Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Men's Hockey - at Princeton (7 Jan)

An odd Thursday night game with school out of session was RPI's only game last weekend, and the Engineers tied it into their split with Miami by adding it to their road trip. After spending some time in Pittsburgh practicing and seeing the Penguins play, RPI crossed Pennsylvania and played an ECAC road game against the Princeton Tigers, a team that is much improved over last season but still among the lower-tier of the conference. In a game the Engineers would have probably liked to have come away with a pair of points, they settled for a tie, fighting back twice in the third period to knot the score, eventually skating away with a 3-3 score.

Princeton
Melanson-Bubela-Wood
Bourbonnais-Schroeder-Nanne
Miller-DeVito-Liljegren
Fulton, Ohrvall

Bradley-Prapavessis
Wilson-Reno
Moore-Hampton
Grant

Kasdorf

Princeton netminder Colton Phinney is one of the sneaky good goaltenders in the ECAC. His stats don't give that away, but he certainly doesn't have much help when it comes to defense. He was busy during the first period, facing 11 shots from an RPI team that had fired only 17 and 19 shots in their previous two games during the opening 20 minutes alone. The Engineers did strike first, with Jesper Ohrvall scoring his fifth goal in as many games with just under two minutes to play in the opening frame.

A far more even second period saw the Tigers tie things up on the power play, as Mike Ambrosia's second goal of the season made it 1-1 with about four minutes left in the period. The Tigers then took the lead early in the third period after Ohrvall and Princeton's Matt Nelson were sent off for roughing after the whistle as Max Véronneau scored on the ensuing four-on-four.

That lead was short-lived. 1:01 later, Jared Wilson scored his third of the season, from Jimmy DeVito (notching his second assist in his second game back) and Riley Bourbonnais to make it 2-2. That goal didn't swing momentum in the Engineers' favor, however, and minutes later RPI had to call a timeout after icing the puck. Seconds later, VĂ©ronneau's  second of the night made it 3-2 Princeton and the game began to have all the hallmarks of a bad loss for the Engineers.

It took some time, but RPI managed to find the equalizer once again. Just under six minutes after falling behind for a second time, with a little over three minutes left in regulation, Riley Bourbonnais hit the back of the cage for his 13th goal of the year, giving some hope for a total turnaround. Princeton complained that Zach Schroeder was offsides on the play, but the goal stood.

That was as far as they'd be able to get, thanks in part to some strong play from Phinney in the overtime period, otherwise dominated by the Engineers. Ohrvall could have given RPI their third OT victory of the season late in the extra session, but fanned on a shot that would have had a wide open net to greet it. Ultimately, it was a bittersweet tie. Usually, coming from behind twice is considered a "good" tie, but this was certainly a missed opportunity to gain another point against a team that has the most losses in league play so far this year.

RPI's next weekend is back at home as they host a once-again strong Cornell team that's scoring goals at a rate we haven't seen from them in quite some time, combined with their usual strong defensive showing. That's followed by the annual autism awareness game against a Colgate team that have easily been the league's biggest negative shock of the year to date.

Parker Reno suffered a shoulder injury, possibly during the Princeton game, and will be on the shelf for 6-8 weeks. That's not a good turn of events at all, especially considering that he leads the ECAC outside of Quinnipiac in plus/minus.

Bourbonnais' 13 goals this year is the third most for an Engineer over the last five years, trailing only Ryan Haggerty (28) and Brock Higgs (14), both in 2013-14. And there's still plenty of season left.

Current ECAC Standings
1. Quinnipiac - 22 pts (10-0-2)
2. Cornell - 13 pts (6-1-1)
3. RPI - 12 pts (4-1-4)
4. Harvard - 11 pts (4-2-3)
5. St. Lawrence - 9 pts (4-2-1)
6. Yale - 8 pts (3-3-2)
7. Princeton - 8 pts (3-7-2)
8. Dartmouth - 6 pts (3-5-0)
9. Brown - 6 pts (2-5-2)
10. Union - 6 pts (2-6-2)
11. Colgate - 5 pts (2-6-1)
12. Clarkson - 2 pts (0-5-2)

By winning percentage
1. Quinnipiac (.917)
2. Cornell (.812)
3. RPI (.667)
4. St. Lawrence (.643)
5. Harvard (.611)
6. Yale (.500)
7. Dartmouth (.375)
8. Brown (.333)
9. Princeton (.333)
10. Union (.300)
11. Colgate (.278)
12. Clarkson (.143)

#20 RPI at Princeton
ECAC Game - Goggin Ice Center (Oxford, OH)
1/7/16 - 7:00pm

RESULT: RPI 3, Princeton 3 (OT)

RECORD: 11-7-4 (4-1-4 ECAC, 12 pts)

Upcoming games
15 Jan - #8 Cornell
16 Jan - Colgate
21 Jan - at #2 Quinnipiac
23 Jan - vs. Union (Albany, NY)
29 Jan - at Brown

Monday, January 11, 2016

Women's Hockey - Quinnipiac & Princeton (8/9 Jan)

RPI took what was slated to be one of the toughest weekends of the season and managed to make a decent showing of it, fighting hard to earn a 0-0 tie against fourth-ranked Quinnipiac on Friday before falling short in a late comeback bid in a 3-2 loss against Princeton on Saturday.

Quinnipiac

Rooney/Tomlinson/Mankey
Horwood/Gruschow/Thomas
Grigsby/Hylwa/Tremblay
Wash/Orzechowski

Hansen/Godin
Behounek/Banks
Kimmerle/Renn

Selander

Games don't always need a lot of scoring to be exciting, and it was proven on Friday as RPI battled #4 Quinnipiac to a scoreless tie that featured a lot of back-and-forth action and some excellent goaltending, especially from RPI's Lovisa Selander who made 40 saves for her second shutout of the season. Her counterpart in the Quinnipiac net, Sydney Rossman, made 15 saves for a shutout of her own.

The tie broke a 10-game winning streak for Quinnipiac, which still sits atop the ECAC standings.

RPI nearly took a lead in the first period, as Mari Mankey was left alone on the doorstep to take a feed from behind the net, but the senior couldn't get a clean shot off. Quinnipiac had several chances of their own, including shots off the pipe in the first and second period.

Selander made a save on a Quinnipiac 2-on-1 chance early in the third period to keep the scoreboard clean. Her 40 saves were critical as the Engineers were outshot by a nearly 3-1 margin on the evening.

The scoreless tie is the first for the Engineers since a 2008 game against now-defunct Wayne State, while it's the second of the season for the Bobcats, with the first having come in November against Colgate.

Princeton

Horwood/Gruschow/Thomas
Rooney/Mankey/Wash
Grigsby/Hylwa/Tremblay
Orzechowski

Hansen/Godin
Behounek/Banks
Kimmerle/Renn

Selander

After no goals and just three penalties on Friday, Saturday's score sheet had a lot more to offer as RPI fell short in their comeback bid against Princeton by a 3-2 tally.

Princeton jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the first period, with Jaimie McDonell taking a feed through traffic and putting it past Selander.

With back-to-back RPI penalties late in the first and early in the second, the Tigers' power play went to work and cashed in at 3:36 of the middle frame. Molly Contini tipped home a shot by Karlie Lund, taken after the puck popped out of a scrum in front of Selander.

Things looked bleak for the Engineers as Princeton extended the lead to 3-0 at 8:14 of the second, with Cassidy Tucker getting the puck in front of the RPI net and putting it top shelf for the goal.

RPI settled down after the third goal and stopped the bleeding, holding Princeton scoreless for the remainder of regulation. Ths third period saw RPI launch a comeback bid, started by Katie Rooney at 3:25 of the third. Rooney charged the net as Mari Mankey carried the puck behind the goal line, and quickly redirected it past Kimberly Newell when Mankey fed it to the front.

Makenna Thomas cut the deficit to 3-2 at 16:30 on the power play, deflecting a shot from Hannah Behounek at the top of the circle to bring the Engineers within a goal.

Unfortunately for RPI, that was as close as they would get to the tying goal, as the late push with the extra attacker was cut short by a penalty in the game's final minute.

With the one point weekend, the Engineers fall into ninth place in the ECAC but will have an opportunity to make up a little ground next weekend in the home-and-home against Union. Though the Dutchwomen have no wins and just five ties on the season, they always manage to play RPI tough. If the Engineers want to chart a course for the playoffs, however, these games are pretty strongly in the "must-win" column.

-----

RPI vs Quinnipiac
ECAC Hockey Game - Houston Field House (Troy, NY)
1/8/16 - 7pm
RPI 0, QU 0 (OT)

BOX SCORES:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/boxscore.aspx?path=whock&id=5197
College Hockey Stats: http://collegehockeystats.net/1516/boxes/wquiren1.j08

RECAPS:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/news/2016/1/8/WICE_0108165001.aspx?path=whock
QU: http://www.quinnipiacbobcats.com/news/2016/1/8/WIH_0108163252.aspx?path=whockey
Video Highlights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hqu-NspdTy4
Complete Game Video: http://rpitv.org/productions/1027

RECORD: 5-10-4 (3-4-2 ECAC)

-----

RPI vs Princeton
ECAC Hockey Game - Houston Field House (Troy, NY)
1/9/16 - 4pm
Princeton 3, RPI 2

BOX SCORES:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/boxscore.aspx?path=whock&id=5198
College Hockey Stats: http://collegehockeystats.net/1516/boxes/wprnren1.j09

RECAPS:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/news/2016/1/9/WICE_0109164157.aspx?path=whock
Princeton: http://www.goprincetontigers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?ATCLID=210624394&DB_OEM_ID=10600
Video Highlights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_zmhQqtFrY
Complete Game Video: http://rpitv.org/productions/1028

RECORD: 5-11-4 (3-5-2 ECAC)

-----

ECAC Standings

1. Quinnipiac - 23 pts (10-1-3) (.821)
2. Princeton - 19 pts (9-4-1) (.679)
3. Harvard - 15 pts (7-3-1) (.682)
4. Clarkson - 12 pts (5-3-2) (.600)
5t. Colgate - 10 pts (3-2-4) (.556)
5t. St. Lawrence - 10 pts (5-5-0) (.500)
5t. Dartmouth - 10 pts (4-5-2) (.455)
8. Yale - 7 pts (3-4-1) (.438)
9t. Cornell - 8 pts (3-4-2) (.444)
9t. RPI - 8 pts (3-5-2) (.400)
11t. Brown - 2 pts (1-9-0) (.100)
11t. Union - 2 pts (0-8-2) (.100)

-----

Upcoming Schedule

Jan. 15 - Union (3pm)
Jan. 16 - at Union (3pm)
Jan. 22 - at Brown (7pm)
Jan. 23 - at Yale (4pm)

Thursday, January 7, 2016

ECAC Immersion

Well, that's all. The next time RPI hockey, men's or women's, takes on a team from outside the ECAC, it'll be October - or, God-willing, March. It's time to do battle.

Tonight, the men finish a long road-trip - literally - by concluding their Midwestern journey in the most natural of places, New Jersey. And we've said it before and will say it again: if you're going to be a top 4 team, there are games that you absolutely must win in order to prove it. Tonight, even on the road at Princeton, is one of those nights. The Tigers aren't as bad as they were last season and are probably better than their record (they've been in a few nailbiters). Nevertheless, tonight looms as not only a winnable game, but one a team claiming top honors should win.

Tomorrow and Saturday, the women host Quinnipiac and Princeton in what could be the most difficult home weekend of the year - the Bobcats are #1 in the ECAC by winning percentage, and Princeton's #2. As we've often mentioned when it comes to weekends like, this, these are bonus points up for grabs. Gotta snag some of these where possible if you're going to make the playoffs, and what better place to do that than Houston Field House?

Anyway... the fight to the finish begins now, and here's the fun part.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Engineer Bracketology: Week 1

Well, we did promise that we'd do this if the Engineers were in striking distance in January. And it's January. And they are. And a promise is a promise.

Welcome to Engineer Bracketology. Each Wednesday, from now until the end of the season (or when it seems pointless to talk about, whichever comes first), we'll break down the NCAA field, show you where the Engineers line up, and talk about what needs to happen (besides the most important element, just keep winning) to boost their standing.

As a quick reminder, there are three elements to the PairWise Rankings (PWR), the objective method by which the field is chosen:
* Ratings Percentage Index (RPI)
* Record against Common Opponents (COp)
* Head-to-head wins (H2H)

And, as always, because RPI is both the name of a PWR criteria and the preferred nomenclature for our fair school, we use "Rensselaer" in order to make sure there's no confusion when referring to the Engineers. For more information, click here.

Here's the current PWR situation.

1. Quinnipiac*
2. Harvard
3. Omaha
4. St. Cloud State
5. North Dakota*
6. Providence*
7. Cornell
8. Michigan
9. Yale
10. St. Lawrence
11. Penn State*
12. Boston University
13. Notre Dame
14. UMass-Lowell
15. Rensselaer
16. Boston College
17. Minnesota State*
23. Holy Cross*

Last in: Notre Dame, UMass-Lowell
First out: Rensselaer, Boston College
League breakdown: 5 ECAC, 4 HEA, 3 NCHC, 2 B1G, 1 WCHA, 1 AHA

Albany's hosts are Rensselaer (15 PWR) and Union (18 PWR), Worcester is Holy Cross (23 PWR and leading AHA), Cincinnati is Miami (28 PWR), and St. Paul is Minnesota (19 PWR). Worth keeping in mind when it comes to placement, as hosts are required to be placed in their hosted regional (which could get messy if Rensselaer and Union both manage to qualify). For right now, though, it's just Holy Cross who has to be in a place, everyone else is (somewhat) fungible.

Worcester
1. Quinnipiac
2. Providence
3. St. Lawrence
4. Holy Cross

Albany
1. Harvard
2. Cornell
3. Boston University
4. UMass-Lowell

Cincinnati
1. Omaha
2. Michigan
3. Yale
4. Notre Dame

St. Paul
1. St. Cloud State
2. North Dakota
3. Penn State
4. Minnesota State

Been a while since I did this, so I'm a bit rusty and this may not comport with more professional bracketlogists. Basically, the rule of thumb is that the NCAA will place #1 seeds in their closest available regional starting with #1 overall and working down. Anywhere that requires travel of 400 miles or more is a flight, and the NCAA has traditionally tried to keep the number of flights down as much as they can while maintaining bracket integrity and ensuring that there are no intra-conference matchups in the first round (although, funny enough, 5 of the 8 first round matchups feature teams who were formerly in the same conference, some quite recently). In each regional, it's 1 vs. 4 and 2 vs. 3. Winners compete for a berth in the Frozen Four.

So yes, as of now, that's a crazy five ECAC teams in the tournament, with an option on a sixth - and there eight ECAC teams including Union and Dartmouth that are within striking distance of the field. It seems, right now, that three will be a very bare minimum for the ECAC, and four a very strong likelihood. Five isn't out of the question, either. Six is probably a stretch.

Because there are only three Pairwise criteria, and the Engineers only face off this season against 21 of the 59 other programs, RPI is all that matters in the vast majority of comparisons. If two teams in a comparison don't play each other in a given year, COp simply doesn't matter because RPI is the tiebreaker (it also doesn't matter at all when a season series is split, or tied, so Miami can be treated like any other non-opponent in this respect). So in relation to how comparisons are flipped when looking at teams Rensselaer didn't play this year, it's exclusively a matter of having a better RPI. Generally, that means rooting against such teams.

We can, however, look more in depth at comparisons with teams the Engineers have played and either beaten or lost to. We'll ignore most ECAC comparisons for the time being, because there are far too many moving parts when it comes to COp/H2H this early.

Alaska-Anchorage: This is very cut and dried, and won't have to be brought up again, because it's a guaranteed loss for the Engineers. Just something to note. Rensselaer could win all of its remaining games while UAA loses all of theirs, and the Engineers still lose this comparison 2-1 on COp and H2H, just as they are now.

The reason is simple - the only two common opponents with the Seawolves this season are Alaska and Arizona State. The Engineers swept ASU but lost their only game to UAF, giving them a combined winning percentage of 1.000. Meanwhile, UAA beat ASU (barely, in OT, but it counts) and, in the first two out of at least four games against the Nanooks, lost and tied. That gives UAA a combined winning percentage of 1.250, which, when added to their head-to-head win over the Engineers, gives UAA the comparison win. Even if UAA loses their next two games against the Nanooks, they'll still have a combined winning percentage of 1.125 thanks to that tie they've already got, and Rensselaer can't rise above the 1.000 they have now.

This is a perfect illustration on the difference in how COp is now calculated. Before, the Engineers would have won with a 2-1-0 record against COp against 1-1-1 for UAA. But now, it's a matter of adding each individual winning percentage against each individual team. There are pros and cons to both methods, but it'll look awful strange at the end of the year if UAF sweeps UAA in February and the Seawolves still win COp despite a 2-1-0 and 1-3-1 total record difference.

At the moment it's not keeping Rensselaer out of the tournament (adding this comparison wouldn't move them ahead of Lowell), but it does stand as a possibility that the losses in Alaska could have an outsized impact on the Engineers' NCAA hopes.

As an aside, the Nanooks themselves are not a problem specifically because their only two COp are UAA and Arizona State - and the Nanooks lost to the Sun Devils. Otherwise, it's the same problem. So should the Engineers squeak into the tournament, ASU's first ever Division I victory -and Rensselaer's home sweep - could be the difference. It's the same 2-1-0/1-1-1 COp records, but it's how those games are divided up among opponents that makes this one a win for the Engineers, and a permanent one unless the wide RPI gap narrows (at which point it won't matter anymore).

UMass-Lowell: This, right now, is the most interesting comparison as the other of two comparisons that Rensselaer loses to a team they are ahead of in RPI. They fall 2-1, so it is imperative, as with any comparison with a team the Engineers have lost the season series to, that they win the COp comparison.

And that might be changing in Rensselaer's favor soon. Right now, COp is 1.500 to 1.000 in UML's favor based on common opponents of Brown (both tied) and Clarkson (Engineers tied, River Hawks won). But UML has yet to play two important Hockey East opponents that Rensselaer has beaten - New Hampshire and Boston College. Once that happens, the Engineers COp will increase by 2.000. UML also has a pair of games coming up with Arizona State. UML should be huge favorites at home, but even a single draw would be big for Rensselaer.

And would you look at that - UML plays UNH on Friday. Should the Wildcats win, that would flip this comparison to the Engineers - 2-1 on RPI/COp. If it's a tie, it would likely flip 1-1 on RPI with COp as a tie. So we're rooting hard for UML to lose at least once to UNH and BC this season, though they don't face the Eagles until late February.

But RPI is very close anyway in this comparison, so as a general rule of thumb, we're rooting against UML in Hockey East play right now.

Boston College: 2-0 RPI/H2H win for the Engineers at the moment. Obviously, we'd like to possibly win COp here as well as a hedge against BC's RPI improving (as it likely will), so the first game of the Beanpot against Harvard will be a big one here. A Crimson win would give Rensselaer a permanent edge in COp against Harvard, since it's BC's only game with them this season and the Engineers have already tied them.

The only COp right now is UNH, who both teams have beaten. BC plays them again in February - immediately after the Harvard game, so a UNH win or tie would be huge, too. No matter what else happens, a Harvard win in the first round of the Beanpot (since Beanpot games can't tie) and a UNH win or tie the following Friday would go a long way toward making this comparison a win no matter what the RPI is - but those BC-UML games at the end of the regular season loom large, too.

Union: Because of the unique nature of the series with the Dutchmen, the Engineers can practically guarantee themselves a comparison win with their rivals by winning the Mayor's Cup game. That would produce a third H2H point, enough to trump both RPI and COp completely, barring a playoff meeting.

One other thing about Union - if their RPI stays in the Top 20 (they are currently 18th), the Engineers get two quality win bonuses on a graduating scale depending on how high the Dutchmen are ranked. So there's a vested interest in Union remaining as high as they can in RPI - just not too high.

Speaking of which - here's the bonus cutoff. Teams the Engineers have defeated (and thus can get RPI bonuses for) will be bolded in our weekly RPI quality win bonus aggregate.

16. Boston University - .541
17. Minnesota State - .537
18. Union - .527
19. Minnesota - .526
20. Bowling Green - .525
---
21. Denver - .525
22. Holy Cross - .525
23. Dartmouth - .523
24. Minnesota-Duluth - .513
25. Robert Morris - .512

Quality wins
Yale (#9, at home)
St. Lawrence (#10, on the road)
Boston College (#14, at home)
Union (#18, at home and on the road)

Missed opportunities
Harvard (#2, neutral ice and at home)
Michigan (#8, at home)
UMass-Lowell (#12, on the road)

Upcoming opportunities in the next 10 games
Cornell (#7, at home) - Jan 15
Quinnipiac (#1, on the road) - Jan 21
Union (#18, neutral ice) - Jan 23
Yale (#9, on the road) - Jan 30
St. Lawrence (#10, at home) - Feb 5
Harvard (#2, on the road) - Feb 12

One other comparison worth mentioning due to games this week:

Yale: It's a long-shot, but Arizona State popping up in the Bulldogs' schedule this week could provide an unexpected and semi-unusual COp boost if the Sun Devils can get a result out in the Valley of the Sun. Normally, it makes the most sense to root for the ECAC in any non-conference games, but this could be a minor exception, if only because ASU is an independent, with a schedule that draws from pretty much all over the place, so their impact on overall league RPI is blunted a little here. Rensselaer's H2H win over Yale makes this comparison one that could be flipped, especially with an Engineers win over Princeton on Thursday (Yale lost to the Tigers).

General rules of thumb for the order in which we are cheering for other teams. Relevant numbers are listed next to the games/series.
1. Wherever there is direct COp assistance
2. For the ECAC out-of-conference
3. For improved quality win bonuses (QWB)
4. Against teams ahead of or just behind Rensselaer in the RPI or PWR
5. For non-conference opponents

Not including Rensselaer's games - the elimination of the old TUC cliff, for those that remember that, basically eliminates any real impetus to succeed by losing. Let's go Red.

Engineer Cheering Section
Thursday
Harvard over Boston University - 1/2/4
Union over Quinnipiac - 1/3 (despite Union getting a big RPI bonus themselves from beating QU)

Weekend series
Boston College over Providence - 3/5
Michigan State over Michigan - 4
Minnesota over Penn State - 4 (although Minnesota is not far back either)
Cornell over Merrimack - 2
Colgate over Maine - 2
St. Lawrence over Northeastern - 2/3
Miami over Minnesota-Duluth - 4
Western Michigan over Notre Dame - 4/5
Northern Michigan over Minnesota State - 4
Alaska over Alabama-Huntsville - 5
Alaska-Anchorage over Bemidji State - 5
Bentley over Robert Morris - 5

Friday
New Hampshire over UMass-Lowell - 1/4
Union over Princeton - 3
Arizona State over Yale - 1/4/5
Dartmouth over Vermont - 2

Saturday
Harvard over Quinnipiac - 1 (not terribly important either way, both way out in front on RPI/PWR)

Sunday
Yale over Michigan Tech OR UConn - 2/3
Dartmouth over Holy Cross - 2

Tuesday
Clarkson over St. Lawrence - 4 (SLU win at least helps QWB)

Important COp/H2H games for currently relevant comparisons
Friday, January 8: UMass-Lowell at New Hampshire
Saturday, January 23: Union vs. Rensselaer (Mayor's Cup)
Friday, January 29: Arizona State at UMass-Lowell; Rensselaer at Brown
Saturday, January 30: Arizona State at UMass-Lowell
Monday, February 1: Harvard vs. Boston College (Beanpot)
Friday, February 5: New Hampshire at Boston College
Saturday, February 6: New Hampshire at UMass-Lowell; Clarkson at Rensselaer
Friday, February 26: UMass-Lowell at Boston College
Saturday, February 27: Boston College at UMass-Lowell

Unwinnable comparisons (H2H loss, will lose COp)
Alaska-Anchorage

Clinched comparisons (H2H win, will win COp)
Western Michigan, Bentley

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Men's Hockey - at Miami (2/3 Jan)

Miami more than had RPI's number for the last several times that good friends Enrico Blasi and Seth Appert have squared off against each other. It's been very lopsided. This year's home-and-home return to Ohio for last year's Miami blitz ended up being a very even affair instead. The Engineers broke their long losing streak against the RedHawks (dating back to when they were still the Redskins) by winning 3-2 on Saturday night, then had the opportunity to complete a weekend sweep but gave up two goals and an empty netter in the third period on Sunday to fall 4-2 and settle for a split instead.

Saturday
Melanson-Bubela-Wood
Liljegren-Miller-Rodriguez
Bourbonnais-Schroeder-Nanne
Ohrvall-Fulton-Gillespie

Bradley-Prapavessis
Wilson-Reno
Moore-Hampton

Kasdorf

Only two changes to the RPI lineup from their previous time out against Arizona State a few weeks back - Jason Kasdorf returned to the net (he'd split time with Cam Hackett in the ASU series), and Jared Wilson returned, displacing Tommy Grant.

If you want ominous starts, the Engineers got off to one for sure in the first game. Miami's Josh Melnick scored just 1:20 into the game to put the RedHawks ahead 1-0 - and early goals for Miami have been something of a running theme in this series. But as we've seen frequently this season, RPI bent but did not break. They got some solid goaltending from Jason Kasdorf to keep it a one-goal game, then got some good penalty killing when called upon twice in the opening frame.

It was on the second penalty kill that the Engineers struck as the team notched their fifth shorthanded goal of the year. Lou Nanne's outlet out of the zone to Riley Bourbonnais created a breakaway opportunity that the junior buried for his 11th goal of the year, making it 1-1 with about a minute and a half left in the first period.

Bourbonnais scored again just under five minutes into the second period for his team-leading 12th goal of the season as RPI took the lead on Miami for the first time since a 3-1 first intermission edge in the very first Appert-Blasi duel in 2007 in Troy (a game RPI lost 7-3). The lead was dropped 8 minutes later when Miami took advantage of a quality 2-on-1 opportunity with super-freshman Jack Roslovic scoring on a nifty pass from Anthony Louis to tie the score.

The tie did not last long, however, as Kenny Gillespie buried a rebound off a shot by Chris Bradley during a delayed penalty just over two minutes later to make it 3-2 RPI.

The Engineers were unable to convert on the ensuing power play, nor on one during the third period, but Kasdorf and the team defense helped the score to hold up nonetheless. Kasdorf made 12 saves on 13 shots in the final 40 minutes of a game where few teams were able to create much in the way of offense (RPI managed only 9 in the same time frame), enough to power the Engineers' first win over Miami in over three decades.

Sunday
Melanson-Bubela-Wood
Liljegren-Miller-Rodriguez
Bourbonnais-Schroeder-Nanne
Ohrvall-DeVito-Gillespie

Bradley-Prapavessis
Wilson-Reno
Hampton-Grant

Kasdorf

Another pair of changes in the RPI lineup came down for Game 2 - Jimmy DeVito made his first appearance of the season after sitting out the fall semester for academic reasons, entering in place of Travis Fulton, while Grant returned to the blue line in place of Meirs Moore.

Again, it was Miami scoring quickly to grab a 1-0 lead. It took slightly longer - 2:01 of the first period - but Andrew Schmit's second goal of the year put RPI down early for the second night in a row. And again, the Engineers responded within the first period with a breakaway goal to tie it up, this time getting it a bit sooner and at even strength as Jesper Ohrvall hit with his fourth goal in as many games to knot the score.

RPI did score yet another shorthanded goal - giving them six on the year, tied for second and trailing only Penn State's seven - as Jake Wood scored a shorty at 13:08 of the second period to give RPI a 2-1 edge that they took into the third period.

With an impressive long-road-trip weekend sweep just 20 minutes away, a combination of a determined Miami attack and a sleepwalking RPI defense conspired to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Alex Gacek made it 2-2 on a goal that looked a lot like Miami's second goal from a night before, and just under two minutes later another east-west pass on an odd-man rush found the back of the cage to make it 3-2. Kasdorf was pulled late for an opportunity at the equalizer, but Miami stood up long enough to make the lead last until an empty netter with under 30 seconds to play sealed up the win for the RedHawks.

RPI has now completed their non-conference schedule with the exception of the Mayor's Cup game against ECAC rival Union, and they did fairly well with it, amassing a 7-5 record on the season against non-ECAC opponents. Their road trip continues on Thursday as they face off at Princeton against the Tigers, a team they need to be able to beat in order to stay in the hunt for a first-round bye.

Current ECAC Standings
1. Quinnipiac - 18 pts (8-0-2)
2. Cornell - 13 pts (6-1-1)
3. Harvard - 11 pts (4-1-3)
4. RPI - 11 pts (4-1-3)
5. St. Lawrence - 9 pts (4-2-1)
6. Yale - 8 pts (3-3-2)
7. Dartmouth - 6 pts (3-5-0)
8. Brown - 6 pts (2-5-2)
9. Princeton - 6 pts (3-7-0)
10. Union - 5 pts (2-5-1)
11. Colgate - 5 pts (2-6-1)
12. Clarkson - 2 pts (0-5-2)

By winning percentage
1. Quinnipiac (.900)
2. Cornell (.812)
3. Harvard (.688)
4. RPI (.688)
5. St. Lawrence (.643)
6. Yale (.500)
7. Dartmouth (.375)
8. Brown (.333)
9. Union (.312)
10. Princeton (.300)
11. Colgate (.278)
12. Clarkson (.143)

RPI at Miami
Non-Conference Game - Goggin Ice Center (Oxford, OH)
1/2/16 - 7:00pm

RESULT: RPI 3, Miami 2

RECORD: 11-6-3 (4-1-3 ECAC, 11 pts)

RPI at Miami
Non-Conference Game - Goggin Ice Center (Oxford, OH)
1/3/16 - 5:00pm

RESULT: Miami 4, RPI 2

RECORD: 11-7-3 (4-1-3 ECAC, 11 pts)

Upcoming games
07 Jan - at Princeton
15 Jan - #9 Cornell
16 Jan - Colgate
21 Jan - at #2 Quinnipiac
23 Jan - vs. Union (Albany, NY)

Monday, January 4, 2016

Women's Hockey - at Mercyhurst (2/3 Jan)

It was a bit of a rough welcome to 2016 for RPI this weekend. Playing their first games in a month, the Engineers dropped a 3-1 decision to Mercyhurst on Saturday before scratching out a 2-2 tie on Sunday despite being heavily outshot and blowing a 2-0 lead.

Friday

Horwood/Gruschow/Thomas
Rooney/Tomlinson/Mankey
Grigsby/Hylewa/Tremblay
Orzechowski

Hansen/Godin
Behounek/Banks
Kimmerle/Renn

Selander

Shayna Tomlinson's goal early in the second period tied the game at one, but Mercyhurst picked up two more goals afterward en route to a 3-1 victory over RPI on Saturday afternoon. Lovisa Selander had 19 saves in the loss.

Jenna Dingeldein scored at 15:34 of the first period to give the homestanding Lakers a 1-0 lead, getting the puck from Megan Whiddon behind the net and putting it past Selander.

Tomlinson's goal came just 1:20 into the second period, tying the game and giving the Engineers some momentum. However a pair of penalties on the Engineers slowed things down and RPI finished with only three shots in the middle frame. Instead it was Mercyhurst taking control, with Sarah Hine scoring at 14:09 to retake the lead for Mercyhurst.

Whiddon added a goal to hear earlier assist at 1:44 of the third, putting the Lakers ahead by a 3-1 tally which would hold up as the final score in the first game of the weekend pair.

Saturday

Rooney/Tomlinson/Mankey
Horwood/Gruschow/Thomas
Grigsby/Hylwa/Tremblay
Orzechowski

Kimmerle/Renn
Hansen/Godin
Behounek/Banks

Selander

Despite being more thoroughly outshot (38-18) than they were the day before, RPI managed to cling to a 2-2 tie after blowing an early 2-0 lead over Mercyhurst. Lovisa Selander earned third star honors with a 36-save effort, while Mercyhurst netminder Sarah McDonnell picked up the first star with 16 saves, coming into the game in relief of Jessica Convery after RPI's two early goals. Katie Rooney was the second star with a goal and an assist.

That early 2-0 lead was opened up by RPI less than five minutes into the game, with Rooney scoring 2:45 in and Mari Mankey adding a tally at 4:38. Shanya Tomlinson assisted on Rooney's goal, while Rooney assisted on Mankey's - the RPI top line for the night combining for all the points the Engineers would earn, after doing the same the afternoon before.

The 2-0 lead didn't survive the first period, as Dingeldein cut the lead to 2-1 at 11:06 before Samantha Fieseler tied it up at 16:59.

An extended power play, including some 5-on-3 time, didn't prove fruitful for the Engineers in the second, and both the third period and overtime passed without penalties or scoring. The Engineers were outshot 9-4 in the third period and 5-1 in overtime.

It's nothing but league play for RPI from here on out, with 14 straight ECAC contests remaining as the Engineers push to return to the playoffs for the first time since 2013. But the road won't be an easy one, as it starts out with the current top two teams in the league.

First up on that list is red-hot Quinnipiac, riding a 10-game winning streak and 13-game unbeaten streak, good for the fourth spot in the national poll, while things won't get much easier against a Princeton team hovering just outside the top 10, rocking an eight-game winning streak of their own. Those teams will visit the Field House for matchups on 7pm Friday and 4pm Saturday respectively.

-----

RPI at Mercyhurst
Non-Conference Game - Mercyhurst Ice Center (Erie, PA)
1/2/16 - 3pm
Mercyhurst 3, RPI 1

BOX SCORES:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/boxscore.aspx?path=whock&id=5195
College Hockey Stats: http://collegehockeystats.net/1516/boxes/wmrcren1.j02

RECAPS:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/news/2016/1/2/WICE_0102161338.aspx?path=whock
Mercyhurst: http://www.hurstathletics.com/news/2016/1/2/WHOCK_0102160129.aspx?path=whockey

RECORD: 5-10-2 (3-4-1 ECAC)

-----

RPI at Mercyhurst
Non-Conference Game - Mercyhurst Ice Center (Erie, PA)
1/3/16 - 1pm
RPI 2, Mercyhurst 2 (OT)

BOX SCORES:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/boxscore.aspx?path=whock&id=5196
College Hockey Stats: http://collegehockeystats.net/1516/boxes/wmrcren1.j03

RECAPS:
RPI: http://www.rpiathletics.com/news/2016/1/3/WICE_0103163909.aspx?path=whock
Mercyhurst: http://www.hurstathletics.com/news/2016/1/3/WHOCK_0103160107.aspx?path=whockey

RECORD: 5-10-3 (3-4-1 ECAC)

-----

ECAC Standings

1. Quinnipiac - 20 pts (9-1-2) (.833)
2. Princeton - 15 pts (7-4-1) (.625)
3. Harvard - 11 pts (5-3-1) (.611)
4. Dartmouth - 10 pts (4-3-2) (.556)
5t. Colgate - 8 pts (2-1-4) (.571)
5t. Clarkson - 8 pts (3-3-2) (.500)
5t. St. Lawrence - 8 pts (4-4-0) (.500)
8t. Yale - 7 pts (3-4-1) (.438)
8t. RPI - 7 pts (3-4-1) (.438)
10. Cornell - 6 pts (2-3-2) (.429)
11t. Brown - 2 pts (1-7-0) (.125)
11t. Union - 2 pts (0-6-2) (.125)

-----

Upcoming Schedule

Jan. 8 - Quinnipiac (7pm)
Jan. 9 - Princeton (4pm)
Jan. 15 - Union (3pm)
Jan. 16 - at Union (3pm)

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Kill The Chicken

Oh, right. Hockey.

So, the first set of the New Year is always an interesting story. The team's been off for a few weeks on holiday break and you never know how much momentum they can carry into those first couple of games. They're almost always against non-conference opponents, which is good because you want whatever questions there are to be answered after break taken care of before getting back into league games. For RPI, that happens next weekend when they host Cornell and Colgate, but this weekend, it's a trip to Ohio to take on the most common non-conference opponent of the Appert era, the Miami RedHawks.

Now, this is an opponent that, in six games over the last decade, has pretty much destroyed the Engineers left and right. The goal tally over the last six is 28-8, including 3-2 and 3-0 wins for Miami in Troy last year on these exact same days.

The good news? Well, heading into the break, these two teams were going in opposite directions, and it's the opposite of what that 28-8 goal line would suggest. RPI concluded 2015 by going unbeaten in 12 of their last 14 games (9-2-3), while Miami has won only two of their last 11 contests (2-8-1).

But the questions remain... what teams are we going to see coming out of break? Miami's home ice advantage makes this a pretty interesting matchup if momentum stays as it was. To be extremely fair to the RedHawks, the NCHC is brutal. A team that would be among the top in other leagues might be languishing in that conference - and their non-conference record is 3-1-1, the lone loss coming against Providence. But they also finished their 2015 schedule getting swept at Colorado College - that would be 0-13-0 to start the season Colorado College - and will be without one of their top players with Louie Belpedio representing the Stars and Stripes in Finland with the World Junior team.

So it'll be intriguing to see what happens. Can RPI end the schneid against Miami? Will the momentum continue?

(Note to our Miami friends: we have a long, sordid history with the name "Redhawks." Or maybe it only felt long. The title of this post is something we used to chant at "our" own mascot about 15 years ago, though thankfully we never had to do it in hockey.)

Stick tap to our friend Bob for this return-to-play pumpup.