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UAH rolls over FSC, earns spot in quarterfinals

WEST CHESTER, Pa. — The UAH club hockey team did what they needed to do: beat Farmingdale State in their final pool play game at the AAU Division 2 championships, and then hope it was enough to advance to the quarterfinals.

The Chargers rolled over FSC 8-3 on Sunday, finishing with a 2-1 record and four points in Pool C. After the dust settled on the other four pools, UAH qualified by allowing just nine goals in their three games. The Chargers shut out Central Florida 2-0 on Friday, which turned out to be critical, and lost to top seed High Point 6-4 on Saturday.

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“Our focus was goals against,” UAH head coach Tim Flynn said after the game and before the announcement. “We weren’t too concerned with scoring once we got a little bit of a buffer. We had a number in our head: I think we hit it, and we’ll see what happens.”

The remaining eight teams will be reseeded based on their final national ranking. This will pit UAH (12-11-1 overall), the No. 13 overall seed, against Florida, the No. 2 seed and winner of Pool B, on Monday at 12:45 p.m. CDT. The Gators allowed only two goals in their three wins in pool play.

The other matchups are: Top seed Florida Atlantic vs. No. 17 Union (N.Y.); No. 3 High Point vs. No. 11 Clemson; and No. 4 Tennessee vs. No. 10 Penn State-Harrisburg. That makes five College Hockey South teams out of the eight.

“We feel pretty good, but regardless, it’s a great weekend for us no matter what happens,” Flynn said. “The guys worked extremely hard. Very proud of them, and they deserve it.”

The first nine minutes saw non-stop action with no stoppages, and then the Chargers (12-11-1 overall) scored two quick goals.

First, Kolton Watts led a 3-on-1 break down the right side, burying the puck with 9:35 left in the first. Forty-one seconds later, Josh Corrow roofed it from the left side for a 2-0 UAH lead.

“It was a must win for us,” Watts said. “Coach talked to our leadership, talked to our goaltending, talked to our whole line, and we just really wanted to get the win and be prepared.”

Farmingdale State scored its first on a gimme, as goaltender Andrew Sledge misplayed the puck right to Brendan Dixson, the overall scoring leader in AAU Division 2, in the slot. Dixson scored with 1:05 remaining in the period.

That was one of the few errors Sledge made, however, as he stopped 23 of 26 shots in his first action of the tournament while giving Cameron Crawford a rest.

“It felt really good. I love playing under pressure,” Sledge said. “Makes me have to get focused more and make me play good. The boys were very supportive of me in the net. The D-lines did a pretty good job of boxing out so I could see shots.”

UAH scored three goals in the second to take a 3-1 lead. Corrow notched his second of the game on a drive to the net 3:45 in, and nearly three minutes later Bradly McDonald sank in a rebound on a Corrow shot. Then with 3:19 remaining, Henry Hoff tucked one through the FSC goalie’s five hole.

The Watts brothers pushed three more for the Chargers in the third. Kolton Watts scored his second of the game in the middle of the period, sandwiched between two Keaton Watts goals and the beginning and the end.

If there was any blemish that might cost the Chargers, it was the two shorthanded goals they gave up in the third period, including one by Dixson.

Still, the game was primarily UAH’s from the opening faceoff, as the Chargers outshot the Rams 45-26.

While Kolton Watts led the team with five points, the offense was shared around the usual suspects: Corrow had two assists for a four-point game, Hoff also had four points thanks to three helpers, and McDonald and Keaton Watts pitched in three points as well.

“We talked last night and we really wanted to motivate the guys on the team,” Kolton Watts said. “We wanted to push our team so we could be the best we could be. And I think bringing Hoff and Corrow back really helped us today.”

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Chargers show mettle in loss to No. 3 High Point

WEST CHESTER, Pa. — The UAH club hockey team showed resiliance Saturday against the No. 3 team in AAU Division 2, but the Chargers will be in a must-win situation to stay alive in this national tournament.

High Point defeated UAH 6-4 to take full control of Pool C and likely have earned a spot in the quarterfinals. But the Chargers, who cut a three-goal deficit to one at one point, never went quietly.

“I’m definitely proud of how the guys battled and responded,” UAH head coach Tim Flynn said. “Lot of guys played a lot of minutes and worked very hard. Ultimately, we knew they were a good team with good players, and we made one too many mistakes and couldn’t get all the way back in it.”

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“First and foremost, I’m really proud of how the guys played today,” said UAH captain Bradly McDonald. “We try to win each period, just getting pucks low and playing gritty. We had a short bench, so that’s what we have to do.”

The Chargers (11-11-1) must beat Farmingdale State on Sunday, and perhaps get some help, to be one of the three wildcards among second-place teams in the five pools to qualify for the quarterfinals.

“Us playing a good game today really fires us up to play tomorrow,” McDonald said. “It’s a game we have to win and all the boys are excited to play. We’re ready to get to bed and get after it tomorrow.”

The Chargers took the early lead by crashing the net. Adrian Mai scored to put UAH up 1-0 with 16:31 left in the first, assisted by Elijah Howard and McDonald. It was Mai’s first goal of the season.

High Point (29-4-0) came right back, as Nick Sasso had an open net from a cross-ice pass to tie the game at 1-1 three minutes later.

The Panthers took the lead near the halfway point of the first, scoring on the power play following a Henry Hoff tripping penalty.

With 2:55 left in the period, Jacob Newman was called for roughing after checking High Point’s Joseph Di Martino, who had shot the puck on Crawford following an offsides whistle.

UAH scored on the ensuing 4-on-4 situation, with Josh Corrow sliding in front of and beating HPU goaltender Brian Scopel to tie the game at 2-2. He was assisted by Hoff and Crawford, his first point as a goalie.

But the Panthers regained the lead almost immediately with 1:08 left, and then took a 4-2 lead on a breakaway goal 38 seconds into the second.

High Point extended its lead to 5-2 with an odd angle goal from the left side. But even with the large deficit, it didn’t feel like the Panthers were dominating the Chargers. And that left confidence that UAH could rally.

Penalties started piling up for the Panthers in the final minutes of the second, resulting with three straight power plays for UAH. This included a 1:23 stretch of two-man advantage, when Keaton Watts scored on a centering pass from Henry Hoff to cut High Point’s lead to 5-3.

“It was a greasy goal,” Keaton Watts said. “We were all just battling in front of the net. Hoff was able to center it right to me in the slot and I was able to put in, but it was definitely a battle for sure.

“That’s been the story all year. We’ve been trying to persevere.”

Another tripping penalty extended into the third period, and UAH drew within one at 5-4 as Kolton Watts’ shot from the slot found its way through the Scopel’s five-hole.

“Power plays are strange for us, so we know we have to capitalize when we get them,” Flynn said. “Couple of 5-on-3s that we scored on and able to get back early in the third. We were trying to keep it tight and hopefully just find the chance.”

High Point finalized the 6-4 score with a goal with 9:27 remaining, and the Chargers could recover after that.

“Tough break off the faceoff towards the end there and they got their sixth one,” Flynn said.

Now UAH must focus on defeating Farmingdale State, the No. 18 overall seed, playing their third game in three days. FSC lost its pool play opener to High Point 3-0 on Friday, and lost 10-1 to Central Florida on Saturday night.

“Three games in three days is hard, especially with the travel,” Flynn said. “We are fortunate in that our game times are pretty spread apart. A couple of hours can go a long way.”

“For us, we need to play our game and to our strengths,” Keaton Watts said. “We’re a pretty quick team and we have a lot of skill as well. Try to get that first goal and just keep going, going, going the rest of the game.”

Pictured top: Bradly McDonald talks with AAU College Hockey’s Siobhan Nolan after UAH’s game with High Point. Photo by Tim Newman.

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Crawford stops 53 as UAH shuts out UCF to open nationals

WEST CHESTER, Pa. — Cameron Crawford says he is not a morning person. His performance Friday morning to open the AAU College Hockey Division 2 championships did not show it.

Crawford stopped all 53 shots he faced as UAH opened play in Pool C with a 2-0 victory over Central Florida at the Ice Line Quad Rinks.

“I’m feeling pretty good,” Crawford said. “I’ve got a lot of adrenaline going right now and can’t wait to go sleep. I’m not a morning person. I was a little bit concerned (about the early start). I woke up this morning and had a lot of energy.”

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The Chargers (11-10-1) take the early lead in Pool C with High Point taking on Farmingdale State later Friday night. UAH faces High Point, the top seed in the pool and No. 3 overall, on Saturday at 11:15 a.m. CST.

Top: Kolton Watts scores UAH’s first goal. Above: Keaton Watts carries the puck against a UCF defender. Photos by Tim Newman.

UAH had to deal with an atypical 9:15 a.m. local start, right after 13-hour bus ride into Pennsylvania last night.

“I don’t think we’ve played a 9:15 game since probably youth hockey,” UAH head coach Tim Flynn said. “Very proud with how everybody came out and competed. We got a lead and were able to just defend. That’s our mindset going into this tournament: Defense first, and then try to create offense that way.”

Kolton Watts got the Chargers on the board late in the first period, rifling the puck top shelf over UCF goalie Jackson Barton with 25.6 seconds remaining. It was Kolton’s 18th goal of the season.

“Kolton’s goal came off a transition play in the neutral zone that we practice a lot,” Flynn said. “You give them a little bit of ice and they will take advantage.”

UAH pushed the lead to 2-0 just 24 seconds into the second period after UCF got back-to-back penalties to end the first. Keaton Watts, on the doorstep after UCF failed to secure position in the circle, scored his 21st of the season on assists by Josh Corrow and Bradly Mcdonald.

The Chargers didn’t get many offensive chances in the third period — or any shots on goal for that matter. Central Florida (16-10-3), with the help of some power plays, got 22 in the final frame, more than the 20 UAH had for the game.

“We were killing a lot of penalties, and that just wears you down even more,” Flynn said. “They did a great job getting pucks out, making smart plays, and really making the most of their energy. It was desperate, but obviously ‘Craw’ was fantastic.”

Crawford attributed today’s performance to staying loose even as everything was frantic around him.

“I just try to stay in a good mood, and as long as I’m in a good mood, I just stayed in the zone,” Crawford said.

The shut out was the second for UAH’s current club program since it was re-established in 2018. Michael Fairbanks had the first, stopping 26 shots in a 5-0 win over Florida State on November 8, 2019.

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UAH club returning to national play: ‘It legitimizes our program’

The original UAH club hockey program established a Huntsville tradition of winning in the early 1980s. On Friday, the new program takes a significant step toward bringing that back.

Friday is when the Chargers take on Central Florida to open the Division 2 schedule of the AAU College Hockey national championships at West Chester, Pa.

“The opportunity that making Nationals gives us is huge,” UAH head coach Tim Flynn said. “It legitimizes our program. For those out there kind of looking at the College Hockey South hierarchy, especially in our foot print, I think this helps show that we belong in the discussion of top teams and options for future players. Playing on a stage like this, we’re hopeful from a recruiting standpoint that people take notice.”

It’ll start early, though. Opening faceoff is 9:15 a.m. local time, 8:15 a.m. in Huntsville.

“The guys are ready to get up there and get started,” Flynn said. “Kind of a tough draw playing at 9:15 a.m. (EST), but that’s part of the fun. We’ll just have to hit the ground running. Everyone’s kind of in the same boat when it comes to that side of things.”

“We saw UCF at the CHS playoffs. They’re a good team that’s going to be tough to play against. We’ll have to limit mistakes, and stay disciplined.”

UAH (10-10-1) did not play UCF (16-9-3) in the CHS regular season or playoffs. The Knights finished sixth in the conference tournament.

Friday’s the first of three straight days of games in Pool C. The Chargers play High Point at 11:15 a.m. CST on Saturday, and then Farmingdale State at 1:15 p.m. CDT on Sunday. All games in the AAU College Hockey national championships will be streamed for free on Black Dog Hockey.

High Point, the ACCHL champion, is the third overall seed in the tournament and have an overall record of 23-5-0. Farmingdale State is 20-11-1 and have AAU D2’s leading scorer in Brendan Dixson.

“High Point looks like they can put up points against anyone,” Flynn said. “Some very impressive offensive totals on that team, and as the top seed in the pool, they’re coming in as the team to beat. Farmingdale State is not your standard 18 seed as they come into the tournament with 20 wins and their leading scorer having 85 points, so they’ll present another set of challenges we’ll have to navigate.”

The winners of the five pools and three wild cards will qualify for the Division 2 quarterfinals, which take place Monday. The semifinals are on Tuesday and the championship on Wednesday, meaning its will take winning six games in six days to take the title.

The last club hockey tournament a UAH team participated in was in 1985, the season before the program went varsity and eventually joined the NCAA. Those Chargers lost in the national championship game, just falling short of winning their fourth straight U.S. National Club title.

Flynn says playing in this tournament is big for this UAH club program, which had seen many bumps and bruises since starting up in 2018.

“This just goes to show what UAH club hockey has been and can be. We have 13 kids on this team who came up through the Huntsville youth hockey programs (North Alabama Hockey Association and Total Package Hockey). Getting here validates all the coaching they’ve received in town over the years, and shows that you can play locally and be able to compete for championships at the college level. As a group, we’ve talked about the tradition and expectations for the UAH hockey program, regardless of level, has always been winning championships. It’s on us to keep that alive.”

Keaton Watts, Crawford named All-Stars: Keaton Watts and Cameron Crawford have been selected to represent UAH and College Hockey South at the AAU College Hockey in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. from April 12-14.

The event features top players from all three of AAU’s men’s divisions as a celebration of AAU College Hockey’s fifth anniversary. Each member conference is fielding an all-star team for a competitive showcase.

Watts is the Chargers’ leading scorer with 20 goals and 20 assists for 40 points in 19 games. He will be on Team White representing CHS. Watts also named the conference’s top Division 2 star for February with seven goals and 11 points in five games.

Crawford will be on CHS’ Team Gray after a breakout season in goal. He has a 3.74 goals against and a .910 save percentage this season.

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Chargers invited to AAU D2 nationals

The UAH club hockey team isn’t done just yet. After setting a goal this season to reach the College Hockey South playoffs, the Chargers have gone one better.

AAU College Hockey announced its Division 2 national tournament field on Tuesday, and the Chargers are in. The tournament will take place from March 6-13 in West Chester, Pa.

“We are very excited for the opportunity to continue our season and continue to compete for a championship,” UAH head coach Tim Flynn said. “To be selected for nationals is an honor and full credit goes to this group and their hard work. I’m happy to see them be rewarded for it. They’ve earned the right to be here.”

“Nationals has definitely been on our mind this whole season and we knew that would probably come with making it to the CHS playoffs in Huntsville this year,” Charger captain Bradly McDonald said. “These past two seasons we’ve really focused on creating a winning culture and qualifying for nationals is putting this program in the right direction. I’m really proud of how this team has overcome the ups and downs we’ve had this season which has allowed us to beat teams that surprised a lot of people.”

“We have a great group of guys that bought in and have been willing to work really hard this year,” said Keaton Watts, who leads the Chargers in scoring with 20 goals and 40 points. “I am excited to see all of our hard work pay off and give us another chance to showcase our talent and represent UAH.”

Traveling to a week-long tournament in Pennsylvania will be a considerable expense for the UAH club program. Donations to the Chargers can be made via their GoFundMe fundraiser.

The tournament field consists of 20 teams based on the final AAU Division 2 MYHockey Rankings. They were set on February 14, before the College Hockey South playoffs in Huntsville over the weekend.

Each of the six AAU Division 2 conferences’ top two teams in these rankings get “automatic bids.” The top eight teams in the rankings outside of the 12 auto-bids regardless of conference also get invites.

Here are the 20 qualifying teams, with their MYHockey ranking in parentheses:

College Hockey South(1) Florida Atlantic, 18-4-1
(2) Florida, 14-7-0
(4) Tennessee, 17-8-0
(7) Tampa, 16-10-2
(8) Central Florida, 16-9-3
(11) Clemson, 14-10-1
(13) UAH, 10-10-1
(15) Embry-Riddle (Fla.), 10-14-2
(16) Vanderbilt, 9-17-0
Atlantic Coast Collegiate Hockey League(3) High Point, 22-5-0
(6) Liberty, 13-5-0
Delaware Valley Collegiate Hockey Conference(10) Penn State-Harrisburg, 21-9-0
(24) Neumann (Pa.), 13-4-2
Empire Collegiate Hockey Conference(22) Farmingdale State (N.Y.), 19-10-1
(25) Ramapo (N.J.), 11-10-0
New England Independent Hockey Conference(5) Bishop’s (Que.), 7-6-1
(9) Massachusetts Maritime, 17-6-0
(14) Anna Maria (Mass.), 10-5-0
Upstate New York Collegiate Hockey League(12) SUNY Brockport, 13-8-1
(17) Union (N.Y.), 13-2-0

College Hockey South got a whopping nine bids, owing to its relative strength in AAU Division 2. Only eight teams were in the CHS Division 2 playoffs last weekend (Embry-Riddle is the one team in the AAU field that was not in the CHS tournament).

The 20 teams will be divided into five pools of four teams each (seeding in parentheses):

Pool A: (1) Florida Atlantic, (10) Penn State-Harrisburg, (15) Embry-Riddle, (20) Ramapo
Pool B: (2) Florida, (9) Massachusetts Maritime, (14) Anna Maria, (19) Neumann
Pool C: (3) High Point, (8) Central Florida, (13) UAH, (18) Farmingdale State
Pool D: (4) Tennessee, (7) Tampa, (12) SUNY Brockport, (17) Union (N.Y.)
Pool E: (5) Bishop’s, (6) Liberty, (11) Clemson, (16) Vanderbilt

Pool play begins March 8. Here is UAH’s pool play schedule (game times are Central time):

March 8: UAH vs. Central Florida, 8:15 a.m.
March 9: UAH vs. High Point, 11:15 a.m.
March 10: UAH vs. Farmingdale State, 1:15 p.m.

“Just looking at our opponents on paper, obviously High Point looks like they can put up points against anyone,” Flynn said. “Some very impressive offensive totals on that team. We’ll have to get to work watching what they’re all about. We saw UCF (at the CHS playoffs) over the weekend, and they’re a very good team that’s going to be tough to play against. Farmingdale State is not your standard 18-seed as they come into the tournament with 19 wins and their leading scorer (Brendan Dixson) having 80 points.”

The five pool winners, along with with three wild cards, will advance to the national quarterfinals. Teams will be reseeded based on final national ranking. The quarterfinals are on March 11, the semifinals are on March 12, and the national championship game is on March 13.

“Our goal now is to get out of pool play and into the knockout stage and take it from there,” Flynn said. “That’s not going to be an easy task, we know that. We’re not going to be 100 percent, probably be a little short handed due to injuries, but I think everyone is a little banged up this time of year.”

The Chargers will play an extra game between now and the national tournament. On Friday, UAH visits the Pelham Civic Center to take on the Alabama ACHA Division I team at 7 p.m.

Photo by Jaime Crawford/JC Sports Photography

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UAH finishes CHS tourney with wild 9-8 OT win

Pretty crazy for a seventh-place game. Pretty crazy for any game, including the Chargers’ final home contest of the season.

Kolton Watts scored the game-winner in overtime — the only time UAH had the lead — as the Chargers stunned Vanderbilt 9-8 in the seventh-place game of the College Hockey South Division 2 playoffs at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center on Saturday.

Keaton Watts scored four goals and assisted on Kolton’s winner as the Chargers came back from deficits of 3-0, 4-3, 6-4, 7-6, and 8-7 to tie the game. Every time UAH answered the Commodores in regulation, Vanderbilt answered right back.

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UAH improved to 10-10-1 overall, while Vanderbilt dropped to 9-17-0.

The Chargers were able to bust out the offense that they wanted in Friday’s quarterfinal loss to Tennessee, who had dominated in a 6-1 decision. And early on, it seemed Vanderbilt wanted to do the same thing.

Vanderbilt held the Chargers back for a good portion of the first period and staked a 3-0 lead. Braden Pichel and Matthew McPhail scored within a minute of each other, and captain Julian Yang netted the Commodores’ third goal with 7:33 remaining.

The Chargers finally battled back and gained some significant offensive zone time, and it paid off on the power play. Keaton Watts sniped his 17th goal of the season from the slot to get UAH on the board with under three minutes to go in the first.

With 9.3 seconds left in the period, Tyler Trombly cut Vanderbilt’s lead to 3-2, assisted by Kolton Watts and Roland Mann. And what was a 15-5 shots on goal advantage for Vanderbilt at one point turned into just 17-13 at the first intermission.

About halfway through the second, UAH tied the game at 3-3 when Josh Corrow, on a drop pass from Henry Hoff, blasted the puck from the left circle to beat Luke Cassidy glove side.

But 21 seconds later, the Commodores regained the lead on a Will McGoughran goal.

UAH would tie the game again at 4-4 with 4:06 left in the second. Keaton Watts scored his second goal of the game, putting in a rebound on his initial shot following nice passing from Kolton Watts and Bradly McDonald.

That started a scoring barrage by both teams. Vanderbilt bolted to a 6-4 lead on two quick goals 24 seconds part by Andrew Harder and Andrew Fietz.

Then 26 seconds after that, with 2:30 left in the period, Keaton Watts completed a hat trick with a shot behind the goal line that deflected off Cassidy. After two periods, Vanderbilt led 6-5.

UAH tied the game a third time, this time at 6-6, when Nathan Litton got his second goal of the season with 15:43 left in the third.

Vanderbilt answered yet again when Emmett Kappesserr scored with 11:04 to go.

UAH knotted up yet again with 3:48 remaining. Josh Corrow’s second goal off the post far side from the right circle tied the game at 7-7.

It’s like a broken record at this point. Yang scored his second goal with 2:01 left to give Vanderbilt the lead yet again, 8-7.

That could have been the killer. And yet, UAH tied the game a fifth time. Keaton Watts netted his fourth goal of the game, finishing off a 3-on-1 break with a centering pass from Bradly McDonald, with a blast from the slot with 30 seconds left in regulation.

In overtime, Kolton Watts finally gave UAH it’s first lead with the game winner. Assisted by Keaton Watts and Tyler Trombly with 2:22 left, he went top shelf on Cassidy for the Charger victory.

UAH ended up with the shots advantage at game’s end, 47-43.

Andrew Sledge was the goaltender for the Chargers, making 35 saves. Cassidy finished with 39 saves.

Next, the Chargers will see if they can qualify for the AAU College Hockey Division 2 tournament.

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Vols take UAH out in CHS quarterfinals

The College Hockey South Division 2 quarterfinal between UAH and Tennessee was the season’s rubber match between the two clubs. Each team had a close win under its belt, so the Chargers felt like they had a fighting chance despite being the seventh seed to the Vols’ second seed.

In the end, Tennessee showed itself to be the stronger team, peppering UAH’s defenses and rolling to a 6-1 win at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center on Friday night.

The Chargers (9-10-1) will face Vanderbilt in the seventh-place game at the ISC on Saturday at 11 a.m. The Ice Vols (15-8-0) take on Tampa in the evening semfinals.

Tennessee outshot UAH by a 67-31 margin. The Vols’ pressure started and was maintained from the opening faceoff.

Most of the action in the first period was in the UAH zone as the Ice Vols maintained a constant pressure early. Tennessee would eventually get on the board first on a Will Schneider goal at the 5:34 mark.

But the Chargers would capitalize on a chance with under six minutes left in the first. Tyler Trombly’s outlet pass found Kolton Watts on a breakaway, and Watts beat UT goaltender Lincoln Simons from the slot to knot the game at 1-1.

UAH goaltender Cameron Crawford made 18 saves to keep the Chargers level at the first intermission despite Tennessee outshooting the Chargers 19-9. That would be his least busy period, however, as Crawford finished with 61 saves total, one short of his season high.

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The Vols remained relentless, and scored two goals early in the second period to take a 3-1 lead. Jason Seaholm got a deflection past Crawford 1:38 into the frame, and then Connor Frazer finished a 2-on-1 break almost five minutes later.

Tennessee went up 4-1 on a power-play goal by Chris Kelly with 4:05 left in the second.

UAH had two chances on a breakaway and a 2-on-1 early in the third period, but Simons (30 saves) made the critical stops to keep the complexion of the game from changing. Then Kyle Oakley scored with 16:24 to go for a 5-1 Tennessee lead to add insult to injury. Kyle Stober scored the Vols’ sixth goal to finish it.

Other Friday quarterfinal results:

Clemson 4, Florida 3 (OT)

No. 6 seed Clemson rallied from a 3-0 deficit to defeat No. 3 Florida 4-3 in overtime.

Herbert Kopf scored the game-winner with 1:22 remaining in overtime. He also scored the Tigers’ first goal in the second period.

Michael Katz scored twice for the Gators.

Tampa 2, Central Florida 2 (Tampa wins shootout)

No. 5 seed Tampa won its quarterfinal over No. 4 Central Florida in a shootout following a 2-2 tie.

Aeryk Lehrhaupt and Ryan Steiner scored for Tampa in regulation, while Kent Bishop and Jacob Graziotti scored for UCF.

Florida Atlantic 5, Vanderbilt 1

The No. 8 seed Commodores had thoughts of a possible upside of the top-ranked team in AAU Division 2 after the first two periods were scoreless, but the Owls put those notions away with four goals in the first half of the third period. Leon Biller had a hat trick.

Saturday’s schedule

7th Place Game: #7 UAH vs. #8 Vanderbilt, 11 a.m.
5th Place Game: #3 Florida vs. #4 Central Florida, 1:30 p.m.
Semfinal 1: #2 Tennessee vs. #5 Tampa, 4 p.m.
Semfinal 2: #1 Florida Atlantic vs. #6 Clemson, 6:30 p.m.

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Vols up first for Chargers in CHS playoffs at home

A season goal for the UAH club hockey team has been achieved. Now it’s time for a new goal: Winning a championship.

The Chargers are in the College Hockey South Division 2 playoffs this weekend at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center. They’ll take on the Tennessee Ice Vols on Friday night at 9:30 p.m. in a quarterfinal matchup.

Playing at home is a big deal for UAH.

“We’re very excited for the opportunity to play for a championship this weekend, and to be able to do it in Huntsville makes it even more special,” UAH head coach Tim Flynn said. “Our goal from the beginning of the season was to get here, and the guys have worked extremely hard to be in this position so I’m very proud of them. It should be a pretty fun experience for the whole team, but especially the local players and we have a lot of talented players from Huntsville. To get to play in front of friends, family, their former coaches and teammates I think is something they’re all excited about.

“A big thank you to the Huntsville Sports Commission for putting this event on, and the people at College Hockey South for hosting these types of tournaments in Huntsville, and obviously the Huntsville Ice Sports Center for all their hospitality and coordination.”

The Chargers may be the No. 7 seed against the No. 2 seed Vols, but they have shown they can pull off the technical upset. The teams split their season series in two close battles, with UAH winning 4-3 in overtime in Huntsville in September and Tennessee winning 5-3 in Knoxville in November.

“We’ve played them twice this year, which can be a good and a bad thing,” Flynn said. “We know a little about them and they know a little about us. It is playoff hockey so I expect the intensity to ramp up a bit. We need to get back to playing on our toes, dictating the pace and tempo and having a little more urgency than we’ve had the last three weeks. Every mistake is amplified this time of year.”

UAH’s spring semester has been up and down, going 3-3 in its last six games, all on the road. The Chargers are coming off a series split against Ole Miss.

Keaton Watts had four points against Ole Miss to take the Chargers’ lead in scoring with 35 points (16 goals, 19 assists). His brother Kolton is two points behind, and Henry Hoff is heating up after a five-point night in UAH’s victory last Friday.

Cameron Crawford had a busy series in goal last weekend, making 107 saves in two games against the Rebels. He sports a season save percentage of .909 to go with a 3.57 goals against average.

More from 256 Today: Blast from the past: UAH to face Vols in College Hockey South playoffs

College Hockey South Division 2 Playoffs

Eight teams are in the tournament, the top four from the North Division and the top four from the South Division. Florida Atlantic, the top-ranked team in AAU College Hockey Division 2, and Tennessee are the top seeds by way of winning the South and North divisions, respectively. The other six teams were seeded in order of their placement in the latest AAU D2 MyHockey rankings.

Tickets

Tickets can be purchased for a whole day’s games ($15) or a weekend pass ($30) either at the Ice Sports Center or online.

Streaming

All games will be broadcast on the College Hockey South YouTube channel.

Schedule

Friday Quarterfinals
No. 3 Florida vs. No. 6 Clemson, Rink 1, 6 p.m.
No. 4 Central Florida vs. No. 5 Tampa, Rink 2, 7 p.m.
No. 1 Florida Atlantic vs. No. 8 Vanderbilt, Rink 1, 8:30 p.m.
No. 2 Tennessee vs. No. 7 UAH, Rink 2, 9:30 p.m.

The teams will be reseeded for the semifinals, with the lowest remaining seed matched against the highest remaining seed.

SaturdayAll games on Rink 1.
7th Place Game: Lowest seeded Friday loser vs. second lowest seeded Friday loser, 11 a.m.
5th Place Game: Highest seeded Friday loser vs. second-highest seeded Friday loser, 1:30 p.m.
Semfinal 1: 4 p.m.
Semfinal 2: 6:30 p.m.

SundayAll games on Rink 1.
3rd Place Game: Semifinal losers, 10 a.m.
Championship Game: Semifinal winners, 12:30 p.m.

Pictured: UAH’s Kolton Watts battles Tennessee’s Kenneth Richter for the puck at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center on Sept. 22. Photo by Todd Thompson/RiverCat Photography.


UAH drops regular season finale to GT

The UAH club hockey team lost 5-4 on Saturday night at Georgia Tech in its regular season finale.

The Chargers, who will play in the College Hockey South Division 2 tournament in Huntsville next weekend, drop to 9-9-1 overall and 7-5-0 in CHS play. Georgia Tech improves to 4-18-1 overall and 3-8-1 in CHS play.

UAH took an early 1-0 lead on a Bradly McDonald breakaway goal just 1:48 in, but Georgia Tech led 2-1 at the first intermission after two John McEvilly goals, the second coming with 21 seconds remaining.

BOX SCORE

McEvilly then got a hat trick by scoring 15 seconds into the second period for a 3-1 Jackets lead.

UAH cut the lead in half when Keaton Watts scored on a breakaway short-handed about four minutes later. Then with 13:31 remaining in the second, Elijah Howard poked in a rebound off Tech goaltender Brendan Germano’s skate to tie the game at 3-3.

Watts scored again with 3:18 remaining in the period to regain the lead for UAH.

McEvilly struck again with his fourth goal of the game to tie it at 4-4 with 13:25 left in the third. With 10:59 to go, Zach Keschner put Georgia Tech up for good.

Goaltender Cameron Crawford stopped 55 of 60 shots for UAH.

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Hoff scores hat trick as UAH powers way to CHS playoff spot

Henry Hoff scored a hat trick to lead the UAH club team to a 7-4 win over Georgia Tech in Atlanta on Friday night to clinch a spot in the College Hockey South Division 2 playoffs.

The Chargers (9-8-1 overall, 7-4-0 CHS) scored four power-play goals, with three in the second period to pull away from the Yellow Jackets (4-17-1, 2-8-1).

UAH’s season continues next week in the conference tournament, which will take place at the Ice Sports Center in Huntsville from Feb. 16-18.

BOX SCORE

Keegan Goodell put Georgia Tech up 1-0 in the first five minutes, but UAH responded with three goals in the first period.

Josh Corrow’s 10th goal of the season tied the game halfway through the frame, then UAH took the lead two minutes later on Elijah Howard’s second. Hoff made it 3-1 four minutes later.

The Yellow Jackets got a quick goal by John McEvilly to start the second to cut UAH’s lead to 3-2, but UAH responded with three power-play goals by Tyler Trombly, Hoff, and Bradly McDonald. The Chargers were 4-for-6 with the man advantage.

McEvilly scored with four seconds left in the second for Georgia Tech’s third goal, and Goodell notched his second with 4:11 remaining in the third for the Jackets’ fourth.

But Hoff’s third goal of the game and 11th of the season with 2:09 to go was the exclamation point for the Chargers. He also had two assists for a five-point night.

Despite the power-play advantages, UAH was actually outshot by Georgia Tech 47-35. Cameron Crawford kept the Yellow Jackets at bay with 43 saves.

UAH and Georgia Tech finish the regular season Saturday night at 7:30 p.m. Central Time.

Pictured: Henry Hoff against Middle Tennessee earlier this season. Photo by Jamie Crawford/JC Sports Photography