Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by billhoward
Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: billhoward (---.union01.nj.comcast.net)
Date: March 28, 2005 10:19PM
Lost in all the lamenting the lack of any Hockey East teams in the Frozen Four, in fact the lack of anything besides the WCHA in the Frozen Four, is the amazing showing by the ECACHL. Harvard and Colgate went down in their opening games but they didn't embarrass themselves, and Cornell did what it's supposed to do the last couple years, which is at least get past the first round.
For a moment there when Harvard was tied at the end of its Game One against UNH and headed into OT, I had visions of Cornell and Harvard in the Frozen Four. Anybody else have that thought, however fleeting? It's okay to say it now; you can't jinx the off-season.
For a moment there when Harvard was tied at the end of its Game One against UNH and headed into OT, I had visions of Cornell and Harvard in the Frozen Four. Anybody else have that thought, however fleeting? It's okay to say it now; you can't jinx the off-season.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Kyle Rose (---.krose.org)
Date: March 28, 2005 10:22PM
Near the end of Harvard vs. UNH, the only thing on my mind was, "SOMEONE score and get the eff off the TV so we can get to the Cornell game!"
Kyle
Kyle
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: KeithK (---.dsl.snfc21.pacbell.net)
Date: March 28, 2005 10:24PM
[Q]krose Wrote:
Near the end of Harvard vs. UNH, the only thing on my mind was, "SOMEONE score and get the eff off the TV so we can get to the Cornell game!"
Kyle[/q]But we already know that you only root for Cornell and not the ECAC, so that doesn't say much. (Not that my thoughts were far off of yours...)
Near the end of Harvard vs. UNH, the only thing on my mind was, "SOMEONE score and get the eff off the TV so we can get to the Cornell game!"
Kyle[/q]But we already know that you only root for Cornell and not the ECAC, so that doesn't say much. (Not that my thoughts were far off of yours...)
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Mike Nevin (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: March 28, 2005 10:47PM
This was the strongest ECAC in quite a while. It was nice to see us be competitive, but I was really hoping we wouldn't be the only ECAC team to win an NCAA game this year. The sad thing is that this could really have been "the year" for the ECAC. If things had broken just a little differently, we could have had 4 or 5 teams in the tourney, at least one #1 seed, and at least a couple of victories.
I don't think the top of the ECAC is going to be nearly as competitive next year. We should be better (maybe), but we may not have a lot of company. Where we had 5 very good teams this year, I can't see it next year. Vermont is gone. Harvard was loaded with seniors, and will take a while to reload. Colgate peaked this year also. Maybe Clarkson, SLU, and RPI will show up in the fall. Otherwise it looks like Cornell and Dartmouth are the returning strong teams.
I don't think the top of the ECAC is going to be nearly as competitive next year. We should be better (maybe), but we may not have a lot of company. Where we had 5 very good teams this year, I can't see it next year. Vermont is gone. Harvard was loaded with seniors, and will take a while to reload. Colgate peaked this year also. Maybe Clarkson, SLU, and RPI will show up in the fall. Otherwise it looks like Cornell and Dartmouth are the returning strong teams.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Kyle Rose (---.krose.org)
Date: March 28, 2005 10:52PM
[Q]KeithK Wrote:
But we already know that you only root for Cornell and not the ECAC, so that doesn't say much.
[/q]
I was kinda rooting for the 'paste (see my LET'S GO GATE! message in the game thread), but Harvard? I just don't think that's happening anytime soon.
[q] (Not that my thoughts were far off of yours...)[/q]
Aha! The truth comes out!
Seriously, if they weren't pre-empting a Cornell game, I would have at least had a token preference for Harvard over UNH, but mostly because I didn't want Cornell to have to meet them in Columbus. Turns out that sentiment wasn't necessary.
Cheers,
Kyle
But we already know that you only root for Cornell and not the ECAC, so that doesn't say much.
[/q]
I was kinda rooting for the 'paste (see my LET'S GO GATE! message in the game thread), but Harvard? I just don't think that's happening anytime soon.
[q] (Not that my thoughts were far off of yours...)[/q]
Aha! The truth comes out!
Seriously, if they weren't pre-empting a Cornell game, I would have at least had a token preference for Harvard over UNH, but mostly because I didn't want Cornell to have to meet them in Columbus. Turns out that sentiment wasn't necessary.
Cheers,
Kyle
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: jtwcornell91 (---.no.no.cox.net)
Date: March 28, 2005 11:19PM
[Q]krose Wrote:
Near the end of Harvard vs. UNH, the only thing on my mind was, "SOMEONE score and get the eff off the TV so we can get to the Cornell game!"
[/q]
Same here, although the word I used was a little longer than "eff" (as those on the chat can attest).
Near the end of Harvard vs. UNH, the only thing on my mind was, "SOMEONE score and get the eff off the TV so we can get to the Cornell game!"
[/q]
Same here, although the word I used was a little longer than "eff" (as those on the chat can attest).
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.emhril.ameritech.net)
Date: March 28, 2005 11:52PM
[Q]Mike Nevin Wrote:
Maybe Clarkson, SLU, and RPI will show up in the fall. Otherwise it looks like Cornell and Dartmouth are the returning strong teams.
[/q]
I think that, overall, the league will be getting stronger in the next few years, but you're probably right that we and Dartmouth will be the only "strong" teams. (A lot depends on Dartmouth's goaltending next year.) Next year, I'm thinkin':
Top tier: Cornell, Dartmouth(?)
Mid tier: Clarkson, St. Lawrence, Princeton, Brown, Harvard, Colgate, Union
Bottom: Quinnipiac, Yale, RPI
Or, like the CCHA this season.
The next year, it'll probably be *wide* open:
Top tier: Cornell, Clarkson, Dartmouth, St. Lawrence(?), Brown, Harvard, Colgate
Mid tier: ?
Bottom: ?
I think a bunch of ECAC teams are waxing but about a year away. I think Ha and Cg will have a down year and bounce back quickly.
Maybe Clarkson, SLU, and RPI will show up in the fall. Otherwise it looks like Cornell and Dartmouth are the returning strong teams.
[/q]
I think that, overall, the league will be getting stronger in the next few years, but you're probably right that we and Dartmouth will be the only "strong" teams. (A lot depends on Dartmouth's goaltending next year.) Next year, I'm thinkin':
Top tier: Cornell, Dartmouth(?)
Mid tier: Clarkson, St. Lawrence, Princeton, Brown, Harvard, Colgate, Union
Bottom: Quinnipiac, Yale, RPI
Or, like the CCHA this season.
The next year, it'll probably be *wide* open:
Top tier: Cornell, Clarkson, Dartmouth, St. Lawrence(?), Brown, Harvard, Colgate
Mid tier: ?
Bottom: ?
I think a bunch of ECAC teams are waxing but about a year away. I think Ha and Cg will have a down year and bounce back quickly.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.nyc.rr.com)
Date: March 29, 2005 12:58AM
Colgate loses Silverthorn but returns some pretty good firepower. I have to figure they'll be in position for one of the first-round byes next year.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Steve M (4.29.49.---)
Date: March 29, 2005 01:01AM
I thought the exact same thing about 10 seconds before it ended!
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: ninian '72 (---.ed.gov)
Date: March 29, 2005 12:18PM
Harvard may surprise us. Their freshman crop showed a lot of potential, and I'll be curious to see what Donato's impact will be on recruiting.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 29, 2005 12:20PM
[Q]ninian '72 Wrote:
Harvard may surprise us. Their freshman crop showed a lot of potential, and I'll be curious to see what Donato's impact will be on recruiting.[/q]
But Harvard has always had plenty of talent. Look at the number of draft picks in their roster. It hasn't been lack of recruiting that has held them back. If Donato can get them to play to their potential (which he did this year much more so than Maz or Tomassoni at the end) they should be fine.
Harvard may surprise us. Their freshman crop showed a lot of potential, and I'll be curious to see what Donato's impact will be on recruiting.[/q]
But Harvard has always had plenty of talent. Look at the number of draft picks in their roster. It hasn't been lack of recruiting that has held them back. If Donato can get them to play to their potential (which he did this year much more so than Maz or Tomassoni at the end) they should be fine.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: ninian '72 (---.ed.gov)
Date: March 29, 2005 12:27PM
I wouldn't quibble about the talent level, but in the later Mazz years, there was some discussion that he had a schizophrenic approach to the type of players he brought in. Some were a good fit with a Cleary-type finesse team, others weren't. I expect Donato will have a more consistent vision about what he wants, particularly now that he has a year under his belt.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.emhril.ameritech.net)
Date: March 29, 2005 12:28PM
That's why I said tha Harvard and Colgate will only have one down year. If they can get their goaltending situations straightened out during the next year, they won't really miss a beat. Oh... and add Clarkson to the list of teams with goaltending "situations."
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/29/2005 12:28PM by Scersk '97.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Trotsky (---.cust-rtr.swbell.net)
Date: April 08, 2005 09:16AM
Here's a list of the returning players with 15+ ECAC conference points (source: [www.ecachockeyleague.com])
By team, that's:
And returning goalies by Sv%:
Note: a *LOT* of teams lose their #1 goaltender.
Harvard (Hyphen)
Vermont (OBE)
Colgate (Silverthorn)
Dartmouth (Yacey)
Clarkson (Happy Trails Traylen)
SLU (McKenna)
Unless Brown improves, Cornell (perhaps Princeton?) is the only contender to return their G.
From all that, plus intuition, I get:
Top Tier: Cornell, Dartmouth, Princeton, St. Lawrence
Middle Tier: Brown, Colgate, Yale, Harvard (maybe worse -- they could be in a world of hurt)
Bottom Tier: Quinnipiac (hey, who knows?), Union, RPI, Clarkson
Point Scoring: GP PPG G- A- P Dustin Sproat Princeton JR F 22 1.23 15-12-27 Matt Moulson Cornell JR F 21 1.19 16- 9-25 T.J. Trevelyan St. Lawrence JR W/C 22 1.14 15-10-25 Tyler Burton Colgate FR C 22 1.09 13-11-24 Grant Goeckner-Zoeller Princeton SO F 21 1.05 5-17-22 Mike Ouellette Dartmouth JR F 22 0.95 11-10-21 Nick Johnson Dartmouth FR F 22 0.95 8-13-21 Eric Przepiorka Dartmouth JR F 21 0.90 9-10-19 Max Taylor St. Lawrence SO C/W 22 0.86 7-12-19 Garret Overlock Dartmouth JR D 22 0.82 7-11-18 Patrick Neundorfer Princeton JR F 22 0.82 5-13-18 Christian Jensen Yale JR F 19 0.89 11- 6-17 Kirk MacDonald Rensselaer JR F 21 0.81 6-11-17 Jon Smyth Colgate JR LW 22 0.77 7-10-17 Daniel Pegoraro Cornell JR F 22 0.77 6-11-17 Drew Bagnall St. Lawrence SO D/D 22 0.77 6-11-17 Jeff Hristovski Yale JR F 22 0.77 6-11-17 Ryan Maki Harvard SO F 20 0.80 9- 7-16 John Zeiler St. Lawrence JR W/C 22 0.73 5-11-16 Mike Madill St. Lawrence JR D/D 22 0.73 4-12-16 Jon Pelle Harvard FR F 22 0.73 3-13-16 Brad Mills Yale SO F 17 0.88 6- 9-15 Brian Ihnacak Brown SO F 19 0.79 8- 7-15 Shane Hynes Cornell JR F 20 0.75 4-11-15 Jonathan Poirier Union JR F 22 0.68 6- 9-15
By team, that's:
Point Scoring: GP PPG G- A- P Dustin Sproat Princeton JR F 22 1.23 15-12-27 Grant Goeckner-Zoeller Princeton SO F 21 1.05 5-17-22 Patrick Neundorfer Princeton JR F 22 0.82 5-13-18 Matt Moulson Cornell JR F 21 1.19 16- 9-25 Daniel Pegoraro Cornell JR F 22 0.77 6-11-17 Shane Hynes Cornell JR F 20 0.75 4-11-15 T.J. Trevelyan St. Lawrence JR W/C 22 1.14 15-10-25 Max Taylor St. Lawrence SO C/W 22 0.86 7-12-19 Drew Bagnall St. Lawrence SO D/D 22 0.77 6-11-17 John Zeiler St. Lawrence JR W/C 22 0.73 5-11-16 Mike Madill St. Lawrence JR D/D 22 0.73 4-12-16 Tyler Burton Colgate FR C 22 1.09 13-11-24 Jon Smyth Colgate JR LW 22 0.77 7-10-17 Mike Ouellette Dartmouth JR F 22 0.95 11-10-21 Nick Johnson Dartmouth FR F 22 0.95 8-13-21 Eric Przepiorka Dartmouth JR F 21 0.90 9-10-19 Garret Overlock Dartmouth JR D 22 0.82 7-11-18 Christian Jensen Yale JR F 19 0.89 11- 6-17 Jeff Hristovski Yale JR F 22 0.77 6-11-17 Brad Mills Yale SO F 17 0.88 6- 9-15 Kirk MacDonald Rensselaer JR F 21 0.81 6-11-17 Ryan Maki Harvard SO F 20 0.80 9- 7-16 Jon Pelle Harvard FR F 22 0.73 3-13-16 Brian Ihnacak Brown SO F 19 0.79 8- 7-15 Jonathan Poirier Union JR F 22 0.68 6- 9-15
And returning goalies by Sv%:
Save Percentage: Saves GA Pct David McKee Cornell SO 477 26 .948 Adam D'Alba Brown FR 485 40 .924 Eric Leroux Princeton JR 488 50 .907 Justin Mrazek Union FR 205 23 .899 Matt Modelski Yale SO 404 47 .896 Kris Mayotte Union JR 356 46 .886
Note: a *LOT* of teams lose their #1 goaltender.
Harvard (Hyphen)
Vermont (OBE)
Colgate (Silverthorn)
Dartmouth (Yacey)
Clarkson (Happy Trails Traylen)
SLU (McKenna)
Unless Brown improves, Cornell (perhaps Princeton?) is the only contender to return their G.
From all that, plus intuition, I get:
Top Tier: Cornell, Dartmouth, Princeton, St. Lawrence
Middle Tier: Brown, Colgate, Yale, Harvard (maybe worse -- they could be in a world of hurt)
Bottom Tier: Quinnipiac (hey, who knows?), Union, RPI, Clarkson
Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 04/08/2005 09:18AM by Trotsky.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Tub(a) (---.resnet.cornell.edu)
Date: April 08, 2005 09:41AM
[Q]Trotsky Wrote:
Unless Brown improves, Cornell (perhaps Princeton?) is the only contender to return their G.
From all that, plus intuition, I get:
Top Tier: Cornell, Dartmouth, Princeton, St. Lawrence
Middle Tier: Brown, Colgate, Yale, Harvard (maybe worse -- they could be in a world of hurt)
Bottom Tier: Quinnipiac (hey, who knows?), Union, RPI, Clarkson
Edited 2 times. Last edit at 04/08/05 09:18AM by Trotsky.[/q]
I think Princeton will improve, but I don't know if I am ready to consider them a serious contender unless Leroux improves dramatically. They will probably get a home playoff game, and may compete for a bye.
Cornell and Dartmouth may be significantly ahead of the other teams (at least by ECAC standards). I don't think it's unreasonable to see a gap of 4-6 points between Cornell, Dartmouth, and everyone else.
That being said, all it would take is Leggio or apostrophe (or another goalie) getting hot to completely turn things upside down.
Unless Brown improves, Cornell (perhaps Princeton?) is the only contender to return their G.
From all that, plus intuition, I get:
Top Tier: Cornell, Dartmouth, Princeton, St. Lawrence
Middle Tier: Brown, Colgate, Yale, Harvard (maybe worse -- they could be in a world of hurt)
Bottom Tier: Quinnipiac (hey, who knows?), Union, RPI, Clarkson
Edited 2 times. Last edit at 04/08/05 09:18AM by Trotsky.[/q]
I think Princeton will improve, but I don't know if I am ready to consider them a serious contender unless Leroux improves dramatically. They will probably get a home playoff game, and may compete for a bye.
Cornell and Dartmouth may be significantly ahead of the other teams (at least by ECAC standards). I don't think it's unreasonable to see a gap of 4-6 points between Cornell, Dartmouth, and everyone else.
That being said, all it would take is Leggio or apostrophe (or another goalie) getting hot to completely turn things upside down.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Will (---.cable.mindspring.com)
Date: April 08, 2005 09:42AM
With all due respect, it's hard to imagine Princeton in the top tier of ANYTHING hockey-related.
___________________________
Is next year here yet?
Is next year here yet?
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Beeeej (---.ny325.east.verizon.net)
Date: April 08, 2005 09:59AM
It ain't all that long since Princeton won the ECAC tournament.
Beeeej
Beeeej
___________________________
Beeeej, Esq.
"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
Beeeej, Esq.
"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Beeeej (---.ny325.east.verizon.net)
Date: April 08, 2005 10:06AM
[Q]Trotsky Wrote:
Bottom Tier: Quinnipiac (hey, who knows?)[/q]
Remember, although Union didn't exactly tear up the league when they came in in 1991-92, they beat a highly-touted Cornell team at Lynah. You never know what a team can do when it has something to prove. I'm picking Q for first-round home ice.
Beeeej
Bottom Tier: Quinnipiac (hey, who knows?)[/q]
Remember, although Union didn't exactly tear up the league when they came in in 1991-92, they beat a highly-touted Cornell team at Lynah. You never know what a team can do when it has something to prove. I'm picking Q for first-round home ice.
Beeeej
___________________________
Beeeej, Esq.
"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
Beeeej, Esq.
"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: ninian '72 (---.ed.gov)
Date: April 08, 2005 10:14AM
Gadowski's also the real deal. It took him two recruiting classes to turn around similarly sorry AAF, so - based on this track record - the projection may be a year premature.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Give My Regards (---.oracorp.com)
Date: April 08, 2005 10:19AM
[Q]Beeeej Wrote:
Remember, although Union didn't exactly tear up the league when they came in in 1991-92, they beat a highly-touted Cornell team at Lynah. You never know what a team can do when it has something to prove. I'm picking Q for first-round home ice.
[/q]
To be honest, Cornell wasn't exactly highly touted that year -- they were (and would wind up) in fifth place. Still, that was a huge loss to a basically Division III team they had beaten 8-1 the month before.
Q also loses their top goalie, Jamie Holden, who started all but three of their games. They also lose three of their top five scorers, although their only two guys to average over a point a game return.
Remember, although Union didn't exactly tear up the league when they came in in 1991-92, they beat a highly-touted Cornell team at Lynah. You never know what a team can do when it has something to prove. I'm picking Q for first-round home ice.
[/q]
To be honest, Cornell wasn't exactly highly touted that year -- they were (and would wind up) in fifth place. Still, that was a huge loss to a basically Division III team they had beaten 8-1 the month before.
Q also loses their top goalie, Jamie Holden, who started all but three of their games. They also lose three of their top five scorers, although their only two guys to average over a point a game return.
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Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Trotsky (---.cust-rtr.swbell.net)
Date: April 08, 2005 02:22PM
[Q]Beeeej Wrote:
It ain't all that long since Princeton won the ECAC tournament.[/q]
Beating us, en route.
I worship the Law of Conservation of Suckiness too, but I think the conference lost a ton of talent, and Princeton didn't. They have not always been horrendous -- they won 18+ games three years running in the late 90's. I think they may turn it around.
Now watch them have a "4 point season clap, clap, clapclapclap."
Note: the "clap" above is in no way a reference to Nickerson.
It ain't all that long since Princeton won the ECAC tournament.[/q]
Beating us, en route.
I worship the Law of Conservation of Suckiness too, but I think the conference lost a ton of talent, and Princeton didn't. They have not always been horrendous -- they won 18+ games three years running in the late 90's. I think they may turn it around.
Now watch them have a "4 point season clap, clap, clapclapclap."
Note: the "clap" above is in no way a reference to Nickerson.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.nyc.res.rr.com)
Date: April 08, 2005 02:29PM
[Q]fenwick Wrote:
Q also loses their top goalie, Jamie Holden, who started all but three of their games. They also lose three of their top five scorers, although their only two guys to average over a point a game return.[/q]They'll also be one of only two ECAC teams to return a Hobey finalist.
Q also loses their top goalie, Jamie Holden, who started all but three of their games. They also lose three of their top five scorers, although their only two guys to average over a point a game return.[/q]They'll also be one of only two ECAC teams to return a Hobey finalist.
Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: ugarte (---.cisco.com)
Date: April 08, 2005 02:53PM
[Q]Beeeej Wrote:
Trotsky Wrote:
Bottom Tier: Quinnipiac (hey, who knows?)[/Q]
Remember, although Union didn't exactly tear up the league when they came in in 1991-92, they beat a highly-touted Cornell team at Lynah. [/q]This, as far as I am concerned, should be spoken of in the same tones as the Sacred Heart Game of Death. I must now go spit on the ground.
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Re: Way to go, ECACHL
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.nyc.res.rr.com)
Date: April 08, 2005 02:56PM
[Q]ugarte Wrote:
This, as far as I am concerned, should be spoken of in the same tones as the Sacred Heart Game of Death. I must now go spit on the ground.[/q]How many times do I have to repeat this? That game NEVER HAPPENED!!!
This, as far as I am concerned, should be spoken of in the same tones as the Sacred Heart Game of Death. I must now go spit on the ground.[/q]How many times do I have to repeat this? That game NEVER HAPPENED!!!
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