMillin, who shot a seeing-eye puck tough angle that found its way into the net just between Zacharias and the right post.

“It’s funny; we’ve had nine days of practice since we’ve come back, and it’s been our best line,” Owens said of the DeBoer-Nick Dineen-McMillin line, which combined for five points (2g, 3a). “It’s been our best line in practice. The first period, it started out a little bit shaky when Dineen got walked on the faceoff and a couple other things, but they’re solid. They have good chemistry, they work extremely hard, they’re honest and they’re doing a lot of little things right.”

MSU’s best chance for another goal probably came with 3:52 remaining in the game when the officials reviewed a Jerad Stewart shot. Stewart had a mini-breakaway, shot the puck, and had his momentum carry him into Bachman and, consequently, the net, which got knocked off its moorings.

The game had some marginal drama when MSU’s Harrison got five and a game for checking-from-behind while teammate Geoff Irwin and CC’s Kris Fredheim each got two for cross-checking with 19.4 seconds remaining, but by that point, the game was over.

“We missed on [some] breakaways; we had some chances to score [but didn’t] ,” said Jutting. “In games like this, those are huge difference-makers.”

“It was a good team win, it was what we needed, we got some secondary scoring, we got some people coming around now, chipping in, but you know what?,” asked Owens. “Tomorrow’s another night and they’re going to be desperate, playing hard and we’ve got to be able to match the intensity.”

The teams faceoff again Saturday night at World Arena. The puck drops at 7:07 Mountain time.

Friday, January 9, 2009

A little while back there was a big uproar over the NCAA Tournament and the possibility that teams would be seeded based on region, rather than "bracket integrity". It was getting tossed around by the "powers" of College Hockey but I hadn't heard much in a while. Well I spottedan article on CHN from December discussing the fact that it's a real possibility, even this season.

The biggest example of this would have been our own Colorado Springs West Regional this past spring. As you remember, the Tigers were partnered with Michigan State, New Hampshire and Notre Dame. A good solid mix of teams from different conferences and different areas of the country. If it were based on regions, it would have been the Tigers, Air Force, DU and North Dakota. Part of me says "wohoo!" for two Colorado Springs teams duking it out with rival DU and conference rival North Dakota. Of course, you would have 3 WCHA teams in the same bracket beating eachother senseless and outside of the Front Range and UND, no one would really care. However, you would have to think that the arena would have been packed to the roof and LOUD with the locals who did care, and you would have had the rival fans going at it as well as the players.

That aspect would definitely be a selling point to me because the WA was pretty quiet last spring. The biggest problem I have with the logic behind this is travel expenses. Ok so planes aren't cheap, so seed them semi-regionally in the "bus league" format that many minor-league teams do. Sure gas could sky rocket again, but I filled up today with premium on a major road for $1.90 for my 5.9L gas hog (bet the red Prius owners right next to me felt dumb for shelling out who-freaking-knows-what for their toxic-battery-tree-hugging-mobile). Unless there's some dramatic turn of events in the UAE (which is never out of the question), then for at least this season go semi regionally. Here's another cost-saving measure. Don't send DU/CC/AFA/UAA (what? they could make it!) to New Hampshire, Boston etc. It's not fair to the players travel, fans, and it's expensive!

Anyway, enough of that. The Tigers take on Mankato in the Springs tonight at 7:37 and tomorrow at 7:07 to resume the season and begin the final race for a second MacNaughton Cup, a first Broadmoor Trophy and a great tournament seeding. Hope you are enjoying viewing the blog the way it was supposed to be viewed, with no blue and purple links!!

Thursday, October 2, 2008

From WCHA.com

Colorado College Picked to Repeat as WCHA Champions
in 2008-09 in Annual Grand Forks Herald WCHA Coaches' Poll
by Brad Elliott Schlossman, Grand Forks Herald

Oct. 1, 2008

GRAND FORKS, N.D. - The opinions of Western Collegiate Hockey Association coaches varied greatly when it came to picking a preseason rookie of the year and a preseason player of the year. There's one thing the coaches can pretty much agree on, though: Colorado College is still the team to beat.

The defending MacNaughton Cup champion Tigers received eight first-place votes and are picked to finish first in the 38th annual Grand Forks Herald WCHA preseason Coaches' Poll. UND received two first-places and is projected to finish second, followed by Denver. Minnesota and Wisconsin are tied for fourth.

"I think a lot of it is based on last year," Colorado College coach Scott Owens said. "I think the strength for us is going to be in our quality depth at forward. We also have five of the six guys who played regularly for us on defense back and all three goalies.

"I think everyone is excited to get back at it. It's an older team with good leadership."

The bottom five projected teams, in order, are St. Cloud State, Minnesota State, Mankato, Minnesota Duluth, Michigan Tech and Alaska Anchorage.

"I think CC is an improved team from last year, and they were a great team last year," UND coach Dave Hakstol said. "I think every team in the league can say they've found ways improve. What a heck of a league we have."

What perhaps best demonstrates the league's outstanding talent level this year is the coaches' votes for player of the year and rookie of the year.

UND's Ryan Duncan has a Hobey Baker Memorial Award sitting in his attic, but he didn't receive a single vote for preseason player of the year. Denver's Joe Colborne was the Canadian Junior A Player of the Year and the highest-drafted freshman in the country (first round, 16th overall), but he didn't receive a single vote for preseason rookie of the year.

Those honors went elsewhere.

Colorado College sophomore goaltender Richard Bachman is the preseason player of the year, getting three votes. St. Cloud State forward Ryan Lasch got two, as did Minnesota Duluth goalie Alex Stalock and Denver forward Tyler Bozak. CC's Chad Rau got one vote.

North Dakota's Jason Gregoire and Minnesota Duluth's Jack Connolly are the co-preseason rookies of the year. Both players received three votes, while Minnesota rookies Aaron Ness and Jordan Schroeder each got two.