Showing posts with label WCHA Hockey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WCHA Hockey. Show all posts

Friday, 24 May 2013

NCHC Forges New Standards for Officiating

One of the issues that fans of the NCHC have been very concerned about is the officiating. Who’s going to be the officials? How are the games going to be called?

There has also been no consistency from game-to-game on how the games are officiated. Are the “big hits” going to be penalized?

In my opinion, college hockey officiating during the past few years has been shoddy at best; there have been a lot of blown calls with little explanation of why the calls were made. Legal checks have been called five minute majors. Obstruction and stick fouls in the offensive zone have gone uncalled. Line calls have been bad as well.

Yesterday, the NCHC released its “official” plan on how the league is going to supervise, train and manage their on-ice officials. On paper, it would appear that the new league is concerned about optics and doesn’t want to have a repeat of how the current WCHA manages its on-ice officials.
NCHC Press Release --- “One of the key goals for our conference is to develop one of the best officiating programs in the country,” Novak said.

Novak and Adam will select a group of up to 14 referees and 32 linesmen that will form the league’s first officiating staff. The majority of the referee staff will be selected from the collegiate ranks with others being hired from both the professional and major junior ranks. Once the NCHC’s referee staff is in place, they will take part in an in-depth, three-day training camp that will set the stage for the inaugural season. The league will also conduct three one-day linesman seminars, which will be in Minnesota, Colorado, and Michigan.

“We will extend our expectations to the officials before they come to camp and then provide them with very detailed and focused sessions once they do arrive,” Adam said. “We want to educate our officials in every way possible which includes, but is not limited to: skating, positioning, rules and interpretations, and the mental aspect of officiating. We will be utilizing video as a teaching tool throughout the season, while communicating with our officials on a regular basis. Our training program is a culmination of our collective officiating experience, which includes the collegiate, professional and international hockey levels. We will always strive to develop one of the best staffs in the country.”

The NCHC’s referee training camp and linesman seminars will be the foundation of a training program that can be built upon throughout the season. The second aspect of the officiating program consists of the addition of three supervisors who are located in key geographic locations for the league, in addition to Adam and Novak. This ensures that approximately 75 percent of all NCHC games will be supervised, allowing officials to learn on a more consistent basis.

“Our supervisory program is based upon a huge commitment from Jim Scherr and Joe Novak,” Adam said. “The fact that they have allowed for additional supervisors to evaluate games every weekend shows their commitment to the officiating program. Our supervisors will be an extension of Joe and I and our goal is to ensure that everyone is always on the same page from a teaching perspective.”

Ron Foyt, Mike Schmitt and Scott Zelkin have been selected to the NCHC’s first supervisory staff. This highly-respected trio brings a wealth of officiating experience to the new conference.
This is what I believe is "major" key as well. USHL Officials for instance have to be certified by the USA Hockey and I believe that the best of the best should be utilized to officiate college hockey games. You should not be selected based on who you’re related to or who you're friends with. You should be selected based on skill and knowledge, not on family lineage.
“As the NCHC begins its inaugural season, I’m truly honored to have the opportunity to work with the officiating staff,” Zelkin said. “The member institutions that make up the conference are some of the premier ice hockey programs in the United States and the staff that will be charged with officiating the games will be equally as strong. Helping to coach the officials to be the best they can possibly be during every game will be a privilege and I can hardly wait to begin working with Don and the rest of the staff.”

Along with establishing a knowledgeable and experienced group of officials for the present, the NCHC has plans to incorporate a system for developing officials. “Our league has already established a formidable relationship with Scott Brand and USA Hockey’s Junior Officiating Development Program” Adam said. “This relationship will assist us in identifying future collegiate officials.”

“We have been gaining input from both coaches and athletic directors regarding their opinions on what might assist in strengthening our officiating program,” Adam said. “Our mindset is that we are going to hire a quality staff with every official being capable of working any game during the season. Officials will have to earn their way into the NCHC playoffs and championship tournament. Selections will be based upon our implemented rating system.”
Now, this plan looks good when you read it on paper. Going forward, it will be interesting to see how this “actually” plays out, once it’s executed. If the NCHC employs the same usual suspects, we can name names, but I won’t, you know who I am talking about. Then this is nothing more than just fancy lip service.

If the NCHC employs the same brutal officials that have been officiating games for the WCHA, then the NCHC is going to have the same shoddy on ice product that the WCHA has had the last 4-5 seasons. We soon will find out. Developing...

Friday, 12 April 2013

NCAA FROZEN FOUR: Championship game (Saturday 4/13)

Yale 21-12-3 ECAC vs. Quinnipiac 30-7-5 ECAC Final 6:00 p.m. (CT) ESPN (206 DirecTV / Dish 140)
Yale’s offense is ranked #26 nationally and #26 defense.
Quinnipiac’s offense ranked #15 nationally and #1 defense

For the first time in 24 years, the NCAA Champion will hail from the ECAC of Division I hockey.

The last team from the ECAC to win the NCAA title was Harvard in 1989, when they beat the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers 4-3 in overtime.

Yeah, that’s not a misprint; the NCAA Champion for the 2012-13 season will hail from the ECAC.

Bobcats snarl

All season long, the Quinnipiac Bulldogs have had to listen to naysayers talk about their number one rankings and their strength of schedule. Last night, the Bobcats did their talking on the ice.

All of those doubts were removed, as the Bobcats enjoyed a three-goal first period against the high flying Saint Cloud State Huskies and skated to a 4-1 win against the Saint Cloud State Huskies.

Saint Cloud State got behind the eight ball quickly, when the Bobcats scored three-goals in less than 15 minutes. Scoring for the Bobcats; were forwards, Jordan Samuels-Thomas, Ben Arnt and Jeremy Langlois. Incidentally, that was all of the offense the Bobcats would need.  

Saint Cloud would finally get on the board, at the 06:25 mark of the second period; with a nifty goal from freshman forward Joey Benik. Unfortunately, that was all the closer that the Huskies would get, as Kellen Jones would score the Bobcats fourth-goal at the 14:31 mark of the second period.

The Huskies would make a surge in every period, but the Bobcats got strong goaltending from their Hobey Baker Finalist goaltender Eric Hartzell who stopped 33 of 34 shots to preserve the win.  When the Huskies were able to get through the Bobcats stifling defense, Hartzell was there to take away the Huskies grade “A” scoring chances.

While the Huskies outshot the Bobcats 34-28, the only statistic that mattered was the final score 4-1, in favor of the Bobcats.

With the win, the Bobcats advance to the title game of the NCAA Frozen Four Championship game on Saturday April 13, 2012, at 6:00pm (CT) on ESPN.

Bulldog bite

Dominating, physical and relentless, is how I would describe the Yale Bulldogs. Also, did I mention that the Bulldogs are a miserable team to play against?

Last night, the Bulldogs frustrated the UMass Lowell River Hawks, getting in the shooting lanes and taking away the River Hawks little time and space.  

During the first period, the Bulldogs’ pressure kept the River Hawks hemmed up in their own end, setting the tone for the rest of the game. Every time the River Hawks tried the move the puck, there was a Bulldog forward on them.

Yale took a two-goal lead with goals from Mitch Witek and Antoine Laganiere. Yale definitely had the momentum in the first period and would outshoot UMass Lowell 11-5.

UMass Lowell would tie the game in the second period, scoring two-goals, 14 seconds apart, from Riley Wetmore and Joseph Pendenza, but that was all the closer the River Hawks would get. Yale would regain the momentum in the third period, outshooting the River Hawks 16-3.  

Yale once again, needed an extra frame to beat the UMass Lowell River Hawks 3-2. Senior forward Andrew Miller scored at the 06:59 mark of the first overtime to send the
With the win, the Bulldogs advance to the title game of the NCAA Frozen Four Championship game on Saturday April 13, 2012, at 6:00pm (CT) on ESPN.

How they got here

Yale beat Minnesota (3-2, O.T.), North Dakota (4-1) and UMass Lowell (3-2, O.T.), to advance to the NCAA Frozen Four Championship game.

Quinnipiac beat Canisius (4-3), Union (5-1) and Saint Cloud State (4-1), to advance to the NCAA Frozen Four Championship game.

Players to watch

Quinnipiac Bobcats forwards:  Jeremy Langlois (13g-18a—31pts), Mathew Peca (15g-15a—30), , Jordan Samuels-Thomas (17g-12a—29pts), Kellen Jones (13g-14a—27pts), Connor Jones (12g-14a—26pts). Defense: Mike Dalhuisen (8g-8a—16pts), Loren Barron (3g-13a—16pts), Zach Davies (2g-15a—17pts). Goaltender: Eric Hartzell 30-6-5, 1.53 GAA, .934 save percentage.

Bulldogs Forwards: Kenny Agostino (17g-23a—40pts), Andrew Miller (17g-22a—39pts), Antoine Laganiere (15g-13a—28pts). Defense: Tommy Fallen (7g-16a—23pts), Ryan Obuchowski (3g-9a-12pts), Gus Young (2g-6a—8pts). Goalies Jeff Malcolm 19-6-2, 2.33 GAA, .915 save percentage.


Monday, 25 March 2013

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Lots of fire power in the WCHA Final Five

Point Scoring:                                                    GP     PPG    G- A- P
1   Danny Kristo              North Dakota         SR F     154    1.03   66-93-159*
2   Rylan Schwartz          Colorado College   SR F     153    1.01   56-98-154*
3   Drew LeBlanc            St. Cloud State       SR F     167    0.88   42-105-147*
4   Corban Knight            North Dakota         SR F     158    0.92   51-94-145*
5   Erik Haula                  Minnesota              JR F      112    1.09   42-80-122*
6   Jordan George            Bemidji State         SR F     148    0.81   58-62-120
7   Mark Zengerle            Wisconsin             JR F      110    1.05   27-89-116*
8   Ben Hanowski             St. Cloud State     SR F      152    0.72   60-50-110*
9   Ryan Walters             Nebraska Omaha   JR F      115    0.87   43-57-100
10   Matt White               Nebraska Omaha   JR F      114    0.87   47-52-99
11   Nick Bjugstad            Minnesota            JR F      107    0.92   54-44-98*
12   Eriah Hayes              Minnesota State    SR F      151    0.63   51-44-95*
13   Zach Budish              Minnesota            JR F       127    0.73   34-59-93*
14   Nick Shore               Denver                  JR F       114    0.81   34-58-92
15   Mike Seidel              Minnesota Duluth SR W    151    0.58   47-41-88
16   William Rapuzzi      Colorado College  SR F      148    0.58   39-47-86*
17   Nick Jensen              St. Cloud State      JR D      115    0.73   15-69-84*
      Michael Mersch         Wisconsin            JR F       116     0.72   45-39-84*
19   Kyle Rau                    Minnesota           SO F       78    1.05   33-49-82*
20   Nic Dowd                 St. Cloud State     JR F       113    0.71   30-50-80*
21   Nate Condon             Minnesota            JR F      116    0.67   31-47-78*
22   Ben Kinne                Bemidji State        SR F      146    0.52   32-44-76
23   Steven Seigo             Michigan Tech     SR D      150    0.50   19-56-75
24   Matt Leitner             Minnesota State     SO F      77    0.96   28-46-74*
Alexander Krushelnyski   Colorado College JR F      119   0.62   30-44-74*

There's a lot of fire power in this week’s Red Baron WCHA Final Five. The asterisk annotates an active player in this week’s tourney. As you can see from the list, Danny Kristo and Rylan Schwartz are the active career point’s leaders in the WCHA.  
  
Cross-posted at the Hockey Writers Combine

Tuesday, 19 March 2013

UND: Quarter Final game Ahead 3/21

WCHA Final FiveThis weekend, the University of North Dakota travels to the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, Minnesota to play in theWCHA Final Five Red Baron WCHA Final Five, March 21-23, 2013.
Historically, this is also the last Red Baron WCHA Final Five before UND moves to the NCHC next season.

Matchup: #Unranked Colorado College (16-18-5, No. 6 seed) versus North Dakota #6 (21-11-7, No. 3 Seed)

Dates: March 21, 2013

Times: March 21: 7:07 p.m. (CT).

Radio: UND 96.1 (KQHT-FM) – The Fox, wcha.com

Webcast: none

TV: Midco/FCS/DirecTV (668)/Dish Network (436)

Live Stats: wcha.com

Series History: All-Time: All-Time: UND leads the all-time series 139-78-10 (.634). UND leads the series against the Tigers in Grand Forks, ND 83-20-6 (.789). UND trails the series against the Tigers in Colorado Springs, CO 48-57-4 (.459). At Neutral sites; UND leads the series against the Tigers 8-1-0 (.889). WCHA Playoff’s, UND leads 7-2-0 (.778). Against the Tigers in the WCHA Final Five, UND leads 4-0-0 (1.000). The last 10 games, UND leads 7-3-0. UND went 2-2 against the Tigers this season.

Players to Watch:

North Dakota: Forwards: Corbin Knight (15g-33a—48pts), Danny Kristo (24g-26a—50pts), Rocco Grimaldi (13g-21a—34pts), Mark MacMillan (13g-12a—25pts), Carter Rowney (10g-16a—26pts). Defense: Dillon Simpson (3g-18a—21pts), Joe Gleason (5g-11a—16pts), Joe Gleason (5g-11a—16pts), Nick Mattson (3g-12a—15pts), Derek Forbort (4g-9a—13pts), Jordan Schmaltz (3g-9a—12pts) Andrew MacWilliam (1g-9a—10pts). Goaltenders: Clarke Saunders 12-6-4, 2.30 GAA, .915 save percentage, Zane Gothberg 7-4-3, 2.52 GAA, .918 save percentage.

Colorado College Tigers: Rylan Schwartz (17g-31a—48pts), Alexander Krushelnyski (14g-26a—40pts), William Rupuzzi (15g-19a—34pts), Scott Winkler (13g-14a—27pts), Archie Skalbeck (12g-11a—23pts) Defense: Mike Boivin (14g-14a—28pts) Eamonn McDermott (3g-19a—22pts), Peter Stoykewych (1g-8a—9pts). Goalies: Joe Howe 12-11-4, 3.09 GAA, .912 save percentage, Josh Thorimbert 4-7-1, 3.73 GAA, .873 save percentage.

UND Officials Web Page

Colorado College Tigers Web Page

Cross-posted at the Hockey Writers Combine.

LONGEST WINNING AND UNBEATEN STREAKS OF 2012-13 BY WCHA TEAM • ALL GAMES


This season, no team in the WCHA has an unbeaten streak over 11 games, and the longest winning streak was 7 games. Stats are from the WCHA Final Five Press Release.

Alaska Anchorage: Longest Winning Streak (1 game – 1-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (3 games – 1-0-2).

Bemidji State: Longest Winning Streak (1 game – 1-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (3 games – 2-0-1; 2-0-1).

Colorado College: Longest Winning Streak (4 games – 4-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (5 games – 2-0-3).

Denver: Longest Winning Streak (5 games – 5-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (5 games – 5-0-0; 4-0-1).

Michigan Tech: Longest Winning Streak (2 games – 2-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (2 games – 2-0-0; 0-0-2; 2-0-0; 1-0-1).

Minnesota: Longest Winning Streak (6 games – 6-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (10 games – 8-0-2).

Minnesota Duluth: Longest Winning Streak (4 games – 4-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (5 games – 4-0-1).

Minnesota State: Longest Winning Streak (7 games – 7-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (7 games – 7-0-0).

Nebraska Omaha: Longest Winning Streak (7 games – 7-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (7 games – 7-0-0).

North Dakota: Longest Winning Streak (5 games – 5-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (7 games – 6-0-1).

St. Cloud State: Longest Winning Streak (5 games –5-0-0). Longest Unbeaten Streak (6 games – 5-0-1).

Wisconsin: Longest Winning Streak (7 games – 7-0-0). Longest Un­beaten Streak (11 games – 8-0-3).
 

Monday, 18 March 2013

UND drops to 6th in this week’s USCHO Poll

USCHO.com Division I Men's Poll
Team
(First Place Votes)
Record
Points
Last Poll
1
Minnesota
(22)
26- 7-5
967
2
2
Quinnipiac
(27)
26- 6-5
958
1
3
Miami
24-10-5
893
3
4
Boston College
22-10-4
820
5
5
Massachusetts-Lowell
( 1)
24-10-2
785
6
6
North Dakota
21-11-7
751
4
7
St. Cloud State
23-14-1
670
8
8
Minnesota State
24-12-3
626
10
9
Notre Dame
23-12-3
578
12
10
New Hampshire
19-11-7
519
7
11
Yale
18-10-3
515
13
12
Western Michigan
19-11-8
408
9
13
Denver
20-13-5
382
11
14
Wisconsin
19-12-7
375
14
15
Niagara
23- 8-5
339
15
16
Providence
17-13-7
269
17
17
Boston University
20-15-2
212
18
18
Union
19-12-5
192
19
19
Rensselaer
18-14-5
91
16
20
Michigan
17-18-3
52
NR
Others receiving votes: Nebraska-Omaha 37, Colorado College 18, Brown 11, Merrimack 10, Alaska 9, Ohio State 9, Robert Morris 2, Connecticut 1, St. Lawrence 1.