Showing posts with label Luke Juha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luke Juha. Show all posts

Monday, October 7, 2013

Men's Jersey Countdown: #4 Luke Juha


Sophomore - Defenseman - 5'11" - 194 pounds - Mississauga, ON

In a sense, a healthy Luke Juha on the Nittany Lions in 2013-14 will be similar to the addition of an extra five-star recruit, as he missed most of the second half of his freshman season with an abdominal injury. And, much like a recruit, it's almost certain that he'll have the shoulder chip of a guy eager to prove himself, particularly since he also missed most of 2011-12 with the BCHL's Vernon Vipers due to injury. Juha, however, is even better than a recruit, since he's already shown flashes of his collegiate potential in the games played before he went out. The unflappable left-handed puck mover pumped home a second-period goal on November 10th versus Air Force that held up as the winner in arguably PSU's biggest NCAA victory to that point. Five of his six assists came in his last five contests: one against Robert Morris on December 15th, two in the Three Rivers Classic consolation game triumph over Ohio State and two more at Connecticut on January 4th. Juha is among Penn State's most adaptable blueliners - he partnered with six different defensemen more than once last year.

Career Statistics:
Season GP G A Pts. PIM PP SH GW GT
2012-13
19
1
6
7
4
0
0
1
0
NCAA Career
19
1
6
7
4
0
0
1
0

Monday, July 29, 2013

Three Stars: July 22-28


3. Southeast Schedules and What They Mean for 2013-14
(Twisted Thoughts)

While the ACHA Division 2 Ice Lions have yet to release a 2013-2014 schedule, several opponents - MACHA rivals Delaware, Virginia Tech and Liberty most recently - have. Here's what we now know of PSU's upcoming slate as a result:

October 26, 2013 - vs. Delaware
November 2, 2013 - at Delaware
December 8, 2013 - vs. Maryland-Baltimore County
January 10, 2014 - at Liberty
January 11, 2014 - at Virginia Tech
February 1, 2014 - at Maryland-Baltimore County
February 7-8, 2014 - at Navy Crab Pot (D1 Navy, D1 Towson, Maryland)
February 14-16, 2014 - at MACHA Playoffs
February 23-24, 2014 - at Southeast Regionals
March 21-25, 2014 - at ACHA National Tournament (Marlborough, MA)

The second-year Women's Ice Hockey Club, which is joining the new College Hockey East women's league with California (PA), West Chester and Delaware for 2013-2014, also has a few games out there, thanks to the schedule releases of both the Blue Hens and Michigan State.

October 19, 2013 - vs. Michigan State
October 20, 2013 - vs. Michigan State
November 16, 2013 - at Delaware
November 17, 2013 - at Delaware
December 7, 2013 - vs. Delaware
December 8, 2013 - vs. Delaware
February 21-22, 2014 - at CHE Playoffs (York, PA)
March 13-16, 2014 - at ACHA National Tournament (Newark, DE)

Notably, the December 8th Delaware game will be played at Galactic Ice in Altoona. Guess PIA isn't solving everyone's ice time issues after all.

2. The debate: players discuss CHL vs. NCAA
(The Daily Collegian)

Tackling something like a CHL vs. NCAA article is a tough task, because it's been done so often that it's difficult to find a fresh angle to bring to the table. But Matt Nestor has pulled it off by writing for a general Penn State audience that might not be familiar with The Choice while also bringing in quotes from guys like Luke Juha and Guy Gadowsky, both Canadians who played or are playing NCAA hockey.

Juha is a particularly insightful source as a guy who was once considered a potential late-round pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft. Electing for college over major junior probably hurt his stock in the short term, and he went undrafted. But Juha seems to believe that he'll ultimately be a better player because of college hockey, with a better shot of making it as a pro. And I believe that he's right.

1. Head Coach Morris to step down
(ohiobobcatshockey.com)

Andrew Largeman, Zach Braff's character in the movie Garden State, memorably said:
"You know that point in your life when you realize the house you grew up in isn't really your home anymore? All of a sudden even though you have some place where you put your shit, that idea of home is gone... You'll see one day when you move out it just sort of happens one day and it's gone. You feel like you can never get it back. It's like you feel homesick for a place that doesn't even exist. Maybe it's like this rite of passage, you know. You won't ever have this feeling again until you create a new idea of home for yourself, you know, for your kids, for the family you start."
That's how I'm starting to feel about ACHA Division 1. Maybe the process is a bit more gradual and less traumatic than it was for Largeman, but it's there nevertheless, because the simple fact is that after you remove yourself from a place, it still continues to evolve without you.

The ACHA will look a lot less like it did when we left without legendary Ohio coach Dan Morris, who is stepping down after 12 seasons, 344 wins and the 2004 national championship. Given that he also played for the Bobcats between 1993 and 1997 (winning three more national championships during those years) and then was an assistant coach under Craig McCarthy between graduation and taking over as the head guy, it's a no-brainer to call Morris one of the most important figures in the history of one of the ACHA's most important programs. Of course, he was also the Icers' archnemesis for all but the final one of those years on the wrong side of the greatest rivalry in ACHA history - including the 2004 title game win over PSU that ended Joe Battista's dynasty of four straight and five in six years.

No Dan Morris, Illinois' Chad Cassel departed a year ago, Minot State apparently wins the Murdoch Cup now... it doesn't feel like home anymore. And to be honest, neither does NCAA Division I and the Big Ten just yet, but it will. We have to evolve too, after all.

Best of the Rest

Eddie Quagliata and Matt Welch model Illinois' new jerseys...who says there's no "I" in "team?"

Just a year in, head coach Fabbrini hires another assistant
(The Daily Illini)

Let's stick with the ACHA for a minute, because it was quite a week for IllinoisWatch.

First, last Monday, the school's student paper published a write-up on new Illini assistant coach Blake Sorensen, who seems to believe that the program would consider going DI, and claims that belief was part of the reason he took the job: "Maybe I’m thinking out of the box, but I’m thinking the U of I would be the next school having the aspiration of going to the next level. So I said, ‘Why not?’ It was a very easy decision." That's either your garden-variety pipe dream or he knows something, take your pick, but I don't remember Billy Downey saying anything like that when he was hired as an Icers assistant in 2008.

That, by itself, is interesting but hardly A Thing. However, mostly-spam Twitter account @USCollegeHockey fanned the flames three days later: "May we have BREAKING NEWS soon? We were 1st to report Penn St.'s ascent to D1. Is another top ACHA team making the jump? Details soon..." They didn't specify that they were referring to Illinois, which is a pretty effective technique in the world of rumor mongering (PS. Someone will die of heart disease today. Because I can see the future.)

For the record, I don't know if @USCollegeHockey was first on Penn State in August and September of 2010. And I don't care. You know who I credit as being first? The Harrisburg Patriot-News' David Jones, who noted Terry Pegula's windfall from the Royal Dutch Shell sale in May 2010 and connected it to the idea of Penn State hockey a few days later. Accuracy and fresh insight over unchecked speed, every time.

Anyway, "soon," evidently, was Saturday evening, when @USCollegeHockey jumped back in with "Remember that BREAKING NEWS we mentioned on Thursday?" and attached a screengrab of a Facebook status (since deleted).


From there, the predictable played out. People overreacted, some commented on how it would be a great idea (it would be), Let's Play Hockey patted themselves on the back over the Jimmy John's rumor they advanced a couple years ago, and real journalists like Matt Slovin and Chris Peters got to work, ultimately taking about 90 minutes to confirm that the Facebook post had to do with the sale of the team's new jerseys.

There's an important lesson, which should have been learned from Penn State, that also needs to be applied here. PSU's process took five years from the initial Battista-Pegula dinner. Along the way, people talk, toes are dipped in the various pools and feasibility studies are conducted. And any one of those occurrences, which repeat themselves many, many times throughout those five years, has the potential to become an "OMG IT'S GOING TO HAPPEN!!!" tweet. Just as a rumor doesn't mean something is imminent, the short-term dismissal of a rumor doesn't mean that the information wasn't a legitimate hint, just applied incorrectly or prematurely. Illinois probably has explored the idea of NCAA hockey, and they probably will have an NCAA program someday. There's been an awful lot of smoke, and it's increased in volume recently. But I'm fairly sure that when it does happen, @USCollegeHockey won't be the first to tell us.

Portland, ME's newly-renovated Cumberland County Civic Center will host the 2015 Ice Breaker

@Chris_MJH
(Twitter)

Last week, Notre Dame was awarded the 2014 Ice Breaker (a season-opening four-team tournament presented by College Hockey Inc.) while Maine grabbed the 2015 version. And almost immediately, the rumor mill fired up.
Hearing Michigan, Michigan St., Penn St & BC are possible teams to take part in '15 IceBreaker.
Just as a reminder, since this seems like an appropriate spot: way back in January 2012, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported that the Nittany Lions had signed on for the 2014 Brice Alaska Goal Rush. The Goal Rush is another season-opening tournament, hosted by Alaska and always including their dumpster fire of a neighbor in Anchorage. This year's field - Denver and Western Michigan are the two "outside schools" - was announced on November 16, 2012, so we might hear confirmation on that one relatively soon.

150 Miles for a Cure...
(Bike MS)

Coming up on September 28th and 29th, women's assistant Casey McCullion will once again go on a bike ride to raise money to fight multiple sclerosis. Please consider supporting her and the cause if you're able. And yes, I'll remind you again.

Pro New York Sports Exclusive: Eamon McAdam
(Pro New York Sports)

Know what I like seeing in a player? This, from Eamon McAdam:
I want to help the team progress as fast as possible and by my second or third year I want to give the team here a chance to go for a National Championship. This may seem like a lofty goal but the age old expression of championships are won with goaltending is true in my eyes and if I put in enough work I am hopeful I can give the team a chance no matter who we’re playing.
Check Gadowsky's track record, especially with a Princeton program that had/has a lot less behind it than what's in place at Penn State. Kid ain't crazy.

New York Islanders 2013 draft review
(Hockey's Future)

Your second dose of Big Mac comes through a roundup of Garth Snow's 2013 draft picks. If you're like me and are now trying to follow the Isles a little bit, it's probably good to check things like this out once in a while.

Ohio State's dumping of Mark Osiecki has continued to prove costly

Magyar chooses Kitchener Rangers over Ohio State
(Western College Hockey Blog)

Ohio State's firing of coach Mark Osiecki back in April... yep, still an absolutely terrible decision. The latest evidence: Ohio native and Cleveland Barons product Nick Magyar, a Buckeye commit who played for Sioux City and the National Team Development Program in the USHL last season, has signed with the OHL's Kitchener Rangers and blowtorched his college eligibility. Magyar is just the latest in a growing line of Osiecki recruits to flee, including Nolan Valeau, Cliff Watson and Zach Stepan.

U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Class of 2013 Unveiled
(USA Hockey)

This year's U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame class lacks the direct Penn State connection of the 2012 group featuring Eddie Olczyk, but it's still a robust collection headlined (for our purposes) by Ron Mason. Mason coached at Lake Superior State (1967-1973), Bowling Green (1974-1979) and Michigan State (1980-2002), won the 1986 national title with the Spartans, and was the winningest coach in college history (924 victories) until he was passed by Jerry York last season. He was also among the hockey giants surveyed for quotes distributed to the press on September 17, 2010, for whatever that's worth:
“I think it’s wonderful that Penn State will have Division I hockey. I’ve long thought that if Penn State ever decided to elevate its program that it would be a school that would challenge for championships. This is a good move for the school and for college hockey.”
Jake Gardiner, a Maple Leafs defenseman and Max's brother, is among the U.S. Olympic hopefuls

Men's National Team Orientation Camp Roster Set
(USA Hockey)

Arguably the biggest story in the hockey world last week was the release of Olympic team camp rosters by most of the countries expected to contend in Sochi, Russia next year. Team USA's version includes a pair of Penn State siblings in Maple Leafs defenseman Jake Gardiner and Blackhawks forward Brandon Saad, and yes, we're going to keep living vicariously through those guys until there are Nittany Lions in the show.

The 48-man camp roster will eventually be cut to 25, so Saad and Gardiner certainly aren't home yet, although both are strong contenders for selection.

Glen Gulutzan happy to return 'home' with Canucks
(Vancouver Sun)

Glen Gulutzan, one of the more prominent members of the Guy Gadowsky coaching tree (Gadowsky coached Gulutzan with the WCHL's Fresno Falcons in 1996-1997 and 1998-1999), has joined John Tortorella's Vancouver Canucks staff. Gulutzan, last time we checked in on him, was being fired as head coach of the Dallas Stars after two seasons, so it's nice to see him land on his feet.


@BillRiga
@KeeferJ_
(Twitter)

The leading Twitterdrama last Tuesday: assistant coaches acting butthurt for really, really stupid reasons. First, there's the case of Quinnipiac's Bill Riga, subtweeting QU blog From the NIP to the Bank for having the audacity to predict the Bobcats' lineup for the coming season (forwards, defense/goalies).
Love people who have our line-up and freshmen predicted. I don't even know and I've seen them all play a lot. #smarterthani
Someone needs to look up the definitions of "prediction" and "know" and note the differences.

Jerry Keefe of Northeastern skipped snark and went straight to fury. His target? The Providence Journal's Mark Divver, whose horrific crime was tweeting that new Providence College commit Spenser Young, a defenseman at Phillips Exeter Academy, held an offer from Keefe's Huskies. Time to rumble.


Divver wisely bowed out at that point, but in Keefe's estimation, Twitter still wasn't safe - after all, there were people making innocuous "don't see that every day" comments about the Keefe-Divver exchange to straighten out.
@smclaughlin9 @MarkDivver don't like when people tweet false info to make a hockey program look bad. We all work to hard for that.
Yeah, you (may have) lost out on a highly-sought-after (heavy hitters Boston College, Yale and New Hampshire also whiffed on Young, according to Divver) recruit. Brutal. Your program looks absolutely horrible now. But no worries, you're well on the way back, because you don't spread rumors about the media.
@smclaughlin9 @MarkDivver I don't report false info on twitter about you guys and your jobs so don't do about hockey programs and our jobs
Also, don't tell Keefe he's in an argument...
@smclaughlin9 @MarkDivver it's not an argument it's a point I feel strongly about.
...or that he melted down.
@FearTheTriangle @TheBUHockeyBlog no meltdowns here!
I beg to differ. The best summation is brought to you by Boston University "blog/Twitter combo without the blog" BurntBoats.


Moving On
(From the NIP to the Bank)

Finally, best wishes in blogger retirement to Luke Devoe, who is stepping aside from his aforementioned work on Quinnipiac.

I don't feel a true kinship with too many bloggers out there (which isn't to say that I don't respect and enjoy their work or like them as human beings). The SB Nation guys have 800 different writers and 20 billion pageviews a month. Other blogs are run by professional journalists as a side project or as part of the coverage of their beat. TYT isn't any of those things, and I don't really identify much with their realities. Devoe was different. Much like him, I'm just a guy who loves hockey, loves his school, and enjoys the artificial level of closeness allowed by doing this. That's why I find his reasons for stopping heartbreaking.
I became blacklisted to a certain extent because, well, I was a little too opinionated during a rough stretch of play. I accepted this, altered my approach, and went on covering the team I love. Recently, a small but similar event occurred. While it would be easy to shrug it off and file it under the "can't make them all happy" category, I simply can't.

Back when things weren't exactly gravy and FTNTTB wasn't on the best of terms with the brass at the Q it was tough receiving sideways stares walking into a venue that I held, and still hold, so near and dear. It was even harder when those stares were coming from some people whose opinion mattered. The labor of love turned into a exhausting game of second guessing and self-censoring, even at times when I truly felt I was right. I just don't feel like doing it again. I concede.
Shame on you, Bill Riga and anyone else who may have contributed to his struggles.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Three Stars: January 7-13

Luke Juha's freshman season is over.

3. Locals help establish strong hockey foundation at PSU
(TribLive)

Much to my amazement, Pittsburgh media was still in on Penn State hockey two weeks after the Three Rivers Classic ended. Matt Skoff, Michael Longo and George Saad - PSU's Pittsburgh connection - get a nice feature this time around.

2. Hannah Hoenshell CHA Rookie of the Week highlights
(YouTube)

I love how the CHA puts together highlight videos for their weekly and monthly award winners. This one, featuring Hannah Hoenshell of course, is kind of old news (it came out just after the last Three Stars), but I'm a huge Hoenshell fan, so... do yourself a favor and watch her second goal about eight times.

1. @TDC_MHockey
(Twitter)

On Monday, Guy Gadowsky updated the media (unfortunately not including yours truly, as mid-week stuff is pretty well off the table for me) on what has become quite the rash of injuries, especially on the blue line. Getting Mark Yanis, who had been out with a fractured ankle since November, back over the weekend was nice, but...
  • D Luke Juha (abdominal injury), who last played January 5th against Connecticut will miss the remainder of the season.
  • There is no timetable on F Jonathan Milley, who missed time in November and has now been out since December 8th with what is being described as a lower body injury. It should be noted that both Milley and Juha missed the vast majority of their junior seasons last year with injury issues.
  • D Nate Jensen (upper body injury) is expected back before the end of the season. He, like Juha, last played on January 5th.
  • F Justin Kirchhevel (concussion) will be in the lineup Tuesday night after missing six weeks.
  • D Brian Dolan's injury was relatively minor - he's expected in Tuesday's lineup as well after missing just this past weekend.

Best of the Rest

Buckeye Ryan Dzingel is the official Hobey Baker voting recommendation of TYT.

Vote For Hobey 2013 Phase I
(hobeybakeraward.com)

There are about 28 billion players on the Hobey Baker Award fan voting ballot, which is used to help pare the preliminary candidates down to 10 finalists. None are Penn Staters (that would have been a separate post, obviously), but there are plenty of Big Tenners and Nittany Lions opponents.

The former category includes A.J. Treis and Jacob Trouba from Michigan, Matt Berry and Jake Hildebrand from Michigan State, Brady Hjelle and Ryan Dzingel from Ohio State, Mark Zengerle and Michael Mersch from Wisconsin, and Erik Haula, Nate Schmidt and Nick Bjudstad from Minnesota. In addition to the MSU, OSU and Wisconsin contingents, Andy Starczewski (Army), Alex Gerke and Garrett Bartus (Connecticut), Evan Zych (Holy Cross), Adam Brace, Eric Levine and Zach Hervato (Robert Morris), Kyle Bodie, Wayne Simpson and Greg Coburn (Union), and Brody Hoffman and Chris McCarthy (Vermont) have played or will play PSU this year.

Recommendation? With all due respect to Levine, Dzingel has been the best opposing player I've seen so far this year, and he's also a Big Tenner. Take that, ignore it, whatever, your choice.

Fate of UAH hockey program could be decided at next week's NCAA convention
(al.com)

The NCAA convention, which begins Wednesday in Grapevine, TX, may seal the fate of Alabama-Huntsville's program. WCHA representatives are expected to vote on UAH's admission to the conference while there, and a rejection might finally mean that the struggling independents have used up their ninth life. Obviously, here's hoping for the opposite outcome.

Club hockey lives Division-I dream
(Inside Vandy)

Vanderbilt's ACHA Division 3 team was crushed by those Chargers on January 5th, but that's not really the point, is it? Definite soft spot for stuff like this.

TWICH: College Hockey Westward Expansion?
(College Spun)

Just to keep the ACHA thing going, here's a pretty standard-issue "more schools should have NCAA hockey" article, but with the best factual error ever.
The way college hockey is set up is different from any other NCAA sport. There are four different levels of college hockey. There is Division-1 NCAA and than there are three separate levels of something called ACHA. The ACHA is a governing body of college hockey that oversees all other levels, mainly including club. Most schools who do not want or cannot afford a D-1 NCAA team choose this route.
Ouch, sorry DIII hockey. Also, I'd like to hear more about these non-club ACHA teams the Icers apparently played all those years.


Wisconsin Unveils Hockey City Classic Throwback Jerseys
(Bucky's 5th Quarter)

The Badgers unveiled their jerseys for the Hockey City Classic, a February 17th doubleheader at Chicago's Soldier Field that will see Wisconsin play Minnesota and Miami take on Notre Dame. I approve.

In hindsight, I'm kind of mad that Penn State didn't use the excuse of last season's outdoor game to come up with some kind of fauxback one-off jersey. Unreasonable? Not really - the Icers played a "third jersey game" from 2007-2008 through 2010-2011 before discontinuing it last season.

Why do we send millions to USA Hockey?
(Let's Play Hockey)

Whether you agree or not, this column does raise interesting arguments about USA Hockey's (over)regulation of the game... and the writer wins like 30,000 rhetoric points for using the words of probably the organization's biggest icon in his introduction.

Bruce Marshall Resigns As Men’s Hockey Coach
(UConn Today)

Finally, best wishes to Bruce Marshall, who resigned as UConn's coach two months after taking a medical leave of absence (and two days after his team finished sweeping Penn State) for an undisclosed condition. From Marshall's statement:
"During my time away from the program, I determined that this decision was in the best interest for myself, my family and the UConn men’s ice hockey team. I am extremely proud of the accomplishments of the program during my time as a Husky and I wish nothing but success for the team as it continues to make the exciting transition to Hockey East for the 2014-15 season."
I've never met Marshall, but from the accounts of those who have, he sounds like a class human being and a great coach who was the driving force behind the Huskies' just-underway attempt to step up in status.

Assistant David Berard, who took over once Marshall went on leave - including against PSU - will finish out the season as head coach, and a national search for a permanent replacement will follow.

Friday, January 11, 2013

State and the Unions

What
NCAA Men: vs. U.S. National Team Development Program Under-18
NCAA Women: at Union

Where
NCAA Men: Greenberg Ice Pavilion, University Park, PA
NCAA Women: Messa Rink, Schenectady, NY

When
NCAA Men: Friday, January 11 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, January 12 at 7:30 p.m.
NCAA Women: Friday, January 11 at 7:00 p.m. and Saturday, January 12 at 4:00 p.m

Coverage
NCAA Men: TYT live blogs (free), Friday PSU video ($), Friday PSU audio ($), Friday PSU live stats (free), Saturday PSU video ($), Saturday PSU audio ($), Saturday PSU live stats (free)
NCAA Women: Union video ($), Union live stats (free)

J.T. Compher will return to Penn State next season, but as a Michigan Wolverine.

The men, who are now 9-12-0 in all games, 8-11-0 against NCAA competition and 6-10-0 against NCAA Division I will try to reverse their fortunes with a pair of exhibitions against the U.S. National Team Development Program Under-18 team. Since November 10th, PSU is just 3-9-0 in all games and beyond the win over Ohio State in Pittsburgh - which was outstanding, of course - has only beaten the ACHA's Arizona State and NCAA DIII Fredonia.

For those who don't know the nature of this week's opponent, the National Team Development Program is a USA Hockey initiative based in Ann Arbor, MI. Since 1996, it has attempted to identify the best American players and get them into the same organization in an attempt to enhance their development for, according to their literature "participation on U.S. National Teams and success in their future hockey careers." The NTDP, which includes both an Under-17 and an Under-18 team, plays games against college teams (generally, only the U18s play those games), against the USHL, as the NTDP is a member of the league, and in international tournaments. NTDP players have gone on to collegiate and NHL success, as famous Big Ten alumni like Ryan Kesler, Jordan Leopold, Ryan Suter and Phil Kessel are counted among their products. No fewer than 15 players from Team USA's recent gold medal team at the World Junior Championships did time with the NTDP.

Obviously, since the U18s are the team playing Penn State, I'll speak exclusively about them from this point, using "NTDP" or "Team USA" as shorthand.

There's sort of a misconception many have of these games, at least some of the people with whom I've spoken, who view these as pointless walkovers, which really couldn't be further from the truth. In fact, Penn State will be the less talented team on the ice this weekend. That's not a slam on the Nittany Lions. The NTDPers, as mentioned, are among the best American players out there in their age group and as such, they out-talent just about every college team they play, with edges in experience and physical maturity going to the collegians (a senior who aged out of junior hockey is generally six years older than an U18 player).

The games Team USA has played against NCAA opponents bear that out, with wins over Michigan, Merrimack and Alabama-Huntsville. They also boast impressive draws with Minnesota, Notre Dame and New Hampshire, presently three of the top four teams in the country. Most of the NTDP's action comes against USHL competition, and (combined with the U17 team in this case), they're 6-18-3 in those games.

As one might surmise, NTDP players are some of the most sought-after recruits in the country. Nineteen players opposing PSU this weekend are committed to colleges, including future Big Ten opponents J.T. Compher, Evan Allen and Tyler Motte (Michigan), as well as Hudson Fasching (Minnesota). While Penn State has yet to pull an NTDP recruit, getting players of their caliber on campus certainly can't hurt in that process. Motte, Compher, Allen and Fasching, along with leading scorer Tyler Kelleher (committed to New Hampshire) represent a few of a lethal group of forwards that will really test a thin PSU blueline that hopes to receive Mark Yanis back this weekend but has now lost Luke Juha to an undisclosed injury.

Shenae Lundberg is an elite stopper - and owes some of that to PSU's Casey McCullion.

For the women (7-12-1, 1-8-1 CHA), this weekend represents a chance to continue the momentum generated from last weekend's shellacking of an overmatched and shorthanded NCAA Division III Chatham team. The Nittany Lions will seek to chip off a second and a third major-conference win at Union (5-11-3, 0-7-3 ECAC).

Since joining the Division I ranks to join their male counterparts in 2003-2004, the Dutchwomen haven't been particularly successful, never posting more than five wins or better than a 0.176 win percentage in any season. In that sense, this year has been a breakout of sorts with that zenith for victories already matched and Connecticut, Maine, RPI and Syracuse, PSU's College Hockey America rival, among Union's victims.

The team's undisputed star is goaltender Shenae Lundberg. The sophomore boasts a 3.09 goals against average and a 0.902 save percentage - outstanding numbers on a losing team. She has a boatload of USA Hockey recognition to prove her talents, including her status as a member of the 2011 world champion U.S. U18 team. Lundberg is also a four-time USA Hockey Player Development Camp selection and a two-time selection to the Warren Strelow National Team Goaltending Camp. She's played in four of Union's five wins, and has been called on to make at least 30 saves each time without ever allowing more than three goals.

In short, Lundberg is good.

Oh, by the way, the New Hampshire native is an alumna of Deerfield Academy, where she played for - you guessed it - PSU assistant Casey McCullion, who was an assistant there in 2007-2008.

With Nicole Paniccia expected back between the pipes after playing only 20 minutes in the sweep of Chatham, combined with Lundberg and Union's anemic offense that scores just 1.42 times per game, it probably isn't out of line to expect a pair of low-scoring games. When the Dutchwomen do receive offense, it tends to come from a large number of sources. Sophomore Christine Valente leads the team with five goals, but the team's 27 this season have come from 12 different players.

It would serve the Nittany Lions well to put everything out there in the pursuit of two wins - next weekend is the last one off for the team this season before jumping back into the fray with a trip to Syracuse on January 25th and 26th.

Friday, January 4, 2013

M: Penn State 3 at Connecticut 4



In a back-and-forth game that saw ties 1-1, 2-2 and 3-3, Connecticut's Patrick Kirtland got the last word in a 4-3 victory over Penn State despite a 42-21 shot advantage for PSU. The Nittany Lions are now 9-11-0 in all games, 8-10-0 in NCAA games and 6-9-0 against NCAA Division I, with a shot at redemption against the Huskies (6-8-2, 4-6-1 Atlantic Hockey) coming Saturday night at 7:05 p.m.

True to the victor-spoils rules for games I did not witness, here's the UConn recap.


Behind a career-high 39 saves from Matt Grogan and a game-winning goal by freshman Patrick Kirtland, the UConn men's hockey team defeated Penn State in Storrs, 4-3. The Huskies improved to 6-8-2. The two teams face off again on Saturday at Freitas Ice Forum in Storrs at 7:05 p.m.

Tonight's game featured two of the top rising programs in NCAA hockey. 2012-13 is Penn States inaugural season as a Division I program and the Nittany Lions will join the newly formed BIG Ten Conference in 2013-14. The Huskies will be a fully funded program and join Hockey East, the nation's premier hockey conference, in 2014-15.

A back-and-forth hockey game saw UConn with leads of 1-0 and 3-2 before pulling out the thrilling 4-3 victory in front of the home fans. The Huskies were outshot 42-21 but kept many of the attempts from distance. The UConn skaters blocked 24 shots on the night.

"That's the team we need to be. We have to be willing to sacrifice to get a win," said Assistant Coach David Berard. "We had some good goals but struggled to get going offensively. The guys have to be willing to lay out and sacrifice sometimes to get a win in a game like this and that's exactly what they did. The coaches were really proud of the effort they gave in that regard."

Senior goaltender Matt Grogan earned his third consecutive start and made a career-high 39 saves, including 15 in the third period.

"They have some big guys in front of the net so it was tough to fight through screens but we did a good job in front and I was able to make some saves," said Grogan.

Kirtland scored the game-winning goal with a turn-around wrist shot at the near post just under the cross bar.

"Originally I was looking for the pass but I just turned around and shot it and it went in," said Kirtland. "I was looking for Smitty (Brad Smith) at first. I've been getting harped on this year to shoot the puck more and I just shot it and it went in. I love these types of up and down games. That's my style, that's how I've always played."

"We expect him to be power forward, drive the net, possess the puck, finish checks and just be a physical presence and he did that tonight," said Berard. "He's done it in stretches the first half but he's been a bit inconsistent. Tonight he scored his goal because he played that way. If he continues to do those little things, he'll be a really important player for us."

UConn opened the scoring just 28 seconds into the game with Jordan Sims wristing a shot into the top-left corner from the slot off a feed from Sean Ambrosie behind the net. Brant Harris started the play along the left wall. The goal was Sims' fourth of the year.

The Nittany Lions evened the score at 5:55 with David Glen tipping a shot in the slot past Grogan on the power play. Luke Juha fired the puck from the right point after a face-off win by Glen. The goal was Glen's ninth of the year.

Penn State took the lead for the first and last time at 2:39 when Taylor Holstrom, a transfer from AHA foe Mercyhurst, had a shot from the left side ricochet off a UConn defenseman and in.

The Huskies regained a 3-2 lead with two goals in a 1:07 span. Brant Harris sent a shot from the left wall towards net that bounced off the skate of a PSU defenseman and past netminder Matthew Skoff.

At 9:29, freshman Shawn Pauly outraced his defender down ice to bury a rebound in front off a shot from Evan Carriere. The goal was Pauly's first as a UConn Husky.

Penn State's Connor Varley evened at 13:46 through traffic with a shot from the right side. After two periods, the score was tied, 3-3, with Penn State ahead on shots 27-17.

Kirtland's game-winning goal was his second tally of the season. Kirtland collected a loose puck on the inside of the right face-off circle at 6:27 and snapped a shot under the cross bar to give UConn the victory.

Sunday, December 16, 2012

M: Penn State 2 vs. Robert Morris 3



I realize that I've done an atrocious job on this blog over the last two weeks, and I'm truly sorry about that. The good news is that my grad school finals are now all complete, as is my only family Christmas party that will conflict with hockey. So hopefully, this will be my last mailed-in (or skipped altogether) post, as the Nittany Lions fell to 7-8-0 according to the completely substance-free official tabulation, but 8-9-0 in all games and 5-7-0 against NCAA Division I competition.

Victor, meet spoils. Here's the Robert Morris release. Well, mostly. I inserted the PSU goal descriptions from GoPSUSports.com.


University Park, Pa. - The Robert Morris University men's ice hockey team took to the ice for their only contest of the weekend as the Colonials travelled to Penn State for the first-ever meeting between the two teams. In a hard-hitting match that pitted the two newest NCAA Division I programs, RMU would prevail by a score of 3-2.

At 12:07 of the first period, the Colonials would net the first goal of the game. After cycling the puck down low in the offensive zone, sophomore Jeff Jones (Revelstoke, British Columbia / Merritt Centennials) would gather the loose puck behind the net and send a pass to the slot. Waiting in the slot was freshman defenseman Chase Golightly (Temecula, Calif. / Prince George Spruce Kings) would slap home his second goal of the season. Also assisting on the play would be freshman Zac Lynch (Pittsburgh, Pa. / Bay State Breakers) who picked up his third assist of the season.

In the second period, the Nittany Lions scored twice in a 1:52 span as they took a 2-1 lead. Olczyk tied the game at 1-1 when he tipped defenseman Luke Juha's (Mississauga, Ont.) point shot at 1:33 of the stanza. Senior defenseman Brian Dolan (Havertown, Pa.) tallied his first point as a Nittany Lion on the play.

With 16:35 left in the frame, Loik scored on the rebound for his fourth goal of the season. Freshman forward David Glen (Fort Saskatchewan, Alta.) took a low shot from the left circle that was stopped, but Loik found the loose puck and slipped it through the five-hole.

After killing off a Penn State power play, Robert Morris would go on the offensive and tie the game, 2-2. A pass coming from behind the net by junior Colin South (Sewickley, Pa. / Bay State Breakers) would find the stick of senior captain Brendan Jamison (Pittsburgh, Pa. / Jersey Hitmen) as he would walk in to a wrist shot from the top of the circle. While the initial shot would be saved, Jones would corral the rebound and flick the loose puck past the goaltender for his second goal of the season.

With 8:11 remaining in the third period, Robert Morris would regain the lead as assistant captain Tyler Hinds (Orleans, Ontario / Nepean Raiders) would fire home his first goal of the season. After battling along the boards in the defensive zone, Hinds would pick up the puck after it was chipped out of the zone by Matt Cope (Lakewood, Colo. / Wenatchee Wild) and carried it in to the offensive zone for the game-winning goal. The Colonials would withstand a late Penn State surge as the team held on for the 3-2 victory.

Senior Eric Levine (Wheeling, Ill. / Pembroke Lumber Kings) picked up the win while making 38 saves. Over the past six games in which Levine has started, the goaltender holds a record of 4-0-2 and has made at least 30 saves in five of those six contests. With two points in the game, Jones recorded his fourth multi-point game of his career and second of the season. Hinds’game-winning goal was the first goal for the defenseman since the Atlantic Hockey Quarterfinals against Niagara on March 10, 2012.

The Colonials will have the next week off before returning to Pittsburgh, Pa. to take part in the first-ever Three Rivers Classic. The two-day event will see RMU take on Penn State for the second-consecutive game at 4:30 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 28. Following that will be a match-up of Ohio State and #5 Miami. On Saturday, Dec. 29, the consolation game will be played at 4:30 p.m. and the first-ever champion of the Three Rivers Classic will be crowned that night which a championship game faceoff scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

Tickets for either day are available at ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster outlets, the Dick’s Sporting Goods Box Office at CONSOL Energy Center and charge by phone at 800-745-3000.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

PSU Lands Former Engineer Koudys

According to both Chris Heisenberg and Ken Schott, former RPI defenseman Patrick Koudys has committed to Penn State.

Patrick Koudys

Defenseman
Muskegon Lumberjacks (USHL)
6'3", 198 pounds
Smithville, ON
DOB 11/15/1992

EliteProspects.com


Season   Team                   Lge    GP    G    A  Pts  PIM
-------------------------------------------------------------

2009-10  Burlington Cougars     CCHL   50    5   28   33   42  
2010-11  Rensselaer             ECAC   31    1    2    3   14
2011-12  Rensselaer             ECAC   27    1    1    2   22
2012-13  Muskegon Lumberjacks   USHL   20    0    3    3   34

The headlining news with Koudys (pronounced COW-dice, by the way) is that he's an NHL draft pick, the second such player associated with Penn State, after Max Gardiner, of course. The Washington Capitals selected Koudys with their fifth round pick (147th overall) in 2011. Let's work a photo of him wearing a Caps jersey in, just because we're not used to this NHL thing yet.


Koudys left Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute after last season and joined the USHL for his sit-out year, where he presently plays with 2015 commit Conor Garland (and Matt Mendelson, the brother of women's team member Cara) on the Muskegon Lumberjacks. The Jacks are off to a great start at 12-7-1, with Koudys second on the team in plus-minus at +5.

Here's what RPI blog (and FoTYT) Without a Peer had to say upon his leaving their program in the spring.


Koudys came to RPI with a lot of upside potential, but did have a rough sophomore year defensively after a solid freshman campaign.

It doesn't do us much good to speculate about underlying reasons for the departure. [RPI coach] Seth Appert told the Troy Record that it was a decision that Koudys himself made in part because of a lack of playing time. Why Koudys was a healthy scratch down the stretch is unknown and will likely remain that way. He was not injured this season, which means he was a healthy scratch on 12 different occasions this year on a team with only seven defensemen.

It's not outside the realm of possibility that the Washington Capitals weren't satisfied with his development in Troy (or just his playing time) and wanted him elsewhere, but Koudys plans to return to juniors rather than sign with the Oshawa Generals, the OHL team that has his rights. That means he's looking to use his last two years of NCAA eligibility in 2013-14 and 2014-15, and in most cases an NHL team leaning on a player to leave school would result in a bee-line for major junior.

Where he ends up from here is a bit of a mystery, but given that he majored in civil engineering at RPI, that might narrow it down a bit if he maintains his field of study. It makes Clarkson and Yale likely potential landing points, and would put Union out of the running, though he does have a connection there in Josh Jooris, who he played Junior A hockey with in Ontario.

At any rate, it's tough to lose a guy with as much potential as Koudys, but hopefully he lands on his feet. He's a good kid and his father, Jim, is a great person. Unless we see him across the ice at any point down the road, best of luck to him in the future.


Before his apparent falling out of favor with the RPI coaching staff, Koudys - who describes himself as a big, physical defenseman who makes smart decisions with the puck - actually enjoyed a great deal of success as a freshman, in 2010-2011. That year, and with the Ontario blueliner regularly in the lineup, the Engineers went 20-13-5 and advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the ninth time since Ned Harkness' revival of the program in 1949 (I suppose it's worth a quick mention that Rensselaer split a pair with Guy Gadowsky's Princeton team that year, with Koudys registering a shot and a -2 rating over both games). Washington was pleased enough to nab him with their second pick (the Caps traded their picks in each of the first three rounds) following that season.

Photo: Sara Melikian/RPI Athletics

So why use his last two years of eligibility at Penn State?
“Penn State was the right choice for me because it was more than I expected when visiting the campus with the new state of the art facilities being built, and the coaching staff is dedicated to helping me develop my skills for the pro level,” said Koudys. “Penn State has everything to offer both on and off the ice for me because it is close to home and the engineering program they offer is second to none.”
The reference to PSU's engineering program is hardly fluff - Koudys was a dean's list student as a civil enginnering major at an institution recently rated behind only CalTech, MIT and Stanford among the world's engineering schools. Their athletic teams are even named the "Engineers," if you didn't know (or catch it above). So yeah, he's probably not dumb.

Prior to his time in Troy, NY, he skated for the CCHL's Burlington Cougars in 2009-2010, where he and PSU freshman Luke Juha were the two highest scoring defensemen on the team. Interestingly, from there, Koudys went to RPI and - after another year with the Cougars - Juha committed to rival Clarkson. Now in a bizarre way, the puck mover and the brick wall will bring things full circle as Nittany Lions. Burlington was 39-8-3 that year to take the West Division title, but was upset in the league semifinals by second-place Newmarket. Prior to his season in Junior A, Koudys played Junior B for the Welland Jr. Canadians in 2008-2009 and for the Hamilton Jr. Bulldogs organization from 2002 through 2008.

Koudys is the product of a true hockey family, as his father Jim was a former 12th-round pick of the New York Islanders in 1982, although he never made it to the NHL. Jim's brother Randy was a four-year player at RPI from 1980 through 1984. Randy's two sons also are playing or played college hockey, as one, Dan, is a senior forward at Bentley, while Joey is playing professionally in Germany following four years with Alabama-Huntsville.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

M: Penn State 1 at Union 4



On the surface, Penn State (6-5-0, 5-4-0 NCAA DI) was swept by No. 8/8 Union (8-2-1, 3-1-0 ECAC). It was the first time a PSU hockey team failed to win during a series since January 7-8, 2011 at Ohio and the one goal scored in two games was the lowest output since a weekend at Rhode Island two months prior to that trip to Bird Arena.

Underneath the surface? I sincerely pity any Penn State hockey fan who didn't drop the $7.95 each night to watch it happen.

It wouldn't have been entirely surprising if the Dutchmen, after what their side may have considered an embarrassingly close 2-0 win over a start-up program Saturday night, had charged back to blast PSU out of Messa Rink Sunday afternoon. That was not the case. In fact, Sunday's effort was arguably an even better one from the Nittany Lions, despite the difference in the final margin.

Once again, PSU's undisputed star was Matt Skoff, who cemented his grip on the top goaltending spot and pushed some of his evident early-season jitters even further into the past. For the second straight day, Skoff set a career high in saves - 42, following 40 Saturday night - and for the second straight day, he gave the Nittany Lions a chance to beat a great hockey team. Some people consider a team lucky when receiving great goaltending to balance out tilted ice. Not me. I just see it as great goaltending from a great goaltender. Hey, that's part of the game too.

Kenny Brooks, shown here against Army, turned in his typical two-way effort - including seven shots.

Players like David Glen and Kenny Brooks prefer to make their own luck as well. After Union sophomore Daniel Ciampini poked home a rebound of a Greg Coburn point blast to make the score 1-0 for the Dutchmen after 20 minutes, two of PSU's best forwards so far this season put on their hard hats and got to work. Just 50 seconds into the middle period...
From behind the cage, [Max] Gardiner sent the puck to the right corner where Glen slid it across the ice to the right half wall. Brooks chased the puck down and took a shot from the circle that [Union goaltender Troy] Grosenick stopped, but Glen was positioned right on the doorstep to knock it past the netminder.
Two minutes later, Union coach Rick Bennett used his timeout. The strategy worked, as his team largely carried the play for most of the rest of the frame, forcing Skoff's best work of the late afternoon. In all, the freshman was a perfect 17-for-17 in the second period. In addition to shooting the puck with great frequency, the Dutchmen also started to draw penalties. Thanks to two minor penalties to Bryce Johnson and one to Michael Longo, the Nittany Lions spent about half of the last 12:19 of the period playing 4-on-5.

The next penalty, an early third period cross-checking call to Brian Dolan, would prove too much to kill. Quality end-board work from Ciampini and Wayne Simpson resulted in a pass up top to Shayne Gostisbehere. The third-round draft pick of the Philadelphia Flyers then dropped a center-point bomb through traffic and past Skoff. Five minutes later, Mark Bennett won an offensive faceoff to Skoff's left and got to the opposite circle in time to deflect Ryan Forgaard's wrister in for a 3-1 Union lead. The goal was reviewed for a possible high stick on Bennett's part, but upheld.

Just as in Saturday's game, PSU did not fade away in the face of a third period deficit. Following the Bennett goal, the Nittany Lions registered seven of the game's next ten shots. Skoff was pulled for an extra skater with 2:56 left, but Dan Carr took advantage of the empty net for the final goal of the match.

Union goaltender Troy Grosenick, a Hobey Baker Award finalist last year, stopped 37 of the Nittany Lions' 38 shots. Gostisbehere's game-winning goal was the only power play marker of the game from four attempts by each team.

It bears repeating, one last time: against the No. 8 team in the country, which won the ECAC regular season and playoff championships and advanced to the Frozen Four last season, Penn State played two games that were very much in doubt in the third period. As a first-year NCAA Division I program.

And against my nature, I'm thrilled despite losing. Simply put, it's because the day when Penn State fans are justifiably upset about losing to a Union seems closer than ever.


Saturday, November 10, 2012

M: Penn State 5 vs. Air Force 1



Matt Skoff made 31 saves in his best college outing to date and Max Gardiner notched three assists to help Penn State (6-3-0, 5-2-0 NCAA DI) to a 5-1 stunner over Air Force (3-4-3, 2-1-1 Atlantic Hockey).

Then again, maybe it's not so stunning coming from a team that continues to exceed expectations on a weekly basis. After all, none of Penn State's six wins can accurately be called "fluky."

The Nittany Lions, especially for a first-year NCAA program, have tremendous balance - PSU received goals from five different players for the third time this season on Saturday night, and after the game Guy Gadowsky praised the play of all six of his defensemen. Penn State also has a big-game penalty kill - against Air Force, just as in the October 20th RIT game (which has probably now been unseated as the team's signature win), the opponent was blanked on the advantage. In short, PSU is competing and frequently winning games just like <gasp> a good team. And then there's the goaltending, which is pretty important in a sport that Falcons coach Frank Serratore says could be called "goalie" instead of "hockey" a lot of the time. Skoff demonstrated a subtle brilliance against the Falcons that comes from superbly reading plays and seeing the puck.

Goals, of course, matter too, and Casey Bailey scored the game's first late in the opening period when the Alaskan sniper squeezed a shot through Jason Torf from the left wing circle. Gardiner, who laid it over for Bailey, collected his first assist on the play. The Minnesota transfer's second came when Juha blasted home his first career goal through traffic for a 2-0 PSU lead after scooping up Bailey's blocked shot.

The single most important shift of the game may have been cashed in by David Glen, Curtis Loik, Kenny Brooks, Connor Varley and Brian Dolan halfway through the third period. The Nittany Lions carried what felt - based largely on Skoff's play - like a comfortable 2-0 lead entering the frame, but Casey Kleisinger cut the lead in half just 2:41 in. For several minutes following the goal, it's probably fair to say that the Falcons had PSU on the ropes a little bit. On stepped the Glen line and suddenly, the action transported entirely to the corners behind Torf's net. Momentum flipped. That group did more than dictate the flow of the game though, as their stint on the ice ended when Loik found Varley up high. Glen then cruised to the slot just in time to deflect Varley's wrister past Torf. 3-1 Penn State.

Air Force wasn't done, of course, and continued to press through one last power play from a Justin Kirchhevel penalty with 4:49 left, and then as they pulled Torf just before Kirchhevel exited the box. Mike McDonagh and Varley responded by bombing the empty net from range to seal the win.


Friday, October 12, 2012

M: Penn State 2 vs. American International 3 (OT)



Jon Puskar's deflection goal with just 21 seconds remaining in overtime wrote a heartbreaking ending to what on balance was a joyous occasion, despite Penn State's 3-2 overtime loss to AIC in the first NCAA Division I game in program history in front of a sellout crowd of 1,300 at the Ice Pavilion.

The star of the game, without question, was senior Yellow Jacket goaltender Ben Meisner. Meisner made an unreal 61 saves on 63 shots (and you thought PSU shot totals like that were a thing of the past) to take first-star honors. The 61 saves were an AIC and Atlantic Hockey record. In all, the Nittany Lions made 116 attempts toward the AIC goal. George Saad (twice), Jonathan Milley and Taylor Holstrom were a few of the more spectacular Meisner stops.

Despite PSU's dominance, it still somehow felt like the team was chasing the game throughout. With Mark Yanis in the box for roughing, Nathan Sliwinski gave AIC the lead just 2:43 into the game on a rebound goal. That lead held up through numerous close calls and into the second period. Just after one of those close calls, involving Casey Bailey cutting across the slot, the big freshman repositioned himself just next to Meisner, which paid off with a slice of history in the form of a rebound goal, the Nittany Lions' first as an NCAA Division I program. Joe Lordo and Nate Jensen were given the assists at 4:37 of the second period.


Chris Markiewicz's deflection goal cut that celebration off six minutes later to restore the AIC advantage. Frustratingly, it looked like that might somehow hold up as the game winner until 6:05 left, when Taylor Holstrom snapped off a filthy wrister to blow the roof off of both the net and a packed Ice Pavilion and get the teams back on level terms. A Penn State winner from that point would have transformed Friday night from "historic game in front of an electric crowd" to "story for the grandkids," but Puskar's OT winner off of Jake Williams' point shot rendered the game one to forget, yet one to remember at the same time.

The Nittany Lions (0-1-0) and Yellow Jackets (1-0-0, 0-0-0 Atlantic Hockey) will battle Saturday night at 7:00 p.m. at Mohegan Sun Arena in Wilkes-Barre to close the weekend series.

Here's the live blog from the historic first NCAA DI men's game:


Monday, October 8, 2012

Three Stars: October 1-7



3. Joe Battista: Are you Ready for Some Hockey? Some NCAA Varsity Hockey?
(statecollege.com)

Great article, brutal headline.

I've said it before, I'll say it again - even if you don't care at all about Penn State hockey, you're not a human being if you're not ridiculously happy for Joe Battista, the man who is finally seeing his dream of a quarter century materialize.

2. Brandwene returns to alma mater for inaugural season
(The Daily Collegian)

The Josh Brandwene story has always been a little fascinating to me. I remember him coming into the Ice Pavilion as an opposing coach, including his tenure at Delaware, when visits tended to coincide with alumni weekend as both he and Blue Hens assistant John O'Connor are former Icers. Obviously, I knew he was a great defenseman at PSU in the day, although I'm thankfully not old enough to go back that far. And, I'll be honest, once he left the ACHA for the New England prep circuit, I didn't really expect to cross paths with him again. His hiring blindsided me, even though it actually made, and continues to make, perfect sense.

On a related note, it looks like the Collegian has every intention of covering women's hockey for seriously this season, which is great to see.

1. Penn State Hockey Practice
(YouTube)

I more or less ignored the goings-on Friday night - I viewed it more as PR than as important news I needed to drop everything and post about to be perfectly honest - but just to be thorough, the men's team did in fact open official practice with a midnight event. A few hundred people, or roughly 75 percent of the rink's capacity, were there according to PSU media rock star Ben Jones, who is responsible for the above video. Solid crowd, although I'll admit that I cringed when College Hockey News retweeted a photo of a mostly-but-not-completely full Ice Pavilion with the PSU hockey account's description calling it an "awesome turnout." Some Minnesota, Wisconsin or Michigan fan undoubtedly saw that and thinks we're all idiots.

Penn State: Highly-engaged student body for most athletic events, tons of school pride...but not anywhere close to where it needs to be as a hockey school yet. That's my position until it's proven untenable. The good news is that I think it will be at some point over the next couple years.

Best of the Rest


Homecoming parade celebrates all things Penn State
(Centre Daily Times)

Also on Friday evening, the PSU homecoming parade (featuring Terry and Kim Pegula as Grand Marshals) included a float jammed with the men's hockey team decked out in the new home jerseys and yes, Guy Gadowsky on a Zamboni.

Students gobbling up tickets for inaugural season
(Centre Daily Times)

This is sort of a filler article, but I threw it in because it actually gives hard numbers on ticket sales, which passes the interesting-ness test for me.
Student ticket sales indicate he’s right, with 799 five-game packages and 273 full season tickets sold as of last week. (Only season ticket holders from last year were allowed to get them in 2012-13.

Penn State will play this season at the Greenberg Ice Pavilion, which holds 1,350 people. The Nittany Lions have 16 home games and open against American University Oct. 12.

Two of the three student ticket packages, which cost $20, are sold out, and the third had few remaining last week. The five-ticket packages were designed to triple the number of people who get to see games,” said Joe Battista, associate athletic director for ice arena and hockey development.

Battista said the rink will sell 300 standing-room-only tickets for each game. He said there aren’t any plans to change the rink to fit in more people, but he expects it to be loud and provide the team with a definitive home-ice advantage.
2012-13 NCAA Independents Season Preview
(Hockey's Future)

With the season in full swing starting this week, the "preview period" has expired, but not before this one (as well as the several that follow) got their stuff in just under the wire. Because I don't think he gets enough attention, here's a quote on freshman defenseman Luke Juha from Gadowsky contained in this one:
“Luke has a great hockey IQ, a great offensive mind and he sees the ice really well,” Gadowsky said of Juha. “He’s player that’s really fun to watch. And people that really appreciate hockey will love watching him. I think Luke will be a great college defenseman. He likes to control the play from the back end and he just has the desire and the skill that will help us. So we’ll be relying on Luke a lot from the start.”
Quick and Dirty Ice Hockey Primer
(Black Shoe Diaries)

Friend of TYT IcersGuy checks in on BSD with a nice summary of how things stand in our shared domain.

Women’s CHA preview: New teams, same champ
(USCHO)

The women's team hasn't gotten much love from this season's CHA previews, as everyone I've seen make CHA picks went with an identical sequence (with one single exception breaking ranks and going Robert Morris first over Mercyhurst), one that has the Nittany Lions pegged for last place. I'm not promising anything, but I don't think it will be quite that easy - I happen to believe PSU, Lindenwood and RIT will be pretty close to each other this year.

Top Preseason Storylines (Part I, Part II)
(College Hockey, Inc.)

Penn State and the commonwealth both receive quality mentions from CHI.


@PSUWIHC
(Twitter)

Just ahead of the first games in club history, the new women's ACHA team announced its letter-bearers. I can't think of a more deserving choice for captain than Carly Szyszko, who once played goal for the Lady Icers while both of the team's regular netminders (Heather Rossi and Katie Vaughan) were in Turkey for the 2011 World University Games.

Wait, this guy's a douche? Never
would have guessed.
Things to Watch in 2012-13
(College Hockey News)

This article, while heavy on Penn State content intended to be positive, really bothers me for a couple reasons.
The controversy surrounding its football program and a massive cover-up carried out by a region's most beloved figure still pervade the entire university.
Oh, okay. "Massive cover-up carried out by a region's most beloved figure?" Care to substantiate that statement? Oh right, you can't (and no, Louis Freeh's executive summary doesn't count, sorry).

Forgetting about that (I don't really care to get into it further right now, hockey is my escape from that mess), the whole "PSU hockey opening up under a black cloud" storyline, while it makes for good copy, is complete trash, a construction of lazy journalism. Speaking as someone who communicates with program personnel on a regular basis, I can promise you that The Scandal simply doesn't register in hockey on any substantial level. Other than a few dicey moments last November and December - some public knowledge, some not - I can't point to a single instance where something happened differently than it would have if Jerry Sandusky had never been born (I wish).

CHN did speak with Gadowsky back in July, and therefore had a chance to make that assessment for themselves, but instead were more concerned with generating a story by badgering him into admitting that he cares about his kids. Still think they know more than I do? You're allowed...then again...
Independent and ineligible for postseason play...
Well-researched as always, CHN. You know what I did when I wasn't sure whether PSU was eligible for postseason play? I asked. So did your chief competitor, USCHO, back in April. You, on the other hand, did as you normally do and guessed at it. You want to know why nobody takes you seriously next to USCHO? I've hit on most of it here, but just to summarize: rumor mongering, artificial generation of "controversy," opinion pieces at about a 20-to-1 ratio to news reporting, sloppy fact-checking, douchebag "reporters." I think that about covers it.

Badger Freshman Nic Kerdiles Dealing With NCAA Eligibility Issue
(Bucky's 5th Quarter)

If you're asking me to get teary-eyed when a top recruit of one of PSU's toughest opponents throws his NCAA eligibility into jeopardy by tweeting photos of himself with agents at the NHL Entry Draft...yeah, that's not going to happen.

Merrimack College reaches settlement with Dept. of Education in Title IX probe
(The Mack Report)

Mike McMahon (easily among the best college hockey writers out there) broke the news that Merrimack, which was found to be at a pretty severe Title IX deficiency, may add hockey as one of six women's sports meant to balance things out. Can't say that I approve of how they got there, but hey, more hockey teams. Sweet.


Chargers Show Strong in 12-1 Exhibition Victory
UAH Dominates Again, Shutout Frozen Tide 10-0
(uahchargers.com)

Ever wonder what would happen if an NCAA Division I team (Alabama-Huntsville in this case) played an ACHA Division 3 team (Alabama)? Wonder no more.

In all seriousness, speaking as a fan of an ACHA program that had trouble getting NCAA games for years, much respect to the Chargers for giving Bama the opportunity. Yeah, I know they don't have to worry about game limits as most do and will take any fixtures they can get, but still.

New league for rink at Bowman
(Williamsport Sun-Gazette)

It really fascinates me that they're building an ice rink on a baseball field in Williamsport and leaving it there all winter. Not only that, but it's apparently going to get pretty regular use beyond the Federal Hockey League franchise that just relocated to the city.

Club hockey team dealt five-year ban for violating alcohol policy, hazing
(Central Michigan Life)

Directional Michigan ACHA programs: still horrible at not getting busted for hazing. Back in 2003, it was former Icers rival Eastern getting a four-year hammer, which was eventually reduced to the balance of the 2003-2004 season, as well as a postseason ban in 2004-2005 and probation through 2007. The Eagles, formerly one of the best programs in ACHA D1, haven't been the same since.