Archive for February, 2009

Gameday: Merrimack @ UNH

February 28, 2009

DURHAM, N.H. — Greetings from the Whittemore Center where tonight the Merrimack College Warriors take on the University of New Hampshire Wildcats.

The game will be televised on NESN in the New England region (New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, Mass., Rhode Island, Connecticut). For the Warriors’ Canadian fans, the game will so be televised on Rogers Sportsnet tomorrow (Sunday) morning at 10 a.m. East/Ont./West and 11 a.m. PT.

Click here to launch the live blog, with updates from the Whittemore Center

The Warriors’ lines:

Chris Barton Rob Ricci Jesse Todd
Pat Kimball John Jamieson Francois Ouimet
Jeff Velleca Carter Madsen Elliott Sheen
Ryan Flanigan Joe Cucci J.C. Robitaille
Adam Ross Grant Farrell
Karl Stollery Brandon Sadlowski
Justin Bonitatibus Pat Bowen
Joe Cannata
Andrew Braithwaite

Scratches: Fraser Allan (inj), Joe Loprieno (inj), Mickey Rego, Bobby Kramer, Simon Demers, John Goebel (inj), Matt Moulakelis (inj), Pat Watson (inj)

Tonight’s Referees: Kevin Shea (R), Tim Benedetto (R), Matt Riegert (L), Wayne Silva (L)

UNH 4, MC 3: Final

February 28, 2009

NORTH ANDOVER — I can’t post a full notebook, but the Warriors fell to UNH 4-3 on Friday night at Lawler Arena, ending the team’s playoff hopes.

The Warriors trailed 4-1 late in the game before mounting a comeback that fell short. Karl Stollery, Jesse Todd and Ryan Flanigan were the scorers. 

There is still quite a bit to play for. The Warriors trail Providence by two points for ninth place, and while it still wouldn’t mean playoffs, it could be the first time the Warriors finish out of the Hockey East basement since the 2003-04 season, when they finished seventh.

Gameday: UNH at Merrimack

February 27, 2009

NORTH ANDOVER — Greetings from Lawler Arena, where tonight the Merrimack College Warriors will take on the New Hampshire Wildcats.

Click here to launch the live blog with updates from Lawler Arena

The Warriors’ lines:

Chris Barton Rob Ricci Jesse Todd
Pat Kimball John Jamieson J.C. Robitaille
Jeff Velleca Carter Madsen Elliott Sheen
Ryan Flanigan Joe Cucci Bobby Kramer
Adam Ross Grant Farrell
Karl Stollery Brandon Sadlowski
Justin Bonitatibus Pat Bowen
Joe Cannata
Andrew Braithwaite

Scratches: Fraser Allan (inj), Joe Loprieno (inj), Mickey Rego, Francois Ouimet, Simon Demers, John Goebel (inj), Matt Moulakelis (inj), Pat Watson (inj)

Tonight’s Referees: Jeff Bunyon (R), Tom Quinn (R), Tim Low (L), Chris Federico (L)

Tale of the Tape: New Hampshire

February 27, 2009

The Warriors host the Wildcats tonight at Lawler Arena (7 p.m.) and travel to the Whittemore Center on Saturday for a 7:30 p.m. faceoff, televised on NESN (live) and on tape delay on Rogers Sportsnet across Canada on Sunday morning.

No. 44 Merrimack

No. 7 UNH

Record 8-18-4 16-9-5
Hockey East 4-16-3 (10th) 12-7-4 (3rd)
Head-to-Head 1-0-0 0-1-0
Goals For 2.17 3.03
Goals Against 2.53 2.82
Shots For 26.8 33.3
Shots Against 28.6 29.6
PIM per game 15.20 16.47
Power Play 13.6% (20 of 147) 13.3% (22 of 165)
Penalty Kill 83.8% (150 of 179) 82.9% (131 of 158)
Top Scorer Chris Barton, So. 30gp, 9-13=22 J. vanRiemsdyk, So. 28gp, 13-21=34
Top Goaltender Joe Cannata, Fr. 6-9-4, 2.36, .918 Brian Foster, Jr.    15-7-4, 2.47, .916
Injuries Matt Moulakelis (knee), out

Pat Watson (hip), out

Joe Loprieno (knee), questionable

Fraser Allan (knee), questionable.

Steve Moses (shoulder), questionable

James Charlebois (academics), out

Dennehy vs. UNH
2-6-2
All-time vs. UNH
12-59-8
Top Scorer vs. PC Rob Ricci, Jr.           7gp, 4-1=5

Lozzi lands at Bowdoin

February 26, 2009

Former Reading Rocket Mike Lozzi (currently at Phillips Academy) has committed to Bowdoin. It was rumored that Lozzi was being looked at by some DI schools. Phillips goalie Glen Stowell has committed to Wesleyan.

Russell stands out as a mountain in the Valley

February 26, 2009

Merrimack College and Hockey East has a lot of ties to the local high school hockey scene.

Casey Kesselring coaches up at Pinkerton Academy (Derry, NH), Mike Jankowski coaches the Super-Eight Central Catholic Raiders and Denis Barrette leads the North Andover squad.

Mario Martiniello (Northeastern grad) leads a talented Andover squad into the tournament (and also coaches, for my money, the best player in the area – I’ll get to that in a bit).

I’ve watched quite a bit of the local high school scene, and while it hasn’t been loaded with talent, there are a few prospects who stand out.

The best player in the Merrimack Valley is probably someone you’ve never heard of. Andover’s Paul Russell is, from top to bottom, the best in the Valley.

Russell has 19 goals on the year, and he’s only a sophomore. He’s got size (I’d estimate him at about 5-foot-8, 170 pounds) and in last night’s 5-0 Division 1 North opening-round win over Lexington, he dominated. At roughly 15 or 16 years old, he’s only going to get bigger.

Lets put it this way — if he played at CM or Malden Catholic, he’d be noticed by now.

Against some of the best teams in the state, Russell has shined brightest.

Against a powerful Waltham bunch, Russell netted two points in two games. Against Central Catholic, the best team in the area (15-0-7 on the season, ranked 5th in the Super 8), Russell netted three goals in two games leading the Warriors to a 1-1 tie and a tough 4-3 loss.

He’s all over the nice, not only crashing the net with total disregard for his own well being, but ferociously back checking which wreaked havoc on the Lexington transition last night. He caused turnovers which he quickly turned into scoring chances with his speed, size and flashy release.

He didn’t look like the typical high school forward that will sometimes just throw a puck at the net, hoping it finds a hole. He picked his spots. He danced around over-matched defensemen. Oh, and I did mention he’s only a sophomore, right?

He’s certainly the player that played the NCAA game best of anyone in the area. Ryan Sifferlen is a tremendous talent at North Andover, but he won’t be able to get away with merely outskating opponents at a Division 1 level. The talent gap won’t be as wide as it was in the CAL. Russell has that mix of talent, hard work, and size. Sifferlen will put up big numbers at a NESCAC school, and there’s a lot to be said for that.

The crazy thing about Sifferelen is despite leading the area in scoring (I don’t count Chris Kreider, because he’s a Phillips), hockey probably isn’t even his best sport. He’s a tremendous soccer player, one of the best midfielders in the region, and hit .333 on the baseball team last spring. He’s a three-sport titan who will have plenty of options when it comes to making a college choice.

And despite a weaker league, 47 points in nothing to ignore.

I watched the Knights lose to Lincoln-Sudbury 5-4 in a shootout on Tuesday night, and Sifferlen put his team on his back. Trailing 2-0 early in the game, Sifferlen potted the game-tier in the second period after assisting on the Knights’ first goal.

Trailing 4-2 late in the game (just over 6:00 left), Sifferlen struck twice in 45 seconds, carrying his team to overtime before falling in a shootout (which is an awful way to end your season, by the way).

He’s on another level when it comes to other Division 2 players. If hockey is the sport he chooses to move forward with, it would be very interesting to see what he does at the prep or junior level. In the CAL he had superior talent. When that gap is closed a bit, I’d be interested in seeing how he adjusts.

From a body standpoint, he reminds me a lot of John Heffernan his senior year. Tall, but a little thin, and could just out-talent anyone he played against. Albeit Heffernan and Sifferlen were playing much different opponents.

Methuen goalie Jonathan Borden would be considered one of the best in the state if he wasn’t on a Ranger squad that has struggled since the turn of the millennium. You have to give credit to  Borden for loyalty. I’m sure he had chances to run to juniors or transfer to other schools, but the senior, who started all but three games this season (missed some time due to illness), posted a 1.94 GAA to finish his career.

Methuen coach Denny Eagan said that Borden was the best high school goalie he had ever seen — this coming from a guy who has coached at the high school level for some 30 years.

My colleague, David Willis, wrote a great story on Borden a few weeks back. Borden is small (5-foot-8, 140 pounds), but is certainly battled tested, regularly facing 40 or so shots a game.

Salem’s Rob Liberatore also stood out as one of the better netminders in the area. Russell’s teammate at Andover, Kyle Berthiaume, has been stellar since taking the starting job. He has posted shutouts in four of his last five games (including last night’s 15-save 5-0 win over Lexington), and hasn’t allowed more than one goal in his last seven (1-1 ties to Central Catholic and Waltham).

Not much Division 1 talent comes out of the Valley, but there is some. Right now, Russell is the best of the bunch.

Andover barely missed out on a Super Eight bid (ranked fourth in the Division 1 North Sectional), with losses to Malden Catholic, Central Catholic and Waltham likely hurting their chances. But they are still among the best teams in Division 1, certainly top-15.

Russell and former Andover skater Tucker Mullin (who pg’ed at Phillips for a year and is now with the Boston Jr. Bulldogs) are on par from a talent standpoint — in fact I would argue that Russell is as good as a sophomore as Mullin was as a senior — and Russell has more size, and better intangibles.

He has that swagger about him, too. An attitude that sometimes you like to see, at least on the ice.

Will be he be a Division 1 superstar? Likely not. But can he carve out his niche on a DI program? From what I’ve seen, absolutely.

Interesting Stats

February 24, 2009

I was going through some numbers this morning and thought I would throw your way some interesting statistics on this year’s Merrimack squad:

*In their wins, the Warriors have outscored opponents 3.25-1.25, despite being outshot 32.3-26.4.

*The Warriors are on pace to set a team-GAA record for the second-straight season (it’s at 2.53 currently). Also, the 2.91 Hockey East GAA is on pace to be the program’s best ever, as well as the first sub-3.00 GAA in program history.

*The -1.8 shot-differential is the best since 1999-00, as far back as shot stats have been kept. The previous best was last year’s -5.7.

*The 2.17 goals per game in HE games is the best since 2002-03, when the Warriors netted 2.35 per game. But the goal-differential (-0.74) is currently the best since 1996-97.

*All but one of Karl Stollery’s 14 points have been scored in league play. He’s the highest-scoring freshman defenseman in the league.

*The Warriors have played over 13 minutes of empty-net hockey this season, and haven’t allowed a goal.

MC 5, PC 1: ESPNU’s Take

February 23, 2009

ESPNU has posted highlights and a recap of Sunday’s 5-1 win over Providence College at Schneider Arena.

The Warriors will battle UNH this weekend. Saturday’s game at the Whittemore Center will be televised regionally on NESN. For MC’s Canadian fans, the game will be replayed on Rogers Sportsnet on Sunday morning.

Cannata named Defensive POTW

February 23, 2009

After stopping 70 of 72 shots in a three-point weekend for the Warriors, Joe Cannata was named Hockey East’s Pure Hockey Defensive Player of the Week.

With the overtime tie on Saturday, Cannata’s GAA was 0.96 on the weekend, going 1-0-1 with a .972 save percentage.

This is the fourth time Cannata has received a weekly honor this season by Hockey East and the second straight week. He was named the Hockey East Pro Ambitions Rookie of the Week last week, after stopping 35 shots in a 3-2 win over No. 5 Vermont.

Playoff scenarios

February 23, 2009

Heading into the final two weekends of the regular season, the Warriors can’t afford to lose a game if they want in the Hockey East playoffs.

The remaining schedules for the three teams in question are:

Merrimack: UNH (home and home), UMass (home and home)
Maine: UVM (2 home games), UMass Lowell (2 road games)
Providence: BC (home and home), BU (home and home)

There are two scenarios that would land MC in the postseason. They both include no losses from here on in.

Scenario #1: Merrimack goes 4-0-0 (finishes with 19 points)

*Maine can go no better than 0-3-1 (finishes with 18 points).
*Providence can go no better than 3-1-0 (finishes with 19 points, MC holds the tie breaker due to more league wins).

Scenario #2: Merrimack goes 3-0-1 (finishes with 18 points)

*Maine has to lose out 0-4-0 (finishes with 17 points).
*Providence can go no better than 2-1-1 (finishes with 18 points, MC holds the tie breaker due to more league wins).

Analysis

Is it a long shot? Of course it is. But the bottom line is that stranger things have happened.

If it weren’t for a 5-on-3 kill against UVM, the Warriors could be on a nice five-game unbeaten streak at the moment.

They can’t afford a single shift off these next 240 minutes, which is a tough thing to do for any team. They can’t afford a single mistake. In one meeting this season with both of the next two week’s opponents, they’ve won.

As head coach Mark Dennehy pointed out yesterday, if MC does go 4-0-0, but Maine wins and eliminates them, then you’d like to see the Warriors finish as high as possible, which would be to jump Providence. They were picked to finish last in the coaches poll, and despite coaches praising the Warriors for their work ethic, they’ll be ultimately judged on wins and losses. Closing the season on a high note could mean big things heading into next year.

Of course, there is a scenario where the Warriors go 4-0-0 and still don’t make it in. Heck, there is a scenario where they finish 4-0-0 and still finish last, but they can only control what they can control, and that’s themselves.

The most painful of the scenarios would see MC going 4-0-0 and still missing out. But if that were to happen, closing the season 7-1-1 would certainly make for a nice way to enter next season, and send the seniors out on a high note.

Where the Warriors Rank

Team Statistics (Hockey East – out of 10 teams)

Scoring Offense: 2.17 (8th, ahead of PC and Maine)
Scoring Defense: 2.91 (8th, ahead of BC and PC)
PIM/Game: 15.80 (5th, ahead of UNH, UMass, NU, Maine, BU)
Power Play: 14.9% (8th, ahead of UNH and PC)
Penalty Kill: 81.9% (8th, ahead of UVM and PC)
Special Teams Net: -10 (8th, ahead of UVM and PC)