Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Upcoming Podcast: Ken Schott, Jeff Foss

With the big Union weekend on the horizon, we have our first repeat offender coming onto the Without a Peer podcast this week, airing at 8pm on Wednesday, November 10th.

Ken Schott of the Schenectady Gazette has his finger firmly on the pulse of both Union and RPI, and we'll check back in with him with his thoughts on both teams' play last weekend against Dartmouth and Harvard, and we'll see what he thinks about the war for the Capital District.

We'll also get a chance to talk to senior defenseman Jeff Foss. Union has not been an easy task for the Engineers during his tenure in Troy - we'll see what his thoughts are about facing the Dutchmen one last time.

It's a big week, so we'll have open phone lines throughout the show to take your questions and comments - (310) 742-1841.

Of course, we'll also talk about the women's opening league home weekend, and talk about their trip to Yale and Brown this week.

Last week, we talked to WHRB's Brendan Roche and RPI junior Jill Vandegrift. Check it out in the player below, on demand.

Listen to internet radio with Without a Peer on Blog Talk Radio

Monday, November 8, 2010

Men's Hockey - at Dartmouth and Harvard (5/6 Nov)

The Engineers close out the year with lots of home games. 4 of the last 6 ECAC weekends of the year are in Troy, a fact which should be helpful down the stretch. The trade-off, of course, is that the year has to start off with lots of road games, and that's just the way the league schedule kicked off last weekend, with games at Dartmouth and Harvard. RPI got off the ground well on Friday, dumping the Big Green 4-1, but had a long trip back to Troy after a heartbreaking 1-0 loss to Harvard on a late goal, settling for the weekend split.

Dartmouth
Lee/Polacek/Helfrich
Brutlag/Malchuk/O'Grady
Cullen/Higgs/Rabbani
Tinordi/Rogic/Halpern

Bergin/Foss
Kennedy/Dolan
Leboeuf/Bailen

York

The minor shakeup of the 2nd and 3rd lines was a result of Alex Angers-Goulet developing an infection that ultimately kept him from the lineup throughout the weekend. Patrick Cullen was the replacement, he was inserted onto the Higgs line, with Marty O'Grady moving onto the Malchuk line. Seth Appert said that Joel Malchuk was also hurt, but was able to maintain his position as the 2nd line center.

The knock on Dartmouth coming into the season was questionable goaltending. After going with junior Jody O'Neill twice in the Ivy Shootout the previous weekend, coach Bob Gaudet decided to throw freshman Cab Morris in against the Engineers for his first collegiate action in the Big Green's first ECAC game of the year.

After failing on two power play opportunities in the game's first eight minutes, the Engineers got themselves on the board first. A minute after killing a hooking penalty against Guy Leboeuf, Chase Polacek notched his fourth goal of the season, with assists coming from Mike Bergin and Tyler Helfrich, to make it 1-0. It was one of only five shots of the first period for the Engineers.

Dartmouth, meanwhile, blasted away at Allen York throughout the opening period, but especially in the last half of the first - he faced a total of 14 shots in the first period alone, allowing one goal, which came a little under three minutes after Polacek's goal, leaving the game tied at one after the first period, and the Engineers looked like they were on their heels.

Marty O'Grady turned that momentum around almost right away. Just 58 seconds into the second period, O'Grady scored his first goal of the season from Bryan Brutlag and Joel Malchuk to put RPI up 2-1. It was the only goal of the period, but the momentum swung decidedly in RPI's direction during the second - York was forced to make only 3 saves, while the Engineers had 11 shots on goal.

A Dartmouth penalty early in the third period put the Engineers on their fourth power play of the game, and C.J. Lee made the Big Green pay rather quickly. He scored his third goal of the season - and second in as many games - from Nick Bailen and Brock Higgs (who has been getting an increased amount of ice time on the power play) to give RPI a two-goal edge. Three-and-a-half minutes later, RPI went on the penalty kill after a penalty to Johnny Rogic, but the end result became another RPI goal. Chase Polacek, who was among the best shorthanded scorers in the nation last year, earned himself another shorty with the lone assist going to Lee. WRPI announcers questioned whether the puck went all the way over the line, but the goal ended up counting, giving the Engineers a 4-1 lead, which would be the final difference.

Harvard
Lee/Polacek/Helfrich
Brutlag/Malchuk/O'Grady
Cullen/Higgs/Rabbani
Burgdoerfer/Rogic/Smith

Koudys/Kennedy
Bergin/Foss
Leboeuf/Bailen

York

Greg Burgdoerfer worked his way back into the lineup for Saturday's game, taking Matt Tinordi's place on the Rogic line. Justin Smith also saw his first action of the season, replacing Scott Halpern, leaving Kevin Beauregard, Bryce Merriam, and Jeremy Coupal as the only Engineers yet to see the ice thus far this season.

The Crimson were coming into only their second competitive game of the season, their first coming the previous night against Union, a 2-1 loss.

There honestly isn't much to report about the flow of this game. Neither team put a great number of pucks on net in the first two periods - Harvard led the shot total 12-11 after 40 minutes, a low number for both teams despite four power plays for the Engineers and three for the Crimson. During the second period, the Engineers had a pair of goals waved off - one which Josh Rabbani put into the net but was batted in by a high stick, and another that was put in after a scrum in front of Harvard goaltender Kyle Richter, but disallowed because it crossed the line after the whistle.

Referees Eric Ernst and Nick Litterio swallowed their whistles during much of the third period, but late in the game, observers say they had little recourse but to call a penalty to Harvard's Daniel Moriarty for hooking, as he impeded what could have been a clear scoring opportunity for the Engineers. RPI went to work and had their best showing of the night on the man advantage by far, blasting away at Richter, but they weren't able to put one over the line, and the power play expired.

Just 16 seconds after the Moriarty penalty expired, Litterio's arm was in the air - and he was calling Polacek for interference behind the play. WRPI's Tim Heiman couldn't spot the penalty, and Seth Appert later told the Times Union that if there was a penalty on the play, it certainly wasn't on Polacek, one of the team's most important penalty killers, for reasons he'd proven the previous night. All signs pointed to the call being nothing more than the usual ECAC "even up" call - RPI had a late power play, therefore Harvard had to have one too.

The Polacek penalty came late enough that it would have run into a potential overtime period - but it did not get that far. With 8.2 seconds left in regulation, Harvard scored the game's first and only goal on the power play as Alex Killorn beat Allen York with a shot York would probably like a second chance at, shortly after the Engineers, a week after giving up a late goal defending against an extra skater, were unable to clear the zone after attaining the puck, which had led to the late Union goal as well. Just over five minutes away from a solid 3-point weekend, RPI instead had to stomach a loss that ended a 7-game unbeaten streak that had been the longest in over a decade.

Other junk - The split road weekend resulted in the Engineers holding steady in the weekly USCHO poll, as they remain 18th in the nation with 145 votes overall. Also ranked from the ECAC this week are #3 Yale (up two with 5 first-place votes, swept Princeton and Quinnipiac at home) and #12 Union (up three, beat Harvard and tied Dartmouth). As with last week, Boston University is the Engineers' only non-conference opponent ranked this week, but they are now ranked #1 in the nation as they are undefeated in their first 8 games (6-0-2). They earned 31 of 40 first place votes. Cornell fell from the Top 20 after splitting a weekend in the North Country, they tied with Robert Morris for the most votes among unranked teams with 30. Colorado College (22), Quinnipiac (11), Clarkson (2), Dartmouth (2), Harvard (1), and Niagara (1) also received votes.

All ECAC teams now have two games under their belts, and in an interesting twist, no team was swept on the weekend - each team earned at least one point in the opening round. Most surprising was the home sweep by the St. Lawrence Saints of Cornell and Colgate, a duo most observers expected to be among the most difficult travel partner pairings in the league. Nine teams came away with either two points or one point on the weekend, which means there's practically no separation after the first weekend.

Every ECAC team except for Yale and Brown is back into league action this coming weekend (Yale is at Colorado College and Air Force on Saturday and Sunday, Brown is idle), with Dartmouth and Harvard traveling to Clarkson and St. Lawrence, while Princeton and Quinnipiac are at Colgate and Cornell.

And of course, the big RPI/Union weekend is this weekend as well. The travel partners tied 3-3 in Lake Placid in the last week of October, and will not see each other again during the regular season after this weekend. Union is trying to advertise some kind of "blackout" event on Friday in which everyone is supposed to wear black to the game. What a novel concept! The REAL Black Saturday (usually Black Friday) takes place the next night in Troy.

ECAC Standings
1. Yale - 2-0-0 (4 pts)
2. St. Lawrence - 2-0-0 (4 pts)
3. Union - 1-0-1 (3 pts)
4. Cornell - 1-1-0 (2 pts)
5. RPI - 1-1-0 (2 pts)
6. Harvard - 1-1-0 (2 pts)
7. Princeton - 1-1-0 (2 pts)
8. Brown - 0-1-1 (1 pt)
9. Colgate - 0-1-1 (1 pt)
10. Dartmouth - 0-1-1 (1 pt)
11. Quinnipiac - 0-1-1 (1 pt)
12. Clarkson - 0-1-1 (1 pt)


#18 RPI at Dartmouth
ECAC Game - Thompson Arena (Hanover, NH)
11/5/10 - 7:00pm

RESULT: RPI 4, Dartmouth 1

BOX SCORES
College Hockey Stats
USCHO

RECAPS
RPI
Troy Record
Albany Times Union
WMUR-TV (Manchester, NH)


RECORD: 4-1-3 (1-0-0 ECAC, 2 pts)

Reale Deals
1. F Chase Polacek, 2 G
2. F C.J. Lee, 1 G, 1 A
3. G Allen York, 25 saves

#18 RPI at Harvard
ECAC Game - Bright Hockey Center (Boston, MA)
11/6/10 - 7:00pm

RESULT: Harvard 1, RPI 0

BOX SCORES
College Hockey Stats
USCHO

RECAPS
RPI
USCHO
Troy Record
Albany Times Union
Boston Globe
Harvard Crimson

RECORD: 4-2-3 (1-1-0 ECAC, 2 pts)

Reale Deals
1. D Nick Bailen, 5 shots
2. G Allen York, 22 saves
3. F Tyler Helfrich, 2 shots

Upcoming games
12 Nov - at #12 Union
13 Nov - #12 Union (Black Saturday)
26 Nov - UConn (RPI Invitational)
27 Nov - Alabama-Huntsville/Bowling Green (RPI Invitational)
03 Dec - at #3 Yale

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Women's Hockey - Princeton & Quinnipiac (5/6 Nov)

RPI returned to the friendly confines of Houston Field House for the first weekend of ECAC home games, earning a split on the weekend by falling 2-1 to Princeton on Friday before playing an excellent game against Quinnipiac in a 2-0 shutout victory. Friday’s game was marked by a few defensive lapses which cost the Engineers the game while Saturday’s game looked to be their best of the season thus far.

Princeton

Smelker/Vandegrift/Horton
Sanders/Dunlop/Harrison
Padmore/O’Keefe/Jakubowski
Guillemette/Stapleton/Mankey/Letuligasenoa

Le Donne/Vadner
Castignetti/Marzario
Daniels

Van der Bliek

Friday night’s game against Princeton was a relatively well-played, back-and-forth affair, with both teams getting chances at the net, but it was two defensive lapses which led to the Princeton goals. The first came near the midpoint of the first period as a missed clear was turned around by Princeton and skated back toward Engineer netminder Sonja van der Bliek. Olivia Mucha found Denna Laing with a pass and Laing found herself without a defender covering her, leaving her open to roof a shot over van der Bliek’s shoulder for the 1-0 lead. A body checking penalty on Kendra Dunlop late in the period would give Princeton a few more chances at the net, but they couldn’t capitalize with the man-advantage and took the 1-0 lead into the locker room, also leading 8-5 in shots in the opening frame.

Nearly a full period after their first goal, at 8:15 of the second, a similar play unfolded for the Tigers as Engineer defenseman Andie Le Donne pinched to the right to challenge Olivia Mucha, who was again trying to break through with the puck. Mucha threaded a pass to a now wide-open Sally Butler on the right wing, who put another shot past van der Bliek to double the Tigers’ lead to 2-0. This lead would stand for only a couple minutes, as the Tigers would take a penalty and allow the Engineers to set up on the power play. After a minute and a half of constant puck possession and good movement in the offensive zone, Le Donne sent a pass from the right point to Jordan Smelker on the right faceoff dot, who shot a laser which launched the water bottle off the top of the Princeton net and cut the Tigers’ lead to 2-1.

The Engineers turned up the pressure in the third period, dominating most of the final frame and outshooting the Tigers by an 8-1 margin, but Princeton goalie Cassie Seguin held strong and kept RPI from finding the equalizer. Despite a power play opportunity near the middle of the third, and 1:27 of extra attacker time at the end of the game, RPI couldn’t hit the back of the net and fell 2-1, giving Princeton its second win of the season. The Engineers fell to 2-6-2 with the loss.

Quinnipiac

Smelker/Horton/Harrison
Sanders/Dunlop/Vandegrift
Padmore/O’Keefe/Jakubowski
Guillemette/Stapleton/Mankey/Letuligasenoa

Le Donne/Vadner
Castignetti/Marzario
Daniels

Van der Bliek

After RPI knocked Quinnipiac out of the postseason in last year’s ECAC quarterfinals, it was widely expected that Saturday’s rematch would have the Bobcats out for vengeance, and while they were, RPI matched their intensity and put forth one of the best single-game efforts seen in the past several seasons. After a very fast-paced first period, which saw two Engineer penalties but no goals, the goalies had quickly become the story, as one might have expected after last year’s overtime marathon games. Van der Bliek and Quinnipiac’s Victoria Vigilanti were perfect through the first frame and most of the second, but the Engineers were able to capitalize late in the second period. With Vigilanti sprawled out of the net to stop a shot from the point by Kristen Jakubowski, a rebound popped out to Clare Padmore who wasted no time in putting it home for her first goal of the season and a 1-0 lead.

The third period was marked by fast transitions, crisp passing, and a lot of back-and-forth hockey, with Quinnipiac trying desperately to tie the game and the Engineers searching for the extra goal that would put the game out of reach for Quinnipiac. It wasn’t until the Bobcats had their net empty in the final minute that RPI would get the chance it was looking for. Quinnipiac’s Jordan Elkins failed to hold the puck in at the Engineer blue line and Alisa Harrison cut around her, getting a break down ice and dumping the puck into the empty net at 19:28 to put the game on ice.

Sonja van der Bliek earned her first shutout of the season with a 25-save effort, and some of the saves were spectacular. Just as importantly, this was the first game of the season where things really seemed to “click” for the Engineers. Nearly every pass found the stick of its intended recipient, puck control was excellent, the Engineer offense was able to set up in the Quinnipiac zone and cycle smoothly…in general, everything went right. Part of the reason may have been some changes to the lines by Coach Burke, who swapped Taylor Horton onto the top line in place of Jill Vandegrift. Whether it was meant to be a message, or just an experiment, it worked, as every line looked great and most importantly each showed chemistry with each other. It will be interesting to see if Burke keeps the lineup intact for next weekend’s games against Yale and Brown – and if we see the same kind of results as we saw on Saturday. Also important was the lack of “sixth-period syndrome”, where the Engineers get outworked in the third period of Saturday’s game – something which has plagued them on and off for several seasons. The team looked energetic and active throughout the final frame, keeping a frantic Quinnipiac squad at bay.

The Engineers hit the road again next weekend for a series at Yale and Brown. WRPI will not cover the games, however Yale and Brown will both have subscription video available for purchase.

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RPI vs. Princeton
ECAC Hockey Game – Houston Field House (Troy, NY)
11/5/10 – 7:00pm
PU 2, RPI 1

BOX SCORES:
RECAPS:
RECORD: 2-6-2 (1-2-0 ECAC)

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RPI vs. Quinnipiac
ECAC Hockey Game – Houston Field House (Troy, NY)
11/6/10 – 4:00pm
RPI 2, QU 0

BOX SCORES:
RECAPS:
RECORD: 3-6-2 (2-2-0 ECAC)

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Upcoming Games

Nov. 12 – at Yale (7pm)
Nov. 13 – at Brown (4pm)
Nov. 19 – Niagara (7pm)
Nov. 20 – Niagara (2pm)
Nov. 26 – at Syracuse (7pm)
Nov. 27 – at Syracuse (2pm)

Saturday, November 6, 2010

He's Ba-aack

When ECAC goaltenders go to bed at night, they check in the closet and under the bed for Chase Polacek.



Two goals on Friday, five on the year, 11 points overall.

Friday, November 5, 2010

It Begins... Again

A new beginning for both squads this week... the women start the home segment of their ECAC schedule, hosting Princeton tonight and facing the team Jill Vandegrift called "a growing rival" on our podcast on Saturday - Quinnipiac.

Meanwhile, the men hit the road to take on a pair of teams just starting their seasons out, seeking to extend their unbeaten streak, which currently sits at six games in a row after last week's tie with Union in Lake Placid. It's already the longest unbeaten streak since six in a row in October and November of 2007. A win or a tie tonight extends it to the longest unbeaten streak since the Engineers won nine straight between December 1998 to the end of January 1999.

It's a birthday celebration today - on November 5th, 1824, Stephen van Rensselaer founded The Rensselaer School. Also, we celebrate the first anniversary of Without a Peer. Hopefully our second year will be just as awesome as our first. As a commemoration, allow the musical stylings of David St. Hubbins, Nigel Tufnel, and Derek Smalls to get you psyched for a weekend of ECAC hockey.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Upcoming Podcast: Jill Vandegrift, Brendan Roche

We're returning to our regular time this week as we get underway at 8pm for the Without a Peer podcast, Wednesday, November 3rd.

Junior forward Jill Vandegrift, who leads the Engineers with 6 points in 9 games, will join us during the broadcast to talk about RPI's opening weekend of ECAC play in the North Country, where the women knocked off St. Lawrence for the first time, and discuss the first league games at home as the Engineers welcome Princeton and Quinnipiac to Houston Field House this weekend.

Brendan Roche, the play-by-play commentator for Harvard hockey broadcasts on WHRB-FM (95.3 Cambridge, MA) will also join us this week as the men enter ECAC play this week with a road trip to Hanover and Boston. We'll get his insights on the Crimson, who opened their season last night at the Bright Hockey Center with a 2-1 loss to the Swedish junior team, as well as his thoughts on Harvard's travel partner, Dartmouth, and the prospects in the Ivy League this season.

Be sure to tune in at 8pm tomorrow, the 3rd - you can click "Listen to Without a Peer" to hear our broadcast live, or access any of our previous shows on demand at any time.

Last week, we had an in-depth discussion with College Hockey News managing editor Adam Wodon - and you can listen to it on demand right now with the player below.

Listen to internet radio with Without a Peer on Blog Talk Radio

Monday, November 1, 2010

Men's Hockey - vs. Union (30 Oct)

The Route 7 Rivalry was rekindled in unfamiliar territory, as the two teams played each other outside of the Capital District for the first time since meeting in the Catamount Cup in 2006 in Burlington - this time clashing on the hallowed ice of Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid, a venue the Engineers hadn't visited since the 2002 ECAC Championships, which was also the last time they played in that tournament. With an eye on two weeks from now, when the Engineers and Dutchmen will go head to head for ECAC points, the teams skated to a 3-3 tie in a well played, back-and-forth affair.

Union
Lee/Polacek/Helfrich
Angers-Goulet/Malchuk/Brutlag
Rabbani/Higgs/O'Grady
Tinordi/Rogic/Halpern

Bergin/Foss
Kennedy/Leboeuf
Koudys/Bailen

York

The forward lines seem to be settling in nicely - which is bad news for the guys who are now becoming regular scratches, especially Patrick Cullen and Greg Burgdoerfer, who are continuing to have trouble cracking the lineup. Meanwhile, the rotation of the three freshmen defensemen continues, and this time it was Bo Dolan's turn to sit out.

After an early feeling out period, the first major event was an interference penalty to Bryan Brutlag, which gave us our first taste of the crucial Union power play vs. RPI penalty kill matchup, and the first round went definitively to the Dutchmen. Shortly after the man advantage got underway, Greg Coburn scored on a rocket from the point to put Union up 1-0.

A penalty to Union captain Brock Matheson shortly thereafter gave RPI their first power play of the afternoon, but they were unable to convert. Brutlag hit the box again on a tripping call about a minute after the RPI advantage ended, and Union made it 2-for-2 on the power play with a little help from a defensive miscue. Nick Bailen checked a Union forward in front of the net, and the Dutchman, perhaps seeing a golden opportunity after the hit, sprawled into Allen York in front fairly easily, putting the RPI netminder on his back for the shot that came in from senior Adam Presizniuk, giving Union the 2-0 lead that they would carry into the second period.

The Engineers finally killed a penalty early in the 2nd period when they successfully got through an elbowing call against Bailen. The increasingly famous Union slow-down kept things difficult for RPI through the majority of the period, as shots became few and far between, but a penalty late in the period to Justin Pallos opened the door, and the RPI power play walked through it. Just one second after the penalty expired, a laser of a shot from Bailen hit the back of the net. His second goal as an Engineer made it 2-1 heading into the third period.

The Union slow-down continued into the third as the Dutchmen clung to their one-goal lead. What appeared to be an RPI power play chance on a hooking call to Presizniuk was wiped away when the referees called Bailen for embellishment on the play. But a minute after the teams returned to 5-on-5, C.J. Lee came into the zone with Polacek and Helfrich on a 3-on-2, keeping the puck himself as he drove to the net and jammed it past Keith Kincaid to tie the score at two.

With the RPI faithful still cheering Lee's goal, the Engineers attacked immediately on the center-ice faceoff. Just 11 seconds after Lee had tied the game, Tyler Helfrich continued his personal renaissance with his team leading 4th goal of the season, sneaking a Chase Polacek pass between Kincaid and the post to put RPI ahead, 3-2.

From there, the Engineers seemed to have broken the Dutchmen's backs, as they continued pressing and looking for another goal, exhibiting good puck control and keeping Union from having any decent looks. But a late icing call on the Engineers with exactly 60 seconds left in regulation provided the opening they needed. Previously unable to pull Kincaid, Nate Leaman called timeout and set up a play with the extra attacker - a situation in which the Dutchmen have been dangerous all season long, as their excellent power play statistics (and their 2-for-3 record on the night) underscore. 30 seconds later, before the Engineers had ever been able to clear the zone, freshman Mat Bodie scored his first career goal on a shot from the blue line with traffic in front to tie things up at three.

Both teams had opportunities to score in the overtime period, but neither were able to get any quality chances, and the first battle between the Route 7 rivalry ended without resolution. The Dutchmen led most of the way but were fortunate to get the tie - in some respects, both teams were disappointed with the final result. John Kennedy told Ed Weaver after the game that "the team was more PO'd than disappointed." That chip on the shoulder will be important in two weeks.

Other junk - The tie with Union, coupled with some bad weeks from other teams in the rankings, helped the Engineers rise two spots in the USCHO.com poll, they now sit as the 18th ranked team in the nation. Also ranked this week from the ECAC are #5 Yale (one first place vote, no change, beat Brown and Dartmouth at home), #15 Union (up one, tied UConn and RPI), and #19 Cornell (down five, lost at home to UNH and RIT). #3 Boston University (seven first place votes, up three) is the only other ranked RPI opponent this week, but also receiving votes were Quinnipiac (38), Colorado College (18), Clarkson (7), and RIT (6).

The ECAC schedule starts this week with a full slate of games, including RPI/Union visiting Dartmouth/Harvard. The Big Green got two games under their belts last weekend, beating Princeton before falling to Yale in the Ivy Shootout, but this will be the first weekend of competitive hockey for the Crimson.

#20 RPI vs. #16 Union
Nonconference Game - Herb Brooks Arena at Olympic Center (Lake Placid, NY)
10/30/10 - 4:00pm

RESULT: RPI 3, Union 3

BOX SCORES
College Hockey Stats
USCHO

RECAPS
RPI
Troy Record
Albany Times-Union
WNYT-TV (Albany)

VIDEO
Goals (Union goals first, RPI goals after)

RECORD: 3-1-3 (0-0-0 ECAC)

Reale Deals
1. F Tyler Helfrich, 1 G, 1 A
2. F Chase Polacek, 2 A
3. D Nick Bailen, 1 G, 1 A

Upcoming games
05 Nov - at Dartmouth
06 Nov - at Harvard
12 Nov - at #15 Union
13 Nov - #15 Union (Black Saturday)
26 Nov - UConn (RPI Invitational)