Showing posts with label Dylan Richard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dylan Richard. Show all posts

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Men's Jersey Countdown: #12 Dylan Richard


Freshman - Forward - 6'0" - 185 pounds - Sherwood Park, AB

He's not the most heralded of Penn State's freshmen - even from within his own junior team - but don't be surprised if Spruce Grove Saints veteran Dylan Richard (last name pronounced like Maurice and Henri) becomes one of the Nittany Lions' go-to offensive threats in 2013-14. In the AJHL, he averaged 0.80 points per game over 138 games, just a hair behind once-and-again teammate David Glen, PSU's leading goal scorer last year, and his 0.82. In Richard's first full season as a Saint he and Glen won an AJHL championship, and over the following two seasons he emerged as one the circuit's elite players. The honors quickly followed. Richard was selected to the AJHL North Division All-League team last season and was a finalist for the Alberta Old Time Hockey Players Trophy, awarded to the the league MVP. He also joined Team Canada West at the 2012 World Junior A Challenge, but had to settle for silver after dropping the final to Eamon McAdam and Team USA.

Career Statistics (with AJHL Spruce Grove Saints):
Season GP G A Pts. PIM PP SH GW GT
2009-10
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
2010-11
43
9
17
26
8
1
0
1
0
2011-12
51
19
22
41
24
8
2
1
0
2012-13
42
22
20
42
39
8
0
3
0
AJHL Career
138
50
60
110
71
17
2
5
0

Monday, May 13, 2013

Penn State Confirms Koudys, Richard, Williamson and DeRosa Additions

Patrick Koudys, an RPI transfer, becomes PSU's second NHL draft pick (Washington, 5th round, 2011)

Penn State officially announced the additions of forwards Rick DeRosa (Port Huron - NAHL) and Dylan Richard (Spruce Grove - AJHL), as well as defensemen Patrick Koudys (Muskegon - USHL) and Mike Williamson (Spruce Grove - AJHL) on Monday afternoon.

Given that we've been talking about these guys for a few months - they committed between November (Koudys) and March (DeRosa) - I'll assume that you already know something about them. But if not, here's the post on each from the time of their pledges.

Koudys: PSU Lands Former Engineer Koudys
Richard: Richard to Join Linemate Glen in 2013
Williamson: All Saints Day
DeRosa: Philly Native DeRosa Picks PSU

For status checks and updates throughout this past season, refer to the Commit Cycle series as well.

With that in mind, we'll skip to what's new, specifically Guy Gadowsky's first public comments on the four.

On the group as a whole: "This group will be a great addition to the incoming student-athletes we added during the early-signing period. Patrick Koudys and Mike Williamson add size and strength to our blue line, while both Dylan Richard and Ricky DeRosa bring high levels of character and hockey-IQ to our forwards."

On Koudys: "Patrick has experience at the NCAA level and is a big, solid defenseman who takes pride in being a tough person to play against. He takes care of his own zone first and fits a need very well for us."

On Richard: "Dylan has an extremely high hockey-IQ both offensively and defensively. He's a winner and a tremendous leader who always plays for the team. His habits will quickly transition to Penn State."

On Williamson: "Mike has great feet with a huge shot from the point. He will be a welcomed addition to our blue line."

On DeRosa: "Ricky's known as a high-character guy. He has a great work ethic and is known for being a 200-foot player who will work hard in all three zones."

These additions join November's early-period signings - goaltender Eamon McAdam, defenseman Dave Thompson, forwards David Goodwin, Zach Saar and Eric Scheid - to form a robust incoming class (Koudys and Scheid, the two transfers, will be a junior and a sophomore respectively, the others will be freshmen of course). Ahead of any possibly-on-the-way subtractions, the roster presently sits at 29: 4 goalies, 9 defensemen and 16 forwards.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The Rundown: February 1-4

So...if you haven't noticed, I've been completely inactive since Friday. No posts, no Twitter, nothing.

While I usually try to be as upfront as possible with you guys about things, in the interest of not airing my dirty laundry, I'm going to be a little cryptic here. So, on that note, the short version of events is that I've had continuing issues with certain people, and I felt that those issues were compromising the quality of the blog. With that in mind, I decided to completely bail on things for the weekend to get my head back and let my frustration dissipate. Did it work? I guess we'll find out together, won't we?

The purpose of this post will just be sort of a quick one-time catch-up on everything that's happened since Friday afternoon so that I can get straight back into regular programming from here. Presumably most of you know most of it by now, but just for posterity's sake...

Neil Laessig scored twice against St. Joseph's. Photo: Steve Hass

Ice Lions Sweep Weekend, "Clinch" Nationals Bid

Due to context, the ACHA D2 Southeast No. 2 Ice Lions' weekend road sweep at Southeast No. 7 Rider (4-3), at St. Joseph's (5-2) and at Southeast No. 3 UMBC (4-1) - as well as their now-likely return trip to the ACHA National Championships - has to be considered the top story for this post.



A three goal second-period proved important when Rider's late rally - against a PSU team down leading goal scorer Chris Lewis to a first-period elbowing disqualification - fell just short.

Mike Broccolo's power play goal tied things up early in that middle period after the Broncs were spotted a 1-0 lead at the first intermission. Just after a Tyler Person interference penalty ended, Peter Daley and Taylor Vincent made the score 3-1 with goals 13 seconds apart. Ryan Urban's 4-1 goal midway through the third ended up being the winner after RU's Chris Daley and Connor Fox connected on 5-on-3 situations in the last five minutes to make things interesting.


Neil Laessig's pair of goals were key in the Ice Lions' sandwich-game win over the Hawks. Laessig scored late in the first period, then 2:24 into the second - or 2:00 after SJU had tied the game - to keep PSU afloat early.

Once the Hawks tied things up once again, Urban took over with his second consecutive game-winning goal at 11:31 of the period. The sophomore from Chester Springs, PA would add a late insurance goal, after Franky Reluzco, fresh out of the penalty box and on an Ice Lions' power play, made the score 4-2 early in the final period. Reluzco and SJU's Mark Boczar both took penalties at the end of the second period, but Boczar's was a major, giving the Ice Lions a three-minute advantage.



Thanks to early power play goals from Lewis and Reluzco, as well as an even-strength effort from Will Vaeth, PSU put the Sunday showdown with UMBC on ice early, and cruised to the finish line in a rematch of last season's MACHA championship game.

When the Retrievers thought about a comeback, via Daniel Durantaye's power play answer midway though the second, Fredrik Linge was there to restore the three-goal lead after 40 minutes and ensure that the Ice Lions' winning streak hit 13, part of a 22-4-1 overall record.

While nationals bids aren't official yet, PSU has just one regular season game remaining, at Monmouth this coming Sunday, in a makeup for an October game postponed by Hurricane Sandy. Since that date happens to also be the due date for the last ranking of the season, the one establishing nationals autobids and regional seeding, it's now (thanks to the weekend sweep) extremely, extremely unlikely that the Ice Lions will be outside of the Southeast Region top two (the autobid teams) when the poll is released, regardless of what happens against Monmouth.

Interestingly, the ACHA tournament for D2 is in St. Louis from March 15th through 19th, meaning that the Ice Lions will likely be the last Penn State hockey team playing this year, just as they were last year. Nationals for the ACHA women (should they qualify) run March 7th through 10th, while the seasons for the NCAA teams end on February 25th (men) and no later than March 9th (women).

Former Icers George Saad and Eric Steinour (center) got two last shots in on Ohio. Photo: Christine Baker/PennLive.com

NCAA Men End Ohio Series with Wins

PSU played its likely last-ever games against former ACHA archrival Ohio, collecting a pair of wins, including one in front of 6,107 in Hershey, to improve to 14-15-0 in all games, while remaining 10-13-0 in NCAA games and 8-11-0 against NCAA Division I.

By the way, in case anyone is wondering (since I've never fully explained it), my insistence on giving three records for the men this season stems from the fact that I really don't see much value in the official NCAA record, which includes games against NCAA Division III opponents that aren't any better in quality than the ACHA teams not counted. "How does PSU measure up with DI competition?" is a much more pertinent question than whatever question is answered by a combined DI/DIII record, and I also include an "all games" mark because I don't accept the official designation of "exhibition" for the ACHA games, not when stats against a crap DIII like Fredonia are counted.

For a while I only gave a DI record and an all games record, until a PSU representative needlessly called me to complain about the practice back in December... oh right, I'm not airing my dirty laundry.



In the name of having someone who actually saw the games (it was a full-on mini-hiatus, I wasn't kidding about that) write the recap, here's Mary Clarke of Victory Bell Rings.


The men’s first game of the weekend actually took place in Hershey, Pa. at the GIANT Center in front of a mostly Penn State crowd. The Bobcats got the early lead a little over six minutes into the first frame off of forward Nick Rostek but the Nittany Lions were able to bounce back with six unanswered goals of their own. Casey Bailey netted two, Kenny Brooks had one goal and two assists, Connor Varley had two assists, David Glen got one to the back of the net as well, and combined the team went +20 for the night with 37 total shots reaching Ohio’s goaltender. The game was a great defensive showing for the Nittany Lions as well, allowing only 14 shots to reach netminder PJ Musico and blocking six additional Bobcat shots.

Saturday’s game at home started off similarly to Friday’s, with the Bobcats taking a lead early in the first period, this time just less than two minutes into the frame. However, Casey Bailey and George Saad would counter for the Nittany Lions with two goals in under three minutes to give Penn State their first, but not only lead of the game. A quick goal in the beginning stages of the second period for Ohio would tie the game at 2-2 but after a scoreless frame afterwards, the Bobcats would grab their second lead of the night with a Brett Agnew goal just 38 seconds into the third. Ohio wouldn’t get the lead back again after Peter Sweetland capitalized on a Bobcat defensive error and turned the tables in favor of the Nittany Lions. Curtis Loik and Casey Bailey would cap off the scoring to make the rallying comeback complete with a final score of 5-3. Goalie Matthew Skoff faced a fair number of Ohio shots – 37 of them – and was able to stop 34 for the win. While the wins feel nice, the two games against Ohio do not count in the standings so the team still sits at 10-13-0 for the season.


Celine Whitlinger made 59 saves against Mercyhurst on Friday. Photo: Steve Hass

NCAA Women Hang Tough Against No. 7 Mercyhurst

The women - now 7-19-1 (1-12-1 CHA) - once again demonstrated their improvement over the course of the season by forcing Mercyhurst to earn their wins at the Ice Pavilion. PSU faces a pretty important series this coming weekend - the final home games of the year - against Lindenwood. LU sits fifth in the CHA standings with eight points, while PSU is sixth with three. With only four regular seasons games left for each team following their head-to-head, a Nittany Lions sweep is all but essential for Penn State to avoid being the last seed for its first league tournament.



Here's Mary Clarke again.


The women’s team had a rematch against No. 7 Mercyhurst starting Friday night at the Greenberg. Penn State was in trouble early, giving up a three goal lead to a deadly Laker team. However, the Nittany Lions tightened up and scored two goals on the Laker goalie, Stephanie Ciampa. Hannah Hoenshell notched her eighth goal of the season at 6:21 in the second frame and Jordin Pardoski added a power play tally that, at the time, put the game almost within reach at 4-2 to Mercyhurst. However, the Lakers were able to hold on to the win despite Penn State’s late game surge. Celine Whitlinger was in net for the Nittany Lions and played an outstanding game, saving 59 shots on 64 attempts. The Nittany Lions were also better in the shot category in this game than they have been recently, getting 19 shots to the net.

Saturday’s game started off rough with four unanswered Mercyhurst goals. PSU goalie Nicole Paniccia was able to stop all 11 Laker shots in the first period and did end up saving 46 of the Lakers’ 50 shots. Jill Holdcroft scored her ninth goal this season on the power play with three seconds to go in the game to break Penn State’s shutout. The Nittany Lions totaled 12 shots on goal and had another 5 blocked by the Mercyhurst defense. The spirited effort by the team fell short; however, and the two losses for the weekend put their record at 7-19-1 this season.


CDT Gets Exclusive PIA Look

In the aftermath of the games (except for the Ice Lions-UMBC one, I suppose), the big news was the Centre Daily Times' front-page story on Sunday regarding the progress of the Pegula Ice Arena, featuring a tour from Joe Battista.

I suppose at this point, there's not going to much in the way of new information - wait... the student section is as steep as code allows?!?! - given that the thing is pretty well on its way to being completed. Still, it's nice to see the latest, publicity is always good, and there's certainly going to be a thing here or there that's news-ish. Like...
The arena, other than melting the ice for about two months each spring for a few events such as commencement, will be almost exclusively for events on ice. They did not purchase covers to put over the ice and have other events on top of it.
Guess that arena football team for State College is on hold.

Dylan Richard Discusses Commitment

I greatly enjoy Andrew Dzurita's recruiting articles for Lions 247 and this one, featuring 2013 forward Dylan Richard, is his latest effort. Here's your money passage.
The 19-year-old center started speaking with the Penn State coaches after former Spruce Grove Saints (AJHL) teammate David Glen committed to the Nittany Lions, and developed a nice rapport with the staff.

“It was Keith Fisher initially. He really started it out where we got to know each other a little bit,” recalled Richard, who chose the Nittany Lions over Minnesota-Duluth, Ohio State and North Dakota. “I went down to Penn State in mid-December on a visit before committing and I thought it was great. Great people, a great campus, good atmosphere, just an overall good feeling.

“They’re a great group of people, all of the coaches. They’re easy to talk to, fun to be around. Being around them made my decision a lot easier.”
Hahahaha hate you, North Dakota.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

All Saints Day


According to Chris Heisenberg's recruiting list, Spruce Grove Saints (AJHL) defenseman Mike Williamson committed to Penn State on Monday.

Mike Williamson

Defenseman
Spruce Grove Saints (AJHL)
6'3", 210 pounds
Leduc, AB
DOB 9/5/1993

EliteProspects.com


Season
Team
Lge.GPGAPts.PIM
2009-10
Leduc Oil Kings Midget AAA
AMHL
31
7
3
10
72
2009-10
Drayton Valley Thunder
AJHL
4
0
0
0
0
2010-11
Leduc Oil Kings Midget AAA
AMHL
32
6
13
19
70
2010-11
Spruce Grove Saints
AJHL
1
0
0
0
0
2011-12
Spruce Grove Saints
AJHL
41
9
9
18
73
2012-13
Spruce Grove Saints
AJHL
12
1
5
6
12

Williamson then verified the news via Twitter:


The Alberta native, of course, continues a pipeline to the Saints organization that includes current freshman David Glen - a hard-working center who is tied for the PSU lead with 12 goals - and 2013 recruit Dylan Richard. Williamson, Glen and Richard all played together on the 2011-2012 edition of the Saints, which finished the regular season 46-6-8 but were upended by Fort McMurray in the league semifinals. Spruce Grove, one of Canadian Jr. A hockey's powerhouse franchises won the 2011 AJHL title with Glen and Richard, although Williamson only played one regular season game on that team.

On last year's Saints, captained by Glen, the PSU freshman was tops on the team in assists (29) and second in points (50). Richard was third on the team in scoring, with 19 goals among his 41 points. And Williamson, one of the younger players on the team, added healthy totals from the back end as a 17-year-old. He seems to have that uncoachable clutch factor in his favor too - four of his nine goals were game winners, and he stepped up his production in the playoffs, with four goals in 11 games.

This season, with Glen now at Penn State ahead of the other two, the Saints are 28-13-6, a record deflated somewhat from the team's usual pace by the fact that both Richard and Williamson have battled injuries. Williamson's - called an upper-body injury officially - has limited the blueliner to 12 games and none since October 27th, although he's expected back in the lineup soon.

Williamson is certainly stout defensively, as one might expect from a quick glance at his height and weight. But videos of offensive upside are more fun (start at 50 seconds in, unless you want to see Glen assist on a goal too).



Another one? Sure. Williamson's goal play starts at 2:25 below, and once again shows that he's not afraid to get low in the zone if it's there for the taking.



There are interesting roster implications with Williamson's addition. He joins Dave Thompson and Pat Koudys as defensemen entering next season, along with forwards Richard, Zach Saar, David Goodwin and Eric Scheid, as well as goaltender Eamon McAdam. And don't forget about roster ghost Reed Linaker. Departures will number five forwards (Michael Longo, Dom Morrone, Eric Steinour, George Saad and Bryce Johnson, who transferred to Oklahoma earlier this month) and two defensemen (Rich O'Brien and Brian Dolan).

The forwards seem to be an even swap, five in and five out. But three defensemen incoming against two leaving and one goalie in with nobody leaving may bring cuts into play, especially in a reality where Title IX and budget constraints limit roster size. It may also be worth mentioning that scholarship money is likely to get much tighter in a hurry with a large chunk of the former Icers on the roster graduating.

Regardless of the final composition of next year's roster, it's sure to include - as Glen has already demonstrated - three easy-to-like Alberta boys with a winning pedigree.

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Richard to Join Linemate Glen in 2013


According to Chris Heisenberg's well-known recruiting spreadsheet, Penn State's 2013 men's class now numbers seven, thanks to the commitment of Dylan Richard on Friday.

Dylan Richard

Forward
Spruce Grove Saints (AJHL)
6'0", 185 pounds
Sherwood Park, AB
DOB 2/5/1993

EliteProspects.com


Season
Team
Lge.GPGAPts.PIM
2008-09
Sherwood Park Squires Min. Mdgt.
AMMHL
34
23
27
50
10
2009-10
Sherwood Park Kings Midget AAA
AMHL
35
12
26
38
8
2009-10
Spruce Grove Saints
AJHL
2
0
1
1
0
2010-11
Spruce Grove Saints
AJHL
43
9
17
26
8
2011-12
Spruce Grove Saints
AJHL
51
19
22
41
24
2012-13
Team Canada West
WJAC
4
1
3
4
4
2012-13
Spruce Grove Saints
AJHL
31
17
16
33
35

The lead here, in case the identity of Richard's present team (or this post's title, I guess) didn't flip your light switch, is that he and David Glen are former teammates - linemates, in fact.

To be precise, Glen and Richard were together for two full seasons, 2010-2011 and 2011-2012. The Saints' regular season record over those two years was 94-14-8, while postseason accomplishments include the 2011 AJHL championship. Last season, Glen and Richard were the second and third leading scorers on the team, and both were key contributors to the 2011 title season as well, despite Richard's being one of the youngest players on the team at the time.

With the way Glen has performed this season - he's Penn State's leading scorer of course (his 1.07 points per NCAA game are tied for 35th best in the country) and works just as hard on the other end of the ice - it's pretty hard not to be excited about bringing in his running mate.

Jump to 5:28 of this video to see Richard - pronounced like the Rocket's surname - scoring a goal with a reasonable degree of filth back in October.



That goal, and the 16 others that accompany it so far, seem to indicate a player who has taken an additional step offensively this season. He had a hat trick on Saturday in a 6-1 win over Canmore, in his second game after committing (happy to meet you too). While that outburst snapped a three-game pointless streak, he's been remarkably consistent, as he's only been blanked ten times in total all season. He had a goal and three assists on September 16th in a 9-4 win over the Calgary Mustangs. The Saints have followed suit with 24-9-5 record so far to once again sit on top of the AJHL's North Division. Richard's 33 points lead the team and rank 14th in the league, while his 17 goals are ninth best in the AJHL.

In November Richard was selected to Team Canada West for the World Junior A Challenge, helping the squad to a silver medal with four points, three of them coming in a 7-0 blitzing of the Czech Republic to open the tournament. He'll join Luke Juha (2010 silver, 2011 gold), Curtis Loik (2011 gold) and Eamon McAdam (2012 gold) as a WJAC medalist on the Nittany Lions next year, and will also join Glen, Loik, Reed Linaker and (starting in 2014) Bo Pellah as a western Canada native playing at PSU.