College Hockey News is reporting that Braden Birch may not be able to play this weekend due to an undisclosed injury.
http://www.collegehockeynews.com/news/scratches.php?td=18
Wouldn't be surprised if he can't. He went out midway through Game 3 against Q with what appeared to be an arm injury (if my memory is right) and didn't return.
If Birch can't play, I'd assume we use the normal 6-defensemen allignment, with Ross staying at D and antoher forward (Axell?) stepping in.
Old news. Brandon Thomas said as much in his Tuesday IJ article.
QuoteCornell defenseman Braden Birch, who was knocked out of Sunday's game with an upper-body injury, didn't practice Tuesday. Schafer said he was hopeful of having Birch back at practice Wednesday, but added that he thought Birch was "doubtful" for the weekend.
It turns out that I can't go today.:-/ So bring newspapers and Snickers. I'll try to get mha to throw. Cheer wildly, I'll be watching.::panic::
Quote from: Jim HylaIt turns out that I can't go today.:-/ So bring newspapers and Snickers. I'll try to get mha to throw. Cheer wildly, I'll be watching.::panic::
Oh NOOOO! I'm leaving in an hour or two. Will you be at Erie if we don't beat Green?
I've got some newspapers.
Quote from: ajh258Quote from: Jim HylaIt turns out that I can't go today.:-/ So bring newspapers and Snickers. I'll try to get mha to throw. Cheer wildly, I'll be watching.::panic::
Oh NOOOO! I'm leaving in an hour or two. Will you be at Erie if we don't beat Green?
There's still a chance that I can make Erie.(Praying emoticon here.)
Too bad Braden Birch is out. What matters is Union is out and a seed lower than us is in, so we play Dartmouth not Union. Getting to Atlantic City is an accomplishment given the strength of the league this year. Meanwhile, as for getting to the ECACs from Ithaca:
Ithaca to Albany .......... 196 miles
Ithaca to Lake Placid ..... 253 miles
[color=#FF0000][b]Ithaca to Atlantic City ... 308 miles[/b][/color]
Ithaca to Boston Garden ... 362 miles
For Dartmouth's fan, he's got a ride of 393 miles. It's unlikely, but I'm rooting for an all-NYS final. LGR!
Quote from: billhowardToo bad Braden Birch is out. What matters is Union is out and a seed lower than us is in, so we play Dartmouth not Union. Getting to Atlantic City is an accomplishment given the strength of the league this year. Meanwhile, as for getting to the ECACs from Ithaca:
Ithaca to Albany .......... 196 miles
Ithaca to Lake Placid ..... 253 miles
[color=#FF0000][b]Ithaca to Atlantic City ... 308 miles[/b][/color]
Ithaca to Boston Garden ... 362 miles
For Dartmouth's fan, he's got a ride of 393 miles. It's unlikely, but I'm rooting for an all-NYS final. LGR!
But Boston's a lot more fun than AC.
Yale 1, Colgate 0 after 2.
Quote from: ugarteYale 1, Colgate 0 after 2.
2-0 now, under 13 to play
3-0, about 6 min to play.
4-0 is the final score
Guess our faceoff time will be closer to 8:00?
Quote from: Jordan 04Guess our faceoff time will be closer to 8:00?
I assume so. USCHO said our game would be 50 minutes after the end of the first game.
Never mind. Forgot the women's game isn't on TV.
BTW free parking at the trump plaza next door to boardwalk hall (for those late arrivers/tomorrow). No b.s. needed on getting a players card or anything.
One possible factor that could help Cornell tomorrow night is the ice. It's warm in AC and the ice is a bit slow.
Actually they implied it was terrible.
Quote from: Jim HylaActually they implied it was terrible.
Nothing to imply. It was God-awful. If the puck wasn't bouncing over sticks, it was stopping dead because of the slow ice.
Quote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: Jim HylaActually they implied it was terrible.
Nothing to imply. It was God-awful. If the puck wasn't bouncing over sticks, it was stopping dead because of the slow ice.
which will be worse for Yale than Cornell
Quote from: BigRedHockeyFanQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: Jim HylaActually they implied it was terrible.
Nothing to imply. It was God-awful. If the puck wasn't bouncing over sticks, it was stopping dead because of the slow ice.
which will be worse for Yale than Cornell
IOnly if they move the game to Erie.
There sure looked like a LOT of empty seats in that building, for both games....
It would seem that the ECACHL community has not rounded endorsed this venue...
To those who are attending the AC tourney, what is the experience like? Good?? Bad??
Quote from: rediceTo those who are attending the AC tourney, what is the experience like? Good?? Bad??
Warm.
Friday was as good as it could be for AC visitors with temps in the high 70s on the boardwalk. Too bad today will be just over 50; if it were a repeat of Friday, it'd be beach weather. The building is gorgeous in a bizarre, art deco / WPA kind a way, with a huge vaulted ceiling with a powder blue mural; reminded me a little of Liberace's bedroom only bigger (you could rent the place for social events after he checked out). Clearly feels like an ice rink was set down inside some other building. There's a stage at one end (like RPI but that would make you feel the building felt industrial). Huge concourses. Cutouts in the glass in all 4 corners for photographers, a very nice touch that Lynah still ignores.
As a WAG, I'd say 2,500 in the building for the second game. More than 1,000, less than 4,000. (For those who were there, think area coverage vs. hockey capacity of 10,500.) Yale fans tend to show up for the title game so there may be a better turnout tonight. I made a crack yesterday about it being a long 375 mile drive for Dartmouth's fan coming down. Were the 100, 200 there? You can almost get that many just with player parents and girlfriends. No Dartmouth pep band either which gave lots of airtime to the Cornell band. Maybe the TV cameras wanted to capture a more festive atmosphere by focusing so much on the Red band. (And it's not like the Green band had to decide whether to send a crew to the women's final four or the wrestling championships or the ECACs.)
The ice? There seemed to be more bounces of the puck as it skipped over sticks so reports of the ice being mediocre, yeah, that seems accurate. That would be a good question for Adam Wodon or similar to put to ECAC commissioner Steve Hagswell in a follow-up story about the appropriateness of the venue. (I some someone else's softball story online which gave the venue a big thumbs up without mentioning the location or attendance that was softer than the ice.) If pro hockey were played here, the ice would be plenty fine for fights.
As for the game: Garman was awesome with the those 37s saves. We got 2 bad breaks in Cornell shots that hit Dartmouth crossbars (I can't recall if D hit any pipes). Plus 4-5 beautiful diagonal passes in front of Mello of which 1-2 should have gone in but we couldn't handle any of the passes or they hopped on bad ice. A good break: Cornell's second goal was a tap-home when the pick dribbled behind Mello, who should've had an easy night facing just 17 shots (shot 18 was the ENG). But it wasn't all lucky breaks: Cornell also played determined, heads-up, we're-going-to-win-this-game hockey. And that gives me a ray of hope for Saturday night vs. Yale.
I think it's Dartmouth who'll be talking about missed chances, starting with those 2 shots that trickled behind Garman and camped on the goal line for an eternity. The warmer the ice, the slipperier the surface (right, people who stayed awake in physics?) but that probably also meant more ice shavings that slowed the puck down in real life, but regardless there's always a lot of ice shavings around the cage. And their power play at 0x5 (0x6?) sucked and that was what killed Dartmouth. To give credit, Cornell also defensed Dartmouth real good. And there was Garman, either lucky or good or lots of both last night.
I'm thrilled Cornell got this far. It would be an amazing chapter in Cornell's history to take down a heavy favorite. No more amazing than the lax team dismantling No. 1 or No. 2 Virginia in the NCAA lax semifinals 2 years ago. LGR!
Two thoughts: If you're buying single-game tickets, the $21 upper level seats are plenty good. I got the $31 lower level seats and wound up moving up higher. And there's free parking at the Trump casino lot across the street, which had plenty of spaces last night. They're actually happy to see you and they have drink coupons special for ECAC fans when you drive in.
Game box score: http://www.cornellbigred.com/documents/2011/3/18/MIH.Semi2.pdf?id=3631
Bill, much thanks for your report from the scene.
Quote from: billhowardThe warmer the ice, the slipperier the surface (right, people who stayed awake in physics?) but that probably also meant more ice shavings that slowed the puck down in real life, but regardless there's always a lot of ice shavings around the cage.
Only up to a point, Bill. Agreed, small amount of water in just the right temp range makes it slipperier but a larger amount that accumulates when it's warmer impedes the forward motion of the puck and you get the dead stops mentioned by other posters. Thank God the crowd was so small - all those 98.6 degree heat generators would really mess up the ice.**]
Quote from: TimVQuote from: billhowardThe warmer the ice, the slipperier the surface (right, people who stayed awake in physics?) but that probably also meant more ice shavings that slowed the puck down in real life, but regardless there's always a lot of ice shavings around the cage.
Only up to a point, Bill. Agreed, small amount of water in just the right temp range makes it slipperier but a larger amount that accumulates when it's warmer impedes the forward motion of the puck and you get the dead stops mentioned by other posters. Thank God the crowd was so small - all those 98.6 degree heat generators would really mess up the ice.**]
As somebody who actually plays hockey, I can tell you that the colder the ice, the faster the puck and the skaters both move. In the case of the puck, colder means harder rubber, which means it skids across the dry surface without bouncing and does not succumb to friction from water surface tension. In the case of skaters, colder ice means the blades don't sink in as far, so it requires less effort to glide.
Edit: this was intended as a reply to Bill, not you, Tim.
My take on the venue:
The arena is bizzare. It's a wonderful old art-deco interior with a hockey rink dropped inside it. It reminded me more of a theater than a sports venue. If there was a crowd it would be loud. But if not...every sound on the ice echoed through the rink. You coudn't read the video screen and you could barely understand the goal announcements. Beer was $8. Terrible half-cooked frozen pizza was $6. No wonder there were only two hot food stands. There were a half-dozen tables giving away products and tourist info and one souvenir stand.
Our tournament felt like something of an afterthought. The tickets I bought on line through Ticketshafter hadn't even been delived when I went to will call. When the arena opened, the souvenir stand (just 1) had a few bland t-shirts for the individual schools, but only a sign saying "tourament shirts coming soon." There were banners hanging from the rafters for the A10 basketball tournament which was held last week. No school banners for ECAC hockey schools. There was a banner for the ECAC hockey tournament where the future champions would go. It was blank - so much for history. No Canadian flag.
Now regarding AC: What an absolute shit hole! Get 3 blocks from the beach, and you're in a neighborhood I would not want to be in at night. I actually decided to take the Expressway and pay a toll to get back to my hotel rather than drive through the neighborhood where the White Horse Pike dupms into the city. The homeless people hanging around the on-street lots made me decide to park in the lot under the hall. I definitely got a whiff of urine as I went into the box office. And my final picture was coming out of the underground garage to see a strip bar - Girls!" - right across the street from the exit ramp.
Ok a couple of questions. First were the officials the same for both games? I wondered that watching it and that's what all the box scores say. Also, did they announce an attendance figure? None of the box scores that I checked lists it. Finally is there anyone going who could buy me a program? Of course I'll reimburse you. If you could, post it, I don't want 3 or 4.:-} Thanks.
The ECAC schoolS' banners were opposite the A10 ones, above the heads of most of the Cornell fans.
Aside from that, every other one of Jeff's statements is on point.
True fact: Lord Stanley of Preston never once saw a Stanley Cup championship game, nor did he ever present the Cup that bears his name.
http://www.ecachockey.com/men/2010-11/News/20111903_Whitelaw_Returns
Quote from: Jim HylaOk a couple of questions. First were the officials the same for both games? I wondered that watching it and that's what all the box scores say. Also, did they announce an attendance figure? None of the box scores that I checked lists it. Finally is there anyone going who could buy me a program? Of course I'll reimburse you. If you could, post it, I don't want 3 or 4.:-} Thanks.
Regardless of what the box score says, or the TV broadcast said, the officials who worked the Cornell-Dartmouth game last night were referees Chip McDonald and Harry Dumas, and linesmen Mike Emanatian and Glen Cooke.
Quote from: Kyle RoseQuote from: TimVQuote from: billhowardThe warmer the ice, the slipperier the surface (right, people who stayed awake in physics?) but that probably also meant more ice shavings that slowed the puck down in real life, but regardless there's always a lot of ice shavings around the cage.
Only up to a point, Bill. Agreed, small amount of water in just the right temp range makes it slipperier but a larger amount that accumulates when it's warmer impedes the forward motion of the puck and you get the dead stops mentioned by other posters. Thank God the crowd was so small - all those 98.6 degree heat generators would really mess up the ice.**]
As somebody who actually plays hockey, I can tell you that the colder the ice, the faster the puck and the skaters both move. In the case of the puck, colder means harder rubber, which means it skids across the dry surface without bouncing and does not succumb to friction from water surface tension. In the case of skaters, colder ice means the blades don't sink in as far, so it requires less effort to glide.
Edit: this was intended as a reply to Bill, not you, Tim.
Yes, the weight of the skater causes a high pressure on the ice surface and a solid to liquid transition that allows a skater to skate. Cold ice surfaces are fast and warm ice surfaces are slushy and slow. Extremely cold ice (e.g. -40 C) is not good for skating, but rinks are not kept that cold.
Unfortunately, the ice temperature doesn't seem to be helping Cornell tonight.
Quote from: ACMQuote from: Jim HylaOk a couple of questions. First were the officials the same for both games? I wondered that watching it and that's what all the box scores say. Also, did they announce an attendance figure? None of the box scores that I checked lists it. Finally is there anyone going who could buy me a program? Of course I'll reimburse you. If you could, post it, I don't want 3 or 4.:-} Thanks.
Regardless of what the box score says, or the TV broadcast said, the officials who worked the Cornell-Dartmouth game last night were referees Chip McDonald and Harry Dumas, and linesmen Mike Emanatian and Glen Cooke.
I believe Feola and Kotyra did the first game.
Attendance was reported at 3,351 Friday.
There were some good things about Atlantic City (the weather), but overall it was much worse than Albany.
One thing I always liked about Albany was that there were hockey fans everywhere. I definately stuck out walking through the casinos in my Cornell jersey.
The game venue was a weird looking place for a hockey game, and we did not have a very large fan turnout. I was only there on Friday, and even sitting right next to the pep band it was very, very quiet. And did anyone else notice the huge picture of Yale from the 2009 championship inside? I found it offensive that they chose that picture instead of the 2010 champions.
Quote from: abbottfanThere were some good things about Atlantic City (the weather)
It was also 70° in Albany on Friday.
I'll give AC the edge on picturesque setting. Albany is not much to look at... but OTOH it's close and the entire place screams "hockey!" for the ECAC championship weekend.
Quote from: Kyle RoseQuote from: abbottfanThere were some good things about Atlantic City (the weather)
It was also 70° in Albany on Friday.
I'll give AC the edge on picturesque setting. Albany is not much to look at... but OTOH it's close and the entire place screams "hockey!" for the ECAC championship weekend.
Which slum was the most picturesque?:-}
Quote from: Jim HylaQuote from: Kyle RoseQuote from: abbottfanThere were some good things about Atlantic City (the weather)
It was also 70° in Albany on Friday.
I'll give AC the edge on picturesque setting. Albany is not much to look at... but OTOH it's close and the entire place screams "hockey!" for the ECAC championship weekend.
Which slum was the most picturesque?:-}
I think the one just south of Boardwalk Hall. :-)
In all seriousness, the view of the ocean and the sound of the surf are awesome... but I'm not sure I would be outside long enough to give a crap in a typical third weekend of March. This year was unusually warm.
To be fair, there are some slum-ish places in Albany as well.
Its just a lot harder to find them there than it is in AC.
Quote from: abbottfanTo be fair, there are some slum-ish places in Albany as well.
Its just a lot harder to find them there than it is in AC.
I lived there and trust me, they aint that hard to find.
AC was a much better venue than I expected. I don't mind it at all, and frankly "I don't mind it" has been my reaction to every ECAC site except Lake Placid, which was ideal.
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: abbottfanTo be fair, there are some slum-ish places in Albany as well.
Its just a lot harder to find them there than it is in AC.
I lived there and trust me, they aint that hard to find.
AC was a much better venue than I expected. I don't mind it at all, and frankly "I don't mind it" has been my reaction to every ECAC site except Lake Placid, which was ideal.
On that last point, you and I will disagree.
Quote from: Jim HylaQuote from: TrotskyQuote from: abbottfanTo be fair, there are some slum-ish places in Albany as well.
Its just a lot harder to find them there than it is in AC.
I lived there and trust me, they aint that hard to find.
AC was a much better venue than I expected. I don't mind it at all, and frankly "I don't mind it" has been my reaction to every ECAC site except Lake Placid, which was ideal.
On that last point, you and I will disagree.
Right. "Ideal" is about the last thing I'd call LP. Absurdly remote and ridiculously overpriced might do...just as a start.
Quote from: Jim HylaQuote from: TrotskyQuote from: abbottfanTo be fair, there are some slum-ish places in Albany as well.
Its just a lot harder to find them there than it is in AC.
I lived there and trust me, they aint that hard to find.
AC was a much better venue than I expected. I don't mind it at all, and frankly "I don't mind it" has been my reaction to every ECAC site except Lake Placid, which was ideal.
On that last point, you and I will disagree.
Pointless to argue matters of taste. We'll agree you're a Philistine and leave it at that. ;)
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: Jim HylaQuote from: TrotskyQuote from: abbottfanTo be fair, there are some slum-ish places in Albany as well.
Its just a lot harder to find them there than it is in AC.
I lived there and trust me, they aint that hard to find.
AC was a much better venue than I expected. I don't mind it at all, and frankly "I don't mind it" has been my reaction to every ECAC site except Lake Placid, which was ideal.
On that last point, you and I will disagree.
Pointless to argue matters of taste. We'll agree you're a Philistine and leave it at that. ;)
So, who was arguing?::bolt::
Quote from: BigRedHockeyFanQuote from: Kyle RoseQuote from: TimVQuote from: billhowardThe warmer the ice, the slipperier the surface (right, people who stayed awake in physics?) but that probably also meant more ice shavings that slowed the puck down in real life, but regardless there's always a lot of ice shavings around the cage.
Only up to a point, Bill. Agreed, small amount of water in just the right temp range makes it slipperier but a larger amount that accumulates when it's warmer impedes the forward motion of the puck and you get the dead stops mentioned by other posters. Thank God the crowd was so small - all those 98.6 degree heat generators would really mess up the ice.**]
As somebody who actually plays hockey, I can tell you that the colder the ice, the faster the puck and the skaters both move. In the case of the puck, colder means harder rubber, which means it skids across the dry surface without bouncing and does not succumb to friction from water surface tension. In the case of skaters, colder ice means the blades don't sink in as far, so it requires less effort to glide.
Edit: this was intended as a reply to Bill, not you, Tim.
Yes, the weight of the skater causes a high pressure on the ice surface and a solid to liquid transition that allows a skater to skate. Cold ice surfaces are fast and warm ice surfaces are slushy and slow. Extremely cold ice (e.g. -40 C) is not good for skating, but rinks are not kept that cold.
Unfortunately, the ice temperature doesn't seem to be helping Cornell tonight.
Although the reason why ice is slippery is still a matter of some debate, the explanation based on the pressure from the blade causing a solid to liquid transition is generally not considered to be correct.
It's the off season and time to offer some serious thread drift.
Quote from: Roy 82Quote from: BigRedHockeyFanYes, the weight of the skater causes a high pressure on the ice surface and a solid to liquid transition that allows a skater to skate. Cold ice surfaces are fast and warm ice surfaces are slushy and slow. Extremely cold ice (e.g. -40 C) is not good for skating, but rinks are not kept that cold.
Unfortunately, the ice temperature doesn't seem to be helping Cornell tonight.
Although the reason why ice is slippery is still a matter of some debate, the explanation based on the pressure from the blade causing a solid to liquid transition is generally not considered to be correct.
I stand corrected.
New views on the physics of ice skating:
http://www.exploratorium.edu/hockey/ice2.html
Quote from: Roy 82Quote from: BigRedHockeyFanQuote from: Kyle RoseQuote from: TimVQuote from: billhowardThe warmer the ice, the slipperier the surface (right, people who stayed awake in physics?) but that probably also meant more ice shavings that slowed the puck down in real life, but regardless there's always a lot of ice shavings around the cage.
Only up to a point, Bill. Agreed, small amount of water in just the right temp range makes it slipperier but a larger amount that accumulates when it's warmer impedes the forward motion of the puck and you get the dead stops mentioned by other posters. Thank God the crowd was so small - all those 98.6 degree heat generators would really mess up the ice.**]
As somebody who actually plays hockey, I can tell you that the colder the ice, the faster the puck and the skaters both move. In the case of the puck, colder means harder rubber, which means it skids across the dry surface without bouncing and does not succumb to friction from water surface tension. In the case of skaters, colder ice means the blades don't sink in as far, so it requires less effort to glide.
Edit: this was intended as a reply to Bill, not you, Tim.
Yes, the weight of the skater causes a high pressure on the ice surface and a solid to liquid transition that allows a skater to skate. Cold ice surfaces are fast and warm ice surfaces are slushy and slow. Extremely cold ice (e.g. -40 C) is not good for skating, but rinks are not kept that cold.
Unfortunately, the ice temperature doesn't seem to be helping Cornell tonight.
Although the reason why ice is slippery is still a matter of some debate, the explanation based on the pressure from the blade causing a solid to liquid transition is generally not considered to be correct.
It's the off season and time to offer some serious thread drift.
I was meaning to chime in about that. When I taught Thermal Physics, I gave my students a homework problem to calculate the change in the melting point of ice due to the pressure from a skate, and it's a small fraction of a degree.
So how come those blades that heat up never took off (ThermaBlade)? The extra weight offset the advantage from the heat? Not per this article: ThermaBlade (http://www.thephysicsofhockey.com/documents/report1.pdf)
A failure in marketing?
[Edit: Nope, not with the Great One behind. Turns out the blades suck. Even if the sample size was small...... Try Again (http://www.bizofhockey.com/?option=com_content&view=article&id=79&Itemid=1)]
[Edit 2: A more balanced article from ESPN. Interesting story about a passionate entrepreneur. ESPN - Thermablade (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/otl/news/story?id=5182060)]
Quote from: RichHTrue fact: Lord Stanley of Preston never once saw a Stanley Cup championship game, nor did he ever present the Cup that bears his name.
http://www.ecachockey.com/men/2010-11/News/20111903_Whitelaw_Returns
Nor did he ever pee in it when drunk. That's probably a few times since it was first hoisted.