BC tips Northern, faces Sioux today

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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MADISON, WIS.
Boston College, the popular choice as the No. 1 college hockey team in the country among some polls and prognosticators, still has a chance to prove it deserves that sort of acclaim if it can beat No. 1 ranked North Dakota in today’s 5:30 p.m. quarterfinal match at the West Regional in Dane County Coliseum.
The Eagles (26-11-4) defeated Northern Michigan 2-1 Saturday, but it took a pair of power-play goals in the second period by Jeff Farkas and Brian Gionta to gain the seventh straight victory for the Eagles, who had faltered to finish third in Hockey East before streaking to the league playoff title. Northern Michigan (22-15-5) thoroughly outplayed the Eagles to take a 1-0 first-period lead when sophomore Fred Mattersdorfer scored on his own rebound, but the Wildcats were undone by penalties in the second period.
Farkas tied the game with his 32nd goal of the season, also on his own rebound and almost from exactly the same place on the rink on a man-advantage at 5:01 of the second period. The Eagles were two skaters up when Gionta stationed himself at the right edge of the crease and deflected Blake Bellefuile’s shot from the left circle at 18:23.
“We were unlucky maybe not to be up by two or three in the first period,” said Northern coach Rick Comley. “We went toe-to-toe with what is maybe the best team in the East on pure talent. I thought we were the better team, 5-on-5, and we had our chances, but their goalie [Scott Clemmensen] played better than I expected him to.”

Patient Tigers beat St. Lawrence, face MSU

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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MADISON, WIS.—
Part of the reason Colorado College coach Don Lucia is one of the best in the country was spelled out on Saturday afternoon in the first game of the NCAA West Regional hockey tournament at Dane County Coliseum. After his Tigers came away from a dominant, 19-shot first period trailing St. Lawrence 1-0, Lucia didn’t complain about misfiring shooters, but instead stressed defense.
“Even though we hadn’t scored, we had had a lot of very good chances, and their goaltender had made some great saves,” said Lucia. “But I stressed that we had to keep playing good defensively.”
Lucia trusted the offense to come through on its own, and sure enough, the Tigers erupted for three goals in a 42-second span in the first couple of minutes of the second period, then relied on its stifling defense and the goaltending of freshman Jeff Sanger to whip St. Lawrence 5-2.
The victory moves CC (29-11-1) into today’s quarterfinal game against idle and No. 2 seeded Michigan State (28-5-7) at 2 p.m., with that winner going to Disneyland — for the final four at The Pond in Anaheim. “We know Michigan State is a great team, a well-coached team, and in Mike York they have one of the greatest players; we’re definitely the underdog,” said Lucia, proving that psyche-jobs are another part of coaching he’s mastered.
St. Lawrence coach Joe Marsh, whose team finished at 23-13-3, was impressed by CC and by Lucia. “Colorado College is quick, and they play the game the way it should be played, with speed and finesse,” said Marsh. “They handle the puck well, and Donny is a great coach. I had a chance to work with him at last year’s college all-star game. They use their quickness well in close, and they support the puck well and they know how to protect a lead.”
It’s true that many hockey theorists think it’s suicidal to sit on a lead, but Lucia has proven over the last six years that his CC players have the discipline to fall back defensively and win.
St. Lawrence goaltender Eric Heffler looked unbeatable in the first period, with an assortment of spectacular saves, while Brandon Dietrich pounced on the puck shorthanded when CC defenseman Scott Swanson fell when his skate caught a rut in the Dane County Coliseum ice. Dietrich veered out front, held the puck as he crossed the crease to let Sanger drop, then backhanded a shot over him at 10:48.
The Saints also killed off an overlapping power play that lasted until 1:03 of the second period. “I thought when we finished off that kill, it was a big thing when they scored their first goal right away,” said Marsh.
At 1:21 of the second, Cam Kryway scored coming out of the corner. “He made a good individual effort coming out of the corner, and made a good deke to get me to come off the post,” said Heffler, the Saints solid senior goaltender.
Justin Morrison followed up with a goal 11 seconds later, virtually off the ensuing faceoff. “They came in and got us confused a bit,” said Heffler. “I was a little tight in my net, and he picked the corner on me. At that time, after giving up two goals in a row at the start of the period, it was not the time you want to be facing a breakaway.”
But that’s what he faced, and Aaron Karpan roared in and shot into the upper left corner. “I was thinking ‘deke’ all the way, but the goalie was deep in the net,” said Karpan, who said his only previous breakaway came two years ago as a freshman, in the final four, when he came out of the penalty box. “So I’m 1-for-2 now.”
Undaunted, the Saints came back to outshoot the Tigers 13-8 in the middle period, and got within 3-2 when the puck took a weird bounce off the door seam on the end boards and came right out to Charlie Daniels. Startled, Daniels flung the puck across the crease, where a more-startled Sanger went down but missed it, and a still-more-startled Al Fyfe swung and missed before putting his second try at a backhand into the empty net at 9:26.
The Tigers regained control at 16:34, however, when Scott Swanson shot from the right point and Shaun Winkler, a freshman from Bemidji, redirected the puck past Heffler. Swanson said Winkler said he wasn’t sure he touched the puck, for what was his second goal of the season, and he joked about how it was moving so slowly, maybe he didn’t want any credit for it.
St. Lawrence stormed to the attack in the third period, outshooting CC 13-4, but the disciplined CC defense kept the high-quality shots to a minimum, and Sanger took care of those that got through. The only goal of the period came with 20 seconds left, when Morrison got his second of the game into an empty net. It was the 23rd goal of the season for the sophomore from Los Angeles, who had scored only four as a freshman.
NCAA NOTES: The Tigers got back the services of International Falls senior Jon Austin from a sprained ankle, and Cottage Grove junior defenseman Dan Peters from a sprained knee, but Superior senior Darren Clark was declared not ready to play yet with his broken arm, and, of course, Toby Petersen of Bloomington is out for the season with a broken leg.

CC ends UMD’s season 5-4 in overtime

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.
Brian Swanson, Colorado College’s scoring leader and a prime Hobey Baker candidate, broke away on an end-to-end play and scored at 6:17 of sudden-death overtime Saturday night, to give the Tigers a heart-stopping 5-4 victory over UMD before 7,089 fans at the World Arena.
The victory gave CC a sweep of the first-round WCHA playoff series in two games, and propels the Tigers into this week’s WCHA Final Five at Target Center. It also ended the season for the Bulldogs, but they refused to go down without one last, valiant fight.
When the Bulldogs trailed 4-2 with only seven minutes left, it might have seemed like a merciful end to an exasperating season. After all, UMD (7-27-4) was last in the WCHA, while CC (27-10-1) is the WCHA’s second-place team.
But the Bulldogs stubbornly refused to let their season go, and freshman Andy Reierson scored with 6:40 remaining to make it 4-2, and sophomore Jesse Fibiger scored with goaltender Brant Nicklin pulled with another shot from the blue line with only 42 seconds remaining, to send the game into overtime.
For Colorado College, the game had taken a sour turn midway through the second period, when junior star Toby Petersen — who had just recovered from a broke right ankle — got twisted up and fell heavily, and was taken from the ice by stretcher with a reported broken left leg.
The Tigers establishied their offense in the first nine minutes, benefitting from two power plays to outshoot UMD 10-1. At 10:15 of the first period, Mike Stuart threw the puck in front, and Jon Austin shot quickly. Nicklin blocked it, going down, and Justin Morrison chipped a backhander over the fallen goalie for a 1-0 lead.
At 10:58, with the injured Darren Clark watching from the stands, his freshman brother, Trent Clark, carried the puck in from the left corner. UMD’s Shawn Pogreba was all over him, but Clark, from Superior, battled the check until he got to the crease, then slid his shot just inside the left post. With the two goals in 43 seconds, it was the seventh time that CC had scored twice within a minute this season.
The Bulldogs countered at 3:01 of the second period, when Nate Anderson rushed up the left side and slid a pass to Ryan Nosan, who shot into the lower left edge to cut the deficit to 2-1.
At 7:20 of the middle period, Petersen went down with the tragic end to his season, and at 9:00 the Tigers made it 3-1 when Nicklin stopped Scott Swanson’s shot but Cam Kryway smacked in the rebound at the right edge.
That 3-1 deficit looked pretty steep for a UMD team that had settled for scoring either one goal, or less, 13 times this season. But before the period ended, the ‘Dogs made sure this wouldn’t be No. 14.
While killing a penalty, Colin Anderson knocked Brian Swanson down as he tried to score on a rebound at the UMD net, then skated up the left side. When he got within range, Anderson faked a slapshot and slid a pass to the slot, which Jeff Scissons one-timed, and sent into the lower left at 17:16.
That shorthanded goal gave the Bulldogs hope for the third period, but an interference penalty on Nosan with 13 seconds to go in the second period left the Tigers on a power play to open the third, and Scott Swanson scored from center point at 0:58 with a screened shot into the lower left corner.
The Bulldogs survived a later CC power play, and got one of their own that paid off at 13:20, when Andy Reierson scored with a screened shot from the right point that caught the lower left corner.
That again brought the ‘Dogs back within one goal, but a penalty on Mark Gunderson with 2:09 left seemed to doom the ‘Dogs. However, referee Tom Goddard bounced back with a tripping call on CC’s Mark Cullen with 46 seconds left, and UMD took time out. Coach Mike Sertich diagramed what might have been the last chance, and the play took only four seconds, with Scissons pulling a right-corner draw straight back and Fibiger whistling his screened shot past Sanger.
And the Bulldogs, stubborn to relinquish their chance to play, got to overtime.

Spartans swipe final four berth from CC, 4-3

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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MADISON, WIS.—
Michigan State scored a controversial power-play goal with 1:40 remaining Sunday afternoon, then scored again 32 seconds later to beat Colorado College 4-3 in the first West Regional quarterfinal at Dane County Coliseum, to snatch a berth in the NCAA hockey final four.
Michigan State (29-5-7) will face New Hampshire in Thursday’s semifinals, a reward that seemed only justified for Colorado College to achieve, after a season of catastrophic injuries such as broken legs, broken arms, broken tailbones, and assorted major surgeries.
But after surviving all the adversity, the Tigers (29-12-1) were ultimately brought down by a few simple toots on a whistle. Referee Tim Benedetto didn’t beat the Tigers singlehandedly, although his whistle-tooting could have passed for an audition with Michigan State’s lively pep band. The selective nature of his calls, however, took the best drama of the day out of the hands of the players.
Andrew Hutchinson tied the game 3-3 with a power-play goal from the right point at 18:20. And Adam Hall broke in on the left side and fired a shot that goaltender Jeff Sanger blocked with his glove, only to have the puck pop up high and land behind him, where it trickled in at the right edge at 18:52.
The crucial power-play goal occured when Benedetto, a motorcyle policemen from Everett, Mass., called the fifth interference penalty of the game on the Tigers, sending Paul Johnson to the box at 16:59. For the game, CC was penalized nine times to Michigan State’s seven, which isn’t a big difference. But the fact that the Tigers, a small, swift-skating, finesse team, would get five interference penalties to none for a Michigan State team that is skilled but committed numerous acts of what looked like interference — including on the game-tying goal — was at best curious, even if purely coincidental.
On a corner faceoff during that power play, the Spartans got the puck back to the right point where Hutchinson wound up to shoot, as a BC forward shoved CC defenseman Dan Peters into his own crease in front of Sanger, who never saw the screened shot that went in.
“I got pushed into the crease, and I know Jeff couldn’t see it to save it,” said Peters, a junior from Cottage Grove.
That, of course, would also qualify as interference, but the Spartans seemed to be immune to that call, even though Benedetto, at the urging of his linesmen, called to have the goal verified on video replay. They could only look for any MSU players in the crease, however, not for MSU players pushing CC players in.
“As much as refs don’t like to call penalties late in the game, he did it today, and we were fortunate enough to get a power-play goal on it,” said Michigan State coach Ron Mason. “Then he gave them a chance with a later call.”
True, after Hall’s tie-breaking goal, and with Sanger on the bench for a last-minute attack, Benedetto called a meaningless call on Michigan State with 28 seconds left.
The distasteful finish ended a fiercely fought game. The rested Spartans, who had the No. 2 bye in the West, jumped ahead 1-0 on Joe Goodenow’s goal at 1:56 of the first period. Spartan star Mike York was penalized for a heavy check from behind when K.J. Voorhees tied it on the rebound of Jesse Heerema’s shot off the crossbar at 14:43.
Cam Kryway scored on an alert play in the second period after goalie Joe Blackburn dived to poke-check the puck against Heerema but couldn’t recover to guard the open net, and the Tigers held the 2-1 lead into the third period. Another disputed penalty to the Tigers helped Adam Hall backhand in a rebound for a Spartan power-play goal at 9:14, but the Tigers immediately responded to the lost lead by reclaiming it at 3-2, as Trent Clark, a freshman from Superior, broke up the right side and blasted a 40-footer that slid through after Blackburn partially blocked it.
That set up the final, cruel twists. When it was over, CC coach Don Lucia made sure his players held their frustration inside. “I’m really proud of out players to go through what we’ve had to go through to get here,” said Lucia, taking the high road and refusing to comment about the officiating.
Scott Swanson, a senior all-WCHA defenseman from Cottage Grove, said: “There were some other factors involved. We’ve had injuries, and we haven’t gotten key bounces or calls all year. Today, we feel we deserved a little better than what we got.”

Cruel ending typified UMD’s hockey season

August 23, 2002 by · Leave a Comment
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COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.
Four seconds, no more. In the span of four seconds, all the high hopes, moderate hopes and teeny little hopes that the UMD hockey team had conjured this season were manifested into a final, cruel ending.
Maybe the season of hard work and torment couldn’t have ended any other way. The Bulldogs lost a 3-1, open-net first game of the WCHA playoff series, then rallied for goals by Andy Reierson with 6:40 to play and by Jesse Fibiger with 42 seconds left to gain an improbable 4-4 tie. But the last-place Bulldogs fell 5-4 on Scott Swanson’s overtime goal in Saturday night’s second game.
The celebration was tempered for the Tigers, who had lost star junior Toby Petersen with two broken bones in his left leg, both the tibia and fibula, in a second-period incident where he was caught between two players. His skate edge apparently was set, and the bones snapped, just above the skate boot. The incredible part is that Petersen had missed 17 games with a broken ankle on the other leg earlier this season.
That is a serious jolt to the Tigers hopes of an NCAA title, or even a WCHA Final Five crown this week, but at least the Tigers will be going on. CC coach Don Lucia and several of his players insisted they can’t believe UMD finished last in the WCHA (4-20-4) and won only seven games all season (7-26-4), because the ‘Dogs played so ferociously and skillfully in four straight games the past 10 days against CC, losing 4-3, 3-2, 3-1 and 5-4.
“We got our best effort out of everyone,” said UMD coach Mike Sertich. “They gave me everything they had; they emptied the tank. The way it ended just seemed to fit the whole season.”
The end came after about six minutes of overtime had elapsed.. Most of the 7,089 fans were brought to the edges of the palatial World Arena’s new seats when, after killing an amazingly questionable interference penalty, 75 feet behind the play, earlier in the overtime, UMD’s Ryan Homstol rushed up the right side, made a great move to beat a defender, then cut to the slot, with the puck on his forehand, all alone, to face CC’s freshman goaltender Jeff Sanger.
Homstol ripped a shot, and Sanger came up with his best save of the game, while sprawling to the ice. But a moment later, he made an even bigger one, blocking the rebound try of Jeff Scissons, who earlier had boosted his team-leading tally with his 18th goal, shorthanded.
“Before the overtime, I imagined that we were going to win, and I even thought I’d score the winner,” said Scissons, the top-scoring junior in the WCHA. “And then it happened, just the way it was supposed to, and I got the chance, with nobody even touching me. I’ve got to score that goal.”
But Sanger not only stopped Scissons’ try for his 31st save of the game, but he fed the puck straight out to freshman winger Jesse Heerema, which became the goalie’s fourth assist of the season — all on game-winners.
Brian Swanson, CC’s star senior and a prime Hobey Baker candidate, saw it all happen.
“I was coming back down the middle when Homstol made his move and went in alone,” said Swanson. “I thought, ‘It’s over,’ and thought about having to play a third game. Then I saw Sangie laying out after the save, and he got Jeff’s rebound, too. When he kicked the second one out, I was going to keep coming back, but I saw Jesse was going to get to it, so I took off up the middle.
“Jesse hit me with a pass, tape to tape.”
Four seconds. It wasn’t any more than that, and UMD’s near-certain victory had been swapped for the image of Brian Swanson, CC’s best scorer, flying across the blueline all alone, his bright yellow jersey fluttering in the wake of his speed. From 25 feet, maybe, he cut loose. He didn’t know why, he just did. And he got it all, sending a blur of a missile just over the glove of Brant Nicklin and into the top of the net at 6:17 of overtime.
“Usually I deke,” said Swanson. “In fact, I always deke. I don’t even know why I shot, but I’m glad I did.”
Nicklin, like Scissons, is never one to alibi, or even to accept any excuses made for him. Instead, he demands responsibility. “Yeah, it was a great shot,” he allowed. “But I saw our chances at the other end, and I saw the breakaway coming all the way. I just didn’t stop it.”
Nicklin did, however, stop 44 other CC shots for the night, giving him 81 saves for the two games. He held the Bulldogs in the game even when Justin Morrison and Superior’s Trent Clark scored for a 2-0 CC lead in the first period. After Ryan Nosan got one back with his first goal of the season for the Bulldogs, Cam Kryway scored on a rebound for a 3-1 lead.
The Scissons shorthanded goal cut it to 3-2, but Scott Swanson made it 4-2 on a screened power-play shot in the first minute of the third period. Maybe logic would have dictated that the Bulldogs just go quietly into summer vacation, but this UMD team has never quit, all season.
The goal by Reierson, from the right point, made it 4-3, and in the final minute, UMD coach Mike Sertich called timeout with 46 seconds remaining. He drew up a play for the right-corner faceoff, pulled Nicklin, and sent his troops back out. The faceoff was Scissons against Brian Swanson. And nothing went according to form.
“I was supposed to get the puck into the corner, and let Curtis Bois go in and muck it up,” said Scissons. “But when we lined up, I could see they were going to make it hard for Curtis to get to the corner.”
So Scissons crossed up the plan and instead beat Swanson cleanly on the draw, pulling it all the way back to the right point, where Fibiger immediately scored with a low slapshot, and 41.9 seconds showing on the clock.
“I’ve done fairly well on big draws, and that was the biggest,” said Swanson. “I was pretty upset at myself in the dressing room before the overtime.”
Lucia, breathing a big sigh of relief and still wondering how he can patch up enough players to take a run at the WCHA Final Five this weekend, was able to smile about that tying goal. “Brian just figured that since it was his last game ever at the World Arena,” Lucia said, “he’d make it a little more dramatic with an overtime goal.”

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  • About the Author

    John GilbertJohn Gilbert is a lifetime Minnesotan and career journalist, specializing in cars and sports during and since spending 30 years at the Minneapolis Tribune, now the Star Tribune. More recently, he has continued translating the high-tech world of autos and sharing his passionate insights as a freelance writer/photographer/broadcaster. A member of the prestigious North American Car and Truck of the Year jury since 1993. John can be heard Monday-Friday from 9-11am on 610 KDAL(www.kdal610.com) on the "John Gilbert Show," and writes a column in the Duluth Reader.

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  • Exhaust Notes:

    PADDLING
    More and more cars are offering steering-wheel paddles to allow drivers manual control over automatic or CVT transmissions. A good idea might be to standardize them. Most allow upshifting by pulling on the right-side paddle and downshifting with the left. But a recent road-test of the new Porsche Panamera, the paddles for the slick PDK direct-sequential gearbox were counter-intuitive -- both the right or left thumb paddles could upshift or downshift, but pushing on either one would upshift, and pulling back on either paddle downshifted. I enjoy using paddles, but I spent the full week trying not to downshift when I wanted to upshift. A little simple standardization would alleviate the problem.

    SPEAKING OF PADDLES
    The Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution has the best paddle system, and Infiniti has made the best mainstream copy of that system for the new Q50, and other sporty models. And why not? It's simply the best. In both, the paddles are long, slender magnesium strips, affixed to the steering column rather than the steering wheel. Pull on the right paddle and upshift, pull on the left and downshift. The beauty is that while needing to upshift in a tight curve might cause a driver to lose the steering wheel paddle for an instant, but having the paddles long, and fixed, means no matter how hard the steering wheel is cranked, reaching anywhere on the right puts the upshift paddle on your fingertips.

    TIRES MAKE CONTACT
    Even in snow-country, a few stubborn old-school drivers want to stick with rear-wheel drive, but the vast majority realize the clear superiority of front-wheel drive. Going to all-wheel drive, naturally, is the all-out best. But the majority of drivers facing icy roadways complain about traction for going, stopping and steering with all configurations. They overlook the simple but total influence of having the right tires can make. There are several companies that make good all-season or snow tires, but there are precious few that are exceptional. The Bridgestone Blizzak continues to be the best=known and most popular, but in places like Duluth, MN., where scaling 10-12 blocks of 20-30 degree hills is a daily challenge, my favorite is the Nokian WR. Made without compromising tread compound, the Nokians maintain their flexibility no matter how cold it gets, so they stick, even on icy streets, and can turn a skittish car into a winter-beater.