Having display problems? Close this ad.
St. Lawrence to play Union
First published: March 15, 2010 at 3:42 pm
Last modified: March 15, 2010 at 3:48 pm

With Brown's stunning win over Yale and Union's triumph over Quinnipiac in a record-setting series, St. Lawrence will face Union in the night game Friday in Albany.

Brown will be up against Cornell in hopes of continuing its remarkable run in the ECAC Hockey tournament. The Bears finished the regular season 11th and knocked off RPI and Yale to advance to the semifinals.

St. Lawrence, meanwhile, toppled Clarkson in round one and swept Colgate in the quarterfinals.

Now, the Saints have one game to avenge two regular-season losses to Union. The Dutchmen, under ECAC Coach of the Year Nate Leaman, beat the Saints 4-3 and 4-2.

The teams have not met in the playoffs since 2001 when St. Lawrence swept Union.

A full preview will come later in the week. The puck drops at 7 p.m. pending the conclusion time of the afternoon game between Cornell and Brown.

SHOW COMMENTS
Playoff scenarios: What to watch for
First published: March 14, 2010 at 1:07 pm
Last modified: March 14, 2010 at 1:21 pm

St. Lawrence can take an easy Sunday while Yale and Union each face a Game 3 tonight to decide the final two teams into the ECAC Hockey semifinals. The tournament will reseed tonight once the winners are decided. Here is what St. Lawrence is looking at for opponents.

If Yale and Union win: St. Lawrence will face Yale. The Saints are 1-1 against the Bulldogs this season. SLU won, 4-2, at home and lost, 7-5, at Yale.

If Yale and Quinnipiac win: St. Lawrence will face Cornell. The Saints lost and tied the Big Red this season. SLU tied, 1-1, at home and lost, 2-1, on the road.

If Brown and Union win: St. Lawrence will play Union. This is possibly the worst matchup for the Saints. They gave up four goals in each game against the Dutchmen in both regular season games. St. Lawrence lost both. The first was 4-3 and then 4-2.

If Brown and Quinnipiac win: St. Lawrence will play Quinnipiac. The Saints also lost both regular season games and were shutout in one. Quinnipiac won the first 5-2 and then 5-0.

Yale vs. Brown and Quinnipiac vs. Union start tonight at 7 p.m.

SHOW COMMENTS
St. Lawrence 4, Colgate 3 VIDEO recap
First published: March 13, 2010 at 11:16 pm
Last modified: March 13, 2010 at 11:23 pm

Here are the video highlights and interviews from St. Lawrence's 4-3 win over Colgate to advance to the ECAC Hockey semifinals in Albany.

Matt Raley

Mike McKenzie (I apologize for confusion Colgate with Union twice in this. Apparently my ESP thinks Union's the next opponent)

Game Highlights (In chronological order)

McKenzie makes it 2-1

Drewiske makes it 3-3

Raley's game-winner

SLU celebrates heading to the lockerroom.

SHOW COMMENTS
FINAL from Starr: St. Lawrence 4, Colgate 3 (Game 2)
First published: March 13, 2010 at 5:29 pm
Last modified: March 13, 2010 at 9:10 pm

Third period notes

Goal SLU - Matt Raley.

Goal SLU - Drewiske

8 minutes to go...

Goal Colgate - Thomas Larkin on the PP

Now D. Keller goes to the box for obstruction/tripping.

Just an awesome PK for St. Lawrence. SLU back to full strength.

Gate goes on the PP... big PK here for the saints.

GoalSLU Nick Pitsikoulis off a rebound.

Caister is back in the game. Good news for Sainst fans.

-

Second period impressions

St. Lawrence has much to be pleased about. They outskated the Raiders that period. Although they didn't tie the game, they did get back within one. Tisi continues to play well.

The Saints need to keep up their aggression and pressure the Raiders if they want to tie it up or win. They also have to stay out of the box. They gave two penalties -- 5 for the game -- this period. Colgate has taken a lot of penalties (6 last night, 5 tonight). If SLU can stay out of the penalty, Colgate will pick up at least one this period and possibly open the door. Check McKenzie's goal vid below.

Second period notes

SLU goes on the PP again. Fourth of the period. Just like last night.

St. Lawrence is starting to play like they did to end last night's game. I expect a tying score inside of three minutes here in the second.

Saints fail to score on the PP. Bollig had a decent look but couldn't pull the trigger. 4:30 to play.

Power play SLU - Caister was railed into the boards. He got up slow. We'll see if he returns.

Penalty on SLU - Jeff Caister.

Goal SLU Who else but Mike McKenzie?

Penalty on Ethan Cox. SLU on the PP

St. Lawrence appears to have finally gotten rid of its penalty problems. Too bad they've already given up two PP goals.

Gate back to full strength. St. Lawrence is losing a lot of battles but slowly getting more zone time. Need to score the next goal.

SLU goes on the PP finally.

Goal Colgate - Price again... this one off a rebound.

And now Flanagan heads to the box for two minutes for a hold. Not sure about that one. Colgate goes to a 4-on-3.

Matching minors to both teams on a face off. 4-on-4 for two minutes.

Alex Evin needed only four saves that period. Tisi had 12. Shows you what those penalties do to a team.

-

First period impressions

St. Lawrence didn't match Colgate's intensity early on and took some uncharacteristic penalties. Two hooking calls and an interference. All of them in the neutral zone or COLGATE'S own zone. Not good at all.

The Saints need to find the fire and stop taking penalties. I suspect Marsh is telling them the same thing. The energy just wasn't there and Colgate finally ended it's long drought on the PP against SLU.

Saints aren't attacking enough and are sitting back, letting Colgate control the tempo and zone time. Part of that is the penalties and part of that is just playing carelessly.

A lot of hockey left, but Marsh has to be concerned with t he lack of urgency felt amongst the Saints. I guarantee you St. Lawrence does not want to come back tomorrow.

The did, after all, check out of their hotel this morning.

First period notes

The Saints are simply taking too many penalties... and close together. Tisi has made some incredible saves, but one finally got through on a shot from the blue line.

Goal Colgate - Jeremy Price and SLU picks up another penalty.

SLU goes back on the PK. Klancher to the box for hooking. Easy call after an unforced Gate turnover in their own end.

The Saints looked really good on the PK. Colgate, although they moved the puck well, only got one shot on Tisi.

Colgate goes on the PP as Raley heads to the box for interference.

The Saints are getting a ton of zone time, but aren't getting a lot of shots to the net.

Both teams are skating fairly even as we skate 7 minutes into the first period.

Bollig missed a good chance as he skated by a defender but a nice save by Evin.

A bad start to the power play and St. Lawrence fails to score on it. That wasn't a result of a good PK by Colgate. The Saints look a little out of sync. Tisi is playing well though.

Penalty just 36 seconds into the game against Colgate.

-

No real changes from last night. The guys spent the morning in Syracuse, where they're staying in a hotel, touring the Carmelo Anthony Basketball Center on the Syracuse University campus. Everyone was thoroughly impressed.

Here are your starters

Officials: Scott Whittlemore (R); Tim Kotyra (R); William Lyons (L); Matt Brolsma (L).

SLU:

Forwards: Mike McKenzie, Travis Vermeulen, Alex Curran

Defensemen: Jeff Ciaster, Derek Keller

Goalie: Kain Tisi

Colgate

Forwards: Matt Firman, Ethan Cox, Jason Williams

Defensemen: Wade Poplawski, Thomas Larkin

Goalie: Alex Evin

SHOW COMMENTS
St. Lawrence 2, Colgate 1 VIDEO recap
First published: March 12, 2010 at 10:19 pm
Last modified: March 12, 2010 at 10:24 pm

Here are the video highlights and interviews from St. Lawrence's 2-1 win over Colgate.

Mike McKenzie

Kain Tisi

Aaron Bogosian

GOALS

BOGO's

SHOW COMMENTS
FINAL from Starr: St. Lawrence 2, Colgate 1 (Game 1)
First published: March 12, 2010 at 5:29 pm
Last modified: March 12, 2010 at 9:11 pm

Third period notes

Penalty SLu with a minute left

Goal SLU Mike McKenzie

Colgate picks up another penalty.

Saints looked a little better on the power play but still aren't getting the chances they needed. 6 minutes to play.

Saints go on the PP with 9 minutes to play.

Saints kill the penalty. Nice job again. That is at least working in an otherwise weak effort tonight.

Penalty SLU Klancher again.

Saints are looking good about five minutes into the period. Controlling the puck and zone time. they killed the PP.

-

Second period impressions

Colgate woke up in the second period despite giving SLU there power plays. I would imagine Joe Marsh will give it to his guys in the locker room about scoring -- or at least playing effectively -- during the power play. It's was absolutely abysmal in the second period. They nearly gave up two shorties.

Tisi is playing excellent for St. Lawrence in net. Yes, he's given up one goal. But he hasn't had an easy save and St. Lawrence is not blocking any shots. This will be a pretty wild third period upcoming.

Colgate wins the second period. St. Lawrence had it in the first. If Colgate stays out of the box and St. Lawrence continues to sit back, the Raiders will take Game 1. SLU has to start blocking shots and controlling the puck when they get a power play.

Colgate will start the third period on the man-advantage. Hughes and Brian Day both were whistled for roughing after Vermeulen got a holding the stick penalty. A bit of confusion on the ice and in the press box as to what actually happened. Anyway, Colgate has a power play for a minute to start the third. There can be some good momentum gained for SLU with a stop.

Second period notes

They also whistled Vermeulen for holding a stick. Both players in the box.

SLU gets another PP on a wild scrum in front of Tisi. Brian Day heads to the box

Goal Colgate - Just after the penalty ended it was Austin Smith on a deflected shot that went right to his stick just the Tisi's left.

Klancher goes to the box, giving Colgate a PP.

SLU is not playing well with the man advantage. This time they didn't even get a shot off.

Colgate is starting to pick it up here a little bit, but ANOTHER penalty puts SLU back on the PP. Don Vaughan cannot be happy with three penalties this period and we're just over halfway.

The Saints have missed two opportunities this period to go up 2-0. This has the makings to come back and bite them, but Tisi is playing very well in net for SLU.

Another brutal PP for the Saints. They don't get a shot and they almost give up a shorty.

Saints go on the PP again. This time it's Thomas Larkin to the box.

Not a great PP for St. Lawrence. They only got a couple shots and spent most of the time in the neutral zone.

SLU goes on the PP just 1:20 into the second.

It looks as though the Colgate Raiders have a little bit of rust with not playing for a couple weeks. St. Lawrence is just controlling everything.

-

First period impressions

St. Lawrence was clearly the better team in the first period. However, it's defense has been almost too offensive minded. They gave up at least three odd-man rushes and relied on Tisi to make the saves (which he did). This could easily be 2-1 if it weren't for Tisi.

Colgate has to do a better job on the PP. They have gone at least a dozen straight against SLU without a power-play goal.

St. Lawrence needs to keep the aggression going.

First period notes

GOAL SLU: Aaron Bogosian. Awesome move, unassisted. 17:07

Tisi makes a couple nice saves and Colgates PP does not look good. They're making a lot of unforced errors. SLU kills a second penalty.

Saints go on PK. Pitsikoulis with a slashing penalty.

Armstrong missed a good chance on a rebound. Still scoreless as Evin covers up.

Back to full strength and Tisi makes an unbelievable save on a 2-on-1.

Tisi makes a couple nice saves on SLU's penalty kill and STUPID penalty taken by Wade Poplawski makes it 4-on-4 for 1:18 then a SLU power play.

Penalty SLU - Curran.

Nearly the 7 minute mark and no one is getting much of anything. Colgate has taken about three shots on Tisi, while SLU put about five on net.

Starr Rink has a fair amount of people on hand, but no one is making noise. You'd think this was practice, not a game.

Tisi hasn't has to do much. St. Lawrence getting a lot of zone time right now. A lot less intensity in this rink than Appleton last weekend.

A back and forth game here early. Only one shot on goal through the opening two minutes. St. Lawrence appears to have an early edge in puck possession.

The all-time series is knotted at 15-15-2. St. Lawrence has won the last four meetings. It should be a good series. Just about underway.

-

It is collllld inside Starr Rink as Colgate and St. Lawrence are both starting to slowly loosen up and prepare for the 7 p.m. start.

I have the video camera tonight and will provide what video I can between periods.

Officials: Scott Whittlemore (R); Tim Kotrya (R); Wiliam Lyons (L); Matt Broisma (L)

Starters

SLU:

Forwards: Mike McKenzie, Travis Vermeulen, Alex Curran

Defensemen: Jeff Caister, Derek Keller

Goalie: Kain Tisi

Colgate:

Forwards: Francois Brisebois, David McIntyre, Austin Smith

Defensmen: Jeremy Price, Kevin McNamara

Goalie: Alex Evin.

SHOW COMMENTS
Colgate preview
First published: March 11, 2010 at 3:06 pm
Last modified: March 11, 2010 at 3:08 pm

CANTON — St. Lawrence University men's hockey team experienced a quick turnaround from an unforgettable three-game series against Clarkson this week.

The Saints advanced to the ECAC Hockey quarterfinals against Colgate this weekend after playing two overtime games and winning the decisive third game in the final 90 seconds.

"It was such an intense series," coach Joe Marsh said. "That alone prepares you for what you need to have. It's worth probably a month of practice."

Forced to play through Sunday, the Saints have a shortened week of practice before traveling to Colgate to start their next series.

"We're trying to recover from the weekend," St. Lawrence forward Mike McKenzie said. "Usually you get a Sunday off throughout the year. It tires you out a little more, but we're all ready to go."

The Raiders, however, earned a bye and haven't played since Feb. 27. Marsh said that doesn't necessarily matter as long as the Saints continue to practice well.

"You try and establish some sort of pattern or agenda to stick to," he said. "It's about getting hot and sustaining it."

Practice this week was short — little more than an hour each day — and the team worked on minor execution and fundamentals more than any changes in game plan.

"We want to emphasize the quality, not the quantity of the practice," Marsh said. "We had a good skate on Monday to kind of flush out the weekend a little bit. We're not going to affect any monumental changes in strategy."

Nor should St. Lawrence. What it's done against Colgate in the last two years seems to work. The Saints beat Colgate twice last season. This year, it was more of the same. St. Lawrence won 4-0 at Appleton Arena and finished Colgate in overtime, 3-2, at Starr Rink.

"We definitely have confidence going into Colgate's place," McKenzie said. "We've played pretty well at Starr the last couple years."

The last time St. Lawrence faced Colgate in the playoffs was in 2008. The Saints won Game 1 but lost the next two at Colgate to end the season. Marsh doesn't believe Colgate is that different a team from two years ago and sweeping the Raiders in consecutive regular seasons means nothing.

"You can't say 'Hey, we beat them twice,'" Marsh said. "It's hard to beat a team four times (in a season). I think our guys know it's a whole new ballgame."

That doesn't mean the confidence is lacking. Travis Vermeulen, a finalist for the ECAC Defensive Forward of the Year award, said winning will be a matter of consistency.

"We just have to maintain the things we did right (against Clarkson)," he said. "We understand that Colgate's a pretty good team and they finished the season on a pretty good note."

The Raiders overtook St. Lawrence in the final four games of the season to earn fourth place in the conference and a first-round bye. The Saints aren't worried about that now, having won three of their last four games heading into the Colgate series.

"We're confident but not overconfident," McKenzie said. "We enjoyed (the Clarkson win) for a day or so. It's in the back of our heads still, but we gotta move on from that and keep things rolling."

AWARDS SEASON

The ECAC award nominations continue to trickle in as the conference championship approaches.

So far, three awards have been announced and St. Lawrence has a man in the running in all of them.

Vermeulen was selected as a finalist for the Defensive Forward of the Year after setting career highs in goals (17), assists (23) and points (40) this season. Marsh has called him "the best defensive forward I've ever coached."

"I think that's a strong part of my game," Vermeulen said. "It's nice to get recognition for that."

Derek Keller is in the hunt for Best Defensive Defenseman, and coach Joe Marsh is up for Coach of the Year.

SHOW COMMENTS
Get to Know a Saint: Pat Kelliher
First published: March 10, 2010 at 6:20 pm
Last modified: March 10, 2010 at 6:26 pm

The latest in the "Get to Know a Saint" series in St. Lawrence University senior Pat Kelliher. Enjoy.

SHOW COMMENTS
D. Keller Nominated for Defensive Player of the Year
First published: March 10, 2010 at 4:42 pm
Last modified: March 10, 2010 at 4:53 pm
ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY
Derek Keller

The postseason accolades continue to trickle in for the Saints. The ECAC announced today the finalists for the Defensive Defensman of the Year.

Not surprisingly, Derek Keller is one of the four. Keller captained the Saints this year and led a defensive corps that finished fourth in the league in team goals against average. He led the ECAC in goals with nine, which is his career high. He scored six of his nine goals during the power play.

SHOW COMMENTS
Vermeulen Nominated for ECAC Award
First published: March 09, 2010 at 2:25 pm
Last modified: March 09, 2010 at 4:12 pm
ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY

St. Lawrence University senior forward Travis Vermeulen has been nominated for the ECAC's Best Defensive Forward.

Vermeulen reached a career high in goals (17), assists (23) and points (40) this season, leading the Saints in all three categories. He also reached a +11 rating this season.

St. Lawrence coach Joe Marsh has called Vermeulen "the best defensive forward I've ever coached."

SHOW COMMENTS
Get to Know a Saint: Matt Raley
First published: March 08, 2010 at 7:49 pm
Last modified: March 08, 2010 at 7:52 pm

Here is the latest in the ongoing series "Get to Know a Saint." Last week, I spoke with Matt Raley.

SHOW COMMENTS
Marsh Up for Coach of the Year
First published: March 08, 2010 at 1:12 pm
Last modified: March 08, 2010 at 1:20 pm

The ECAC Hockey conference announced today the finalists for the Tim Taylor Coach-of-the-Year award.

St. Lawrence University head coach Joe Marsh is one of the four. He guided the Saints to a fifth-place regular season finish after the coaches picked St. Lawrence to finish 10th in the ECAC. The Saints also beat Clarkson in a playoff series for the first time in Marsh's head-coaching career on Sunday.

Marsh joins Keith Allain (Yale), Nate Leaman (Union) and Don Vaughan (Colgate) as finalists. Marsh is a four-time winner of the award.

SHOW COMMENTS
St. Lawrence 3, Clarkson 2 VIDEO Recap
First published: March 07, 2010 at 11:36 pm
Last modified: March 07, 2010 at 11:48 pm

St. Lawrence defeated Clarkson in a playoff series for the first time since 1983 with a 3-2 win on Sunday. Here are the video highlights and interviews from the game.

INTERVIEWS

Mike McKenzie:

-

Rick Carden:

-

Kain Tisi:

-

HIGHLIGHTS

Caister starts the scoring:

-

McKenzie's game-winner (It happens right at the start of the video, within the first two seconds. Just rewind it or restart it once the full video loads to see it.)

-

SLU celebrates on the ice

-

SLU celebrates coming into the locker room (I have only linked to this do to some strong, celebratory language.)

SHOW COMMENTS
Clarkson 4, St. Lawrence 3 (OT) VIDEO recap
First published: March 06, 2010 at 11:00 am
Last modified: March 07, 2010 at 12:13 am

Here are the videos from Clarkson's 4-3 win over St. Lawrence to force game three in the ECAC Hockey first round.

Mark Borowiecki scores the game's first goal

-

Bogosian tied the game at 1-1

-

Mike McKenzie gives SLU a 3-2 lead

-

Nick Tremblay answers

-

Morley's game-winner

-

Morley's interview

SHOW COMMENTS
St. Lawrence 3, Clarkson 2 (OT) VIDEO Recap
First published: March 05, 2010 at 11:20 pm
Last modified: March 05, 2010 at 11:28 pm

Here is the long-awaited video highlights and interviews from St. Lawrence's 3-2 overtime win over Clarkson University.

Aaron Bogosian

-

Brandon Bollig

-

Aaron Bogosian's game-winner

-

Borowiecki's Game-tying goal

-

Curran's goal

SHOW COMMENTS
FINAL from Appleton: SLU 3, Clarkson 2 (ECAC Playoffs)
First published: March 05, 2010 at 4:46 pm
Last modified: March 05, 2010 at 10:07 pm
BOB MOWRY, DOUG WEAVER/ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY

Overtime

Goal Bogosian

Because this is an ECAC tournament, the overtime will last 20 minutes and be sudden death.

Third period notes

We are headed to overtime.

Thins have become a bit of a horse race here late. everyone is flying all over the ice.

Petizian makes a great glove save on a Clarkson shot to keep it 2-2.

Saints fail to score on the pwer play.

SLU goes right back on the power play as Jake Morley is whistled for tripping.

Goal Clarkson - Borowiecki

Carden heads to the box for a elbow to the head.

Derek Keller has made several great defensive plays one-on-one against Clarkson defenders. He is playing very well for the Saints.

Second period impressions

UPDATED GOAL INFO: Alex Curran was credited with the score, while Vermeulen got the assist along with Hughes.

St. Lawrence played a full 20 minutes that period and it showed, getting two power plays and one goal to take a 2-1 lead into the third period. Petizian is playing very well. He made a few great saves when St. Lawrence gave the puck away either in their own zone or in the neutral zone.

The Saints are putting lots of traffic in front of Karpowich, which is leading to a lot of point-blank opportunities. St. Lawrence took advantage of one with a scramble in front that Vermeulen (how good as he been this year?) put away for the go-ahead score.

If St. Lawrence has the gas to go the final 20 minutes, they should come out with the win. Clarkson is having trouble maintaining puck possession and is starting to pick up frustration penalties as a result. So far, the Golden Knights have three penalties, while St. Lawrence took just one this game.

Second period notes

Clarkson fails to score on a power play. They did have some good chances though.

Goal SLU Curran PP.

Penalty Clarkson - Brian Rufenach for tripping.

It's a pretty frantic pace right now as neither team really appears to have an advantage as the second period continues with 13

St. Lawrence almost looked like they were on a PP again with a full 40 seconds in the offensive zone.

Petizian made a few nice saves on a barrage after the Saints gave the puck away in the neutral zone.

Saints fail to score on the power play.

-

First period impressions

St. Lawrence dominated much of the first period, but a late onslaught from Clarkson in the Saints' zone has the game tied at 1-1. Clarkson, really, should be ahead. Golden Knights forward Matt Beca tripped on an official's skate giving SLU a 2-on-1 attack in Clarkson's zone. The result was a Bollig score just 40 seconds into the game.

Clarkson didn't give in, nor did it play any less aggressively. The final five minutes of the period was all Clarkson. The Golden Knights fired eight shots at Petizian in the second half of the period, one of which finally got through. Petizian had struggled controlling the rebounds, but it didn't burn him until Brandon DeFazio backhanded a loose rebound in the slot to Petizian's stick side.

Petizian isn't opting to cover up anything. He's trying to keep the flow of the game going, but he had an opportunity to cover before the DeFazio goal. Instead, he slapped the puck away with his stick, and it went right to DeFazio.

St. Lawrence will have 49 seconds left on a power play as Clarkson's Lauri Tuohimaa was whistled for hooking. The Saints haven't had too many good chances during the PP.

Prediction: Petizian will start covering up anything he can in the second period and St. Lawrence is going to get back to the aggressive play it start with this game. When the Saints sat on their heels for a moment, Clarkson took advantage.

First period notes

SLU goes on the PP

Goal Clarkson DeFazio of a loose rebound to Petizian's stick side.

The pace has slowed a little as we near the final few minutes of the first period, but SLU is still controlling just about every aspect of this game.

It's been a pretty clean game despite the high intensity and high emotions.

Clarkson is starting to show some life, definitely not letting SLU run away with anything. Good news, Hughes is back out and didn't miss a shift.

Hughes may of turned an ankle or tweaked a knee. He can barely stand as he heads to the bench.

Midway through the first period and it's still all SLU. Clarkson has taken all of two shots on net so far, while St. Lawrence has bombarded Karpowich with a flurry of shots.

St. Lawrence is all over Clarkson here in the early going, just dominating zone time and possession right now. Karpowich didn't stand a chance on Bollig's goal.

Goal SLU Brandon Bollig after Beca tripped by an official.

-

I have the camera today, so I'll be uploading what goals and interesting tidbits I manage to capture in between periods. The students at SLU are on break, so the student section is fairly empy. The rest of the house, however, is packed. Puck drops in about six minutes.

-

Continuing with tradition this season, student equipment manager Doug Weaver and trainer Bob Mowry duplicate the pregame puck art from St. Lawrence's win over Harvard last game. Check the image on the right.

Starters

SLU:

Forwards: Mike McKenzie, Travis Vermeulen, Alex Curran

Defense: Jeff Caister, Derek Keller

Goalie: Alex Petizian

Clarkson:

Forwards: Brandon DeFazio, Louke Oakley, Scott Freeman

Defense: Mark Borowiecki, Andrew Himelson

Goalie: Paul Karpowich.

-

The quiet hum of the lights inside Appleton Arena is eerie as I have arrived entirely too early for a game that means entirely too much to the two schools vying for added playoff life.

We're a little over two hours away from gametime and nary a player to be found. Fans, however, have already begun trickling into the arena lobby, waiting for the doors to open at 6 p.m. There are no starters to announce yet, so I'm going to enjoy the calm and anticipate the first postseason match-up between Clarkson and St. Lawrence since 2001. Epic is a good word that comes to mind.

Updates will follow as we near the 7 p.m. start.

SHOW COMMENTS
SLU prepares for Clarkson; Raley draws
First published: March 04, 2010 at 7:06 pm
Last modified: March 04, 2010 at 7:12 pm
MATT RALEY
Matt Raley created this image in his sketchbook.

Joe Marsh has experienced plenty during his 25-year tenure as head coach at St. Lawrence University. Hosting Clarkson in the playoffs isn't one of them.

But that's where the Saints stand, currently, as the Golden Knights travel the 10 miles from Potsdam to Appleton Arena on Friday.

“Isn't that amazing?” Marsh said. “That's because they've been ahead of us. We've gone over there.”

In eight previous playoff series, Clarkson has been the victor against SLU. Those were all at Cheel Arena.

“We'd rather be here than over there,” St. Lawrence forward Mike McKenzie said. “You can't count on home ice advantage, though. They're a 12th-place team, but in rivalry games, that seems to erase seedings.”

The Saints beat, lost and tied Clarkson in their three meetings this season, two of which were played at Cheel Arena. St. Lawrence's lone win came away from Appleton, where it boasts an 8-3-4 record.

“(Clarkson) is a much better team than how they ended up,” Marsh said. “I think they're a very dangerous team.”

St. Lawrence isn't feeling the pressure from the fans or the playoffs, however. The Saints are looking at it as a chance to keep their season alive.

“This is opportunity. It's not pressure,” Marsh said. “We know them better than anybody else. (But) with rivalry comes that great equalizing kind of factor. You never know how it's going to play out.”

Clarkson's season was marked with illness and injury, but in February, the Golden Knights won three games — more than they had the previous three months combined.

“They were really struggling and finding ways to lose,” McKenzie said. “Now, it seems like they're finding ways to win.”

Said Marsh: “There's a reason why they had a tough year in the regular season. I think they're a better team than what people think. They had a better month of February than we had.”

St. Lawrence managed one win — the last of the regular season — in Feb. The Saints went 1-4-3 in its last eight games. Getting a win to finally end the streak has boosted the Saints as they head into the ECAC Hockey first round.

“Just to get that one under our belt — it didn't mean a ton in the standings really — was huge to get a little confidence,” McKenzie said. “When it comes down to it, both teams have to play their game and play their shifts.”

This best of three series is also a new experience for everyone on the ice. No player from Clarkson or St. Lawrence has faced each other in the playoffs. The last time the two schools met in the postseason was in 2001.

“It's something unique; It's something that's going to be crazy,” senior Jeff Caister said. “There's going to be a ton of energy in the building from both teams.”

RALEY ART

St. Lawrence junior Matt Raley likes to draw, compose and synthesize images and put them on skateboards, sketchbooks, canvas or anything else he can find.

His work, while not on display anywhere but his high school, could be soon.

“My brother's working on getting (the skateboards) to an actual company,” Raley said of his designs. “It's just been more of a hobby. It's the most relaxing thing I can do.”

Raley has been interested in modern abstract art since grade school. His work has developed and stayed with him through the rigors of junior hockey and his first three seasons with the Saints.

“I try not to incorporate too much hockey into my art,” he said. “It's something that's totally different. It's a different form of expression.”

Raley consistently creates art for friends and teammates. He's even designed tattoos. Now, he's working with St. Lawrence goalie Robby Moss, whose nickname is “Moose,” to design his goalie mask for next season.

“He wants me to try and incorporate a moose on there,” Raley said. “I really have to play around with it.”

It isn't new territory for Raley, who said he often gets requests to take pictures and memories of his friends' lives and create art.

“It's not like they're limiting me to one thing,” he said. “They're trusting my creative instincts and let me do whatever I want. It's usually pretty good.”

Raley doesn't necessarily intend on pursuing an art career once his playing days are over. Instead, he wants to be on Wall Street. He's interning with Goldman Sachs this summer to help make that goal a reality after hockey.

INJURY REPORT

Forward Mark Armstrong skated all week and expects to play against Clarkson this weekend... Defenseman Pete Child tweaked his recovering knee in SLU's 4-3 win over Harvard last week. He is expected to play, despite taking a day off from practice this week.

SHOW COMMENTS
SLU Makes All-ECAC Team
First published: March 03, 2010 at 6:40 pm
Last modified: March 03, 2010 at 6:40 pm

Three St. Lawrence University men’s hockey players earned all-conference accolades from ECAC Hockey on Tuesday.

Forward Travis Vermeulen and defenseman Derek Keller were third-team selections, while freshman defenseman George Hughes made the all-rookie team.

No Clarkson University players made all-league.

First-teamers were Chase Polacek (Rensselaer), Broc Little (Yale), Sean Backman (Yale), Mike Schreiber (Union), Brendon Nash (Cornell) and goalie Ben Scrivens (Cornell).

SHOW COMMENTS
St. Lawrence 4, Harvard 3 VIDEO recap
First published: February 27, 2010 at 8:00 pm
Last modified: February 28, 2010 at 12:54 am

Here are the video replays and the post-game interviews from St. Lawrence's 4-3 win over Harvard.

Brandon Bollig:

Mike McKenzie

Alex Petizian

Aaron Bogosian scores the first goal of the game

SHOW COMMENTS
FINAL from Appleton: SLU 4, Harvard 3
First published: February 27, 2010 at 5:47 pm
Last modified: February 27, 2010 at 9:11 pm

Third period notes

Saints go on the power play with 3:28 to play.

St. Lawrence fails to score on a power play with 10 minutes left in the game... whether that comes back to haunt them is still pending.

Carden hits the pipe on a one-on-one.

The Saints need to settle here. Harvard is taking lots of shots on net and dominating puck possession.

Goal Harvard Moriarty. St. Lawrence can't get it out of their own end.

Richter has come back in net for Harvard.

Goal Harvard Alex Biega on a one timer to the left of Petizian.

A loss or a tie from RPI and a St. Lawrence win would give SLU fifth place in the ECAC and a meeting with Clarkson in the first round of the playoffs next week. RPI is currently tied, 1-1, with Cornell heading into the third period.

Second period impressions

St. Lawrence has not lost on senior night this millennium.

Well, it feels like we've played a game and a half here. What a wild second period. There were 10 combined penalties in the period and almost no even-strength play. Players are falling all over the ice and lots of shoving and talking going on after each play ends. The third period is certainly going to be interesting, but Petizian is playing very well tonight. Save a disastrous collapse from St. Lawrence, I don't see another lead lost in the third period tonight. St. Lawrence appears pretty determined.

Second period notes

Goal Harvard Louis LeBlanc inside of 10 seconds to play. Saints take a 4-1 lead into the third period.

Goal SLU George Hughes on a sniper shot from the blue line, just 18 seconds into yet another power play.

Flanagan heads to the box for hooking.

Both teams are playing with a lot of emotion here tonight and it's starting to come out negatively on the ice. Lots of chirping and lots of shoving.

The officiating tonight has been particularly awful. St. Lawrence just got whistled for too many men as Caister was coming out of the box after his penalty and heading straight for the bench. Marsh protested a bit before finally sending Keller to serve the penalty.

Petizian is hurt after Del Mauro ran into him. We'll see if Tisi heads in and what this penalty with be. Caister heads to the box as well as Del Mauro.

Richter has come out of net in favor of Ryan Carroll for Harvard.

Goal SLU Brandon Bollig scores off an assist from Flanagan. SLU was 3-on-1 and Flanagan found the right man.

Goal SLU Mike McKenzie scores after a Harvard defensemen tried to hold him down. He skated in front of the crease and slapped in a rebound.

Petizian continues to play well. He made nine saves in the first period and already has three here in the second.

Good news... Keller is back on the ice to start the second period. He was probably getting stitched up. When he left the ice, he had a pretty good cut above his left eye.

-

First period impressions

St. Lawrence came out with a lot of energy, but slowed after the opening few minutes. It didn't result in a Harvard goal. When Harvard's David Valek checked Derek Keller (who still hasn't returned) hard into the boards, the Saints seemed to be ignited. They scored within the first two minutes of the game-misconduct. Unfortunately one of the referees blew a play dead with the puck uncovered in the crease. Curran was there and had his stick on it just after the whistle. A solid first period nonetheless. Check out the two videos of the plays described below.

First period notes

Petizian makes a couple nice saves heading into the second half of the first period. He's also taken a few hits. Harvard is not exactly back on their heels.

End of the five minute game misconduct and St. Lawrence has a goal waved off after the official blew the play dead.

Goal SLU: Aaron Bogosian

St. Lawrence seems a little out of sync again tonight. A lot of miss communication. So far it hasn't cost them, but a hard hit on Derek Keller sends him to the locker room. David Valek gets a game misconduct.

Saints can't get it out of their own zone and a tip in front almost gets by Petizian, but the senior gloved it.

Senior night should give a little added spark to St. Lawrence tonight. Already the players are out with a bit more fire.

-

It's senior night here at Appleton, and in typical Joe Marsh fashion, all six starters are seniors.

Tonight, the forwards for St. Lawrence are: Mike McKenzie, Travis Vermeulen and Alex Curran.

Jeff Caister and Derek Keller start off the defense, while Alex Petizian gets the start in net for the Saints.

Combined, this starting crew has 346 career points. Mike McKenzie leads them all with 108.

Alex Petizian comes in still under the SLU career GAA record, which was 2.55. He currently has a 2.52 GAA.

Starting for Harvard:

Forwards: Connor Morrison, Doug Rogers, Daniel Moriarty

Defense: Chad Morin, Alex Biega

Goalie: Kyle Richter.

SHOW COMMENTS
LIVE from Appleton: Dartmouth 3, SLU 2
First published: February 26, 2010 at 6:33 pm
Last modified: February 26, 2010 at 8:59 pm

Third period notes

Goal SLU Caister on a beautiful pass from McKenzie

Goal Dartmouth Fleming's second.

St. Lawrence is starting to skate with more anxiousness. They need to get the equalizer however.

NO GOAL

The officials have to go and review a possible SLU goal here. The play will be reviewed. The first time ever in Appleton.

Saints seem to be just biding their time. Hopefully it pays off.

Dartmouth has come out looking a bit fresher. You can really tell that McKenzie wants this one, however.

-

Second period impressions

Aside from the one that got by on Tisi's mistake, St. Lawrence played a pretty solid second period. McKenzie's goal was sensational, stealing it away from Mello, who clearly didn't see him from behind the net. Mello was looking up the left side of the boards and McKenzie came in behind him. Just an excellent goal from one of St. Lawrence's 100-point scorers.

As for the power play this game... well, St. Lawrence has not been very good. The Saints were 0-for-2 in the frame, the first of which was an abysmal display. The Saints took only one shot on net. Overall, though, St. Lawrence controlled the puck and possession. This game should be tied, but a minor mistake that led to a huge goal has Dartmouth up by one.

Second period notes

Mello was hit in the mask AGAIN... third time tonight.

McKenzie stole it away from Mello behind the net and wrapped it around and in. What a goal for McKenzie GOAL SLU

Tisi redirects a shot right into his own net. Terrible goal there. GOAL Dartmouth - Paul Lee.

SLU again can't score on the power play. This one didn't look nearly as bad as the last, but it wasn't good either.

Drewiske and Stephens starting to get into it a little bit, and Adam Estoclet heads to the penalty box for interference.

St. Lawrence with a terrible second power-play chance. The Saints took one shot and barely got any zone time. The Saints have to be disappointed with that.

St. Lawrence was in the offensive zone for a good minute and now Dartmouth takes a penalty.

Mello makes his second save of the game using his mask. A bit unfortunate for the Saints on yet another nice try.

St. Lawrence is playing much more patiently here in the second period. They're really taking their time, setting up plays and taking smarter shots.

-

First period impressions

St. Lawrence came out with a lot of fire, but couldnt' get on the board first. Instead, Scott Fleming netted the game's first score, coming on a power play. He took a shot from a sharp angle just to the right of Tisi. The puck deflected off Tisi's stick and somehow trickled backward and in. A bit of an unlucky goal, but nonetheless, the Saints have 40 minutes to come back from one down.

James Mello in net for Dartmouth has been great. He stopped two shots that against most goalies would have been in without a doubt. The first was a shot in front from Vermeulen, which he calmly kicked away. The second, with SLU on a power play, Bogosian fed Bollig, who then rocketed a shot right into Mello's chest. Any other spot but there, and I think it would have been a goal.

St. Lawrence started to run out of steam, emotionally, it seemed in the latter part of the period. They started avoiding making hits and the defense was often trying to recover as Dartmouth has little issue moving the puck in the Saints zone.

First period notes

Power play over. No score for the Saints.

St. Lawrence with another great chance, but Mello comes up with a big stop. Bogosian streaked through the zone and fed Bollig, who missed his one-timer.

Penalty Dartmouth.

Dartmouth is really controlling the flow of this game late in the first period. St. Lawrence isn't getting a lot of time in Dartmouth's zone.

Neither team is really gaining much of an advantage in transition. When the Saints have it they aren't able to control it for long.

Saints miss a good chance as Curran tried to find Vermeulen in front. Verm couldn't get his stick on it.

Goal Dartmouth - Flemming

Bollig picks up a penalty

Saints are playing with a lot more energy than we've seen here at Appleton in weeks. Vermeulen is playing sensationally.

Tisi makes a nice save after the Saints fall asleep for a moment on defense.

St. Lawrence did an excellent job on the penalty kill. Dartmouth didn't have a shot on goal and didn't spend a ton of time in the offensive zone. Nice little boost for SLU after Child's penalty in the opening minute.

Child picks up a tripping penalty only 43 seconds into the game.

-

Here are the starters for tonight's must-win game for the Saints:

SLU

Forwards: Mike McKenzie, Travis Vermeulen, Alex Curran

Defense: Jeff Caister, Derek Keller

Goalie: Kain Tisi

Dartmouth

Forwards: Adam Estoclet, Scott Fleming, Matt Reber

Defense: Evan Stephens, Joe Stejskal

Goalie: Jody O'Neill

SHOW COMMENTS
Women's Hockey Preview
First published: February 26, 2010 at 11:41 am
Last modified: February 26, 2010 at 11:45 am

For the third time in the last four years Clarkson and St. Lawrence University will meet in a women's ECAC Hockey quarterfinal series.

The past two occassions - 2007 and 2009 - were played at SLU's Appleton Arena.

But this time the Golden Knights (20-9-5 overall, 14-5-3 conference) have home-ice advantage as the No. 2 seed in the tournament. SLU (15-12-7, 11-8-3) is the No. 7 seed.

Game one is at 4 p.m. Friday at Cheel Arena. Game two is at 2 p.m. Saturday and game three, if necessary, is at 2 p.m. Sunday.

Should Clarkson win the series it will host a conference semifinal game next Friday at Cheel Arena. If the Saints win the series they will play a semifinal game on the road next Friday.

Stat of the Series:

Three seems to be the key number, at least regarding goals. SLU is 61-1-5 over the past three seasons when it scores at least three goals in a game and this year the Saints are 15-1-3. SLU is 0-11-4 when it fails to score three goals. Clarkson is 43-2-6 in the same span when it gets three or more goals. This year the Golden Knights are 15-1-2 when scoring three or more and 5-8-3 when held below that number.

Who to Watch

Clarkson:

The Golden Knights are led by Connecticut transfer Dominique Thibault, who has 19 goals and 17 assists. She also has five game-winning goals. Britney Selina, the school's all-time leading scorer with 144 career points, has nine goals and 23 assists this year. Juana Baribeau has 15 goals and 16 assists and Melissa Waldie is the other top scoring threat with 15 goals and 11 assists. Carlee Eusepi leads the defense with a plus-20 rating and also has five goals and 11 assists. Lauren Dahm has seen almost all the playing time in goal and is 20-8-5 with a 1.53 goals-against average and a .935 save percentage.

St. Lawrence:

Vanessa Emond leads the Saints wit 16 goals and 16 assists. SLU's only other double-digit player in goals is freshman Kayla Sullivan, who has 12. Britni Smith is the Saints top defensive player and also ranks second on the team in scoring with eight goals and 17 assists. Kelly Sabatine has nine goals with 14 assists and Michelle Ng has nine goals with 11 assists.

The Saints have used two goalies during the season. Brittony Chartier has played 66 percent of the time and is 11-9-6 with a 2.27 goals-against average and a .910 save percentage. Maxie Weisz is 4-3-1 with a 1.85 goals-against average and a .920 save percentage.

Special Teams Watch

Clarkson:

Clarkson has scored on just 15 percent of its power plays this season and has killed 83.2 percent of its penalties. Melissa Waldie leads the team with nine power-play goals. Dominique Thibault has five and Britney Selina has four.

St. Lawrence:

The Saints have capitalized on 19.6 percent of their power plays and have killed 87.9 percent of its penalties. SLU's top power-play threats are Britni Smith and Kayla Sullivan, who each have five goals. Alley Bero has four power play goals. Vanessa Emond has three short-handed goals and Britni Smith has two. The Saints have seven shorthanded goals.

Playoff History

2007: Clarkson suffered a heartbreaking loss in game one of this quarterfinal series, falling 3-2. SLU completed the sweep with a 3-1 win in game two the following night. Clarkson scored two goals in the second period of the opener to build a 2-0 lead and held a lead until SLU tied the game

with 75 seconds left on a goal from Chelsea Grills. The Saints scored the game winner on a shot from Crystal Connors with only 29 seconds remaining.

2009: Just like in 2007, Clarkson appeared to have game one in Appleton under control only to see the Saints rally for a win and go on to sweep the series. Clarkson had a 3-1 lead late in the third period of the opening game. The Saints scored twice in the final 3:33 to send the game to overtime, where they went on to win 4-3. SLU's tying goal came with only 63 seconds left in the third period. SLU went on to win game two 2-1 to complete the sweep.

Stats and Notes: Clarkson staggered down the stretch, going 1-4-2 in its final seven games to slip to second place in the ECAC Hockey standings.

The Golden Knights' slump started with a 4-2 loss to SLU in Appleton Arena on Feb. 2, in a game where Clarkson played without goalie Lauren Dahm, who was ill. ... This will be just the second quarterfinal series at Cheel Arena for Clarkson, who beat Princeton in three games in 2008. ... Clarkson is 3-11-2 lifetime against the Saints, but is 3-2-1 against SLU in games at Cheel Arena, including two straight wins. .. SLU has a few streaks riding on its playoff performance. The Saints have made the NCAA Tournament six straight years, but the only way they will make it seven straight is if they win the conference tournament. SLU also has a seven-year streak of quarterfinal-series wins on the line. ... Neither team has ever won the ECAC Hockey Tournament.

SHOW COMMENTS
Get to Know a Saint: Jeremiah Cunningham
First published: February 25, 2010 at 5:52 pm
Last modified: February 25, 2010 at 6:01 pm

Two things:

1. Jeremiah Cunningham is expected to play this weekend. He collided with another player and was sent to the hospital after the game. His tests came back clean and he is cleared to play.

2. Here is his "Get to Know a Saint."

SHOW COMMENTS
A Teachable Moment for Marsh
First published: February 21, 2010 at 11:43 am
Last modified: February 21, 2010 at 11:44 am

A generation ago, St. Lawrence University men's hockey coach Joe Marsh stood at the front of a classroom.

The subject was not hockey, but math. It was 1976 and Marsh found himself coaching and teaching at the New Hampton prep school in New Hampton, N.H. From there, he went to the Choate School in Connecticut in 1980. He still taught and still coached.

When a coaching position opened at St. Lawrence in 1983, Marsh left the school and the classroom for his future career as a head men's hockey coach. His teaching took on a less traditional form.

"We teach all the time, it's just a very unconventional classroom," Marsh said. "Appleton Arena is a classroom. (The coaches) have always wanted to be considered part of the educational process."

For 22 years, Marsh was resigned to his role as hockey coach, teaching the intricacies of the college games to his players. But he wanted something else.

"There's some great stuff out there that has nothing to do with what we do here," Marsh said. "It can enhance it; It can augment it. If you had a rough week at practice, you know what, hang your stuff up and pay attention to other things. You may find some things that have great rewards separate from (hockey)."

Heeding his own advice, Marsh sought an old, but familiar position: the front of the class.

"I wanted something different, something fresh," he said. "At my age, I've seen enough Xs and Os to last me a lifetime."

GETTING THE ITCH

Marsh first wanted to get back into traditional forms of education four years ago at a coaching convention.

There, former two-time Maine governor Angus King spoke.

He told the story of Sir Ernest Shackleton, an Irish explorer who famously saved his crew when ice engulfed their ship during the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition.

"Two years they were trapped, and he got them out alive," Marsh said. "The story's incredible and he can really tell it. I got talking to him afterward. We struck up a little bit of a friendship and I thought I'd be really interested in doing this stuff someday. I thought that 'someday' was not anytime soon."

Less than a year later, Marsh approached former St. Lawrence University First-Year Program director Steve Horwitz about helping teach one of the courses.

"I didn't think there was any way, shape or form I would end up doing it," Marsh said. "He actually came to me and said 'Well, we have this one program where we might have room.'

"I was like, 'Whoa.' I started thinking that if the door opens you have to think about doing it sooner than later."

But Marsh needed help, first. He found Peg Cornwell, a Community Based Learning professor at St. Lawrence. With Cornwell in place, Marsh became the only ECAC Hockey coach to also teach a required undergraduate course.

"She helped me out so much," he said. "She was only here for one more year, though."

Cornwell's husband, Grant, became president of Wooster College. Marsh needed someone else to help him teach a first year program.

LOCKED IN

Marsh approached mathematics professor Patti Lock.

"I knew him. I had spoken to him, but we weren't close friends," Lock said. "I happened to see him at a social event. He said he was looking for a teaching partner."

Lock accepted, taking the reigns of the course, titled, "Having an Impact: Leadership, Teamwork and Motivation."

"Patti Lock is an unbelievable teacher," Marsh said. "She loves to teach."

Lock helped Marsh and co-professor, assistant golf coach John Pezdek, learn subtler approaches to teaching in the classroom, delivering material and various ways to help make the course enjoyable for both the professors and students.

"The first question we had the first year we did it was, 'So are we going to beat Clarkson this year?'" Lock said. "The students quickly learned it's about the course; It's about talking about the readings; It's about seeing what we can learn from all these different areas. All three of us have a lot to say on the topic."

THE COURSE

St. Lawrence instituted the First-Year Program 22 years ago. Today, it is required for every freshman in their first semester.

Students attend class with the same kids they live with in their dorm.

Most classes hold around 30 students. The one taught by Lock, Marsh and Pezdek had 50 students in the fall semester.

"We have a large group because we're happy with a big group," Lock said. "It's wonderful."

Marsh added a Community Based Learning requirement for the course. Each student must volunteer with an organization in the community. Students have volunteered at the Ogdensburg Boys and Girls Club, organic farms and Meals on Wheels, among other organizations.

"That was really Joe's push," Lock said. "The students, even though they might gripe, they all say it's one of the best things about the course. So many of them keep doing it after they're done."

Each professor is also responsible for academic advising for a portion of the class. In Marsh's case, that's 17 students. The trio decided to split the class evenly, and all the grading is done the same way.

"This is a course on leadership and motivation, which makes it plausible for me to do it," Marsh said. "I don't have a Ph.D., but I've coached for a lot of years."

Lock said Marsh doesn't skimp on his portion of the students, nor does he allow hockey to interfere with his classroom responsibilities.

"He says he's gotten very good at grading on the bus," Lock said. "Mostly, he just cares so much about the students and helping them have a successful experience here and build character and understand the importance of integrity. He wants to get it right."

For Marsh, getting back in the classroom was a challenge, but Lock and many other faculty helped him overcome a 22-year teaching gap.

"The teachers, they've helped me really develop," Marsh said. "These people are just fabulous. It's allowed me to develop contacts and friendships with the faculty, which has, in turn, helped me advise my (players). I get better feedback from them and they know how we run things here."

ENLIGHTENMENT

Marsh awards numerous athletic scholarships each year to players with Division I-level talent. He makes sure they all know why they're really at St. Lawrence University.

"They're college hockey players, but the operative word should be 'college' and not 'hockey,'" Marsh said. "I want this to be an experience that transcends hockey.

"There has to be that moment — if you want to call it an intellectual awakening or whatever it is — but somewhere along the way we tell our guys, 'You have to get it. The sooner you get it, the better.' By getting it, I mean your education is something you're responsible for and not something you're entitled to. As soon as they get rid of that mentality all together and start becoming more responsible for everything they do, that really improves everything.

"There's a lot going on in their lives and it's pretty important that they get it. Nobody is going to hand it to them. That's the intellectual awakening we want them to have."

SHOW COMMENTS
St. Lawrence 2, Brown 2
First published: February 20, 2010 at 10:14 pm
Last modified: February 20, 2010 at 10:14 pm

PROVIDENCE, RI — Brown University pulled its goalie for an extra attacker and Devin Timberlake scored with 35 seconds left in regulation to tie St. Lawrence, 2-2, in men’s ECAC Hockey on Saturday at Meehan Auditorium.

The Saints (14-12-7 overall, 8-7-4 ECAC) have now gone winless in six consecutive games, posting an 0-3-3 mark and managing only one point in each of the last three weekend series.

In tying Brown (8-15-4, 6-10-4), St. Lawrence missed an opportunity to climb back into a tie for fourth place in the conference standings with Rensselaer. Instead, St. Lawrence fell out of fifth place and into sixth with Colgate’s win over Harvard. The Saints will now need Colgate and RPI or lost at least once in the final weekend of the regular season next week in order to have a chance at a first-round bye in the ECAC playoffs.

Against Brown, the Saints failed to capitalize on early power plays. St. Lawrence missed on three opportunities in the opening period. The game’s first goal came from St. Lawrence’s Alex Curran.

Travis Vermeulen started the play with a pass to Mike McKenzie. He then found Curran at the top of the right faceoff circle. Curran’s wrister beat Brown goalie Mike Clemente at 13 minutes, 27 seconds of the first period.

The Saints made it 2-0 late in the second period on a shorthanded goal during their second penalty kill of the game. Aaron Bogosian intercepted a Brown pass inside the defensive zone and headed up ice with McKenzie trailing. Bogosian dropped a pass to McKenzie from between the faceoff circles. McKenzie snapped a shot inside the far post at 17:17. It was his eight of the year and first career shorthanded goal.

Kyle Flanagan had a chance to put the game out of reach after being tripped on a breakaway during a St. Lawrence power play. He was awarded a penalty shot, but Clemente got enough of his blocker on Flanagan’s attempt to keep it out of the net.

The ensuing momentum led to Brown’s first goal — on the game’s second penalty shot. Jack Maclellan was tripped after beating the St. Lawrence defense at 11:25 of the third.

Maclellan snuck one past SLU goalie Alex Petizian’s pads to pull Brown to 2-1.

Petizian finished with 32 saves with 14 coming in the third period. Clemente stopped 26 shots for Brown.

SHOW COMMENTS
DAN CASSAVAUGH
TIMES SPORTSWRITER

BLOG ARCHIVE

ADVERTISEMENTS
RECENT SPECIAL FEATURES
Progress 2010
Progress 2010
Showcase of Homes — February 2010
Showcase of Homes — February 2010
2010 Bridal Guide
2010 Bridal Guide