Archive for the ‘polls’ Category

CC Falls Back to No. 10 (No. 9 in USCHO)

October 29, 2007
USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine
Division I hockey poll
(first-place votes in parenthesis)
Last Week’s Ranking–2007-08 Record–Weeks In Top 15
1. Miami (Ohio) University (30) 2 6-0-0 5
2. University of Michigan, 3 5-1-0 5
3. University of North Dakota, 1 (2) 3-1-1 5
4. University of New Hampshire, 6 (2) 3-0-0 5
5. Boston College, 5 3-1-2 5
6. Michigan State University, 9 4-1-0 5
7. University of Denver, 7 4-2-0 5
8. University of Minnesota, 10 4-2-0 5
9. University of Wisconsin, 11 3-1-0 5
10. Colorado College, 4 2-2-0 5
11. Clarkson University, 8 4-2-0 5
12. University of Maine, 13 4-2-0 4
13. University of Notre Dame, 12 4-3-0 5
14. Michigan Tech University, 15 4-2-0 2
15. University of Minnesota-Duluth, NR 4-1-1 1
Others receiving votes: St. Lawrence University, 14; Niagara University, 10; The Ohio State University, 9; U.S. Air Force Academy, 7; University of Alaska Anchorage, 4; College of the Holy Cross, 1; Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1.

USCHO.com/CSTV Division I hockey poll
October 29, 2007
Team (First Place Votes)–Record–Last Poll
1. Miami (39) 6-0-0 2
2. North Dakota (4) 3-1-1 1
3. Michigan 5-1-0 3
4. New Hampshire (3) 3-0-0 7
5. Boston College 3-1-2 5
6. Michigan State 4-1-0 8
7. Denver 4-2-0 6
8. Minnesota 4-2-0 10
9. Colorado College 2-2-0 4
10. Wisconsin 3-1-0 11
11. Clarkson 4-2-0 9
12. Maine 4-2-0 13
13. Michigan Tech 4-2-0 14
14. Notre Dame 4-3-0 12
15. Minnesota-Duluth 4-1-1 17
16. St. Lawrence 3-3-0 15
17. Rensselaer 5-2-0 NR
18. Niagara 4-1-0 NR
19. St. Cloud State 3-2-1 NR
20. Massachusetts 2-2-2 16
Others Receiving Votes: Dartmouth 51, Ohio State 45, Alaska-Anchorage 39, Air Force 36, Cornell 25, Mass.-Lowell 25, RIT 15, Holy Cross 10, Colgate 7, Quinnipiac 7, Vermont 7, Boston University 6, Merrimack 6, Nebraska-Omaha 3, Princeton 3, Northeastern 2, Robert Morris 2, Providence 1

CC Jumps Six Spots to No. 4

October 22, 2007

USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine
Men’s College Hockey Poll – #4
(first-place votes in parenthesis and WCHA teams and Air Force in bold)

Last Week’s Ranking
2007-08
Record
Weeks In Top 15
1. North Dakota, 499 (24)
1
2-0-1
4
2 Miami (Ohio), 482 (9)
2
4-0-0
4
3 Michigan, 378
6
3-1-0
4
4 Colorado College, 376
10
2-0-0
4
5 Boston College, 353
4
1-1-2
4
6 New Hampshire, 350 (1)
8
1-0-0
4
7 University of Denver, 303
5
3-1-0
4
8 Clarkson University, 295
7
3-1-0
4
9 Michigan State University, 254
9
2-1-0
4
10 Minnesota, 189
3
2-2-0
4
11 Wisconsin, 182
T-13
3-1-0
4
12 Notre Dame, 151
11
2-2-0
4
13 Maine, 53
NR
2-2-0
3
14 The Ohio State University, 47
12
2-2-0
2
15 Michigan Tech, 37
NR
3-1-0
1

Others receiving votes: University of Minnesota Duluth, 33; St. Lawrence University, 27; University of Massachusetts, 20; University of Alaska Anchorage, 16; Cornell University, 16; U.S. Air Force Academy, 9; Boston University, 3; Merrimack College, 2; Niagara University, 2; University of Nebraska Omaha, 2; Union College, 1.

USCHO.com/CSTV Division I hockey poll
(WCHA teams in Bold)
Record Pts Pvs
1. North Dakota (42) 2-0-1 991 1
2. Miami (7) 4-0-0 950 2
3. Michigan 3-1-0 794 6
4. Colorado College 2-0-0 777 10
5. Boston College 1-1-2 747 4
6. Denver 3-1-0 723 5
7. New Hampshire (1) 1-0-0 700 8
8. Michigan State 2-1-0 653 9
9. Clarkson 3-1-0 645 7
10. Minnesota 2-2-0 577 3
11. Wisconsin 3-1-0 515 13
12. Notre Dame 2-2-0 470 11
13. Maine 2-2-0 293 17
14. Michigan Tech 3-1-0 242 -
15. St. Lawrence 2-2-0 197 15
16. Massachusetts 2-1-1 194 20
17. Minnesota-Duluth 3-0-1 190 -
18. Cornell 0-0-0 165 19
19. Ohio State 2-2-0 156 12
20. Alaska-Anchorage 3-0-1 106 -

Others receiving votes: Air Force 86, Nebraska-Omaha 59, Boston University 47, St. Cloud State 44, Quinnipiac 33, Vermont 33, Union 24, Western Michigan 24, Dartmouth 21, Rensselaer 13, Merrimack 9, Harvard 7, Niagara 6, Colgate 4, Northeastern 3, Holy Cross 2.

Also: CC is ranked sixth in the Inside College Hockey Power Rankings

Gutbuster

September 26, 2007

Apparently, the five “too many men on the ice” penalties that Colorado College took during the 2006-07 season was five too many.

At Tuesday’s practice, which was sparsely attended because the Tigers are ending their first block of classes this week, strength and conditioning coach Mark Stephenson made a point to address those five penalties.

The players, listed below, started practice with no sticks, which I took as an ominous sign. I was right. Just 15 minutes long, the workout had most of the team doubled over.

White Sweatt
Red McCulloch–Johnson–Testwuide
Blue DeBoer–Rau–Schultz
Maroon Lampl
Gold McMillin–Patrosso
Defensemen Hillen, Lowery, Gannon
Goalies O’Connell, Bachman

It began with a series of sprints from the goal line through the blue line. Then came the bench drills. For the first one, Stephenson divided the team in two and put each group in a box. The players had to clear the boards, skate from goal line to goal line and get back over the boards as fast as possible. The other team would go once the first team had finished and the Tigers did two sets of four or five “suicides.” Then, Stephenson had the players jump over the boards, touch the opposite wall, and get back in the box as quick as possible. Each set took about two minutes, but to the players it was probably an eternity.

After Stephenson was done with the Tigers, they did a few shooting drills and played 3-on-3 in the north end of the rink. In one sequence, goaltender Richard Bachman got caught out of position on the right side of the net and managed to come across the entire face of the goal to rob Bill Sweatt on a wrist shot. Goaltender Drew O’Connell made a nice save of his own less than a minute later, when Jack Hillen skated around the back of the net, planning on stuffing it inside the left post. But O’Connell made a backhanded snag to thwart the score. With the defensemen-plus-red-line team up 2-1, Hillen yelled, “Next goal wins” and Derek Patrosso scored the game-winner, beating Bachman over his right shoulder.

I chatted with Stephenson after practice and he said, of the four CC teams he has coached, this season’s squad is the fittest and also the most focused. Stephenson coached for seven years at Providence College before joining the staff at the National Strength and Conditioning Association’s headquarters next to World Arena.

***
The Grand Forks Herald released its annual preseason coaches’ poll and the Tigers were picked no. 3. A closer look at the votes shows that Denver and Wisconsin were just two and three votes behind, respectively, meaning that the Western Collegiate Hockey Association coaches think it will be a dogfight for spots 3-5. A little research by Herald reporter Brad Elliott Schlossman shows that, in the five times CC has won the MacNaughton Cup since the 1990-91 season, the Tigers were not tabbed to finish first place. Look for more in tomorrow’s Gazette.

37th Annual Grand Forks Herald WCHA preseason coaches poll

Rank School Points
1 UND (7) 79
2 Minnesota (3) 74
3 Colorado College 55
4 Denver 53
5 Wisconsin 52
6 St. Cloud St. 43
7 Michigan Tech 41
8 Minn.-Duluth 23
9 MSU-Mankato 19
10 Anchorage 11

Preseason rookie of the year Kyle Turris, UW, 9; Evan Trupp, UND 1
Preseason player of the year Ryan Duncan, UND, 5; T.J. Oshie, UND, 3; Taylor Chorney, UND, 1; Kyle Okposo, Minn., 1

***
Tiger Tracks:
Former CC defenseman Brandon Straub began training camp Tuesday with the Lake Erie Monsters (AHL) this week and encountered a familiar face among the defensive corps: Colorado Springs native Preston Briggs, older brother of former Minnesota goaltender Kellen Briggs (who has landed with the Idaho Steelheads (ECHL), by the way).

What are the odds? The Briggs’, Straub and former CC player Scott Polaski are the only Colorado Springs natives I’m aware of who are playing professionally. If you know of more, please drop me a comment or an email at kate.crandall@gazette.com.

UPDATE: Colorado Springs native Luke Fulghum, a former Denver player, agreed to terms with the Stockton Thunder (ECHL). Another Springs product, former Mitchell High student David Hale is a near-lock to make the Calgary Flames’ roster. That brings the grand total of Colorado Springs natives in professional hockey to six players, but please contact me if there are others I am missing.


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