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2020 Level 5 Coaches Symposium Returns To The State Of Hockey

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USA Hockey announced today that registration is now open for its 2020 Level 5 Coaches Symposium, which will be held Aug. 20-23 in Duluth, Minnesota, at the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center.

Typically held every other year, the USA Hockey Level 5 Coaches Symposium is for aspiring coaches seeking to attain their Level 5 coaching certification, the highest offered by USA Hockey. In addition to general sessions, coaches also have the opportunity to explore innovative approaches to coaching through intensive breakout sessions dedicated to 12-and-under and 13-and-over age groups as well as the Gold Goalie Clinic.
“We’re extremely excited to bring this event back to the State of Hockey,” said Mark Tabrum, USA Hockey director of coaching education. “It’s such a unique opportunity for coaches to have this type of access to some of the best minds in the game.”

Attendees have the opportunity to learn from some of the top coaches and executives in the sport, including those in professional and college hockey, as well as top coaches internationally. Past speakers include: John Tortorella (Columbus), Mike Sullivan (Pittsburgh), Jeff Blashill (Detroit), John Hynes (Nashville) and Jon Cooper (Tampa Bay).

“This is such a great experience for our coaches to learn from the best in the world,” said Mike MacMillan, USA Hockey coach-in-chief. “Spending the weekend with the game’s top instructors provides new tools and techniques that attending coaches can use at all levels to facilitate long term athlete development.”

For more information and to register online, click here.

NOTES: Previous host sites have included Lake Placid, New York, (2018), St. Louis, Missouri (2016), Las Vegas, Nevada (2014), Washington, D.C. (2012), St. Paul, Minnesota (2009), Rochester, New York (2006) and Grand Rapids, Michigan (2005) … For information on accommodations and to register online, click here.

NHL Network To Televise Final 3 Contests of Rivalry Series

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Games Set for Feb. 3, 5 and 8 as USA-Canada Women’s Rivalry Renews
 
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – NHL Network will televise the final three contests of the 2019-20 Rivalry Series it was announced today by USA Hockey. The competition – between the women’s national teams of the U.S. and Canada – resumes this coming Monday (Feb. 3) in Victoria, B.C., with opening faceoff set for 7:30 p.m. PT at Save-on-Foods Memorial Centre.The scene shifts to Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday, Feb. 5, with puck drop slated for 7 p.m. PT at Rogers Arena, with the final game of the Series set for Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 8, with opening faceoff at 7 p.m. PT.Tickets for all games are available by clicking here.

The U.S. Women’s National Team is currently training in Irvine, Calif., at the Great Park Ice and Fivepoint Arena, in preparation for the final three games of the Rivalry Series.

The U.S. won the opening two games of this season’s best-of-five Series, including a 4-1 victory in Hartford, Conn., on Dec. 14 at XL Center and a 2-1 triumph in Moncton, N.B., on Dec. 17 at the Avenir Centre.NOTES: USA Hockey is staging a women’s leadership summit in conjunction with the Feb. 8 Rivalry Series game in Anaheim. The event, entitled Game On: Empowering Women in Hockey, will be held Feb. 7-8 and those interested in attending can get more details here … The final game of the series in Anaheim is part of the Anaheim Ducks’ “We Play Weekend,” which includes multiple initiatives to celebrate the girls and women’s game … For complete coverage of Team USA throughout the 2019-20 Rivalry Series, click here.

Elias and Boyce Earn Weekly UCHC Honors

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ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Manhattanville College senior goalie Taylor Elias (Winnipeg, Man./Canadian International Hockey Academy) and freshman defenseman Connor Boyce (St. Albans, Vt./The Winchendon School) each received weekly honors from the United Collegiate Hockey Conference (UCHC), Tuesday, Jan. 28. Boyce was UCHC Men’s Rookie of the Week and Elias received UCHC Women’s South Goalie of the Week.

Elias had two 30+ save games over this past weekend. Elias made 33 saves on 36 shots in a 3-3 tie against UCHC opponent Nazareth College, Friday, Jan. 24. She kept her team in a game in which her offense only mustered 18 shots. Elias then made 32 saves in a 3-0 win over UCHC opponent Utica College, Saturday, Jan. 25. It was her third shutout of the season. This is Elias’ first weekly honor from the UCHC.

Boyce scored two goals against Utica College on Sunday, Jan. 26. The goals were the first of his career. This is Boyce’s first weekly honor from the UCHC.

Both Elias and Boyce return to action and on Friday, Jan. 31, at the Playland Ice Casino in Rye, N.Y., against Elmira College. Puck drop for the women is set for 3:00 P.M. and the men are set to start at 7:00 P.M.

Kenmore/Grand Island, Frontier/LakeShore/Orchard Park and Williamsville Advance to WNYGVIH Semis

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By Janet and Randy Schultz, NYHOL; Photos by Janet Schultz, NYHOL

The Semi-Finals of the Section VI Western New York Girls Varsity Ice Hockey Section Federation will be held Thursday evening at 4:30 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. at the Amherst Northtowns Center.

Advancing after winning quarterfinal games Tuesday night are Kenmore/Grand Island, Frontier/LakeShore/Orchard Park and Williamsville. Lancaster/Iroquois/Depew as the first place team had a bye.

Here’s how is happened.

WILLIAMSVILLE 9; NIAGARA COUNTY 1

By Randy Schultz, NYHOL

The Williamsville girls varsity ice hockey team opened up the Section VI Quarterfinals Tuesday afternoon defeating Niagara County, 9-1.

Ellie Schau, Elizabeth Jackson and Vanessa Willick each scored two goals to lead the way for Williamsville. Molly Martin, Jenna Cavalieri, Erin Roland and Kelly Dormer added single tallies for the victorious Williamsville team.

In addition Cavalieri had a five-point game while  Schau and Jackson each added four-point performances. Kierston Smith added two assists and Laura Kaplan had a single assist.

Natalie O’Brien scored the loan goal for Niagara County. Madison Mallone and Skylar Berube assisted.

Williamsville outshot Niagara County for the game, 33-10.

FLOP 6; CASH 1

By Randy Schultz, NYHOL

Mary Kromer scored the hat-trick and Keegan Shanahan added a goal and two assists to lead FLOP past CASH, 6-1 in a Quarterfinal contest at Northtown Center. It was the second game of the evening as part of the 2020 Section VI Girls High School Ice Hockey Quarterfinals.

Also scoring for FLOP was Gabby Messing and Brooke Becker. Samantha Torgerson added two assists.

Kylie Nolan scored the loan goal for CASH.

FLOP outshot CASH for the game, 30-16.

FLOP will now move on to the semi-finals to be played at Northtown on Thursday.

KGI 5; HEWS 0

By Randy Schultz, NYHOL

Abigail Blair and Kaylynn Savoy each scored two goals and goaltender Carolyn Bourgeault stopped 22 shots to lead the Kenmore/Grand Island girls high school hockey team to a 5-0 win over the Hamburg/Eden/Seneca girls high school hockey team. It was the third game of the evening at the Northtown Center of the 2020 Section VI Girls High School Ice Hockey Quarterfinals.

With the win KGI will advance to the semi-final round to be held at the Northtown Center on Thursday. The game also marked Jeff Orlowski’s 200th game as head coach for Ken/GI.

Blair and Savoy each added two assists for the victorious Ken/GI team. Tessa Morris also scored for Ken/GI.

NOTES: Blair was awarded a penalty shot with 2:52 left in the second period when she was tripped in front of the HEWS net while attempting to score on a breakaway attempt. Blair attempted the shot but was stopped by HEWS goaltender, Lauren Brown.

A few highlights from the game.

Kenmore/Grand Island Coach Jeff Orlowship talks to his team after first period of Semi-finals against HEWS. With him are his assistant coaches!

Kenmore/Grand Island Coach Jeff Orlowski coached his 200th game in this series. Coach Orlowski, along with Coach Rick Hopkins (Williamsville) are the original coaches in the WNYGVIH league that took to the ice 10 years ago.

Kylie Nolan (CASH) scored her first goal in the CASH vs FLOP game. She got the only goal CASH scored in the game and did it at 2:02 of the third period. Nolan is a seventh grader.

Abigail Blair was awarded a penalty shot, the only one in this series, after she was tripped in front of the HEWS net while trying to score on a breakaway.

KGI got the only shut-out in this series. KGI Goalie Carolyn Bourgeault stopped 12 goals on 12 attempts by HEWS.

Mary Kromer, FLOP, had the only hat trick in the series.

Next up Semi-Finals at Amherst Northtowns Center,

Thursday, January 30 at 4:30 p.m. Kenmore/Grand Island faces #1 Lancaster/Iroquois/Depew

At 6 p.m Frontier/LakeShore/Orchard Park will face Williamsville.

The winners will face each other in the WNYGVIH Section VI Championship game at Lockport’s Cornerstone Arena on Monday, February 3 at 7 p.m.

Admission for both the semi-finals and the Championship is $5/adult.

RIT’s Gonsalves Atlantic Hockey Rookie of the Week

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ROCHESTER, N.Y. – RIT freshman forward Elijah Gonsalves (Scarborough, Ontario/Wellington Dukes) was named the Atlantic Hockey Rookie of the Week, Tuesday, after scoring three goals during the Tigers’ sweep of Canisius last week. It is the third time he has landed the award this season.

With RIT trailing, 4-1, with under eight minutes remaining in regulation, he bookended a 3-0 run with two goals over a 1:34 span as the Tigers went on to the 5-4 home victory on Saturday.
The previous night, he opened the second period with a power-play goal to push RIT to a 3-1 lead en route to a 7-4 victory in Buffalo.
Gonsalves is tied for fourth among all AHA rookies with 14 points and tied for third with 9 assists.
He was also tabbed the conference’s top rookie in back-to-back weeks on Oct. 21 and Oct. 29.
Gonsalves and the Tigers (13-10-3, 9-6-3 AHA) head to Holy Cross this Friday (Jan. 31) and Saturday (Feb. 1) for a pair of games slated to face-off at 7:00 p.m. both nights.

U.S. Women’s National Team Update

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U.S. Women’s National Team Training Camp Underway in Irvine
2019-20 Rivalry Series resumes Feb. 3 in Victoria, B.C. 
 
IRVINE, Calif. – The U.S. Women’s National Team will take the ice at Great Park Ice and Fivepoint Arena today for a three-day training camp ahead of the final three contests of the 2019-20 Rivalry Series. The series resumes on Mon., Feb. 3, in Victoria, British Columbia, with contests also set for Vancouver, B.C., on Wed., Feb. 5 and Anaheim, Calif., on Sat., Feb. 8. The games in Vancouver and Anaheim will face off at 7 p.m. PT, while puck drop for the contest in Victoria is slated for 7:30 PT.The training camp will include practices at Great Park Ice and Fivepoint Arena Wednesday and Thursday (Jan. 29-30), and a scrimmage on Friday (Jan. 31). All practices, as well as the scrimmage, are open to the public.The U.S. won the opening two games of the Rivalry Series, including a 4-1 victory in Hartford, Conn., on Dec. 14 at XL Center and a 2-1 triumph in Moncton, N.B., on Dec. 17 at the Avenir Centre.The final contest of the Series, which will take place at the Honda Center, home of the Anaheim Ducks, is part of the Ducks “We Play Weekend,” which includes multiple initiatives to celebrate the girls and women’s game.Complete coverage of the 2019-20 Rivalry Series can be found here.NOTES: The U.S. roster for the February portion of the Rivalry Series is comprised of all post-graduate players … The Rivalry Series was introduced by USA Hockey and Hockey Canada last season and comprised three games between the women’s national teams of the two countries. The U.S. captured the opening game in London, Ont., by a 1-0 count on Feb. 12, before Canada earned a 4-3 win in Toronto on Feb. 14 and a 2-0 victory on Feb. 17 in Detroit … The U.S. and Canada have battled in the gold-medal game of every IIHF Women’s World Championship and Olympic Winter Games staged, with just two exceptions (2019 World Championship, 2006 Olympics).

Drury Named GM of 2020 U.S. Men’s National Team

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Chris Drury, who in his fourth year as assistant general manager of the NHL’s New York Rangers and general manager of the Rangers’ AHL affiliate Hartford Wolf Pack, will serve as general manager of the 2020 U.S. Men’s National Team it was announced today by USA Hockey.

Drury, who served in the same capacity for the 2019 U.S. Men’s National Team, will be assisted by the U.S. Men’s National Team Advisory Group, led by John Vanbiesbrouck, assistant executive director of USA Hockey, and including NHL general managers David PoileDon Waddell,  Dale
Tallon
Stan BowmanJeff Gorton and Bill Guerin.

“Chris had an exceptional playing career and is an emerging star as a manager,” said Vanbiesbrouck. “We’re really pleased to have him back as the general manager of our men’s national team, and coupled with our Men’s National Team Advisory Group, we’re fortunate to have what is truly an all-star group engaged in helping us assemble a team that can compete for a gold medal.”

“Anytime you have a chance to represent your country on the international stage – in whatever capacity – it’s truly an honor,” said Drury. “We had a terrific team last year, and while we didn’t get the result we wanted, I think we’re on the cusp of getting to that ultimate goal of winning the gold medal. I’m looking forward to working with the men’s national team advisory group in putting together a roster and staff that will represent our country well.”

Drury, who served as part of the management group for U.S. Men’s National Teams in both 2016 and 2017, was inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame in 2015 after a 12-year NHL career that included a Stanley Cup championship with the Colorado Avalanche in 2001. 

He competed in eight international events for Team USA during his playing career, including three Olympic Winter Games (2002-silver, 2006, 2010-silver), three IIHF Men’s World Championships (1997, 1998, 2004-bronze), one World Cup of Hockey (2004) and one IIHF World Junior Championship (1996). 

Additionally, Drury spent four seasons playing at Boston University (1994-98), where he helped lead the Terriers to the 1995 NCAA national championship. Drury captured college hockey’s ultimate individual honor his senior season as the recipient of the Hobey Baker Memorial Award and is also a two-time recipient of USA Hockey’s College Player of the Year Award (1997, 1998).
The U.S. Men’s National Team will compete in the 2020 International Ice Hockey Federation Men’s World Championship, May 8-24, in Zurich and Lausanne, Switzerland. 

NOTES: For complete coverage of the U.S. Men’s National Team, click here … The official online home of the 2020 IIHF Men’s World Championship is 2020.IIHFWorlds.com … The U.S. is 19-7 over the last three world championships. Team USA won five of eight games a year ago and finished seventh in the tournament. The U.S. has earned three bronze medals in the last seven years, including 2018, 2015 and 2013.
(sportsnet.ca photo)

Cornell Men’s Hockey Beyond The Box Scores: The Dartmouth/Harvard Games

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ITHACA, N.Y. — With college hockey’s only perfect team watching, the 50th edition of the Cornell men’s hockey team since the program’s second national title is showing why it very well might have the credentials to bring home a third.

The reason? Results despite imperfection. Having a knack for pulling out any kind of result – whether it be a one-goal victory or a nail-biting tie – is a trait that any successful team needs to have. Cornell delivered on that premise over the weekend, eliminating two deficits against Dartmouth for a 3-2 victory on Friday, then scoring the tying goal of a 1-1 deadlock with Harvard on Saturday with less than two minutes left in the third period. With those results, Cornell (14-1-4, 9-1-2 ECAC Hockey, 5-1-1 Ivy League) will likely stay at #1 in both the USCHO.com and USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine polls for a third consecutive week.

It didn’t feel that way for quite a bit of Friday’s game against 20th-ranked Dartmouth (10-6-4, 7-4-2, 5-2). Perhaps the biggest surprise of the weekend was how the Big Green (ranked 40th in the nation in faceoff percentage) dominated Cornell (ranked 11th) on draws to the tune of 33-21. One of those faceoff wins led directly to Cam Strong’s goal in the eight minute of the game.

Junior forward Tristan Mullin tied the game about eight minutes later with his sixth goal of the season and team-high fourth on the power play. But Dartmouth struck back just 70 seconds into the second period on Tanner Palocsik’s first collegiate goal.

From there, the Big Red started to take over the flow of the game – but Big Green goaltender Adrian Clark repeatedly bailed out his team. Cornell squandered It started to conjure up unwelcome feelings of déjà vu, reflecting back on Cornell’s lone loss to date – a 2-1 decision at Dartmouth in which the visitors had 40 shots on goal to the hosts’ 17.

“We were just frustrated with the way we were playing with the inconsistency,” said Mike Schafer ’86, the Jay R. Bloom ’77 Head Coach of Men’s Hockey. “What I mean by that is we’d have a couple good shifts by a line, then a line would just go out and lay an egg. And then three or four defensemen would play really well, and then they’d go out and lay an egg. We just didn’t have that consistency in our game tonight.”

What the Big Red did have, though, was junior forwards Morgan Barron and Cam Donaldson. Barron’s shift of pure dominance in the first period eventually led to the penalty creating Mullin’s power-play goal. Donaldson then pulled the Big Red even with his fourth goal of the season late in the second.

“I thought the game for us was Cam and Morgan,” Schafer said. “I just thought that they … were outstanding the whole night.”

On the tying goal, Donaldson took Regush’s drop pass in the right circle and snapped off a shot that pinged the far post and in before Clark could react.

“On the bench, coach was telling us that when we got on those three-on-twos, two-on-ones, we needed to shoot the puck,” Donaldson said. “We were being too cute on the offensive rushes. … I just saw the net and tried to get it off as soon as I could and try to catch the goalie by surprise. Thankfully, it went in.”

The third period got off to a worrisome start for Cornell when senior forward Jeff Malott was whistled for holding after throwing a check in the neutral zone. It would actually be his first of two penalties in the third period. But not only did the Big Red kill off those penalties, it created havoc in the Big Green zone toward the end of the first.

Senior forward Noah Bauld had a short-handed breakaway that was stopped, then Barron and senior defenseman Yanni Kaldis skated away on a two-on-one. Though Clark made a save on the initial chance, a net-front scrum ensued. All five Dartmouth skaters – on the ice for about a full minute at that point – had retreated, but freshman forward Matt Stienburg picked a defenseman’s pocket to keep possession in the offensive zone while Malott was released from the penalty box. Working against exhausted defenders, Malott gathered the puck in the right corner, cycled up the wall and into the right circle for a shot from near the hash mark that beat Clark to the stick side.

“For both penalties, I’m extremely grateful that we have – in the last little stint – a very solid penalty kill. A lot of guys paid the price,” Malott said. “It never feels good taking a penalty in the last (20) minutes – let alone two. So I owe those guys one, big time, for those two kills. But coming out of the box … (the penalty-killers) really ran them into the ground. When I got out there, you could clearly tell it was a very tired ‘D’ pairing. So I just kind of picked it up and brought it across the middle.”

It wasn’t a comfortable victory, but it was a victory none the less. And it set the stage for the annual visit from rival Harvard. The fish flew and the fever pitch continued throughout the game, even if there weren’t many goals to cheer about. In fact, there were none – for either team – through 45-plus minutes. Galajda had a lot to do with that, setting the tone with a huge glove save on Nathan Krusko’s one-timer from point-blank range just 3:57 in. With just under 11 minutes to play in the third, he came across to his right to thwart a wide-open Casey Dornbach on the doorstep.

Meanwhile, the Crimson was befuddling the Big Red with its neutral-zone defense. Freshman forward Ben Berard ripped a shot off a faceoff win with 2:20 left in the first, but Harvard’s Cameron Gornet got a piece of it with his glove to send it screaming wide. Just 1:55 into the second, freshman forward Jack Malone one-timed a shot off the crossbar. But other than that, it was slim pickings in terms of offensive chances.

“I was thinking to myself, ‘I wonder if we’ve had less than nine shots in the first period, let alone the (first two) periods. Things weren’t really going our way,” sophomore forward Michael Regush said. “I don’t think we were getting too frustrated. It’s a 0-0 game and we know Gally’s going to stand in there and be great for us. We just tried to stick with things.”

Harvard eventually broke through. Off the rush, Dornbach held the puck and went around the net, then fed Jack Drury coming into the slot for a one-timer that went over a lunging Galajda’s glove. Cornell used its timeout to challenge for goaltender interference, since Jack Donato had both skates in the crease. But the call on the ice stood.

“I wasn’t too sure. I thought it was going to count,” Galajda said. “I don’t think the guy interfered with me too much. He didn’t touch me as the puck went past me.”

The Big Red then caught a break when Drury was called for slashing on the forecheck with 1:56 to play in the third. That sent the faceoff all the way down into the Crimson zone, and Cornell additionally pulled Galajda for an extra attacker to create a six-on-four advantage.

For all of the struggles the Big Red endured on draws over the course of the weekend, it was Barron’s clean win of the ensuing faceoff that set everything in motion. Kaldis’ original shot from the left point was blocked into the opposite corner. Pressure from Barron and Berard forced a weak clearing attempt that went to Malinski at the right point. With a Harvard player bearing down, Malinski deftly one-timed a perfect back-handed pass into the middle for a wide-open Kaldis. Instead of firing a puck into the crowded shooting lane, Kaldis picked out Regush gliding in from the right circle. Regush steered it into the net for his eighth of the season and quite possibly the most exciting of his collegiate career.

“(Barron) does a great job winning the draw, and it kind of sets things up from there,” Regush said. “I don’t know how it got to him, but Yanni had the puck and I kind of got myself loose, and he made a great pass to me. I just kind of tipped it in. It was a great look by Yanni.”

As frustrating as ties can be for fans, it can often be an acceptable result. And it’s nearly impossible to just win every game. The lone exception was there to watch all weekend, with the majority of the 1970 NCAA championship team that famously went 29-0 in town to celebrate its 50th anniversary of a perfect season. But if you fire on all cylinders all game, every game, you ultimately red-line the engine – or, in this case, peak too early in a season.

Up next for Cornell is an ECAC Hockey trip starting with a 7 p.m. Friday visit to #18 Quinnipiac, marking the Big Red’s seventh game in a nine-game stretch in which it plays against a ranked team. The weekend ends with a 7 p.m. Saturday game at Princeton.

Gong Tabbed UCHC Rookie of the Week

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William Smith College first-year Julianna Gong was named the United Collegiate Hockey Conference Women’s North Division Rookie of the Week by the conference office today.

Gong led the Herons with five points on four goals and an assist in a 2-0-0 week for William Smith in conference play. On Saturday against Lebanon Valley, she recorded a career-high three points, notching two goals and an assist in a 6-0 victory. Gong scored the game’s second and fifth goal of the game. She added an assist on Gina Scibetta’s goal late in the first period. The next day, Gong had a pair of goals in a 5-2 win over Chatham. She scored a power-play goal in the second period and then added an empty-net goal late to ice the game for William Smith. Gong has scored two goals in three of the Herons’ last four games.

Gong has played in all 18 games so far this season. She is tied for second on the team with 18 points on seven goals and 11 assists.

William Smith will be back in action this weekend when it hits the road to begin a four-game road trip. The Herons will take on Neumann on Friday, Jan. 31, and Manhattanville on Saturday, Feb. 1. The Valiants and Knights are first and second, respectively, in the UCHC South Division standings.

RPI Men’s Hockey To Honor 1995 ECAC Championship Team

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TROY, N.Y. – The Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) men’s hockey team will be honoring members of the 1995 ECAC Hockey Championships team on the 25th Anniversary of its Lake Placid triumph, during the first intermission of Saturday’s 43rd Annual Big Red Freakout!

“It’s exciting to be coming back to campus to see former teammates and celebrate on the campus where is so many positive memories were made,” said former goaltender Mike Tamburro, Class of 1996. “My teammates and I love RPI.”

“There is such love for the program from the hockey alumni, added third-year head coach Dave Smith. “They each had a great experience and to be able to come back to campus 25 years later as the ECAC Champions is a special time. They love to share the memories with our program and we love hearing them.”

Tamburro, the eventual 1995 ECAC Hockey Tournament Most Valuable Player, led the sixth-seed Engineers to a quarterfinal series victory over Harvard, before topping Colgate, 2-1, in the semifinal, setting up a matchup with Princeton for the conference title. Having lost to and tied the Tigers earlier in the year, RPI ran away with a 5-1 victory for its first championship since its national title-winning 1985 season. Forward Tim Regan and defenseman Adam Bartell earned All-Tournament Team honors along with Tamburro.

The 1994-95 Engineers went 19-14-4 overall and were led offensively by Bryan Richardson, who had 23 goals and 24 assists for 47 points in 36 games. Craig Hamelin (15 goals, 29 assists) had 44 points, while Regan (12 goals, 19 assists) added 19 points. Tamburro started 25 of the team’s 37 games, posting a 13-8-4 record with a 2.92 goals against average and a .914 save percentage and one shutout. Bryan Masotta (5-6-0) had a 4.26 goals against average and an .870 save percentage.

Overall, around 40 alums are expected to be in attendance this weekend, including a number of players from the 1985 National Championship team. The Engineers take on Dartmouth College on Friday (7pm) and the University of Vermont on Saturday (7pm).

Potsdam’s Merrill Named NEWHL Rookie of the Week

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POTSDAM, N.Y.–SUNY Potsdam freshman women’s hockey player Kaylee Merrill (Wasilla, Alaska/Anchorage North Stars) has been named the Northeast Women’s Hockey League’s Rookie of the Week.

Merrill had three points on two goals and an assist last week, helping the Bears to a 1-0-1 record in two NEWHL games. The forward picked up a goal and an assist in a 5-2 win at Canton on Wednesday and added a power-play goal in a 3-3 tie with Oswego on Saturday.

This season, Merrill is third on the team in scoring with a team-high eight goals and two assists for 10 points, while playing in all 17 games.

Potsdam hosts top-ranked and conference leader Plattsburgh State tomorrow night at 7 p.m.

Harley Commits To SUNY Brockport Men’s Hockey

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Warren Kozireski reports that Brockport High grad Andrew Harley, a forward for the East Coast Wizards, has committed to SUNY Brockport for the fall of 2020.
In his second season with the Wizards he has tallied 63 points in 77 career games in the Eastern Hockey League (EHL). Overall, Harley is tied with two other players for the 5th most points in the EHL.

New City’s Gillespie Leading Oswego

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By Warren Kozireski —

The points haven’t come quite as fast as Oswego senior forward Michael Gillespie would like or as they did for his first two seasons with the Lakers, but he has helped them into first place as they get ready to resume SUNYAC conference play this coming weekend.

The New City native and former Clarkstown High player for three seasons arrived in central New York three seasons ago, but it was a circuitous route.

It all started when his dad—the coach with the New York Saints in the Metropolitan Junior Hockey League—traded his son to the New Jersey Rockets.

“My dad was coaching the Saints and he actually traded me to the Rockets because they doing better,” Gillespie said after a mid-January contest. “But it was a good move and honestly was the first right step in my hockey career playing with the right guys and that’s where I started getting all of my Division I looks.

“Turning point in my career was my dad trading me to a different team.”

While there, Gillespie committed to Niagara University. He then played the 2014-15 season with Lincoln in the USHL and quickly decommitted to Niagara and decided to play collegiately at Ohio State.

That lasted eight games, where he scored his first goal, before he decided to leave and return to finish out the season in Lincoln and stay for an additional season in 2016-17 when he committed to the University of Western Michigan.

But instead, he ended up in Oswego for now three seasons.

“Definitely of a story. Niagara was my plan and I really didn’t know much about the USHL until I got drafted there. Then I got there and solidified my spot. I really didn’t know about all of the Midwest schools and as my (advisor) kept looking I kept playing better and got looks from other schools and…I ended decommitting from Niagara and went to Ohio State.

“I was really excited to go (to Western Michigan), but it turned out I was a couple credits short eligibility-wise with all of the transfers and switches and taking classes back in juniors and not taking the right ones for my major.

“The day that happened I got on the phone with Eddie (Oswego head coach Gosek) right here and he was more than welcoming to have me come and visit the school.

“Arms wide open and everything was top-notch and they’ve treated me with high-class. It’s my home away from home and I’ve never had a team be like this where coaches and team building a family at the rink and the fans.”

Now it’s down to the final ten games in Gillespie’s final collegiate campaign.

He had two goals and five assists over the first 13 games this season, but entered 2019-20 as almost a point-per-game player with 50 points in 51 games, so the offense could come at any time.

“My game is to keep making plays. (Coach) is happy with my 200-foot game and now it’s just trying to get it all to come together. Try to get the team to be as successful as we can be going into the second half, make a run to the playoffs and hopefully make a run to the national tournament if we can.

“I definitely want to keep playing after here; that’s my plan and what I’ve been working towards.”

Cornell’s Galajda Named MAC Goalie of the Week

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ITHACA, N.Y. — ECAC Hockey announced that Cornell men’s hockey junior Matthew Galajda has been named the MAC Goaltending Goaltender of the Week.

Galajda has continued to backstop the Big Red, which remains the #1-ranked team in both the USCHO.com and USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine polls for a third straight week. He made 20 stops against Dartmouth on Friday, earning the victory after the Big Red rallied for a 3-2 victory. Galajda was even better on Saturday in a heated rivalry game against Harvard. He made 29 saves while yielding just one goal late in the third period of a 1-1 tie to push the Big Red’s current unbeaten streak to eight games.

With the effort, Galajda now ranks second in the nation with a 1.46 goals against average and third with a .940 save percentage.

The Big Red has now won six of the league’s weekly honors this season, with this honor marking Galajda’s second weekly accolade of the season and the ninth of his career. He was also named the league’s top goaltender for the month of November.

Cornell (14-1-4) puts the nation’s best winning percentage on the line this weekend with an ECAC Hockey road trip to Quinnipiac at 7 p.m. Friday and Princeton at 7 p.m. Saturday.