NCHC 2015-16 Midseason Report

At the beginning of the season, I gave you my predicted order of finish in the NCHC:

1. Minnesota-Duluth
2. Denver
3. North Dakota
4. Omaha
5. Miami
6. St. Cloud State
7. Western Michigan
8. Colorado College

And here’s how the race stacks up heading into this weekend’s action:

NCHC 2015-16 Current Standings

Team Record Points
North Dakota 9-1-0-0 27
St. Cloud State 8-2-0-0 24
Minnesota-Duluth 4-5-1-1 14
Omaha 4-3-1-0 13
Western Michigan 4-6-0-0 12
Denver 3-4-1-0 10
Miami 2-7-1-1 8
Colorado College 2-8-0-0 6

It is worth noting that Omaha and Denver have each played only eight conference games, while the other six NCHC teams have already played ten. It appears that North Dakota and St. Cloud State have all but locked up home ice for the first round of the conference playoffs, with Minnesota-Duluth, Omaha, Western Michigan, and Denver battling for the other two places in the top half of the league.

We will have a very interesting race for the league title. Take a look at the remaining opponents for North Dakota and St. Cloud State:

North Dakota Home: UNO (2), CC (2), UMD (2), WMU (2)
Road: WMU (2), DU (2) UNO (2)
St. Cloud State Home: CC (2), WMU (2), UMD (2)
Road: UMD (2), Miami (2), UNO (2), CC (2)

UND has one more home series than the Huskies, but St. Cloud plays four of their remaining 14 conference games against Colorado College. With a three point (one game) lead headed into the second half, I’ll give the edge to North Dakota, but it’s close.

St. Cloud State has definitely been the biggest surprise to me in the first half (I tabbed them to finish sixth in the league), while both Duluth (my preseason #1) and Denver (#2) have been a mystery. SCSU already has eight league wins after collecting just eleven a year ago, while the Bulldogs (4-5-11) and Pioneers (3-4-1-0) have just seven between them.

Here’s why I had the Huskies in 6th place headed into this season:

After winning back-to-back conference titles, the Huskies fell to 6th place in the NCHC last year. While SCSU consistently scored with the man advantage, the rest of the offense suffered. St. Cloud State only scored 1.65 even strength goals per game in 2014-15 after posting a much more respectable 2.42 goals per game in the same category two seasons ago. If Bob Motzko’s crew wants to contend for an upper-division finish, balanced scoring is key.

Fast forward to this season: Yes, St. Cloud is blistering on the power play (22 of 72, 30.6%), but they’ve also scored two shorthanded goals, five empty-netters, and 61 even-strength goals in 20 games while allowing under two goals per contest. That’s good for a scoring margin of 90-39 while playing the most difficult schedule in the country (according to KRACH).

If I had to predict how the race for home ice would play out, I would put them in this order:

1. North Dakota
2. St. Cloud State
3. Omaha
4. Duluth

Of the bottom four teams, Denver is the most likely to make a run at Duluth for the final home-ice spot, while Miami, Western Michigan, and Colorado College will be playing for seeding purposes in the second half.

Who do you think will hoist the Penrose Cup? Feel free to comment below with your predictions, and we’ll see you at the rink!

Weekend Preview: UND vs. Minnesota-Duluth

Minnesota-Duluth just might be the biggest fan of 3-on-3 overtime in the entire league.

The Bulldogs took the extra point at home against #8 Denver on November 14th to break a four-game losing streak. During those four losses, UMD was outscored 17-7. Since that night, the first instance of 3-on-3 in the NCHC, Scott Sandelin’s club has won four straight, outscoring Colorado College and Western Michigan by a combined margin of 24-2.

North Dakota has also put together an impressive stretch of hockey over the past two weekends. UND has back-to-back sweeps of Michigan State and Denver, scoring 16 goals and allowing three in those four games combined.

UND’s situation between the pipes has solidified after a rocky beginning. In 2015-16, head coach Brad Berry expected his goaltenders to be sophomore Cam Johnson and freshman Matej Tomek, but both of them went down with injuries. The job was left to junior walk-on (and practice goalie) Matt Hrnkiw, and he responded by keeping North Dakota in games and racking up wins until UND could get healthy again. Johnson has since reclaimed the crease and played very well over the past two weekends against Michigan State and Denver, stopping 97 of 100 shots and allowing only a single goal in three straight games before posting his first career shutout last Saturday night against the Pioneers. For his efforts, Johnson was named NCHC Goaltender of the Week for the second consecutive week and for the third time this season.

Minnesota-Duluth was tabbed to win the NCHC this season after finishing fifth a year ago. The Bulldogs returned goaltender Kasimir Kaskisuo (18-14-3, 2.30 goals-against average, .917 save percentage, one shutout) and 94 of their 115 goals (81.7%) from last season. Here’s what I wrote about UMD in my NCHC Season Preview and Predictions:

Duluth is a legitimate title contender this year, with almost all of the key pieces returning. The Bulldogs tightened up defensively last season and could be even better this time around. If UMD stays healthy, they will have their most successful season since 2011, when Scott Sandelin hung a national championship banner inside the DECC.

With those lofty expectations, Duluth’s start has to be seen as a disappointment. While it is true that UMD picked up four big league wins over the past two weekends, those victories were against Western Michigan and Colorado College. The Bulldogs were swept at Omaha and managed to pick up just two of six conference points at home while hosting Denver. If Scott Sandelin’s club expects to make a push for the NCHC title, they’ll need to do better on home ice, and it starts this weekend against North Dakota.

Junior forwards Dominic Toninato and Alex Iafallo have not been a huge factor for the Bulldogs lately but could heat up in the second half. The pair combined for 51 points in 68 combined games last season but are stuck on 15 combined points through the team’s first fifteen contests this year. Toninato had a nice October, with two game-winning goals (vs. Minnesota in the second game of a home-and-home and at Massachusetts-Lowell), and his third period goal at Minnesota in the series opener effectively iced the game just 32 seconds after the Gophers cut the lead to one. Unfortunately, Toninato, who scored 16 goals in 2014-15, has lit the lamp just three times in the past nine games dating back to Halloween night.

Toninato’s line (he has been skating with Iafallo and freshman Adam Johnson) did put together a nice weekend against Western Michigan, posting four goals and an assist. All three scored in Friday’s 7-0 win, and Johnson added a goal on Saturday for the first two goals of his NCAA career.

North Dakota forwards Drake Caggiula, Brock Boeser, and Nick Schmaltz have been everything for the Green and White over the past eight games, notching 43 points (19 goals, 24 assists) and posting a combined plus-48 rating. During that stretch, the ‘CBS’ line has accounted for over 60 percent of UND’s goals. Sophomore forward Austin Poganski (5-4-9) did score three goals last weekend against Denver, but Duluth is deeper at forward than UND right now. Secondary scoring will need to come from senior Bryn Chyzyk (6-3-9), junior Luke Johnson (3-4-7), and sophomore Johnny Simonson (2-6-8) if North Dakota is to stay on top of the league race.

Another big reason for UND’s success this season has been North Dakota’s ability to hold a lead. During the 2015-16 campaign, Brad Berry’s squad is unbeaten (7-0-1) when leading after the first forty minutes of play. In fact, over the past eight years, North Dakota is converting almost 90 percent of second intermission leads into victories and has just seven losses in the last 163 such situations (145-7-11).

North Dakota head coach Brad Berry has his team in very good position for a 14th consecutive NCAA tournament appearance. UND’s record outside the NCHC now sits at 7-1-2, with only a January home series against Alabama-Huntsville (3-9-2, 2-8-2 WCHA) remaining on the non-conference schedule. The Fighting Hawks are currently 5th in the Pairwise rankings, one of four NCHC teams (along with Omaha, St. Cloud State, and Denver) who would make the NCAA’s if the season ended today. Brad Berry’s .833 winning percentage (14-2-2) is tied with Bob Peters (15-3-0) for the best 18-game start in program history.

The National Collegiate Hockey Conference as a whole has a solid record against other leagues once again this season, particularly against the Big Ten. North Dakota’s split against Wisconsin is currently the only league loss against the six teams in the conference that destroyed college hockey as we knew it.

NCHC overall record vs. other conferences: 34-21-7 (.605, second best in the country)

NCHC record vs. Atlantic Hockey: 4-2-0 (.667)
NCHC record vs. Big Ten: 14-1-1 (.906)
NCHC record vs. ECAC: 1-6-0 (.143)
NCHC record vs. Hockey East: 5-11-4 (.350)
NCHC record vs. WCHA: 10-1-2 (.846)

The six teams in the Big Ten (Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Ohio State, Penn State, and Wisconsin) are a combined 29-32-11 (.479) in non-league play, the second-worst winning percentage in college hockey (Atlantic Hockey, 10-40-3, .217). Not including a 12-2-1 mark against Atlantic Hockey and a 2-0-0 record against D-I independents, the Big Ten sports a dismal 15-30-10 (.364) record against the other four major hockey conferences.

Last season, Boston University defeated both Minnesota-Duluth (3-2) and North Dakota (5-3) in the NCAA tournament on their way to the championship game. The Terriers fell 4-3 to the Providence Friars, one win short of a national title.

Minnesota-Duluth Team Profile

Head Coach: Scott Sandelin (15th season at UMD, 275-266-73, .507)
National Rankings: #17/NR
This Season: 7-5-3 overall, 4-3-1-1 NCHC (3rd)
Last Season: 21-16-3 overall (NCAA Northeast Regional finalist, 12-9-3-0 NCHC (5th)

Team Offense: 3.20 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 2.07 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 21.7% (15 of 69)
Penalty Kill: 85.5% (47 of 55)

Key Players: Senior F Austin Farley (10-9-19), Senior F Tony Cameranesi (5-12-17), Junior F Alex Iafallo (2-6-8), Junior F Dominic Toninato (6-1-7), Senior D Andy Welinski (2-8-10), Freshman D Neal Pionk (1-7-8), Sophomore G Kasimir Kaskisuo (7-5-3, 1.82 GAA, .928 SV%, 4 SO)

North Dakota Team Profile

Head Coach: Brad Berry (1st season at UND, 14-2-2, .833)
National Rankings: #4/#4
This Season: 14-2-2 overall, 7-1-0-0 NCHC (1st)
Last Season: 29-10-3 overall (NCAA Frozen Four appearance), 16-6-2-0 NCHC (1st)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.56 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 1.89 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 17.9% (12 of 67)
Penalty Kill: 81.9% (59 of 72)

Key Players: Senior F Drake Caggiula (13-12-25), Sophomore F Nick Schmaltz (3-21-24), Freshman F Brock Boeser (11-8-19), Senior F Bryn Chyzyk (6-3-9), Sophomore D Tucker Poolman (1-10-11), Junior D Troy Stecher (3-10-13), Freshman D Christian Wolanin (3-5-8), Sophomore G Cam Johnson (5-0-1, 1.53 GAA, .934 SV%, 1 SO)

By The Numbers

Last Meeting: January 10, 2015 (Grand Forks, ND). #1 North Dakota rallied from a 4-1 defeat to earn a home split with a 5-2 win over the visiting Bulldogs. Senior Brendan O’Donnell led the way for the Green and White with a hat trick, while teammate Zane McIntyre made 41 of 43 saves and picked up an assist on Mark McMillan’s second period goal. UND would not lose again in regulation until March 7th at #5 Miami.

Last Meeting in Duluth: February 22, 2014. North Dakota blitzed the Bulldogs 6-2 to complete the road sweep (UND won 3-0 in Friday’s opener). Freshman defenseman Paul LaDue scored two power play goals while Rocco Grimaldi, Mitch MacMillan, Dillon Simpson, and Jordan Schmaltz all registered two-point nights. The Green and White went 3-for-4 with the man advantage and held Duluth scoreless on five power play opportunities.

Most Important Meeting: March 22, 1984 (Lake Placid, NY) Minnesota-Duluth and North Dakota met in the national semifinal game, with the Bulldogs defeating the Fighting Sioux 2-1 in overtime to advance to the championship. UND went on to defeat Michigan State 6-5 (OT) for third place, while Duluth fell to Bowling Green 5-4 in four overtimes, the longest championship game ever played.

All-time Series: UND leads the all-time series, 140-77-9 (.639), including a 57-39-5 (.589) record in games played in Duluth. The teams first met in 1954, with North Dakota winning the first ten games between the schools by a combined score of 72-16. UMD’s first win over the Fighting Sioux (a 3-2 road victory on December 18th, 1959) did not sit well with the defending national champions. UND defeated Duluth 13-2 the following night.

Last Ten: North Dakota is 6-3-1 (.650) in the last ten games between the teams, outscoring Duluth 37-29 over that stretch.

Game News and Notes

The Bulldogs are 1-4-1 against teams in the top 15 of the Pairwise rankings. The two schools did not play in Duluth last season. Senior forward Drake Caggiula became the 85th member of UND’s Century Club (100 or more career points) last weekend. Caggiula has appeared in 140 games in his North Dakota career, tied with Minnesota State’s Bryce Gervais for the most among all active NCAA Division I men’s hockey players. Both head coaches this weekend are alumni of the University of North Dakota; Brad Berry (1983-86) and Scott Sandelin (1982-86) both played for UND under John “Gino” Gasparini.

Media Coverage

Both games this weekend will be televised on Midco Sports Network (channel 322 in Grand Forks). A high definition webcast of the games is also available to NCHC.tv subscribers. All UND men’s hockey games (home and away) can be heard on 96.1 FM and on stations across the UND Sports Network (as well as through the iHeart Radio app). Follow @UNDMHockey for real-time Twitter updates, or follow the action via live chat at UNDsports.com.

The Prediction

North Dakota is playing better hockey than anyone else in the country right now and could very well sweep this weekend at the DECC. However, the Bulldogs have an edge in combined specialty teams and a proven netminder in sophomore Kasimir Kaskisuo (25 career victories). I’ve got a feeling UMD will rally on Saturday night to earn a hard-fought split. UND 4-1, UMD 3-2.

Weekend Preview: UND vs. Denver

In the NCHC, it is clear that Denver/North Dakota is at the top of the league rivalries. The teams have played nine games over the past three seasons, but the feud goes all the way back to Geoff Paukovitch’ illegal check on Sioux forward Robbie Bina during the 2005 WCHA Final Five.

Since that 2005 Final Five contest (a Denver victory), the two teams have met seven times in tournament play. Denver won the 2005 NCAA title with a victory over North Dakota and claimed a 2008 WCHA Final Five win as well. UND has won the four of the past five playoff games between the schools, including three consecutive victories in the WCHA Final Five (2010-2012) and the 2011 NCAA Midwest Regional final which sent the Fighting Sioux to the Frozen Four. The Pioneers throttled North Dakota 5-1 back in March when the two teams met in the third-place game at the 2015 NCHC Frozen Faceoff.

This season, the Pioneers went just 3-3 in October, including two overtime losses. Denver flipped the script last month, going 4-0-2 despite playing five of six games on the road. Each DU loss this season has been by a single goal, including back-to-back heartbreakers at Boston College (4-3) and Boston University (5-4) over Halloween weekend.

This weekend’s action will feature two of the top rookies in the NCHC. North Dakota’s Brock Boeser currently leads the conference with 16 points, while Denver’s Dylan Gambrell is tied for third with 11 points. UND’s Christian Wolanin also finds himself in the top six of the freshman scoring race with eight points.

Denver goaltenders Tanner Jaillet (3-1-2, 2.11 GAA, .929 SV%) and Evan Cowley (4-2-0, 2.33 GAA, .915 SV%) have each started six games for the Pioneers, with each netminder also coming on once in relief for the other this year. Expect Jaillet and Cowley to each play one game at Ralph Engelstad Arena this weekend.

UND’s situation between the pipes has solidified somewhat after a rocky beginning. In 2015-16, head coach Brad Berry expected his goaltenders to be sophomore Cam Johnson and freshman Matej Tomek, but both of them went down with injuries. The job was left to junior walk-on (and practice goalie) Matt Hrnkiw, and he responded by keeping North Dakota in games and racking up wins until UND could get healthy again. Johnson has since reclaimed the crease and played very well last weekend against Michigan State, stopping 57 of 59 shots on the weekend and allowing only a single goal each night.

North Dakota forwards Drake Caggiula, Brock Boeser, and Nick Schmaltz have been everything for UND over the past six games, notching 33 points (13 goals, 20 assists) and posting a combined plus-33 rating. During that stretch, the ‘CBS’ line has accounted for nearly 60 percent of UND’s goals.

Another big reason for UND’s success this season has been North Dakota’s ability to hold a lead. During the 2015-16 campaign, Brad Berry’s squad is unbeaten (5-0-1) when leading after the first forty minutes of play. In fact, over the past eight years, North Dakota is converting almost 90 percent of second intermission leads into victories and has just seven losses in the last 161 such situations (143-7-11).

After last weekend’s sweep at Michigan State, Brad Berry has his team in very good position for a 14th consecutive NCAA tournament appearance. UND’s record outside the NCHC now sits at 7-1-2, with only a January home series against Alabama-Huntsville (3-8-1, 2-7-1 WCHA) remaining on the non-conference schedule. The Fighting Hawks are currently 7th in the Pairwise rankings, one of four NCHC teams (along with St. Cloud State, Omaha, and Denver) who would make the NCAA’s if the season ended today.

Denver Team Profile

Head Coach: Jim Montgomery (3rd season at DU, 51-33-10, .596)
National Ranking: #9/#9
This Season: 7-3-2 overall, 3-0-1-0 NCHC (t-3rd)
Last Season: 24-14-2 overall (NCAA East Regional finalist), 13-10-1-1 NCHC (4th)

Team Offense: 3.50 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 2.25 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 17.4% (8 of 46)
Penalty Kill: 89.7% (35 of 39)

Key Players: Sophomore F Danton Heinen (5-5-10), Freshman F Dylan Gambrell (2-9-11), Junior F Trevor Moore (2-6-8), Senior F Gabe Levin (2-5-7), Senior F Quentin Shore (4-2-6), Junior D Will Butcher (3-9-12), Senior D Nolan Zajac (1-9-10), Sophomore G Tanner Jaillet (3-1-2, 2.11 GAA, .929 SV%, 1 SO)

North Dakota Team Profile

Head Coach: Brad Berry (1st season at UND, 12-2-2, .813)
National Ranking: #4/#4
This Season: 12-2-2 overall, 5-1-0-0 NCHC (t-1st)
Last Season: 29-10-3 overall (NCAA Frozen Four appearance), 16-6-2-0 NCHC (1st)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.44 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 2.06 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 16.7% (10 of 60)
Penalty Kill: 79.0% (49 of 62)

Key Players: Senior F Drake Caggiula (11-10-21), Sophomore F Nick Schmaltz (2-19-21), Senior F Bryn Chyzyk (6-3-9), Freshman F Brock Boeser (8-8-16), Junior D Paul LaDue (1-2-3), Junior D Troy Stecher (3-10-13), Freshman D Christian Wolanin (3-5-8), Sophomore G Cam Johnson (3-0-1, 1.92 GAA, .921 SV%)

By The Numbers

Last Meeting: March 21, 2015 (Minneapolis, MN). Denver knocked off top-seed North Dakota 5-1 in the third place game of the NCHC Frozen Faceoff behind goals from five different scorers. Nolan Zajac and Matt Tabrum led the way for the Pioneers with two points each, and netminder Tanner Jaillet made 25 of 26 saves in the victory. Conner Gaarder scored the lone goal for UND at the 14:34 mark of period one, but DU answered with two of their own before the first frame ended. Zane McIntyre stopped 30 shots in defeat.

Last Meeting in Grand Forks: February 14, 2015. One night after defeating the Pioneers 4-2 on home ice, North Dakota let a two goal lead evaporate in the third period and had to settle for a 3-3 tie (Denver won the shootout for the extra NCHC point). UND built the lead thanks to two first-period power play goals just 27 seconds apart while Trevor Moore served a five minute major for clipping. Moore remained in the game and scored two of Denver’s three regulation goals.

Most Important Meeting: It’s hard to pick just one game, as the two teams have played four times for the national title. Denver defeated UND for the national championship in 1958, 1968, and 2005, while the Sioux downed the Pioneers in 1963. But the game that stands out in recent memory as “the one that got away” was DU’s 1-0 victory over the Fighting Sioux in the 2004 NCAA West Regional final (Colorado Springs, CO). That North Dakota team went 30-8-4 on the season (Dean Blais’ last behind the UND bench) and featured one of the deepest rosters in the past twenty years: Brandon Bochenski, Zach Parise, Brady Murray, Colby Genoway, Drew Stafford and David Lundbohm up front; Nick Fuher, Matt Jones, Matt Greene, and Ryan Hale on defense; and a couple of goaltending stalwarts in Jordan Parise and Jake Brandt.

Last Ten Games: North Dakota has had slightly the better of it lately, going 5-4-1 (.550) in the last ten meetings between the schools and outscoring Denver 32-29 over that span.

All-time Series: UND leads the all-time series, 140-120-9 (.537), including an 82-42-7 (.653) advantage on home ice. North Dakota last home sweep of the Pioneers came on February 15th and 16th, 2008. The teams first met in 1950.

Game News and Notes

The teams were dead even in five contests last season, with each team winning two games and the fifth ending in a tie. Denver sophomore forward Danton Heinen, last year’s NCHC Rookie of the Year and the reigning league overall scoring champion (16-29-45 in 40 games), is expected to sign with the NHL’s Boston Bruins after this season. UND senior forward Drake Caggiula needs three more points to become the 85th member of North Dakota’s Century Club (100 or more career points). Caggiula, who has collected nine points in 11 career games against the Pioneers, has appeared in 138 games in his UND career, tied with Minnesota State’s Bryce Gervais for the most among all active NCAA Division I men’s hockey players.

Media Coverage

Both games this weekend will be televised on Midco Sports Network, with Saturday’s game also carried live on FOX College Sports. A high definition webcast of the games is also available to NCHC.tv subscribers. All UND men’s hockey games (home and away) can be heard on 96.1 FM and on stations across the UND Sports Network (as well as through the iHeart Radio app). Follow @UNDMHockey for real-time Twitter updates, or follow the action via live chat at UNDsports.com.

The Prediction

Both teams can score and defend, but North Dakota’s penalty kill is vulnerable if the teams trade power plays. I’ve got a feeling that at least one of these games will go to overtime, with the teams shaking hands on Saturday night after a hard-earned split and the fans looking forward to the February rematch in Denver. DU 3-2 (OT), UND 4-2.

Weekend Preview: UND vs. Michigan State

Michigan State and North Dakota competed in the WCHA from 1959 until 1981, when then-head coach Ron Mason took the Spartans to the newly-formed CCHA. In their 22 seasons in the WCHA, MSU won exactly zero league titles and made only two NCAA tournament appearances. Ron Mason made the most of those chances, however, with a national championship in 1966.

Ron Mason’s clubs fared far better after switching conferences. In 21 CCHA seasons under Mason, the Spartans collected eight regular season championships, ten playoff titles, and 19 NCAA appearances, including five trips to the Frozen Four. Mason collected the progam’s second NCAA title in 1986 and finished runner-up to Gino Gasparini’s Hrkac Circus in 1987.

Michigan State has already played three ranked opponents this season, losing a pair at #5 Denver (4-2, 3-0) and a single game at #2 Boston College (6-4) before hosting #19 Michigan Tech last weekend. The Spartans played MTU tough, but managed only a 4-4 tie on Saturday night after dropping a 5-4 overtime decision the night before. MSU held third-period leads in both games against the Huskies.

The Spartans will open up Big Ten play next weekend at #20 Penn State, while North Dakota has already played six conference games, going 5-1-0-0 in sweeps of Colorado College and Miami and a split at St. Cloud State to find themselves tied atop the league standings. Michigan State finished 2nd in the six-team Big Ten last season after a fifth place finish in the first year of the league that destroyed the WCHA as we knew it.

Michigan State and North Dakota will play a rare Friday-Sunday series due to the Spartan football game vs. Penn State. UND will be on the road for Thanksgiving for the first time since 2012, when the Green and White traveled to Notre Dame and earned a split. Start times for this weekend’s games will be 7:05 p.m. Eastern time on Friday and 3:05 p.m. Eastern time on Sunday. The last time North Dakota played a pair of games on Friday and Sunday was in December 2010 (Mankato, Minnesota), when a blizzard pushed Saturday’s game back to Sunday.

After turning in a fine freshman campaign last year (5-21-26 in 38 games played), UND sophomore forward Nick Schmaltz has taken his game to another level. Schmaltz (2-15-17 in 14 games this season) is fourth in the nation in scoring and leads all NCAA players in plus/minus at +19. Linemates Drake Caggiula (+17, t-3rd) and Brock Boeser (+15, t-7th) are also in the top-20 nationally in scoring. The “CBS Line” has produced eight goals and 14 assists in the past four games. A key to North Dakota’s success in the second half of the season will be offensive production from the other three lines.

Spartan senior goaltender Jake Hildebrand, the reigning Big Ten Player of the Year, has started all 11 games for MSU, going 4-5-1 in those games. The former Cedar Rapids Roughrider posted a 17-16-2 record in 2014-15 with a goals-against average of 2.18 and a save percentage of .930. Hildebrand could have left school after last season, but decided to stay. His numbers this season pale in comparison: a GAA of 2.84 and a save percentage of .904. Michigan State has scored plenty of goals this season (3.36/game), but the goaltending will need to improve if they hope to contend in the Big Ten.

North Dakota’s 2015-16 netminders were slated to be sophomore Cam Johnson and freshman Matej Tomek, but when both of them went down with injuries, the job was left to junior walk-on (and practice goalie) Matt Hrnkiw. North Dakota scored enough goals and defended well enough early on to allow Hrnkiw to gain confidence, but his goaltending took a step backward last weekend at St. Cloud State. The third-year netminder from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan had not seen a minute of game action before this season, but to his credit, Hrnkiw posted nine victories and kept UND in the hunt for a league title and an NCAA tournament bid while his counterparts got healthy. Cam Johnson, who is from nearby Troy, Michigan, replaced Hrnkiw in the second period last Saturday night and is expected to start this weekend against the Spartans.

UND is 5-1-1 on the road this season with a 5-1-2 non-conference record. North Dakota’s non-conference schedule will conclude with a January home series against Alabama-Huntsville (2-6-1 WCHA, 3-7-1 overall). Brad Berry is hoping to extend the nation’s-best thirteen consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, and victories this weekend will help secure that goal.

Michigan State Team Profile

Head Coach: Tom Anastos (5th season at MSU, 65-80-18, .454)
National Rankings: NR/NR
This Season: 4-5-2 overall, 0-0-0-0 Big Ten
Last Season: 17-16-2 overall, 11-7-2-2 Big Ten (2nd)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.36 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 3.09 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 17.6% (9 of 51)
Penalty Kill: 90.5% (38 of 42)

Key Players: Junior F Mackenzie MacEachern (7-6-13), Junior F JT Stenglein (7-6-13), Freshman F Mason Appleton (3-9-12), Senior F Michael Ferrantino (2-9-11), Freshman D Zach Osburn (3-5-8), Senior D Travis Walsh (0-5-5), Senior D Rhett Holland (0-1-1), Senior G Jake Hildebrand (4-5-1, 2.84 GAA, .904 SV%, 2 SO)

North Dakota Team Profile

Head Coach: Brad Berry (1st season at UND, 10-2-2, .786)
National Ranking: #5/#5
This Season: 10-2-2 overall, 5-1-0-0 NCHC (t-1st)
Last Season: 29-10-3 overall (NCAA Frozen Four appearance), 16-6-2-0 NCHC (1st)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.43 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 2.21 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 16.4% (9 of 55)
Penalty Kill: 77.4% (41 of 53)

Key Players: Senior F Drake Caggiula (7-9-16), Sophomore F Nick Schmaltz (2-15-17), Senior F Bryn Chyzyk (6-3-9), Freshman F Brock Boeser (7-7-14), Junior D Paul LaDue (1-2-3), Junior D Troy Stecher (3-9-12), Freshman D Christian Wolanin (3-4-7), Junior G Matt Hyrnkiw (9-2-1, 2.11 GAA, .911 SV%, 2 SO)

By The Numbers

Last Meeting: October 13, 2007 (Grand Forks, ND). North Dakota blitzed the defending national champions 6-0 in the US Hockey Hall of Fame Game. Twelve Fighting Sioux players made the scoresheet, and the names read like a who’s who of UND hockey in the 21st century: Robbie Bina, Taylor Chorney, Ryan Duncan, Matt Frattin, Chay Genoway, Rylan Kaip, Andrew Kozek, Brad Malone, T.J. Oshie, Evan Trupp, Chris VandeVelde, and Darcy Zajac. Jean-Phillippe Lamoureux made 23 saves for the shutout.

Last Meeting in East Lansing: November 1, 1980. One night after doubling up the homestanding Spartans 6-3, the Fighting Sioux completed the road sweep with a 7-4 victory. UND’s 1980-81 team finished 21-15-2, but the defending national champions were left out of the NCAA tournament. Wisconsin defeated the Minnesota Golden Gophers 6-3 in the national championship game, held in Duluth, Minnesota.

Most Important Meeting: March 28. 1987 (Detroit, MI). The Hrkac Circus invaded Joe Louis Arena and took home North Dakota’s fifth national championship with a 5-3 victory over the Spartans. More recently, the Fighting Sioux scored twice on “unscoreonable” Hobey Baker winner Ryan Miller and advanced to the 2001 national championship game with a 2-0 Frozen Four semifinal victory over MSU.

All-time Series: UND leads the all-time series, 62-36-2 (.630), and holds a slim edge of 22-21-1 (.511) in games played in East Lansing.

Last Ten: North Dakota has won eight of the previous ten meetings between the schools, outscoring the Spartans 43-26 in that stretch. Three of the last MSU-UND games have come in the national tournament, with North Dakota winning all three, most importantly the 1987 championship game and a 2001 semifinal contest. The Fighting Sioux also defeated Sparty 6-5 in overtime to win the 1984 third-place game (Lake Placid, NY),

Game News and Notes

Michigan State has not made the NCAA tournament since 2012 and has just two tourney appearances since their national championship in 2007. Two of North Dakota’s seven national titles have come against the Spartans (1959 and 1987). Spartan junior forwards Mackenzie MacEachern and JT Stenglein are tied for the Big Ten scoring lead with 13 points each, while freshman Zach Osburn (3-5-8) is tied as the league’s highest scoring defenseman. UND senior forward Drake Caggiula needs eight more points to become the 85th member of North Dakota’s Century Club (100 or more career points). Caggiula has appeared in 136 games in his UND career, tied with Minnesota State’s Bryce Gervais for the most among all active NCAA Division I men’s hockey players.

Media Coverage

This weekend’s games will not be televised, but a live stream of both can be purchased at www.btn2go.com. All UND men’s hockey games (home and away) can be heard on 96.1 FM and on stations across the UND Sports Network (as well as through the iHeart Radio app). Follow @UNDMHockey for real-time Twitter updates, or follow the action via live chat at UNDsports.com.

The Prediction

Both teams can score, but the defensive edge goes to North Dakota. UND’s six blueliners can defend, move the puck, and contribute offensively. UND is also deeper than the Spartans and will hope to roll four lines against MSU. The Fighting Hawks should sweep this weekend, with Sunday afternoon’s finale a tougher contest. UND 5-2, 3-2.

Thank you for reading. As always, I welcome your questions, comments, and suggestions.

Weekend Preview: UND vs. St. Cloud State

A battle of two top-ten teams. A matchup between the first two winners of the Penrose Cup (NCHC regular season champions). A rematch of last season’s NCAA West Regional final in Fargo, North Dakota. Two teams who battled six times a year ago, with North Dakota winning four. An arena that will feel like Christmas in November, with nearly half of the fans in green to combat the hometown red. The only two undefeated teams in conference play, who have combined to score 84 goals in their first 22 games. The top two teams in the NCHC in scoring offense, scoring defense, and (of course) scoring margin. The only two times these rivals will meet during the 2015-16 regular season.

And if all of that wasn’t enough, this weekend will mark the first time that the University of North Dakota men’s hockey team takes the ice as the Fighting Hawks (UND Hawkey, anyone?). The players will continue to wear the same “North Dakota” jerseys with the crossed ND design for the forseeable future (a new logo has yet to be created), but there is still some intrigue this weekend. Will the visiting fans, typically among the most vocal and passionate in all of college hockey, rally around the Fighting Hawks? Continue to chant “Let’s Go, Sioux”? Cheer when the public address announcer mentions the new nickname?

These two teams last played at SCHEELS Arena in Fargo, North Dakota in the 2015 NCAA West Regional. With a trip to the Frozen Four on the line, North Dakota topped SCSU 4-1 behind a vocal UND fan contingent. One night earlier, in a battle of Huskies, St. Cloud State took Michigan Tech to overtime before defeating their long-time WCHA foe 3-2 and advancing to face UND. I wrote about goaltender Charlie Lindgren’s play and the ups and downs on the St. Cloud State bench in a feature for College Hockey News called “Huskies Never Say Die”.

Many of the players who featured prominently in the six UND/SCSU games last year will not take the ice this weekend. North Dakota graduated forwards Michael Parks, Mark MacMillan, Brendan O’Donnell, Connor Gaarder, Stephane Pattyn, and Colten St. Clair (plus blueliner Nick Mattson), all significant contributors to Dave Hakstol’s final Frozen Four run.

Mark MacMillan, the NCHC Defensive Player of the Year last season, sustained a lower body injury while blocking a shot during a key 5-on-3 penalty kill in a home victory against St. Cloud State that clinched a share of the Penrose Cup. MacMillan finished his North Dakota career with 99 points in 151 games at UND. The last player to fall one point short of UND’s Century Club was forward Wes Dorey (1997-2001), who collected 47 goals and 52 assists in 140 career games.

Meanwhile, St. Cloud State said goodbye to forwards Joe Rehkamp, Nick Oliver, and Brooks Bertsch and defensemen Andrew Prochno and Tim Daly after all saw plenty of action during last season’s 20 win campaign.

The Huskies were bit by the early departure bug when forward Jonny Brodzinksi (64-48-112 in 120 games) announced that he was giving up his final season of NCAA eligibility to sign with the Los Angeles Kings. There are currently four seniors on the SCSU roster, the same number that North Dakota claims.

UND defenseman Jordan Schmaltz (13-51-64 in 125 games) left one year early to sign with the St. Louis Blues, but his departure left only the second-biggest hole to fill. Netminder Zane McIntyre, last season’s Mike Richter Award winner, inked a deal with the Boston Bruins after his junior campaign. McIntyre had a career record of 58-24-9 at UND with a goals-against average of 2.10, a save percentage of .926, and four shutouts.

UND’s 2015-16 goaltenders were slated to be sophomore Cam Johnson and freshman Matej Tomek, but when both of them went down with injuries, the job was left to junior walk-on (and practice goalie) Matt Hrnkiw. North Dakota scored enough goals and defended well enough early on to allow Hrnkiw to gain confidence, and his goaltending has been better each weekend as a result. The third-year netminder from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan had not seen a minute of game action before this season.

Hrnkiw’s counterpart between the St. Cloud pipes is Charlie Lindgren, who has been everything for the Huskies during the early part of this season. Lindgren (7-2-0, 1.49 GAA, .944 SV%) has only given up more than two goals twice this year and has already posted four shutouts. The junior from Lakeville, Minnesota allowed nine goals in two losses at Quinnipiac and four goals in his other seven games combined.

UND’s freshman have been the offensive story thus far this season. The top four first-year forwards (Brock Boeser, Shane Gersich, Chris Wilkie, and Rhett Gardner) have scored 17 of North Dakota’s 43 goals through the first twelve games, and freshman defenseman Christian Wolanin has picked up two game-winners and six points overall (three goals, three assists).

According to KRACH, St. Cloud State has played the most difficult schedule in the country to this point in the season, while North Dakota’s slate of opponents ranks 47th. The Huskies were swept at Quinnipiac (10-0-0, the nation’s only remaining perfect record) but completed sweeps at the Kendall Hockey Classic (Alaska and Alaska-Anchorage), vs. Minnesota State, vs. Miami, and at Western Michigan to vault into the top ten of the USCHO rankings (currently #7).

North Dakota, meanwhile, has collected sweeps at Vermont and Colorado College and a pair of home victories vs. Miami. UND also managed a win (Lake Superior State) and a tie (Maine) at the IceBreaker and in a home-and-home with Bemidji State, but a home split with lowly Wisconsin has fans in Grand Forks hoping that the Badgers will be good for more than four victories this season (Mike Eaves’ club went 4-26-5 in 2014-15).

Perhaps the biggest reason for UND’s early success this season has been North Dakota’s ability to hold a lead. Brad Berry’s squad is unbeaten (6-0-1) when leading after the first forty minutes of play. In fact, over the past eight years, North Dakota is converting over 90 percent of second intermission leads into victories and has just seven losses in the last 162 such situations (144-7-11). The last time UND lost when leading after two periods of play was November 1st, 2013 against visiting St. Cloud State, when a 1-0 lead turned into a 3-2 defeat.

In 2004, the Center Ice Club created a commemorative trophy to mark the rivalry, and the two teams have been battling it out each season to claim the Challenge Cup.

UND had the better of the play in the first eight years of the Challenge Cup era, claiming the Cup four times and sharing the trophy three times while St. Cloud State only won the trophy once (2005-06). However, the Huskies earned the trophy two of the last three seasons. With only two regular season games scheduled this year, the Cup is on the line this weekend in St. Cloud.

St. Cloud State Team Profile

Head Coach: Bob Motzko (11th season at SCSU, 212-157-41, .567)
National Rankings: #7/#7
This Season: 8-2-0 overall, 4-0-0-0 NCHC (t-1st)
Last Season: 20-19-1 overall (NCAA West Regional finalist), 11-12-1-0 NCHC (6th)

Team Offense: 4.10 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 1.50 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 21.6% (8 of 37)
Penalty Kill: 84.6% (22 of 26)

Key Players: Sophomore F Patrick Russell (6-6-12), Senior F Kalle Kossila (2-10-12), Senior F Joey Benik (7-3-10), Sophomore F Judd Peterson (6-3-9), Senior D Ethan Prow (1-7-8), Sophomore D Nathan Widman (0-6-6), Junior G Charlie Lindgren (7-2-0, 1.49 GAA, .944 SV%, 4 SO)

North Dakota Team Profile

Head Coach: Brad Berry (1st season at UND, 9-1-2, .833)
National Ranking: #4/#4
This Season: 9-1-2 overall, 4-0-0-0 NCHC (t-1st)
Last Season: 29-10-3 overall (NCAA Frozen Four appearance), 16-6-2-0 NCHC (1st)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.58 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 1.83 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 14.3% (7 of 49)
Penalty Kill: 79.1% (34 of 43)

Key Players: Senior F Drake Caggiula (4-9-13), Sophomore F Nick Schmaltz (2-11-13), Senior F Bryn Chyzyk (6-3-9), Freshman F Brock Boeser (7-5-12), Junior D Paul LaDue (1-2-3), Junior D Troy Stecher (2-7-9), Junior G Matt Hyrnkiw (8-1-1, 1.82 GAA, .920 SV%, 2 SO)

By The Numbers

Last Meeting: March 28, 2015 (Fargo, ND). North Dakota scored three unassisted goals over the final two periods of the hockey game to defeat St. Cloud State 4-1 in the West Regional Final and advance to the NCAA Frozen Four. Jimmy Murray got the Huskies on the board less than 90 seconds in to the hockey game, but that did nothing to quiet the partisan crowd of 5,307 at SCHEELS Arena. Four different players scored for UND, while Zane McIntyre made 19 stops to earn his 29th and final victory of the season.

Last Meeting in St. Cloud: November 22, 2014. On his 21st birthday, North Dakota freshman Trevor Olson potted the first two goals of his career (including the game-winner) and led UND to the 3-2 road victory over the Huskies. St. Cloud native Austin Poganski assisted on both Olson goals against his hometown team, and Brendan O’Donnell also scored for the Green and White. UND outshot the Huskies 39-29, and both teams went 0-for-3 with the man advantage. SCSU won Friday’s opener 3-2.

Most Important Meeting: The aforementioned NCAA West Regional final was the most important meeting between the two teams. The schools also faced off on March 20th, 2015 in the NCHC semifinals (Minneapolis, MN). St. Cloud State silenced the pro-North Dakota crowd with two goals in a span of 19 seconds late in the first period to turn a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 lead after twenty minutes of play. SCSU forward Joe Rehkamp added an empty net goal with 1:05 left in the game and the Huskies advanced to the NCHC Frozen Faceoff championship game. Zane McIntyre made 21 saves for UND; Charlie Lindgren stopped 19 of 20 North Dakota shots on goal.

All-time Series: North Dakota leads the all-time series, 65-38-12 (.617), including a 26-20-6 (.558) record in St. Cloud. Aside from their 2015 NCHC Frozen Faceoff semifinal victory, the Huskies also defeated North Dakota in the 2001 WCHA Final Five championship game. UND is 10-3-0 (.769) against St. Cloud State in the conference playoffs, with their most recent triumph coming in the 2012 WCHA Final Five quarterfinals. The teams have only met once in the NCAA tournament (2015).

Last Ten: UND holds a 5-4-1 (.550) edge in the last ten meetings between the teams and has outscored St. Cloud State 24-23 over that stretch of games. The last twenty games are just as close, with North Dakota holding a slim 10-9-1 (.525) advantage.

Game News and Notes

St. Cloud State has not lost at home this season (4-0-0), while UND is 5-0-2 away from Ralph Engelstad Arena. North Dakota sophomore forward Austin Poganski (St. Cloud, MN) has four points in six games against his hometown team. No team has swept this series in the past 14 years.

Media Coverage

Both games this weekend will be televised. Friday’s opener can be seen on FOX Sports North Plus/FOX College Sports (Channels 339/639 in Grand Forks), and Saturday’s finale will be available all across the Midco Sports Network (27/322/622). A high definition stream of both games is available to NCHC.tv subscribers. All UND men’s hockey games (home and away) can be heard on 96.1 FM and on stations across the UND Sports Network (as well as through the iHeart Radio app). Follow @UNDMHockey for real-time Twitter updates, or follow the action via live chat at UNDsports.com.

Pregame Event (from Center Ice View)

The annual gathering of SCSU and North Dakota fans will take place on Saturday, November 21st from 4:00-6:00 p.m. on the second level of Brothers Bar and Grill (119 5th Avenue South) in St. Cloud. Complimentary appetizers will be served, and the Challenge Cup will be on hand. All St. Cloud State and UND fans are encouraged to attend.

The Prediction

St. Cloud State would love for each side to get four power plays per game, while North Dakota would rather roll four lines and take their chances at even strength. UND netminder Matt Hrnkiw has not faced a team with this much firepower, nor has he played in such a hostile environment. The early edge will go to the Huskies on the wide sheet of ice, with Brad Berry claiming the first Fighting Hawks victory in Saturday’s rematch. SCSU 3-1, UND 4-3.

UND/SCSU Challenge Cup

Beginning with the 2002-03 season, the WCHA changed its schedule rotation, creating “rivals” which would play each other four times each season. St. Cloud State and North Dakota were partnered up in a scheduling system that ended in 2009-10.

At that time, even though the WCHA expanded to 12 teams (adding Bemidji State and Nebraska-Omaha) and implemented a new rotating schedule, UND and SCSU continued to play four games each year. In the NCHC, that will not be the case. This season (2015-16) will be the first time since 2001-02 that the two teams will not play four times in the regular season.

Over the past eleven seasons, the fans have made their mark on the partnership between the schools. The UND/SCSU rivalry has a commemorative fan trophy, thanks to the Center Ice Club at St. Cloud State University:

Challenge Cup

The UND/SCSU Challenge Cup is awarded to the team that wins the regular season series. As you may be able to see in the photo above, the winning team is engraved for each year.

UND won the Challenge Cup in 04-05, going 3-0-1 against the Huskies. St. Cloud took the trophy back in 05-06, sporting a record of 3-1-0 against North Dakota. In 06-07, the Sioux won two games and tied the other two, collecting six points and the Challenge Cup. The next season, the teams shared the Cup, with UND and SCSU each winning one game and tying the other two. In 08-09, North Dakota sprinted to the lead in the Challenge Cup race by winning both games in Grand Forks but needed a Saturday victory in St. Cloud to salvage a split on the weekend and reclaim the Cup. The following year (09-10), both series were splits, and the Challenge Cup was shared once again. In 2010-11, UND claimed seven of eight points (3-0-1) and took back the trophy, while the 2011-12 campaign went down as another tie. The Huskies claimed the Cup for two consecutive seasons (2012-14) by going 5-2-1 over North Dakota, but UND pulled off a Challenge Cup-worthy sweep last season in Grand Forks that also earned them a share of the Penrose Cup.

If you’re keeping track at home, UND has won the Cup five times, St. Cloud has claimed the trophy three times, and the schools have shared the Challenge Cup three times.

Since the two teams will not play in Grand Forks during the regular season this year, the Cup is on the line this weekend at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center.

The Challenge Cup will be on display at the UND/SCSU pregame event on Saturday, November 21st at Brothers in St. Cloud. This is a great opportunity to meet fans on both sides of this hockey rivalry. There will be complimentary appetizers and fabulous door prizes. The event is free and open to the public.

Check back on Friday for a full preview of this weekend’s game action.

UND/SCSU pregame event set for Saturday, November 21st

Please join us for the UND/SCSU pregame social, an event which takes place in both Grand Forks, North Dakota and St. Cloud, Minnesota each hockey season. This is an opportunity for fans of the University of North Dakota and St. Cloud State University to gather, celebrate the great sport of hockey, and view the Challenge Cup, a traveling trophy which is presented to the team that wins the regular season series. North Dakota claimed the Cup last season with a record of 3-1 against SCSU, outscoring the Huskies 10-8 in the four contests. The teams also met twice in the postseason. St. Cloud State bested UND 3-1 in the NCHC semifinals, while the Green and White earned revenge eight days later with a 4-1 victory in the NCAA West Regional final.

UND SCSU fan social

The pregame event will be held on Saturday, November 21st from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. on the second floor of Brothers Bar & Grill (the same location as the past two years). The address is 119 Fifth Avenue South in St. Cloud, within walking distance of the Kelly Inn. The event is free and open to the public. A free appetizer bar will be available, and everyone in attendance will have the opportunity to win door prizes.

Fans of both teams enjoy the camaraderie at these social events and regularly comment that the connection between the two fan bases is among the best in college hockey.

Mark your calendars and join us for this event!

Weekend Preview: UND vs. Miami

Miami’s first year in the newly-formed National Collegiate Hockey Conference was a disaster. The RedHawks, picked to finish at the top of the league, went just 6-17-1-1 (.271) in conference play and finished dead last – yes, behind even Colorado College.

In that season (2013-14), Enrico Blasi’s crew allowed 80 goals in 24 conference games and lost ten one-goal contests overall. Miami came back with a vengeance last year, pushing UND to the final weekend of the regular season before a split between the two teams had North Dakota hoisting the Penrose Cup.

In the 2015-16 NCHC preseason poll, North Dakota was picked to finish third and Miami was tabbed to finish fifth, although both schools received first-place votes. In league play this season, Miami swept Western Michigan but suffered a sweep at the hands of St. Cloud State. North Dakota has played only one conference series this year, earning two victories at Colorado College.

#3 North Dakota (7-1-2) is currently ranked considerably higher than #17 Miami (5-4-1), although the RedHawks have played the 3rd toughest schedule in the country (according to KRACH), while UND has played the 60th toughest (otherwise known as the easiest). Miami has already faced #7 Providence, #14 St. Cloud State, and #17 St. Lawrence (rankings are for the week in which the games were played), and will host #6 Omaha next weekend. Brad Berry’s club has not faced a ranked opponent this season, but will travel to #9 St. Cloud State next weekend to face the Huskies.

Miami has killed an incredible 34 of 35 penalties (97.1%) this season. North Dakota went 0-for-9 with the man advantage last weekend against Wisconsin but killed all six Badger power plays in the home split over their former WCHA rival.

Both teams are relying heavily on their freshman classes to carry the scoring load. Miami’s Jack Roslovic (6-3-9) and UND’s Brock Boeser (5-2-7) are leading the pack and rank 1-2 in the league’s freshman goal-scoring race. Overall, Enrico Blasi’s first-year players have scored 11 of Miami’s 20 goals this season (and 21 of 56 points), while Brad Berry’s new recruits have potted 16 of North Dakota’s 33 tallies (21 of 87 points).

Miami Team Profile

Head Coach: Enrico Blasi (17th season at Miami, 356-234-58, .594)
National Ranking: #17/#18
This Season: 5-4-1 overall, 2-2-0-0 NCHC (t-1st)
Last Season: 25-14-1 overall (NCAA East Regional Semifinalist), 14-9-1-1 NCHC (2nd)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 2.00 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 2.50 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 18.4% (7 of 38)
Penalty Kill: 97.1% (34 of 35)

Key players: Freshman F Jack Roslovic (6-3-9), Freshman F Josh Melnick (3-3-6), Junior F Anthony Louis (1-5-6), Senior F Sean Kuraly (0-3-3), Sophomore D Louis Belpedio (1-4-5), Senior D Matthew Caito (1-3-4), Senior G Ryan McKay (5-2-1, 1.70 GAA, .937 SV%, 1 SO)

North Dakota Team Profile

Head Coach: Brad Berry (1st season at UND, 7-1-2, .800)
National Ranking: #3/#4
This Season: 7-1-2 overall, 2-0-0-0 NCHC (t-1st)
Last Season: 29-10-3 overall (NCAA Frozen Four appearance), 16-6-2-0 NCHC (1st)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.30 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 1.70 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 14.3% (6 of 42)
Penalty Kill: 83.3% (30 of 36)

Key Players: Senior F Drake Caggiula (3-8-11), Sophomore F Nick Schmaltz (0-7-7), Senior F Bryn Chyzyk (5-3-8), Freshman F Brock Boeser (5-2-7), Junior D Paul LaDue (0-2-2), Junior D Troy Stecher (2-5-7), Junior G Matt Hyrnkiw (6-1-1, 1.63 GAA, .933 SV%, 2 SO)

By The Numbers

Last Meeting in Grand Forks: November 15, 2014. After surrendering the first goal early in the second period, North Dakota came roaring back with three of their own in the middle frame and cruised to a 4-1 win in front of 11,802 fans at Ralph Engelstad Arena. Junior forward Drake Caggiula potted two goals (including a highlight reel dangle through Ben Paulides’ skates) and assisted on another, while seniors Mark MacMillan and Michael Parks collected two points each. Zane McIntyre made 28 of 29 saves in the victory, while UND hung the loss on Ryan McKay (23 of 27 saves). Miami won the series opener by a final of 3-2, with both teams scoring a shorthanded goal.

Most Important Meeting: March 6, 2015 (Oxford, OH). North Dakota went on the road and took care of business, securing a hard-fought 2-1 victory over the RedHawks and earning the Penrose Cup, UND’s 16th regular season conference title. UND scored early in each of the first two periods (Keaton Thompson at 2:43 of the first; Connor Gaarder at 1:56 of the second) and survived a furious Miami rally. Zane McIntyre made 43 of 44 saves, including 38 stops in the final two periods.

All-time Series: North Dakota leads the all-time series 7-4-1 (.688), including a 3-1-1 (.700) mark in games played in Grand Forks. Five of the twelve all-time meetings between the schools came during the 2013-14 season, with UND picking up wins in three of those five games. The teams first played in 1999 (Badger Showdown, Milwaukee, WI).

Game News and Notes

UND is not scheduled to play in Oxford this season but could meet Miami in the NCHC and/or NCAA playoffs. That matchup could feature the Fighting Hawks versus the RedHawks, unless voters choose to be known as the University of North Dakota Roughriders instead. UND and Miami are two of six teams tied atop the NCHC standings with six points (two victories), although only three schools (Denver, North Dakota, and St. Cloud State) are 2-0-0. UND senior forward Drake Caggiula has collected five goals and four assists in nine career games against the RedHawks.

Media Coverage

This weekend’s series against Miami is televised on MidcoSports Network, and a high definition stream of both games is available to NCHC.tv subscribers. All UND men’s hockey games (home and away) can be heard on 96.1 FM and on stations across the UND Sports Network (as well as through the iHeart Radio app). Follow @UNDMHockey for real-time Twitter updates, or follow the action via live chat at UNDsports.com.

On A Personal Note

I am almost halfway through my Movember campaign, and I could use your help. My goal is $2018, with the 18 in honor of my favorite UND player, David Hoogsteen. Please visit mobro.co/daveberger, donate, and help me change the face of men’s health. Thank you!

The Prediction

I can’t see any way either one of these teams sweeps the series. I’ve got Miami going ahead both nights, with North Dakota rallying in Saturday’s rematch to earn the split. Miami 3-2, UND 4-1.

Weekend Preview: UND vs. Wisconsin

A quick rewind to March 2014:

Plenty was written about the roller coaster ride of emotions that North Dakota faced after defeating Western Michigan 5-0 in the 3rd place game of the NCHC tournament (Target Center, Minneapolis, MN). The team had done its part, but needed some help to make the NCAAs.

That help came in the form of the Wisconsin Badgers, former WCHA foe and long-time rival. On Saturday night, across the river at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Bucky was facing Ohio State in the Big Ten tournament championship. Down 4-2 with seven minutes remaining, UW scored twice in twenty seconds and rang a shot off the post in overtime before Mark Zengerle notched the game-winner at 7:48 of the first extra session.

To be fair, North Dakota’s 23-13-3 record and second-place finish in the NCHC would have been good enough for an at-large bid in most seasons. But the new league did not fare well out of conference (37-31-16, .536), including an abysmal 9-17-8 (.382) mark against Hockey East and the ECAC.

Thanks to Wisconsin, UND had new life and nothing to lose. #4 North Dakota managed to defeat the top-seeded Badgers (UW had gone 20-5-1 since November 30th, 2013) and outlasted #2 seed Ferris State for a trip to the Frozen Four (Philadelphia, PA).

Since that regional semifinal twenty months ago, the Badgers have become virtually unrecognizable. One of the criticisms leveled against UW head coach Mike Eaves is that he recruits in a cycle, bringing in huge freshman classes every four years in the hopes that a dominant senior class will bring a title to Madison down the road.

And it worked. Once. In 2006, the Badgers won a national championship on the backs of three seniors (forwards Adam Burish and Ryan MacMurchy and defenseman Tom Gilbert) plus forwards Joe Pavelski and Robbie Earl, underclassmen who left the program after that season. Mike Eaves came close four years later, but Wisconsin fell to Boston College 5-0 in the title game. North Dakota derailed UW’s title hopes at the end of the 2014 season, and now Bucky is left to rebuild again.

So is that one championship in Mike Eave’s previous 13 seasons enough to satisfy the fans in Madtown? The attendance figures at the Kohl Center suggest otherwise. Season ticket sales are down 52 percent from their 2006 championship campaign, and the Badgers are only drawing 7,239 fans per game so far this season. Here’s why:

In the three strongest seasons under Mike Eaves (2006, 2010, 2014), the Badgers went 82-32-9 for a winning percentage of .703. But in the other ten seasons, Wisconsin went just 177-174-49 (.504).

The 2014-15 season (4-26-5, .186) was historically bad for UW hockey. Before that, the last time Bucky won fewer than ten games was in 1963-64, when the Badgers went 8-5-3 in the first season of the modern era of UW hockey (Wisconsin also played as an independent from 1921 to 1935). That’s a stretch of 50 years without a season as bad as last year was for Mike Eaves.

And it’s more of the same this year. The Badgers are 2-2-3 on the young season, with two home victories over first-year Division 1 program Arizona State. Those two victories broke a 14 game winless streak for Mike Eaves, and it doesn’t get any easier this weekend.

The Brad Berry head coaching era at the University of North Dakota is off to a white-hot start, as #1 UND is unbeaten in its first eight games (6-0-2) despite playing only one of those games at home. Aside from Cornell, Harvard, and Yale (three ECAC schools that have just begun their season and are currently 2-0), only #2 Providence (6-0-1) and #5 Quinnipiac (6-0-0) remain among the unbeaten.

North Dakota has been dominant 5 on 5 this season, outscoring opponents 19-7 over the first eight games of the year. Despite the fact that UND has scored and allowed six power play goals this season, Brad Berry’s crew has been deeper offensively in every series and is outscoring opponents by two full goals per game. One measure of offensive talent up and down the roster is the number of players who are scoring at least one point every weekend (0.5 points per game or better). Currently, 11 North Dakota skaters are at that mark, including four defensemen. To this point in the season, Wisconsin has eight, and only two other teams in the NCHC have more (Denver and Western Michigan each have 12).

UND’s penalty kill has improved after a dismal start. Over the first three games, North Dakota’s opponents scored five power play goals in 12 opportunities (a penalty kill mark of just 58.3%). Since that time, UND has only allowed one power play goal in 18 opportunities (94.4%) while scoring a shorthanded goal (Rhett Gardner’s game winning shorthanded tally at Colorado College). The improvement is due in large part to junior netminder Matt Hrnkiw, who is much more comfortable in the crease than when he was first forced in to action against Bemidji State on October 16th.

Hrnkiw has been the MVP of the season to this point, filling in for Cam Johnson and Matej Tomek as both recover from injuries. Hrnkiw, who did not see the ice in his first two seasons at North Dakota, has not allowed more than two goals in any contest this season and has posted a goals-against average of 1.48 (11th best in the country) and a save percentage of .942 (13th) to go along with his two shutouts (3rd).

His counterpart in the Badger crease this weekend will be freshman goaltender Matt Jurusik, who has done a capable job to this point in the year. Jurusik has difficult skates to fill, as he replaces four-year starter Joel Rumpel. Rumpel, who appeared in 114 games as a Badger, had a record of 49-27-7 with a 2.16 GAA and a .926 SV% before last season crushed his career statistics. Rumpel finished with a line of 53-50-11, 2.51 GAA, .918 SV%.

Junior forward Grant Besse continues to be a bright spot for the Badgers. Besse has collected 22 goals and 22 assists in his UW career (76 games) and has scored eight points in eight games this season.

Wisconsin Team Profile

Head Coach: Mike Eaves (14th season at UW, 261-209-61, .549)
National Ranking: NR
This Season: 2-3-3 overall, 0-0-0 Big Ten
Last Season: 4-26-5 overall, 2-15-3-2 Big Ten (6th of 6 teams)

Team Offense: 2.38 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 3.00 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 22.2% (8 of 36)
Penalty Kill: 84.4% (27 of 32)

Key Players: Junior F Grant Besse (3-5-8), Freshman F Seamus Malone (2-5-7), Freshman F Luke Kunin (2-4-6), Sophomore F Ryan Wagner (3-2-5), Senior D Kevin Schulze (0-4-4), Sophomore D Jake Linhart (2-1-3), Freshman G Matt Jurusik (2-2-2, 2.84 GAA, .904 SV%)

North Dakota Team Profile

Head Coach: Brad Berry (1st season at UND, 6-0-2, .875)
National Ranking: #1/#1
This Season: 6-0-2 overall, 2-0-0-0 NCHC (t-1st)
Last Season: 29-10-3 overall (NCAA Frozen Four appearance), 16-6-2-0 NCHC (1st out of 8 teams)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.62 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 1.62 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 18.2% (6 of 33)
Penalty Kill: 80.0% (24 of 30)

Key Players: Senior F Drake Caggiula (2-7-9), Sophomore F Nick Schmaltz (0-6-6), Senior F Bryn Chyzyk (5-2-7), Freshman F Brock Boeser (5-2-7), Junior D Paul LaDue (0-1-1), Junior D Troy Stecher (2-5-7), Junior G Matt Hyrnkiw (5-0-1, 1.48 GAA, .942 SV%, 2 SO)

By The Numbers

Last Meeting: November 8, 2014 (Madison, WI). #2 North Dakota scored three third period goals in a six minute stretch to turn a 2-1 contest into a 5-1 victory and a road sweep. 11 different players figured into the scoring for UND, while junior netminder Zane McIntyre stopped 23 of 24 shots, allowing only a second period tally to Grant Besse. North Dakota won Friday’s opener 4-3 behind two goals from Michael Parks, who scored the shorthanded game winner with under eight minutes remaining in the game. Wisconsin’s Grant Besse figured into three of the four Badger goals on the weekend.

Last Meeting in Grand Forks: February 2, 2013. One night after the teams skated to a 1-1 overtime tie, UND built a 4-0 lead after two periods en route to a 4-1 victory. Mark MacMillan scored a power play goal just 45 seconds into the rematch, and Michael Parks added two goals in the middle frame for North Dakota. It was the last meeting between the two schools as members of the WCHA.

Most Important Meeting: March 27, 1982 (Providence, RI). A 2-2 tie after two periods turned into a 5-2 Sioux victory, as Phil Sykes netted a hat trick and led UND to its fourth National Championship. Glen White scored the first goal of the game for North Dakota and assisted on two of Sykes’ goals. Darren Jensen backstopped the Green and White and was named to the all-tournament team along with Sykes, defenseman James Patrick, and forward Cary Eades. This title would be the second of three North Dakota titles won at the Providence Civic Center (1980, 2000).

All-time Series: Wisconsin leads the all-time series, 86-68-12 (.554), including a 36-33-9 (.519) record in Madison. The teams first met in December 1968.

Last Ten: The Green and White have had Bucky’s number lately, going 7-2-1 (.750) in the last ten tilts. UND is unbeaten in the last seven (6-0-1), outscoring UW 28-13.

Game News and Notes

Wisconsin has just one victory in its last 22 road games. At 6-0-2, North Dakota currently has the longest unbeaten streak to start a season since 1999-2000, when the eventual national champions opened the year 8-0-1 before falling 6-5 to Minnesota State in the Mavericks’ first season in the WCHA. The Badgers outshot Arizona State 56-19 in Friday’s 5-1 victory. UND senior forward Drake Caggiula, the nation’s leader in career games played (131), will be unavailable for Friday’s opener due to a one game suspension handed down by the league. Assuming Minnesota State senior forward Bryce Gervais (130 career games played) suits up for the Mavericks tonight, he will tie Caggiula for the top spot.

Media Coverage

This weekend’s series against Wisconsin is televised on MidcoSports Network, and a webcast of both games is available to NCHC.tv subscribers. All UND men’s hockey games (home and away) can be heard on 96.1 FM and on stations across the UND Sports Network (as well as through the iHeart Radio app). Follow @UNDMHockey for real-time Twitter updates, or follow the action via live chat at UNDsports.com.

The Prediction

UND will easily score eight goals this weekend, so the only question is whether they win a couple of 4-2 games or whether one game becomes a blowout. I’ve got a close one on Friday night, with Drake Caggiula’s return to the lineup on Saturday sparking the North Dakota offense. UND 3-2,2, 5-2.

Weekend Preview: UND at Colorado College

In the first two seasons of the NCHC, North Dakota has won 31 league games, while Colorado College has managed to win just eight. If we look more closely at last season, the numbers are even worse for the Tigers. UND went 16-6-2-0, claiming the Penrose Cup and posting the best record in the two-year history of the league. The Tigers were historically bad in 2014-15, winning just two league games (2-19-3-1) all season.

The boys from Colorado Springs have not been able to score or stop anyone from scoring. Over the last twenty games dating back to last season, CC has given up three or more goals 15 times and scored more than two goals only six times. As a result, Colorado College has been outscored 77-37 in that stretch and sputtered to record of 1-17-2 over the past twenty games.

The feeling among the Tiger faithful is that new blood behind the bench will eventually translate into new life on the ice. Second-year head coach Mike Haviland is new to Division I hockey, but he was named the AHL coach of the year in 2006-07 (Norfolk Admirals) and served as an assistant coach with the Chicago Blackhawks for four seasons (2008-12), winning a Stanley Cup in 2010. He was most recently head coach for the AHL’s Hershey Bears.

UND and Colorado College met six times last season (twice in Colorado Springs), with North Dakota winning all six games and outscoring the Tigers 25-10. Without those six victories, UND’s record last year would have looked far less impressive at 23-10-3 (.681).

This weekend’s games, the first of the conference season, are critical for UND’s Penrose Cup hopes. Last year, North Dakota went 10-2-0 against the bottom four teams in the league (Colorado College, Western Michigan, St. Cloud State, and Minnesota-Duluth) en route to a 16-6-2 conference mark and the NCHC regular season title. A second reward for the Green and White was a first-round playoff series against Colorado College, the 13th time in a row that UND hosted the opening round of the conference tournament. The Green and White dispatched the Tigers in two games (5-1, 3-2) and advanced to the NCHC Frozen Faceoff.

After this weekend, North Dakota will have played seven of its eight October games on the road, with only a single home game versus Bemidji State(a 5-2 victory) to satisfy the fans in Grand Forks. Beginning with a November visit from the Wisconsin Badgers, however, UND will have eight home series and only six weekends away from Ralph Engelstad Arena.

North Dakota killed all four Vermont power plays last weekend and raised its penalty kill percentage to 72.2% (48th best in the country). This stat will need continually improve if the boys from Grand Forks want to compete for a league title again this year. In the first four games of the season, UND surrendered a total of five power play goals (to put that in perspective, Dave Hakstol’s group allowed only 27 power play goals in 42 games last year). The penalty kill numbers will improve as the goaltending situation improves (UND’s top two netminders – Matej Tomek and Cam Johnson – are both out with injury), but until that happens, the key will be to stay out of the penalty box.

The NCHC led all leagues last season with a sparkling record against the other five conferences, and in doing so placed six teams in the NCAA tournament. And this year, the eight teams in the league have gone 24-14-6 (.587) to place second (the ECAC is first at 21-10-4, .657). Last season, Dave Hakstol’s squad went 9-1-1 in regular season non-conference action and advanced to the NCAA Frozen Four. After a 4-0-2 start outside the NCHC, North Dakota’s other non-conference opponents this season will be Wisconsin, Michigan State, and Alabama-Huntsville (all currently unranked). UND has lost just once in its last 21 nonconference games (16-1-4) dating back to the second half of the 2013-14 season.

Saturday’s series finale will mark the first time that North Dakota will play on Halloween since 2008-09, when UND defeated Wisconsin 3-2. That victory pushed North Dakota’s all-time record on October 31st to 6-3-0. UND and Colorado College have never met on Halloween.

Colorado College Team Profile

Head Coach: Mike Haviland (2nd season at CC, 6-32-3, .183)
National Rankings: NR/NR
This Season: 0-6-0 overall, 0-0-0-0 NCHC
Last Season: 6-26-3 overall, 2-19-3-1 NCHC (8th)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 1.50 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 3.83 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 14.3% (4 of 28)
Penalty Kill: 76.7% (23 of 30)

Key players: Senior F Cody Bradley (1-2-3), Senior F Hunter Fejes (1-0-1), Junior F Sam Rothstein (0-3-3), Freshman F Trey Bradley (3-1-4), Sophomore D Teemu Kivihalme (1-3-4), Freshman D Andrew Farny (0-2-2), Junior G Tyler Marble (0-2-0, 3.44 GAA, .877 SV%)

North Dakota Team Profile

Head Coach: Brad Berry (1st season at UND, 4-0-2, .833)
National Ranking: #1/#2
This Season: 4-0-2 overall, 0-0-0-0 NCHC
Last Season: 29-10-3 overall (NCAA Frozen Four appearance), 16-6-2-0 NCHC (1st out of 8 teams)

Season Statistics:
Team Offense: 3.67 goals scored/game
Team Defense: 1.83 goals allowed/game
Power Play: 20.0% (5 of 25)
Penalty Kill: 72.2% (13 of 18)

Key Players: Senior F Drake Caggiula (2-6-8), Sophomore F Nick Schmaltz (0-5-5), Senior F Bryn Chyzyk (5-1-6), Freshman F Brock Boeser (4-2-6), Junior D Paul LaDue (0-1-1), Junior D Troy Stecher (2-4-6), Junior G Matt Hyrnkiw (3-0-1, 1.76 GAA, .933 SV%, 1 SO)

By The Numbers

Last Meeting: March 14, 2015 (Grand Forks, ND). Senior forward Connor Gaarder potted the game-winner with under 90 seconds remaining in the hockey game to propel UND to a 3-2 victory over the visiting Tigers. Colorado College forward Luc Gerdes scored a wraparound goal at 6:10 of the third period to knot the game at 2. CC outshot the Green and White 33-31, but Zane McIntyre was up to the challenge, making 31 saves in the victory. North Dakota won Friday’s opener by a much more comfortable 5-1 margin.

Last Meeting in Colorado Springs: October 18, 2014. UND blitzed the homestanding Tigers with four goals in the opening frame before cruising to a 7-2 victory. The visitors from Grand Forks went 5-for-9 on the power play and added two shorthanded goals. Senior forward Mark MacMillan scored a rare empty net shorthanded goal for his hat trick, and added two assists for good measure. North Dakota won Friday’s opener 3-1.

Most Important Meeting: March 27, 1997. UND defeated Colorado College, 6-2, in the Frozen Four Semifinals in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Two nights later, North Dakota downed Boston University, 6-4, to claim its sixth NCAA Championship. North Dakota and Colorado College also met in the 2001 East Regional (Worcester, Mass.), with UND prevailing, 4-1.

All-time Series: UND leads the all-time series, 149-80-10 (.644), although Colorado College has had the advantage at altitude (6,035 feet), going 57-50-4 (.532) in Colorado Springs. The teams first met in 1948.

Last Ten: North Dakota has won nine of the last ten meetings between the teams, outscoring CC 38-20 over that span. The only Tigers victory was an overtime win in the 2014 NCHC quarterfinals. Seventeen of the last nineteen games have been decided by two goals or less.

Game News and Notes

Four of the Tigers’ nine goals this season have come with the man advantage. UND went the entire 2014-15 season without being swept on the road (11-4-0 during the regular season away from Ralph Engelstad Arena last year). Colorado College has only scored one first period goal in six games this season. North Dakota senior forward Drake Caggiula, who leads all current NCAA men’s hockey players in career games played with 129, has already faced CC 16 times in his career, collecting 13 points (eight goals, five assists).

Media Coverage

This weekend’s series at Colorado College will not be televised, but a webcast of both games is available to NCHC.tv subscribers. All UND men’s hockey games (home and away) can be heard on 96.1 FM and on stations across the UND Sports Network (as well as through the iHeart Radio app). Follow @UNDMHockey for real-time Twitter updates, or follow the action via live chat at UNDsports.com.

The Prediction

UND has been rolling and Colorado College has been stumbling. Furthermore, the boys from Grand Forks can expect a predominantly green and white crowd at World Arena, proving yet again that for UND hockey, it’s always a home game. If the Tigers’ power play gets clicking, they could make one game close. North Dakota will sweep and end October with a sparkling 6-0-2 record. UND 5-1, 4-2.