Monday, April 5, 2010
Well, it's pretty obvious I did the cardinal blogging sin and abandoned my blog with no warning. Whelp I learned and have started a new entity encompassing not only Tiger hockey but also that great living in Colorado Springs over on WordPress and Tumblr. SO, come on over and take a look, you won't be disappointed!
http://pikespeakliving.wordpress.com
http://pikespeakliving.tumblr.com/
Saturday, March 28, 2009
I've been relatively quiet the past few weeks, enjoying a taste of spring and watching Michigan and DU both lose on the first day! BUT the big news I spotted this morning is that Richard Bachman signed a 3 year deal with the Stars and will no longer be the Tigers saving grace in net.
Sad for the Tigers, good for him. Next year will be an interesting battle in net, but the Tigers do have a new goalie coming in who may be an NHL draft pick before stepping onto campus. It should be an interesting off-season for the team.
Bachman leaves CC for Stars
THE GAZETTE
Colorado College goaltender Richard Bachman and the Dallas Stars agreed to a three-year contract Friday. Terms were not disclosed.
"The main thing for me was getting in a good situation with a NHL team that doesn't have a lot of depth at goaltender," Bachman said. "The other main thing is it has been my dream to play pro hockey. I went both ways on it. It was a really tough decision. It just felt like the right timing."
CC coach Scott Owens said Bachman called and told him the news.
"We're happy for him," Owens said. "It seems to be a very good opportunity within the Dallas organization for Richard."
The Stars drafted Bachman in the fourth round, 120th overall, in 2006.
"The guys were sad to see me go but they're supportive of it," Bachman said of his teammates.
He had a standout freshman season for CC, with a 1.85 goals-allowed average and .931 save percentage, and was named the WCHA Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year.
Monday, March 16, 2009
Here's Missy's pics from the Duluth series and the last shots of our great senior class. If you look closely, you can see all the guys were sporting...uhhh....mohawks of sorts. Guess we won't ever be seeing those again!
Sunday, March 15, 2009
I was planning a writeup about how the Tigers playoff fall could have been seen from miles away but it looks like Schwab beat me to the punch. Pretty good article and it sums up the problems the Tigers have had all season. Pics from the weekend will be up tomorrow night.
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Minnesota-Duluth eliminates Tigers
FRANK SCHWAB
THE GAZETTE
Colorado College's quick and quiet exit from the 2008-09 season should have been stunning, but the signs were there for months.
The Tigers were offensively challenged throughout the season, which ended Saturday with a 3-1 loss to Minnesota-Duluth at World Arena. The Bulldogs swept the best-of-three Western Collegiate Hockey Association first-round playoff series and advanced to this week's Final Five with an 18-12-8 record.
CC, which finishes 16-12-10, managed only two goals in the series.
"It's fitting we go out this way, kind of struggling on the power play and not scoring enough goals," senior forward Cody Lampl said.
The Tigers were picked to repeat as league champions before the season and briefly were ranked No. 1 nationally. CC was the only WCHA team to finish as a top-five seed and not advance to the Final Five. The other four top seeds went 8-0 in the first round.
The Tigers finished with their fewest victories since the 1992-93 season, when they went 8-28. CC has lost five straight postseason games and has lost in the first round of the WCHA playoffs three of the past four years.
"It's amazing how fast it ends," senior forward Scott McCulloch said.
The Bulldogs lead the WCHA in power-play percentage, and the Tigers were burned by some early power-play goals Friday night. On Saturday, CC couldn't stay out of the penalty box early.
A hooking penalty on center Andreas Vlassopoulos led to Duluth's first goal, by Jack Connolly. The Tigers' second penalty - cross checking by Eric Walsky - was turned into another goal, this one by Nick Kemp, giving Duluth a 2-0 lead a little more than 11 minutes into the game.
"That was the scouting report, was we have to keep them off the (power play)," McCulloch said. "It was a lot better than I thought it would be. They did a number on our (penalty kill) this weekend."
CC showed some signs of life late in the first period. On a power play, McCulloch scored on a rebound off Brian Connelly's shot. Duluth answered in the second when Michael Gergen scored.
The Tigers battled in the third period, putting 12 shots on goal, but couldn't get another score.
Coach Scott Owens said the season was "absolutely frustrating."
"To get swept at home in this fashion - despite the fact there wasn't a lot of difference between the teams in the middle (of the WCHA) - it shouldn't happen," Owens said.
NOTES
High shots
In Friday's playoff opener, Minnesota-Duluth had success shooting high on CC goaltender Richard Bachman, beating him a couple of times over the shoulder on his glove side. The Bulldogs obviously figured that was their best strategy to beat Bachman in the series.
"It looked like they were going high on him a lot," CC coach Scott Owens said. "Bachman is known for having good legs, so I'm sure that's probably what it was."
Overtime prep
One obvious difference between the regular season and playoffs is there are no ties in the playoffs. The longest game in CC history was in 1997, when the Tigers beat Wisconsin 1-0 in four overtimes in a WCHA first-round playoff game. The coaches and players said there was no way to prepare for a multiple-overtime game, although they understand it was a possibility.
"Everyone wants that one goal to win and get the game over because you're so tired," CC senior defenseman Jake Gannon said. "I think all of that drives playing in those long games."
Hall in
The Tigers didn't make many changes to the lineup after losing their playoff opener against Duluth in the best-of-three series. CC did make one switch. Freshman Tim Hall replaced Addison DeBoer as the left wing on the fourth line.
CC did not make many changes to its lineup over a five-week stretch in which the team only lost once.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
The Tigers couldn't have picked a worse time to be swept for the first time this season. CC fired 30 shots on Alex Stalock and were again stopped cold in a 3-1 loss that ends the Tigers WCHA playoff hunt and the 08-09 season. The loss marks the 5th straight playoff loss for the team and will put Richard Bachman's future on the team in question. He said there was unfinished business here and would pass up the chance to go to the pro's to get the Tigers into the Frozen Four.
More to come tomorrow.
Apparently I wasn't the only one suprised at the score last night. Both the Tigers website and USCO put it as a major upset. The Tigers now have 60 minutes to keep their season alive or else it will plummet into a huge disappointment for a team once ranked #1. Below you will find the CC Athletics recap and below USCHO for your Saturday reading pleasure. I'm off to play on the red rocks of Moab!
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Colorado College really has its work cut out now.
The Tigers head into Game 2 of their first-round WCHA playoff series with the University of Minnesota Duluth in a do-or-die predicament, facing elimination after suffering a 4-1 loss to the Bulldogs in Friday’s opener at the World Arena.
In plain and simple terms, CC must bounce back and win on Saturday and Sunday, or the season is over.
Senior center MacGregor Sharp set up a power-play goal then scored one of his own in the first period, as visiting UMD got an early jump and never looked back in Game 1 of this best-of-three set. Freshman forwards Mike and Jack Connolly collected a pair of assists apiece while Josh Meyers, Jordan Fulton and Justin Fontaine each clicked for a key tally in the victory.
Colorado College’s only goal, at 15:53 of the middle frame, came on a semi-breakaway by Eric Walsky. Sophomore net minder Richard Bachman banked a pass off the boards to Walsky as Duluth finished killing a long 5-on-3 power play for CC, and the senior winger soloed in to score his 11th goal of the season to pull the Tigers to within 3-1.
Fontaine’s red lighter at 3:52 of the third period ended any further hopes for a comeback.
Bachman finished with 35 saves compared to 36 by Bulldogs goaltender Alex Stalock, who made 15 of his stops in the second period when CC had four consecutive power plays, including the two-man advantage for 1:56.
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Duluth Shocks CC
Bulldog Power Play the Difference in Crucial Game 1 Win
by Theresa Spisak/WCHA Correspondent
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (March 13) — Though the lower seed in this series, the University of Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs proved why they have the fourth best power play in the country, getting two power-play goals to beat the Colorado College Tigers, 4-1, in the first game of the best-of-three series Friday night at World Arena.
The Tigers controlled play early, but they couldn’t get anything past Bulldog netminder Alex Stalock (36 saves).
“I thought Al made some big saves early,” said Duluth coach Scott Sandelin. “There’s no question he was good early.”
As a result, the Bulldogs got on the board first at the tail end of a five minute power play thanks to a Cody Lampl checking from behind call. About halfway through the period and with 32 seconds remaining in the power play, Josh Meyers unleashed a slapshot from the right face-off circle that beat Tiger goaltender Richard Bachman (35 saves) under his right shoulder.
“It happened early and it set the tone and we did a pretty good job killing it for about four and a half minutes until they score but it gave them life; it gave them momentum and life,” said CC coach Scott Owens.
Duluth took a 2-0 lead with 1:58 left in the first period when MacGregor Sharp’s power play shot from the slot beat Bachman five-hole.
The Bulldogs went up 3-0 on another five-hole goal from the slot 7:21 into the second period with Jordan Fulton doing the honors.
CC got on the board with about four minutes left in the middle period in the waning seconds of a 5-on-3 penalty. The Bulldogs cleared the puck out of their zone, but Bachman controlled the clear and quickly dished it to Eric Walsky for the breakaway. Walsky came down the center of the ice, cut to Stalock’s right and slid it under the sprawling goaltender to make it a 3-1 game.
Though the Tigers tried to get back into the game, the Bulldogs only furthered their lead with a goal four minutes into the third period when Justin Fontaine beat Bachman high glove side right off a face-off.
The Tigers almost had a goal with 16.8 seconds remaining, but Stalock made a goal-line glove save on Scott McCulloch.
“It was huge for us to get the lead and build on that lead,” said Sandelin. “I thought our [penalty-] killers did a great job, I thought Al came up big on certainly that last save [which] kind of epitomized his night, but you need your best players to play like your best players.”
“It was there for us to get back into it,” said Owens, “and it didn’t happen. They got better with confidence as they went along and I think their top guys outplayed our top guys tonight.
“In the end, you tell them, hey, it’s one game. You live to fight as a desperate team tomorrow and whatever happens, happens on Sunday. It’s not over.”
The two teams meet again on Saturday, March 14 at World Arena. Game time is at 7:05 p.m. Mountain.
Friday, March 13, 2009
CC's Friday struggles continued into the post-season as the Tigers were waxed 4-1 by the Bulldogs from Duluth. The Tigers launched 36 shots on Alex Stalock but weren't able to solve the solid goalender. Bachman faced 39 shots, stopping all but the four goals. The Tigers are now faced with a must-win tomorrow night or their season is done for sure. I was following the game notes on the stupid Gazette's game blog but the blog died after the second period. Pretty sure if you're blogging at a game, you should keep people updated and not wander away to drink beer the rest of the game.
So, upcoming: The Tigers play Duluth again Saturday night at 7:07. If the Bulldogs win, it's all over. If the Tigers can rebound, game 3 will be Sunday night-I'm assuming 7:05 (that's when all Sunday games have been). The Tigers' season is all on the line tomorrow night, we'll see how they respond.
The Tigers still have a pretty good shot at making the NCAA Tournament if they can play good hockey and win some WCHA tournament games. Unfortunately, that road looks a little tougher at the time of this posting as the Tigers are down 3-1 going into the third period against Duluth. I'll have a quick update of the score when it ends (nothing more since I'm in Moab!). In the meantime, here's Frank Schwab's assessment of the Tigers' postseason chances.
CC hockey team knows what it has to do to make the NCAA Tournament
FRANK SCHWAB
Unlike college basketball, which will engage in nonstop "in or out?" bubble-team debate until Sunday afternoon, college hockey's postseason berths are easier to figure.
If the power ratings in hockey say you're good enough to make the NCAA Tournament, you're in. That's why coaches pay so much attention this time of year to the U.S. College Hockey Online PairWise rankings. Those rankings mirror the formula used by the NCAA selection committee.
"I like it because there are no opinions, there's no subjectivity," Colorado College coach Scott Owens said. "There's always those thoughts if a guy is sitting around in a cigar smoke-filled room paying back people to get teams in. This takes that out of it. It's very fair."
At the beginning of February, PairWise wasn't a big factor for the plummeting Tigers. Now they're in a tie for 14th after a strong run in February and early March. Depending on how many lower-ranked teams get automatic bids by winning conference tournaments, the top 12 or 13 teams in the PairWise rankings usually get into the NCAA Tournament.
CC has a best-of-three home series in the opening round of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association playoffs this weekend against Minnesota-Duluth. Two wins in the tough matchup could help the Tigers move up in the PairWise. Duluth is barely behind the Tigers in PairWise, tied for 17th.
"If you don't win, you're done anyway," Owens said. "If you do win, you might as well pick up some value points."
If CC advances, there is a good chance it will participate in the extra game at the WCHA Final Five in St. Paul, Minn. The Tigers are the fourth seed, and the top three remaining seeds get byes to the semifinals. That could give CC a chance to get an extra win and help its NCAA Tournament standing.
"I think if we can win this series and win two games in St. Paul, we have a decent chance," Owens said.
CC could also get in the NCAA Tournament by winning the Final Five, but that won't be easy. The Tigers have never won the event and if they play in the extra game, that adds some difficulty.
The players understand they can't pay too much attention to what happens to teams like Princeton, Minnesota, Ohio State and St. Lawrence - teams that are directly ahead of or tied with CC in the PairWise. The Tigers hope to win and let the computers figure out the rest.
"I just try to focus on the games," senior forward Eric Walsky said. "All we have control over is winning and those wins are only going to help in the PairWise."
Thursday, March 12, 2009
photo from Gazette.com
I think Frank Schwab taking over the Tigers coverage at the Gazette was the best thing ever to happen. I hated the previous writer's style and topics and I thought she was pretty amateurish. Frank's latest article was from a full week ago and I completely forgot about it until Missy J posted the link for me on my facebook page (oh and a big thanks to all the Tigers who confirmed my friend requests this week, pretty cool to be friends with all the guys on the team and I may harrass you guys more for some interviews after the season is over).
If anyone ever tells you that hard work doesn't pay off, just have them give Berni Horowitz a call. The guy was just chillin' and playing on the club team at CC (I didn't realize that had both club and D1) and now he is on the Tigers roster as the #3 goalie and getting worked over in practice. It gives Bachman a break and also seems to have given the Tigers a little energy and fun in practice-something that could pay off bigtime this weekend. Check out the article below.
One other fun thing that Missy also pointed out to me which is the video of Jack Hillen's first NHL goal and it's a beaut!
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Club team goalie gets dream chance with Tigers
FRANK SCHWAB THE GAZETTE
Bernie Horowitz isn't in Colorado College's media guide or listed as a player on the team's Web site. And he won't be dressed and on the bench Saturday when the Tigers play at Denver.
All Horowitz gets is to live the dream of every recreational athlete who wants the chance to compete at a higher level.
When backup goaltender Drew O'Connell suffered a season-ending shoulder injury, CC needed a third goalie for practice. That's how Horowitz went from playing on the school's club team to practicing every week with the nation's No. 15 team.
"Wonderful, amazing," Horowitz said. "My highest aspiration was to play open hockey against these guys just once, to see how I matched up against them."
O'Connell hurt his shoulder Jan. 16. For a while, the Tigers were hopeful he could return, but O'Connell never recovered and recently had surgery.
Finding another goalie isn't easy. There aren't free agents like in the pros, and CC is a small campus.
While the Tigers were worried about finding a new goaltender, Horowitz was enjoying himself on the club team. He wasn't going to challenge Richard Bachman for supremacy at CC, not with his 4-8-1 record and 4.94 goals-against average, according to the club team's site. But the former New York City high school starter never dreamed of playing with the guys on scholarship.
"When I came to this school, I saw I could play with the club team five times a week, and that was great," he said. "The D-I team was never part of the equation."
Horowitz, a junior, knew some of the Tigers players. He was friends with former CC goalie Chris Kawano as a freshman and a neighbor to some Tigers players last year in the dorms. During the summer after his freshman year, he even practiced against some of them, which fulfilled a dream.
CC's coaches asked Charlie Litch, a part-time video editor for the varsity team last year, about club team goalies. Litch, who is handling administrative duties for the club team, recommended Horowitz.
"We just asked around," coach Scott Owens said. "It takes some of the practice workload off Richard, and you're able to run a full hour-and-15-minute practice with three goaltenders without having to worry about burning out your two goaltenders. From that standpoint, we needed it."
Horowitz was given what amounted to a two-week tryout, then was added to the roster.
Horowitz has taken it in stride. He laughs along when teammates mercilessly tease him during an interview, and he jokes about getting "red light burns" after he practiced despite being under the weather this week. He admits if anything in his game is off, he'll "get killed." Yet, for the most part, he doesn't think he has embarrassed himself.
And the practices are a blast, for himself and even the coaches.
"He's a good kid," Owens said. "He's been a fun addition. He's pretty jacked about it."
There's one question he constantly receives from friends and family back home: Is he ever going to get in a game? If another goaltender goes down, he's all that's left to be the backup. Even though he has far surpassed any college hockey dreams he had, he daydreams about the possibility of playing in a game.
"Of course I have," Horowitz said. "I think I'd have a heart attack before I made it into the net."
Friday, February 27, 2009
Pic from CC Athletics: Hey USCHO, this is what Bachman's pads look like now, update your stock pics from 2 years ago!!
If you haven't already noticed, the Tigers are doing the Saturday-Sunday thing this weekend up at the Ralph in North Dakota. Home ice in the WCHA playoffs is the main thing the Tigers will be fighting for this weekend and of course throwing a kink in the race for the MacNaughton Cup-heck they can even win it if they can muster the right kind of luck.
On a blog note: due to some unfortunate schedule conflicts in the coming days, I won't be able to post anything after the games this weekend and potentially not until after the DU season finale. Lame, I know, I'm going to be out-of-the-loop in what could be an incredibly exciting last 3 games of the season. There is a chance I could sneak a post or two in during the week but it's going to be a busy next 10 days for me. SO, don't get too bummed out with no new posts, I've got a good reason :) I'll be sure to post any pictures I receive over the next two weekends as soon as I can.
Here's some links to keep up on the action in my absence: GO TIGERS!!!!
College Hockey News (Richard Bachman is the featured pic at the time of this post)
USCHO Scoreboard
CC Athletics
Tigers still in race for WCHA season title
FRANK SCHWAB-THE GAZETTE
With only three games left to play, Colorado College could repeat as Western Collegiate Hockey Association champions - they would need to get at least two wins and a tie and also get some help - or finish as low as seventh place.
The WCHA has been tough to figure out all season, although the incredibly close race will get sorted out over the final two weekends of the regular season.
T-1. North Dakota, 15-6-3, 33 points
Remaining games: 2 vs. Colorado College, 2 at Wisconsin
Outlook: The schedule isn't easy but North Dakota has been hot and has a game in hand on Denver, which is tied for first.
T-1 Denver, 15-7-3, 33 points
Remaining games: 2 vs. St. Cloud State, 1 vs. Colorado College
Outlook: The Pioneers could put the pressure on North Dakota by sweeping St. Cloud State, but still needs some help from rival Colorado College.
3. Colorado College, 12-8-5, 29 points
Remaining games: 2 at North Dakota, 1 at Denver
Outlook: A tough remaining schedule means CC could move up with some wins. But with one fewer game than every team that could pass them, the Tigers need some points in their final three games or risk losing home-ice advantage.
4. Wisconsin, 13-9-2, 28 points
Remaining games: 2 at Minnesota State-Mankato, 2 vs. North Dakota
Outlook: Finishing in the top three is big in the WCHA, to guarantee avoiding the extra game in the Final Five. Wisconsin has that in its sights with an easier schedule than the Tigers and a game in hand.
5. Minnesota-Duluth, 10-8-6, 26 points
Remaining games: 2 at Minnesota, 2 vs. Alaska-Anchorage
Outlook: The series at Minnesota this weekend will go a long way in determining if Minnesota-Duluth can fight off St. Cloud State and the Gophers for home-ice advantage.
6. St. Cloud State, 12-11-1, 25 points
Remaining games: 2 at Denver, 2 vs. Minnesota State-Mankato (1 home, 1 road)
Outlook: St. Cloud State needs some points at Denver this weekend to keep hopes of home ice in the first round alive.
7. Minnesota, 10-10-4, 24 points
Remaining games: 2 vs. Minnesota-Duluth, 2 at Michigan Tech
Outlook: Minnesota is the only team with remaining games against lowly Michigan Tech. Combine that with two winnable home games against Minnesota-Duluth, and the Gophers could make a charge into the WCHA's upper division.
8. Minnesota State-Mankato, 9-13-2, 20 points
Remaining games: 2 vs. Wisconsin, 2 vs. St. Cloud State (1 home, 1 road)
Outlook: Mankato would need a lot of help to finish in the top five, even with three home games left.
9. Alaska-Anchorage, 7-14-5, 19 points
Remaining games: 2 at Minnesota-Duluth
Outlook: Anchorage could move up a bit, but is going on the road in the first round.
10. Michigan Tech, 1-18-7, 9 points
Remaining games: 2 vs. Minnesota
Outlook: Michigan Tech could be a spoiler to Minnesota, but it will face the WCHA's top seed on the road in the first round.
Monday, February 23, 2009
The Tigers moved to 13th in the USA Today poll to solidify a #13 ranking in the two major polls. Nothing glamourous about 13th BUT anything is better than being unranked. North Dakota is ranked 7th and 8th and holds the #2 spot in the WCHA.
USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Poll
Feb. 23, 2009
No. | Team (First-place votes) | Points | Last Poll |
1. | Notre Dame (18) | 494 | 2 |
2. | Boston University (16) | 492 | 1 |
3. | Michigan | 415 | 3 |
4. | Northeastern | 409 | 5 |
5. | Denver | 385 | 8 |
6. | Princeton | 298 | 10 |
7. | North Dakota | 291 | 9 |
8. | Vermont | 256 | 6 |
9. | Miami | 250 | 4 |
10. | New Hampshire | 188 | 12 |
11. | Cornell | 171 | 11 |
12. | Yale | 171 | 7 |
13. | Colorado College | 87 | NR |
14. | Minnesota Duluth | 77 | NR |
15. | Ohio State | 38 | 15 |
Also receiving votes: St. Lawrence 25, Minnesota 13, Air Force 8, RIT 2, St. Cloud State 2, Wisconsin 2.
USCHO.com/CBS College Sports Poll
Feb. 16, 2009
No. | Team (First-place votes) | Points | Last Poll |
1. | Boston University (31) | 981 | 1 |
2. | Notre Dame (19) | 968 | 2 |
3. | Michigan | 863 | 3 |
4. | Northeastern | 850 | 4 |
5. | Denver | 790 | 8 |
6. | Princeton | 673 | 10 |
7. | Miami | 666 | 5 |
8. | North Dakota | 637 | 9 |
9. | Vermont | 635 | 6 |
10. | Cornell | 540 | 11 |
11. | Yale | 532 | 7 |
12. | New Hampshire | 513 | 12 |
13. | Colorado College | 352 | 18 |
14. | Minnesota Duluth | 336 | 15 |
15. | Ohio State | 281 | 16 |
16. | Wisconsin | 227 | 13 |
17. | St. Lawrence | 191 | 20 |
18. | Minnesota | 145 | 14 |
19. | St. Cloud State | 122 | 19 |
20. | UMass Lowell | 62 | NR |
Also receiving votes: Air Force 50, Boston College 41, Alaska 22, RIT 16, Dartmouth 7.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
I had a rare Sunday mid-day game today so my schedule is all wacked-but here are the pics from the weekend sweep of the Gophers. The pics from Friday with the Tigers in white are courtesy of my dad and Saturday night with the massive amounts of gold on the ice are from Missy J. The Tigers are still "bubblelicious" and could provide some crazy drama to end the WCHA season if they can manage a sweet up at North Dakota.
Note: the Tigers play Saturday and Sunday night up at the Ralph.
Pics from Saturday night vs Minnesota
Pics from Friday night vs Minnesota
Saturday, February 21, 2009
The Tigers got their first series sweep in what seems like forever as they beat Minnesota 5-3 Saturday night.
Unofficial box and summary
Friday, February 20, 2009
The Tigers pulled out a gritty, exciting win Friday night and beat Minnestoa 4-3. Richard Bachman had 4 HUUUGE dramatic saves in the last 1:30 to seal the win. Mike Testwuide's backhander won in for the Tigers. CC blew leads of 2-0 and 3-1 yet showed some grit in one of the more exciting games of the season. The Tigers now have 29 points in the tight WCHA race. I'll update the standings above on Sunday. The announcers were two of the stupidest I have ever heard on TV. I'm fine with getting the feed from hometown announcers but c'com! These guys are terrible! BUT, game was awesome, pics will be up tomorrow!
Thursday, February 19, 2009
As if you can't put any more emphasis on the two games this weekend, how about home ice for the WCHA playoffs AND a potential NCAA invite hanging in the balance?
Tigers want to be home for WCHA playoffs
FRANK SCHWAB
THE GAZETTE
In a week, Colorado College should have a better idea if it can make plans for a home series in the first round of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association playoffs.
The Tigers host a pair of games this weekend against Minnesota, which is sixth in the WCHA. The Gophers are a point behind CC, but the Tigers have played one more league game. The top five teams in the WCHA host first-round playoff series.
The Tigers are 10-8-5 in the WCHA, tied for fourth with St. Cloud State. CC had a chance to make a move in the standings but settled for a tie against Denver in its only game of the weekend.
"That makes this series even more important," coach Scott Owens said.
The Tigers were the second team among others receiving votes in Monday's USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine poll. Air Force didn't receive any votes after splitting a pair of games at Bentley.
CC and Air Force are tied for 20th in the U.S. College Hockey Online PairWise rankings, which mimic the NCAA Tournament selection committee's rankings. Usually a team needs to be in the top 12 or 13 to receive an at-large bid to the NCAAs.
The Tigers' immediate concern isn't the NCAA Tournament, but their seeding in the WCHA playoffs. The Tigers are two points ahead of seventh-place Minnesota-Duluth and three points behind third-place Wisconsin. North Dakota and Denver are tied for first with 29 points, four ahead of CC.
"I think we're just right in the middle," Owens said. "We're right there, and it's going to be a battle."
Monday, February 16, 2009
The Tigers remained 18th in the USCHO poll this week as they get ready to take on the Gophers in the Springs this weekend. Hope you enjoy the pics from Sunday night that Missy took against the U18 team-pretty sweet!
USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Poll
The 14th annual USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Men's College Hockey Poll is conducted each week in conjunction with the American Hockey Coaches Association. The poll includes input from coaches and journalists representing each of the six NCAA Division I ice hockey conferences, as well as composite votes from officers of the American Hockey Coaches Association and USA Hockey Magazine, the official publication of USA Hockey.
Feb. 16, 2009
No. | Team (First-place votes) | Points | Last Poll |
1. | Boston University (31) | 507 | 1 |
2. | Notre Dame (3) | 473 | 3 |
3. | Michigan | 448 | 4 |
4. | Miami | 391 | 6 |
5. | Northeastern | 369 | 2 |
6. | Vermont | 331 | 5 |
7. | Yale | 296 | 10 |
8. | Denver | 285 | 8 |
9. | North Dakota | 235 | 11 |
10. | Princeton | 205 | 9 |
11. | Cornell | 151 | 7 |
12. | New Hampshire | 133 | 12 |
13. | Wisconsin | 109 | 13 |
14. | Minnesota | 85 | 14 |
15. | Ohio State | 21 | NR |
Also receiving votes: Minnesota Duluth 16, Colorado College 12, Boston College 7, RIT 3, St. Lawrence 3.
USCHO.com/CBS College Sports Poll
Feb. 16, 2009
No. | Team (First-place votes) | Points | Last Poll |
1. | Boston University (44) | 993 | 1 |
2. | Notre Dame (6) | 945 | 2 |
3. | Michigan | 905 | 4 |
4. | Northeastern | 815 | 3 |
5. | Miami | 783 | 7 |
6. | Vermont | 731 | 5 |
7. | Yale | 677 | 10 |
8. | Denver | 659 | 8 |
9. | North Dakota | 564 | 11 |
10. | Princeton | 560 | 9 |
11. | Cornell | 495 | 6 |
12. | New Hampshire | 420 | 12 |
13. | Wisconsin | 404 | 13 |
14. | Minnesota | 371 | 14 |
15. | Minnesota Duluth | 256 | 17 |
16. | Ohio State | 211 | 16 |
17. | Boston College | 177 | 15 |
18. | Colorado College | 167 | 18 |
19. | St. Cloud State | 101 | NR |
20. | St. Lawrence | 92 | NR |
Also receiving votes: Dartmouth 91, UMass Lowell 21, RIT 18, Air Force 16, Nebraska-Omaha 12, Alaska 5, Colgate 5, Massachusetts 4, Alaska Anchorage 2.
Sunday, February 15, 2009
So much for momentum, the Tigers were beaten by the USA U-18 team today in a game played just for fun. The Tigers used the opportunity to play some lesser-used players and get some guys used to the speed of the game. I'm pretty bummed to lose an exhibition, but these players are future NHL stars and did just win a world tournament, plus it was our lower line players so I'll let it go. The Tigers better rest up quickly as they host Minnesota this upcoming weekend.
Missy J sent me some great pics from the game, they'll be up Monday night (I gotta sleep since work begins at 7am!)
U.S. Under-18 Team rallies past Tigers
CC suffers 3-2 exhibition loss
David Civitarese-Athletic Media Relations
They may be young, but the players on the United States Under-18 Team continue to show that they are very capable of competing against anyone.
On Sunday afternoon at the World Arena, a week after winning the 2009 Five Nations Tournament in Sweden, they pulled off what no other opponent has done against Colorado College all season.
Third-period goals by Jeremy Morin and Ryan Bourque rallied the visiting USA squad from a 2-1 deficit after 40 minutes of play and lifted them to a come-from-behind 3-2 exhibition victory over the Tigers.
Fortunately, the loss doesn’t count for CC, which officially remains undefeated (11-0-6) this 2008-09 campaign when ahead entering the third period.
Tallies by freshman right wing David Civitarese just 1:16 into the contest and senior center Chad Rau with 2:15 left in the middle frame staked the Tigers to leads of 1-0 and 2-1 in this one.
But, after Morin pulled Team USA even for the second time at 7:40 of the final stanza, Bourque beat sophomore goaltender Tyler O’Brien with a quick wrist shot after a steal at the blue line by A.J. Treais. The game winner came with 4:43 remaining in regulation.
Colorado College pulled O’Brien with a little more than a minute to play, but could not strike for the equalizer. O’Brien made 23 saves in the game while Under-18 net minder Adam Murray finished with 44, including 18 in the third period.
Morin and Drew Shore combined to set up a power-play goal by Nick Mattson that tied the score at 1-1 midway through the second period. Shore also assisted on Morin’s red lighter as Team USA improved to 7-9-1 against NCAA Division I opponents in ‘08-09.
The loss was CC’s first ever against the Under-18 Team after four consecutive victories dating back to February 2003.
Saturday, February 14, 2009
The Tigers obviously had some disappointment from the tie last night, but got a point and got some hardware so they'll just take the point and the positives from the game and move on. Missy J sent me some amazing pics from the game (above) so enjoy those! Below are the links to the Gazette and Denver Post recaps of the game as well as the recap from the USCHO.
Gazette Recap
Denver Post Recap
DU Skates to Tie With CC
CC Holds Onto Gold Pan
by Theresa Spisak/WCHA Correspondent
Even though Denver has one more chance to tie up the season series between the two squads, they couldn't win the Gold Pan due to a rule that states the current holder of the trophy retains it if the teams tie the season series. The game was Owens' 400th behind the bench for the Tigers.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Feb. 13) — Sometimes, you get what you pay for, and the 7,696 standing-room only crowd in World Arena got just that Friday night.
Though the Colorado College Tigers and University of Denver Pioneers tied, 3-3, the game held a late tying goal for Pioneers’ fans and a Gold Pan victory for the Tigers’ faithful.
Ask each team, however, and both were glad to get a big conference point.
“[It was a] tough point to get; a tough game to play, having to come from behind in a building that historically has not been very kind for us,” said Pioneers’ coach George Gwozdecky. “In many ways, I was proud of our effort.”
“It’s a big point; they’re very hard to get,” said his Tigers’ counterpart Scott Owens. “It’s very, very hard, especially considering the schedule we have left. It’s always a big point.”
Both teams had early chances to get on the board, but neither DU’s Kyle Ostrow nor CC’s Mike Testwuide could take advantage of their open net chances.
Despite being outshot 13-7 in the period, the Tigers scored first with a power-play goal 8:53 into the first period. Brian Connelly took a shot from the point that was tipped in front past DU goaltender Marc Cheverie (25 saves) by Stephen Schultz.
The Pioneers tied it up about 4:30 into the second period when Dustin Jackson skated into the Tigers’ zone, muscled his way through traffic to the front of the net and put the puck far side past CC netminder Richard Bachman (41 saves).
CC regained the lead at the 9:19 mark of the frame when Cody Lampl put an Eric Walsky rebound in the net. Just 1:36 later, the Tigers went up 3-1 on another tipped Connelly power play shot, this time with Bill Sweatt getting the goal.
The Pioneers rounded out the scoring in the frame with 4:43 to go in the period on a power-play goal of their own. Rhett Rakhshani passed the puck from behind the net to Joe Colborne in the slot, who put it under Bachman’s right shoulder.
Brian McMillin almost put the Tigers up 4-2 with about 2:40 left when he backhanded the puck out of the air towards the DU net, but it went off the crossbar behind Cheverie.
It appeared as if CC would hold their lead through the third, but Colborne tallied his second of the night to tie it up with 56.3 seconds remaining when he roofed one over Bachman’s left shoulder from the doorstep.
“I was kind of sliding back door thinking that I was going to scrum, maybe the puck would go behind the net or something and all of a sudden it was just out there on my stick,” said Colborne. “I was the lucky recipient.”
The teams battled throughout overtime, both getting several chances, but the contest ended in a tie.
“It’s a pretty weird sort of feeling,” said Colborne. “We obviously wanted two points, we had a chance for the Gold Pan, but when you look at it now, it was a huge, huge point for us in the standings, a huge character win for us that will hopefully carry us into Wisconsin.”
“We made the plays when we had to to get back in the game in time and tie it up so I was pleased with our effort and proud of our team to come back through some pretty good challenges tonight,” said Gwozdecky.
“If it wasn’t for Bachman, it would have been a loss,” said Owens. “It’s a strange deal. You get a tie, you get the Gold Pan, but it feels like a loss and they feel like a win and that’s the way it goes.”
The Tigers next play a non-conference matinee on Sunday against the United States Under-18 Team while the Pioneers are off until next weekend where they face the University of Wisconsin.
Friday, February 13, 2009
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From Colorado College Tigers vs DU Pioneers |
The Tigers tied DU tonight and locked up a 3rd straight Gold Pan trophy as kings of the Colorado WCHA teams.
The Tigers played extremely well, the Pioneers played extremely well and the end result is a 3-3 tie. CC looked to have the game wrapped up until DU ripped a goal over Bachman's left shoulder with 55 seconds left to tie the game. The Tigers would have probably liked to win the Gold Pan outright with a nice win but there is still one game left to end the season so they can go out with a bang. I was impressed with DU's goalie Marc Cheverie; he had some pretty ridiculous saves. Once again, Bachman was a stud against the Pioneers with two point-blank stuffs that I though for sure got behind him.
The TV coverege, although with DU announcers, was pretty good. Camera work was so-so, they missed DU's final goal. Colorado Springs native Alanna Rizzo (Sierra HS I think?) was kinda annoying to me, she stumbles over her words too much-for whatever reason I don't like her, haha.
I was just excited to be able to watch the game on TV, since I'm displaced to the SouthWest BUT I had 2 goals and 2 assists in my game tonight so I can't complain!
More links and Missy J's pics (I hope!) to come tomorrow!
Plenty of reading about the game tonight and the battle for the Gold Pan. The Denver Post has a pretty good article so that's my post de jour today. I'm stoked because the game is on TV on FSN tonight at World Arena and I've never watched a game on regional TV at our home arena. The other great thing is that those of us displaced from being able to go, get to watch. I've got my own hockey game right before but I'll be headed to the nearest TV after. GOO TIGERS!!!
And here's something interesting, my banner on the blog for the Tigers back-to-back Gold Pan wins made it onto the DU(d) blog back in October and I just realized it now. Funny, you would think all of those smart, educated folks that brag about going to that school would be able to come up with their own content! (as much as I hate DU, their fellow blogger and I get along just fine, go figure)
USCHO WCHA Weekly
DU, CC Playing High Stakes Game
The coveted Gold Pan is up for grabs as is a chance for Pioneers to grab league lead.
By Mike Chambers
The Denver Post
CC goalie Richard Bachman has stopped 84-of-88 shots in two previous games against Denver this season. (Nathan W. Armes, Special to The Denver Post )
In a one-and-done, playoff-feel format, the Denver Pioneers and Colorado College Tigers will tonight butt heads and the rest of their bodies in a single-game weekend at the Colorado Springs World Arena. The rivals will again go against the college hockey grain March 7 at Magness Arena to conclude the regular season.
Putting aside the excitement and momentum swings of the traditional consecutive-night, home-and-home series was not caused by a venue conflict. Rather, when the schedule was originally released, both programs had this weekend off, and they collaborated to avoid having a bye during the final six-game stretch.
So wardrobe and location changes won't be needed after tonight's 270th meeting between the Front Range and Western Collegiate Hockey Association rivals. But much will be at stake, beginning with the coveted Gold Pan.
If DU loses or ties tonight, CC retains the traveling trophy for the 10th time in 16 years. The Tigers tied (2-2) and beat (3-2) the Pioneers in a home-and-home set Oct. 31-Nov. 2 — a series defined by the sensational goaltending of CC sophomore Richard Bachman.
DU must find ways to beat Bachman tonight and March 7 to bring the trophy back to Denver. Bachman, from Highlands Ranch, stopped a combined 84-of-88 shots in his previous two games against the Pioneers, and was the primary reason DU went 1-of-19 on the power play.
"He's a great goaltender, no doubt about that, but you don't go into a series, or a game, focusing on the opponent or one player," said DU junior center Tyler Ruegsegger, who grew up playing with Bachman in the Littleton Hockey Association. "We just have to put pucks on net, crash the net, and shoot to score."
The DU-CC rivalry has an order of importance. It begins with the Gold Pan, continues with the WCHA standings, and finishes with the NCAA Tournament.
For the latter two, the Pioneers are in better shape.
DU is contending for its 13th MacNaughton Cup, and third this decade, and can pull ahead of idle Wisconsin for first place by itself in the league standings with a win or tie tonight. The Badgers host the Pioneers for a two-game series next weekend that concludes DU's five-game road stretch, including the final three on Olympic-size ice sheets.
"The standings are huge right now; we're tied with Wisconsin, and every point is necessary — and it doesn't matter what ice surface we play on," DU goalie Marc Cheverie said. "We just know we have to win."
CC, the defending MacNaughton Cup champion, is fourth in the WCHA, four points behind DU and UW.
In the national picture, the Pioneers are tied with Cornell for sixth in the all-important Pairwise Rankings and in good position to make the 16-team NCAA Tournament without winning the WCHA playoff tournament. The Tigers are 19th in the Pairwise — about six spots on the negative side of the at-large-berth bubble.
"We've been good some nights, bad other nights. Very inconsistent," CC coach Scott Owens said. "Who knows what's going to happen with us, but we know they're a good team and, with a win or tie (tonight), we retain Gold Pan, which is a big deal. There is a lot at stake for us."
NO. 8 DENVER (17-9-3, 13-7-2 WCHA) AT COLORADO COLLEGE (14-9-7, 10-8-4)
When: Tonight, 7:35 p.m.
Where: Colorado Springs World Arena
TV/Radio: FSN/KLZ 560 AM
Notes: DU was already short-handed with injuries to center Tyler Bozak (knee) and defenseman Chris Nutini (upper-body injury), but will now be forced to play without puck-moving defenseman Patrick Mullen, a senior who was issued a one-game suspension Thursday for his slashing major and game misconduct at the end of Saturday's game at Minnesota-Duluth. . . . The Tigers will be without the services of center Andreas Vlassopoulos (lower-body injury), defenseman Kris Fredheim (lower body) and backup goalie Drew O'Connell (shoulder). . . . CC is on a four-game unbeaten streak (3-0-1) against DU.