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Hoof Beats: Trying to stay positive through the off week

How do keep chins up when a team has been struggling to find their first win as the Chargers have?

UAH is 0-3-1 in the last two series. In three of those games, the Chargers have either matched or bettered the opponent in shots on goal, a vast improvement from the first six games. The three losses were essentially one-goal affairs with an empty-net goal tacked on the end.

“I won’t call it ‘puck luck,'” UAH head coach Corbett said during Tuesday’s media session. “You get what you deserve. This is where our program is at, where we have to take that next step and just win the game.”

Still, Corbett said the Chargers have been encouraged over the last four games.

“The biggest thing is making sure (the players’) attitude is right, making sure they’re understanding that we are getting better, that we’re improving and how close it is, because these kids like to see the final result.

“We had six breakaways and missed five of them over the weekend. If we score one, does everything change? Who knows, but our guys need something like that to cling to. The great thing about it is we’re getting those opportunities. We’re showing those things and being positive about it.

“I wouldn’t say frustrated, but we’re all at the point where we want to see some results, but we have to understand that our process has to stay the same. Now we just have to finish. We’re at the finish line, now we have to finish, and that’s just getting that puck over that red line.”

Corbett said the upperclassmen need to be a leaders for the freshmen.

“A lot of times you can camouflage your own frustration by helping someone through theirs. I talked to one of our captains about that — go through that process with (a younger player), and it will probably be very therapeutic for you.

“It’s easy for those younger guys to be frustrated. Part of why we like this group so much is that they came from very successful programs where they have won. We want that leadership, that winning mentality in our program. So it’s been frustrating for them, but that’s where (upperclassmen) have to be able to lead them and show them the way.”

The coaching staff will be recruiting this weekend during the off week, and there will be a captains’ practice on Friday.

“They don’t want to hear it from us anymore,” Corbett said. “They want to start seeing some results, so they’ve got to bond together. We’re keeping it simple and saying we don’t need a ton, we just need that extra 10 percent, that second effort, and I think the older guys can help them with that.”

The Chargers’ next series is Nov. 22 and 23 at Bemidji State (3-3-2 overall, 3-1-0 WCHA). The Beavers outscored Lake Superior State 12-2 in a sweep at home last weekend. If the Chargers (0-9-1, 0-5-1) want to improve their chances for victory, they’ll need to cut down their 4.17 goals allowed per game average in conference games.

“Some of the things we have to cure within our defensive systems, we’re working on a little bit each day,” Corbett said. “Bemidji is scoring a lot of goals right now, that’s the biggest thing we’re looking at for them. We’ve got to tighten up defensively and figure out where our flaws are.”

Chargers in the pros: Josh Kestner is on a roll with the Toledo Walleye.

Kestner has a 10-game point-scoring streak, tied for the longest in the ECHL this season. In 11 regular-season games played, the Huntsville native has 12 points on four goals and eight assists.

Here’s how former Chargers are doing in the ECHL so far this season (through Nov. 13):

TeamGPGAPts
Josh KestnerToledo114812
Brennan SaulnierRapid City136410
Tyler PoulsenRapid City14448
Cam KnightTulsa6235
Matt SalhanyAdirondack11235
Kurt GosselinCincinnati12123

In the NHL, goaltender Cam Talbot continues to back up David Rittich in Calgary. He made his fifth start on Wednesday, stopping 29 of 31 shots in the Flames’ 3-1 loss to the Dallas Stars at home. Talbot has a 2.69 goals against average and .907 save percentage this season.

Alaska teams to play next season: College sports will continue for another year at Alaska and Alaska Anchorage, the schools announced on Friday.

That means the Seawolves and Nanooks hockey teams will be playing in the WCHA for the 2020-21 season.

The future is still uncertain after that. The conference is facing its demise in 2021 as seven schools plan to leave and form a new league, leaving UAA, UAF, and UAH searching for a new home.

This week in the WCHA: All times Central. All WCHA conference games (*) can be seen on FloHockey.tv (online subscription).

Friday, November 15
Bemidji State at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
Alaska at #18 Northern Michigan, 6:07 p.m.
Michigan Tech at Lake Superior State, 6:07 p.m.
#17 Bowling Green at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, November 16
Bemidji State at Ferris State, 5:07 p.m.
Alaska at #18 Northern Michigan, 5:07 p.m.
Michigan Tech at Lake Superior State, 6:07 p.m.
#17 Bowling Green at Alaska Anchorage, 8:07 p.m.

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Chargers drop 3-1 decision to UAA

The search for a win incredibly continues.

Alaska Anchorage scored with 3:05 remaining in the third period, then added an empty-netter to defeat UAH 3-1 at the Von Braun Center on Saturday.

Alaska Anchorage (2-4-2 overall, 2-1-1 WCHA) came to Huntsville and took five of six points in the WCHA series, which seemed to be the best chance so far for the Chargers to finally taste victory. The teams tied 4-4 on Friday with the Seawolves taking the shootout.

BOX SCORE | PHOTO GALLERY

This loss will fester for a bit. UAH (0-9-1, 0-5-1) is off next week before heading to Bemidji State on November 22-23.

“We’ve got to get our game crisper,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett said. “We’ve got to get more consistent. We’ve got to be able to move pucks and let pucks do the work, especially on nights like tonight when maybe we don’t have our best legs.”

The Chargers almost started the game with a bang just like Friday night when Peyton Francis had a breakaway in the first 17 seconds, but he was stopped by UAA goaltender Kristian Stead.

There wasn’t that much action after that until Tanner Schachle committed a major boarding penalty with a game misconduct, ending his night 12:34 in. UAH then had a short two-man advantage after an Alex Frye slashing penalty.

UAH failed to score with the over six minutes of power play time, but not without peppering Stead with pucks. The Chargers finished the first period with a 16-2 shots on goal advantage, but the game remained scoreless.

The first half of the second period saw the Seawolves get the first nine shots on goal, but it was the Chargers who got the first goal.

On a power play, Brandon Salerno backhanded a rebound at the Stead’s doorstep to put UAH up 1-0 with 6:12 remaining in the second. Tanner Hickey and Connor James had the assists.

However, the Chargers did not pick up Trey DeGraaf, who 86 seconds later tied the game at 1-1, also on a rebound in the slot.

The Seawolves continued to dominate the share of scoring opportunities into the third period. From the second period on, UAA outshot the Chargers 26-10.

“We had to get a spark,” Corbett said. “We had to get something going, and we didn’t have the energy to get it going.

“They pressured us a lot. We knew what they were going to do. We just have to be able to handle that pressure. You’ve got to be in shape and you’ve got to be able to play 60-plus minutes to be able to handle that pressure consistently.”

Anchorage’s game-winning goal came off the stick of DeGraaf, who deflected Carmine Buono’s blast from the left point. The puck somehow found its way past UAH goalie David Fessenden to make it 2-1.

Fessenden, who was making his third start, finished with 25 saves.

“I thought he was solid,” Corbett said of Fessenden’s effort. “All you want your goalie to do is give you a chance to win and I think he gave us a chance to win. He played hard and competed in his first home start.”

With Fessenden pulled for the extra attacker, Alex Frye sealed the Chargers’ fate with 8.8 second remaining with an empty-net goal.

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UAH rallies in third to tie Anchorage

The Chargers rallied from two goals down in the third to force a 4-4 tie with Alaska Anchorage at the Von Braun Center on Friday night.

Anchorage took two points in the WCHA standings after taking the shootout in two rounds, while UAH got its first league point of the season.

UAH (0-8-1 overall, 0-4-1-0 WCHA) reached a season high in goals and outshot the Seawolves 37-32. The Chargers will try again for their first victory in game two of the series at 7 p.m. on Saturday.

BOX SCORE

“We’re always talking about possessing the puck and having the puck more,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett said. “It was our third straight game where we outshot a team and that’s exactly what we want to do.”

It was the second straight tie for Alaska Anchorage (1-4-2 overall, 1-1-1-1 WCHA).

UAH got on the board quickly as Josh Latta scored his first collegiate goal just 34 seconds in. Latta picked the puck inside the UAH blue line and broke away, beating UAA goaltender Kristian Stead.

Stead (33 saves) had to deal with other breakaways in the first period, but was able to make saves on Peyton Francis and Bauer Neudecker.

“We scored on a breakaway with the first goal,” Corbett said. “We had two other breakaways in the first period. We’re getting those opportunities and we have to capitalize on them.”

The Seawolves tied the game at 1-1 with 9:45 left in the first as Drake Glover tucked the puck around the left post by Mark Sinclair (28 saves).

UAA went up 2-1 on a Tanner Schachle goal at the 2:34 mark of the second, finishing a one-timer all alone in front following a UAH turnover.

The Chargers answered with 11:14 remaining when Christian Rajic, not long after serving an elbowing penalty, put in a rebound to tie the game at 2-2.

“We’re starting to put some minutes together,” said Rajic, who had a three-point night. “It’s just unfortunate that we can’t put 60. As soon as we do that, we’re going to start winning some games.”

UAH continued to put on pressure but two lapses gave UAA two-goal lead.

Jared Nash drove to the net, cut across Sinclair right to left and scored with 6:58 left in the second. Then after a bad pass in the UAH zone, Taylor Lantz made it 4-2 UAA with 3:05 to go.

“We made big mistakes that ended up in our net,” Corbett said. “Just being hard on pucks and being able to support each other — those are the biggest things we really need to work on going into tomorrow.”

But the Chargers roared to life in the third period.

Jack Jeffers notched his third goal of the season at the 1:32 mark, assisted by Rajic and Latta.

“That was huge for us,” Corbett said. “We didn’t feel great about ourselves going into the locker room after (the second period). We came out and got that goal early right after the power play expired and was able to roll with that.”

Then on a short 5-on-3 power play, the Chargers tied it up at 4-4 on Dayne Finnson’s first college goal, a one-timer blast from the right circle with 8:12 remaining in regulation. Jeffers and Rajic got the assists.

“I was lucky enough,” Finnson said. “Jack put it right there on the tapes so I just ripped it.”

“It started off with our leaders,” Finnson said of the third-period rally. “They pushed the pace in the third and we followed up with that.”

“Dayne was having a really good game and we just kind of rode him,” Corbett said. “He’s done a lot of it in practice and it’s nice for him to be rewarded.”

The Seawolves came close to winning late in regulation and in the first overtime, but Sinclair made crucial saves to force the tie.

No scoring occurred in the 3-on-3 overtime period, although the Chargers were shorthanded in the final 1:45.

In the shootout, Jack Jeffers and Christian Rajic did not score. Sinclair made a save in the first round against Nick Wicks, but Brayden Camrud scored in the second round to earn the extra point for UAA.

“We’re going to keep moving forward here, forget about this one, and look forward to tomorrow,” Finnson said.

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Preview: Chargers can get over hump at home vs. UAA

WHERE: Von Braun Center, Huntsville, Ala.
WHEN: Friday, 7:07 p.m.; Saturday, 7:07 p.m.
WATCH: FloHockey.tv (subscription)
TICKETS

The last two weeks, the Chargers have played better and better against two of the better teams in the WCHA. That first victory, however, has continued to elude them.

The Chargers (0-8-0 overall, 0-4-0 WCHA) feel they can finally end their losing streak this weekend when they return to Propst Arena to take on the Seawolves of Alaska Anchorage.

Last weekend, the Chargers lost 5-3 and 4-2 to Northern Michigan in Marquette, both being one-goal games until NMU scored an empty-net goal in the final minute.

It was the best offensive effort for UAH this season. The five goals matched their total from the first six games, and the Chargers outshot NMU 59-56 for the series.

“Our group has continued to get better,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett said told media on Tuesday. “Now we just have to learn how to win those games. We have to learn how to not make that big mistake at the crucial time.

“These kids can handle adversity. And they’re not listening to the outside noise. They’re seeing that they’re improving every day.

Freshman Josh Latta had an assist in each game, giving him five on the year. Still searching for his first goal, he currently leads UAH in scoring with those five points.

Jack Jeffers, Christian Rajic, and Tyr Thompson each scored their second goals of the season in the series.

Alaska Anchorage (1-4-1 overall, 1-1-0 WCHA) has had its own struggles in recent years. The Seawolves won only three games overall and two games in WCHA play last season.

So, this weekend is as good a chance as any for the Chargers to end their skid, especially at home.

“We have to try to do as much as we can against the bottom group teams,” Corbett said.

“It’s always good to be home. For us, to be able to get off the bus after a long trip and then skate and play at the VBC, it’s great.”

The Chargers want fans to come to Propst Arena after the big football game in Tuscaloosa on Saturday.

“Alabama plays (LSU) at 2, and we play at 7, so everybody’s got to come out for the 7:00 game,” Corbett said. “We’re hoping to be able to get a good crowd on Friday and a good crowd on Saturday to help our guys.”

Anchorage does have a win over their arch-rival Alaska. Last week, the Seawolves lost 4-3 and tied 3-3 with Omaha at home.

Freshman Nick Wicks has eight points on two goals and six assists in six games so far. Nine of Anchorage’s 13 goals this season have come from freshmen, including three from Alex Frye.

Promotions: Kids 12 and under can get free admission to both games at the Von Braun Center box office, courtesy of Huntsville International Airport.

This week in the WCHA: All times Central. All WCHA conference games (*) can be seen on FloHockey.tv (online subscription).

Friday, November 8
* Alaska Anchorage at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
* #3 Minnesota State at Michigan Tech, 6:07 p.m.
* Lake Superior State at Bemidji State, 7:07 p.m.
Ferris State at Western Michigan, 6 p.m.
St. Cloud State at #16 Northern Michigan, 6:07 p.m.
Arizona State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, November 9
* Alaska Anchorage at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
* #3 Minnesota State at Michigan Tech, 5:07 p.m.
* Lake Superior State at Bemidji State, 6:07 p.m.
St. Cloud State at #16 Northern Michigan, 5:07 p.m.
Western Michigan at Ferris State, 6 p.m.
Arizona State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

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Chargers lose another close one at NMU

The Chargers outshot the opponent for the first time this season, and even that wasn’t enough to get their first win of the season.

UAH lost to Northern Michigan 4-2 on Saturday, a sweep for the 20th-ranked Wildcats despite the best effort the Chargers have had all season.

The Chargers (0-8 overall, 0-4 WCHA) can take their frustrations out on Alaska Anchorage at the Von Braun Center next week.

NMU (6-1-1, 4-0-0) extended its unbeaten streak to seven games although the Chargers outshot the Wildcats 27-24. They needed another empty-net goal at the end before they could breathe.

The Wildcats scored first on the power play following a Max Coyle slashing penalty. Vincent De May beat UAH goaltender Mark Sinclair (19 saves) high on a one-timer from the left circle at the 8:16 mark

UAH tied the game with 4:22 remaining in the first. Austin Beaulieu did a spin move to a cross-ice pass to Christian Rajic, who scored his second goal of the season.

Beaulieu and Liam Izyk got the assists for their first points of the season, and for Izyk his college career.

NMU regained the lead at 2-1 early in the second period. Caleb Schroer slid away from the defender in the slot and beat Sinclair stick-side.

With 12:38 left in the second, Jarrett Lee was assessed a five-minute major penalty and game misconduct for checking from behind.

UAH quickly took advantage to tie the game at 2-2. Ten seconds into the long advantage, Tyr Thompson had an open net on the left side for his second goal of the season.

Latta was the one who found Thompson from the slot, netting his fifth assist of the year. Rajic also got an assist to become the first Charger with a multi-point game this season.

The Chargers used the power play to build a few shots on goal on NMU goaltender Nolan Kent (25 saves), but could not get the lead.

After the Wildcats killed the major penalty, they regained the lead a third time. Andre Ghantous had a loose puck come to him in the slot and scored with 6:45 left in the second.

UAH outshot NMU 15-8 in the second period, but was outscored 2-1.

The third period was mostly uneventful until the teams got a little chippy with under seven minutes to go, but there were no penalties called.

Like Friday, UAH pulled Sinclair with just over two minutes to go. And, like Friday, NMU sealed the win with an empty net goal with 58 seconds to go, this time by Griffin Loughran.

Pictured: Christian Rajic. Photo by Todd Thompson/Rivercat Photography.

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Charger offense perks up, but falls short at NMU

The Chargers got more shots. The Chargers got more goals. But it wasn’t enough for the Chargers to get their first win.

UAH lost to Northern Michigan 5-3 on Friday in Marquette, Mich., dropping the Chargers to 0-7 on the season and 0-3 in WCHA play.

The shots on goal were 32 for each team. For UAH, it was more than double the 15.8 per-game average through its first six games.

NMU, ranked No. 20, improved to 5-1-1 overall and 3-0-0 in the WCHA.

Game two of the series is Saturday at 5 p.m. Central Time.

It didn’t take long for the Chargers to finally get their first lead of the season. Josh Latta centered the puck from the left circle to Jack Jeffers, who buried his second goal of the season just 19 seconds in.

Latta leads the Chargers with four assists.

Rylan Yaremko tied the game for NMU at the 8:08 mark, but UAH got the lead right back just 22 seconds later. Connor Wood was the recipient of a turnover and snapped the puck over goaltender John Hawthorne.

Right then UAH already had its first multi-goal game of the season.

But the Chargers coughed up the lead in the first 2:02 of the second period.

NMU tied the game 2-2 during an abbreviated power play as Griffin Loughran deflected a Philip Beaulieu blast up the middle 57 seconds in.

Then the Wildcats went up 3-2 as Andre Ghantous beat Mark Sinclair from the right circle.

NMU finished a three-goal second period with a Darien Craighead tally with 3:21 remaining.

Being down two to start the third was trouble enough, but UAH also had to kill a major power play after Dayne Finnson checked Drew Newhouse from behind as the second period expired.

The Chargers killed the penalty, with some help from NMU’s Michael Van Unen, who kneed Wood.

UAH then got to work on trimming its deficit. With 13:31 remaining, Daneel Lategan scored his first collegiate goal with a slapper from the right circle to cut NMU’s lead to 4-3.

The Chargers showed some fight in the third, outshooting the Wildcats 15-9 in the period. UAH popped some shots on Hawthorne (29 saves) during two third-period plays.

But UAH didn’t convert, and Philip Beaulieu sealed the NMU victory with :57 remaining with a empty-net goal from near his own goal line.

Sinclair finished with 27 saves.

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Preview: Chargers head to NMU for first WCHA road series

WHERE: Berry Events Center, Marquette, Mich.
WHEN: Friday, 6:07 p.m.; Saturday, 5:07 p.m. (CDT)
WATCH: FloHockey.tv (subscription)

The Chargers head north this weekend in search of their first win of the season, taking on Northern Michigan in the first road WCHA series.

UAH has found some success against Northern Michigan in recent years. Last season, the Chargers took a 2-point tie at home. In 2017-18, UAH went 3-4 against the Wildcats. Two of those wins came in Marquette, including one victory in the WCHA quarterfinals.

UAH (0-6-0 overall, 0-2-0 WCHA) lost 5-1 and 4-1 to No. 2-ranked Minnesota State last weekend in the Chargers’ first series at home. The second game was tied 1-1 with 10 minutes to go, but the Mavericks scored two quick goals to pull away.

Despite being outshot 88-30 for the series, the Chargers got a strong effort from goaltender Mark Sinclair. The junior played both games and made 79 saves, including 45 in the first game, one short of his career high.

UAH continued to struggle offensively, now with only five goals on the season. Jack Jeffers and Sean Rappleyea had the tallies for the Chargers against Minnesota State. Jeffers and freshman Josh Latta lead UAH with three points.

Northern Michigan (4-1-1, 2-0-0) is off to a strong start, getting a sweep at Ferris State (4-3 and 6-4) last week to start WCHA play and enter the USCHO.com poll at No. 20. The Wildcats also posted a tie and win at Boston University to weeks ago.

Two sophomore forwards have been tearing it up for NMU. Vincent de May and Griffin Loughran each have six goals already. Loughran scored four goals, including a hat trick on Saturday, against Ferris State to earn WCHA forward of the week honors.

Northern Michigan has split time in net between sophomore Nolan Kent and freshman John Hawthorne. Hawthorne has put up the better numbers in his three starts, with a 2.27 goals against average and .921 save percentage.

Series preview by the Marquette Mining Journal

This week in the WCHA: All times Central.

Thursday, October 31
Omaha at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.

Friday, November 1
* UAH at #20 Northern Michigan, 6:07 p.m.
* Ferris State at Lake Superior State, 6:07 p.m.
* #18 Bowling Green at #2 Minnesota State, 7:07 p.m.
* Bemidji State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.
Omaha at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, November 2
* UAH at #20 Northern Michigan, 5:07 p.m.
* Ferris State at Lake Superior State, 6:07 p.m.
* #18 Bowling Green at #2 Minnesota State, 6:07 p.m.
* Bemidji State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.
Michigan Tech at #14 North Dakota, 7:07 p.m.

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Mavs’ 3rd-period burst finishes sweep of Chargers

A little closer this time, but the Chargers still have work to do to catch up with Minnesota State.

UAH found itself in a tie with the second-ranked Mavericks halfway in the third period. But two quick goals was the difference in MSU’s 4-1 win on Saturday.

BOX SCORE | PHOTO GALLERY

The Chargers (0-6 overall, 0-2 WCHA) kept it tight thanks again to Mark Sinclair, who made 34 saves in addition to the 45 he had in Friday’s 5-1 loss. It was the first series of back-to-back starts this season for Sinclair, who is working off a preseason knee injury.

“I think I played all right,” Sinclair said. “There’s a couple I’d like to have back for sure, but tonight was a little bit better of an effort overall. We may have had quite a few shots, but a lot of them were from the outside, so our defense did a really good job.

“You have to go with your top guy against the top team in the league,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett said. “And that’s what we’re building for. Mark’s the guy that we’ve got to be able to rely on in big games like this.”

The game was scoreless through the first period, and despite being outshot 14-5, it was the first shutout period UAH had posted all season.

The Mavericks (5-0-1, 2-0-0) also had plenty of chances in the second period as UAH gave them a handful of power plays. But it was on a 4-on-4 that Minnesota State drew first blood.

Charlie Gerard, who had two goals on Friday, snuck one past Sinclair on a back-hander with 2:43 left in the second.

UAH tied the game at 2:27 of the third. Adrian Danchenko retrieved his own dump in near the left corner of the MSU end, and sent it in front to Sean Rappleyea. Rappleyea’s shot from the high slot found its way past Jaxson Stauber for this first goal of the season and just the second of the senior’s UAH career.

“We don’t get a lot of shots, we’ve got to bury the ones we get, and he buried the one that he got,” Corbett said. “Raps and that line didn’t necessarily get a ton of ice time but they’re out there to give us energy and they gave us a great boost.”

The Chargers also got a boost from a Homecoming crowd of 3,084.

“I think the crowd’s at a new level this year,” Sinclair said. “I think we got a pretty good boost from it. It’s a lot of fun, and a lot of guys really enjoy it. They’re getting loud and it’s very encouraging for sure.”

Minnesota State regained the lead on a Reggie Lutz goal with 8:31 remaining in the third.

“The kid made a heck of a play popping the puck in the air on the second goal,” Corbett said. “But we’ve got to get the puck out. It’s those little lapses.

“We relax for a second, and they’re the type of team that preys on those mistakes.”

Nathan Smith followed up 42 seconds later picking up a loose puck in the slot and putting MSU up 3-1.

Parker Tuomie finished the game with an empty-net goal with 40.7 seconds left.

“Tonight’s kind of a tough one because we’re so close,” Sinclair said. “Close doesn’t really count right now, but I think we’re making good strides. Hopefully next weekend we can turn it around.”

“I thought our 60 minutes tonight was better than our 60 minutes last night,” Corbett said.

The Chargers head on the road to Northern Michigan next weekend.

“There’s no rest for us to be able to play another top team in our league,” Corbett said. “Our guys have to gain confidence. Little successes build into big successes.

“We don’t talk about moral victories and all that stuff, but these guys have to look at some of the things that are really good. We’re 1-1 with 10 minutes left in the game, and these are the games that we’ve got to learn how to win.”

UAH is now winless in the last 32 meetings with Minnesota State (0-28-4) dating back to 2002.

No. 2 Minnesota State wears down UAH

An electric atmosphere greeted the Chargers in their home opener, but Minnesota State continued its dominance over UAH on Friday night at the Von Braun Center with a 5-1 decision.

“I like the way our guys battled,” Corbett said. “This is the difference between a young group and an older group like they do coming down the stretch. We kind of run out of gas.”

“They don’t want me to tell them about moral victories right now. They don’t want to hear that and neither do I, but this is the (No. 2) team in the country for a reason, and they do a lot of really good things that we can learn from. And our guys have to accept that.

“They know how to win, they know how to score, they know how to finish, and those are things we’re trying to teach our guys right now.”

UAH goaltender Mark Sinclair made 45 saves, one short of his career high, on 50 MSU shots. The Chargers finished with 15 shots on goal.

“We know we have a good goaltender,” Corbett said. “He got a little tired towards the end there, too.”

Minnesota State asserted themselves early, taking a 2-0 lead on two short-range goals by Charlie Gerard at 8:32 and 10:56 of the first period.

UAH cut the Mavericks’ lead to 2-1 as Jack Jeffers roofed the puck over Dryden McKay’s right shoulder. His first goal of the season was assisted by Bauer Neudecker.

Sinclair made 17 saves in the first period as the Mavericks started getting plenty of open looks late in the frame.

“I thought in the first period we were playing good and moving the puck,” UAH senior forward Austin Beaulieu said. “We weren’t getting to rattled and putting the puck behind their D.

“We were in the right spots and we were making them pay when we made mistakes.”

It was more of the same in the second period, as MSU outshot UAH 19-3. One of those shots went in off the stick of Walker Duehr to make it 3-1 Mavericks at the 9:44 mark.

The Chargers entered the third period within striking distance, but a opening flurry gave Chris Van Os-Shaw a wide open net to put MSU up three just 34 seconds in.

Parker Tuomie scored with 11:11 remaining for the final 5-1 score.

With 8:58 remaining, the Chargers took exception with Connor Mackey charging into Sinclair. The result was numerous roughing penalties and Mackey getting a five-minute major.

Game two of the series is Saturday night at 7 p.m., with Homecoming festivities. Corbett says the Chargers will look at video before their next attempt at the Mavericks.

“It’s never as good as you think it is and it’s never as bad as you think it is. We’re going to focus on those fundamental things that we can quickly improve. The effort’s there, the compete level is there, now we’ve got to work a little smarter.”

“We have to show that we can be consistent,” Beaulieu said. “And we proved it in the first and second period, but we’ve got to do it for all 60.”

UAH implemented some measures for more fan engagement, and it didn’t go unnoticed.

“The crowd was awesome,” Beaulieu said. “We appreciate them coming out and hopefully we can get a win for them tomorrow.”

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Preview: UAH comes home to challenge against No. 2

WHERE: Von Braun Center, Huntsville, Ala.
WHEN: Friday, 7:07 p.m.; Saturday, 7:07 p.m.
WATCH: FloHockey.tv (subscription)
TICKETS

The Chargers open the home schedule and WCHA action this weekend against a nemesis.

Minnesota State (3-0-1), No. 2 in the latest USCHO.com and USA Today polls, will be the highest-ranked Division I team to ever visit Huntsville.

The Mavericks, who are favored to take the WCHA title again this season, have been the hardest nuts to crack for the Chargers. UAH hasn’t beaten MSU in the six seasons since joining the WCHA. The Chargers’ last win in the series came in 2002.

“It’s going to be a huge challenge,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett said. “We played them in the playoffs at the end of last year, so we know exactly what we’re getting into with them. But it’s a good challenge, a challenge we have to embrace. I’m excited to see how we’re going to be up to that challenge.”

Meanwhile, UAH (0-4-0) has had a rough start out of the gate, scoring only three goals in four road games. Coach Mike Corbett says his young team is learning how tough Division I hockey can be.

“We are playing nine freshman on most nights,” Corbett said. “As I have told this group before, D-I hockey is a men’s league and our young guys now have a good understanding of what it takes to compete night in and night out at this level.

“We have improved every game even though the scores may not show it.  We need to fight out way to the net front to get second chance opportunities. Lots of shots missing the net and young mistakes have hurt us, especially at the end of shifts.”

“I like this team a lot. There will be a learning curve but our young guys are all players that will help us continue to win games. We have to stay on them and keep pushing for improvement and good habits within their game.”

Jack Jeffers and Josh Latta each have two assists in the early going. In goal, time has been split between junior Mark Sinclair and freshman David Fessenden, each with two starts.

For the Mavericks, freshman Lucas Snowden has already made a mark with seven points (two goals and five assists) in four games. Senior Marc Michaelis is continuing to be a force with four goals. Goaltender Dryden McKay has allowed only six goals in four games.

“They’re an older, senior-laden group and have a very good offense,” Corbett said. “We have to match their intensity right off the bat.”

Promotions: Schedule magnets will be given away in Friday’s opener. Kids 12 and under can get free admission to both games at the Von Braun Center box office, courtesy of Huntsville International Airport.

This week in the WCHA: All times Central. All WCHA conference games (*) can be seen on FloHockey.tv (online subscription).

Friday, October 25
* #2 Minnesota State at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
* Michigan Tech at #17 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
* Northern Michigan at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
* Alaska at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.
Lake Superior State at #5 Notre Dame, 6 p.m.
Bemidji State at #16 North Dakota, 7:37 p.m.

Saturday, October 26
* #2 Minnesota State at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
* Northern Michigan at Ferris State, 5:07 p.m.
* Michigan Tech at #17 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
* Alaska at Alaska Anchorage, 8:07 p.m.
Lake Superior State at #5 Notre Dame, 5 p.m.
Bemidji State at #16 North Dakota, 7:07 p.m.