NMU 4, UAH 3: Wildcats’ Shine Corrals Chargers

HUNTSVILLE — Northern Michigan (5-5-5, 4-4-3 WCHA) rolled into Huntsville and pressured the Chargers into costly mistakes, coming away with a last-minute goal to snatch victory from the UAH Chargers (3-9-1, 2-8-1 WCHA) by a 4-3 margin.  The Wildcats were powered by junior alternate captain Dominik Shine (Pinckney, Mich.) scoring his first collegiate hat trick.

BOX SCORE

I’ve spent the last three hours trying to figure out what to say about this game.  I’ll say this: when UAH was clicking, they were clicking.  They put 22 shots on goal in the first period, netting one of them, and put 47 on all told, a mark that the Chargers hadn’t met since March 14, 2009, the last time the team had poured on 40+, in a season-ending tie in the 3rd-place game in the 2009 #CHAForever tournament.

But then there were the ghastly, ghastly turnovers in their end.  There were some real head-shakers — the WCHA video cutters left them there for you to see.  Puck security was often there, but when it leaked a little, it was like Niagara Falls.

Max McHugh had a solid night on the score sheet, and at a number of points his steadiness with the puck made the offense really click.  UAH had one long 1:00+ sustained offensive possession that had NMU scrambling so hard that I actually checked to make sure that I hadn’t missed a penalty.  It was that kind of quality execution that we’ve come to expect after having lacked it for so long.

But the turnovers … man, yeah.  The first was a forward trying to hold the puck in and blindly making a pass that Shine saw coming and intercepted with a full head of steam.  The next, he and a teammate flummoxed retreating UAH defensemen so much that they put the puck right on Shine’s stick.  And while you can’t see it in the video, Shine again was the thief, jumping a play and drawing a penalty on his shorthanded breakaway.

All hats are off for Shine, and the bareheaded among us can now be left to shake those heads at our side.

UAH v. NMU: Excitement and Dread

[Note: This originally appeared on the USCHO Fan Forum, and I’ve modified it slightly for publication here.  —GFM]

I’ve gotta admit that I’m going into this weekend’s series with Northern Michigan with equal parts anticipation and dread. Which UAH team is this, really? Is it the team that started 3-2-1, or is it the team that’s run 0-6-0?

Well, let’s look at it:
· Home split with Connecticut: currently 53rd in CHN’s KRACH at 21.1 (UAH is 51st at 23.5)
· Home loss and tie to Anchorage: 30th at 98.3 (essentially NCAA average)
· Road sweep at Lake Superior: 48th at 31.4

· Home swept by Tech: 22nd at 149.9
· Road swept at BG: 26th at 128.8
· Home swept by Bemidji: 41st at 51.8

While it’s a little reductive to say that we’ve had success against the teams that are roughly on our level (per KRACH) and, well, nada against teams above us, the thing is this: is Bemidji really that much better than UAH? They came into town without a defined #1 goalie, weren’t scoring outside of Gerry Fitzgerald, and are still struggling with the loss of their three top D. And the UAH team that started out scoring 3.0 goals/game —*remember, last year’s team was 1.63 G/GM, and 2013-14 was 1.08 — scored two goals on Bemidji.

Then there’s the fact that Carmine isn’t at the level he was last year and Matty Larose has rounded into a solid 1B, shedding nearly 1.5 GAA in this his junior season.  Last year’s team knew that Carmine was their guy, and that they could trust him to handle the 35+ shots a night.  Now that they’re not giving up that many, things have changed.  Why?  I do not know.

Shots on goal against are down from 41.1 a game (!!!) two years ago and 37.6 last year (!!!) to just 28.9 this year, and the margin is just 4.4 a game. But again, UAH has been outshot 40-18, 30-18, 28-18, 24-20, and 26-17 in five of their last six games (out-shooting BG 36-28 in the second contest).

After starting off the 2015-16 season as a disciplined team (less Saulnier, who’s pretty much still good for one head-shaker a game), the penalties are piling up. UAH has been near the top in penalty minutes per game for their entire time in D-I, and we’re earning that reputation again this season (14.1 PIM/GM, 11th nationally). It’s come lately, too: 27, 23, 10, 33, 4, and 8 in their last six games.

(Hey, if you want one nice takeaway from the Bemidji series, it’s that we took six penalties all weekend.)

So what team shows up this weekend? Is it the team that plays within itself, trusts the system and the people in it, and tries to play smart hockey? Or is it the team that lacks discipline and can’t maintain possession?

I think that they need smart hockey, short passes, good pressure, and being willing to take the shot when it’s even sorta there.

This team is too damn good to be 3-8-1. Are they as good as they were in those first six games? Maybe not. Are they as bad as they have been in the last six? I don’t think so. As I harp on those six games, it’s important to note that the second Tech game and both BG games were one-goal losses, including an OT on Friday night in Ohio.

But the results just aren’t there, and my enthusiasm after that emphatic effort in the Soo — and from the beginning of the season — has really waned.  Split with BSU and the Chargers are 4-7-1, and sweeping the Environmental Terrorists would’ve made the boys 5-6-1.  In this WCHA, .500 hockey is enough to scrap for home ice.  I thought that we were there. Maybe we’ll get there, but man, it has to start tonight.

Series preview: vs. Northern Michigan, Dec. 4-5

CATCHING THE GAMES
Friday, Dec. 4, 2015 – 7:07 p.m.
First 500 fans get free UAH Hockey trading cards
Saturday, Dec. 5, 2015 – 7:07 p.m.
First 500 fans get free thunder sticks
Kids 12-under get free gen. admission to both games
Team statistics: UAH | Northern Michigan

The Chargers host Northern Michigan this weekend, trying to end their six-game losing streak.

On Fridayy night at 7, the first 500 fans will receive a free set of UAH hockey trading cards, courtesy of Spirit Coach. On Saturday night at 7, the first 500 fans will receive UAH hockey thunder sticks, courtesy of SportsMed. All kids 12 and under get free general admission, courtesy of Huntsville International Airport.

Matchup history: Northern Michigan leads the all-time series 8-2-2. Those two Charger wins came last season, as UAH beat the Wildcats 2-1 and 3-2 at the Von Braun Center in January. UAH went 2-1-1 against NMU last season.

Chad Brears

Chad Brears has scored a goal in each of his last two games. (Photo by UAH Athletics/Doug Eagan)

Charger recap: UAH (3-8-1 overall, 2-7-1 WCHA) was swept at home by Bemidji State last week, seeing its losing streak extended to six games following a 3-2-1 start. The Beavers won both games by a score of 4-1 to send UAH to the bottom of the WCHA standings.

On Wednesday, Brandon Carlson scored just 1:36 into the contest to give UAH a 1-0 lead, but the Chargers could not muster any more goals. Bemidji scored in the second period to tie the game, then three more in the third (including two in the final minute). Matt Larose made 20 saves on 23 BSU shots on net.

On Friday, Chad Brears‘s goal at 7:04 of the third period tied the game at 1-1, but the Beavers retook the lead 15 seconds later, and a 3-1 lead less than two minutes after that. Carmine Guerriero stopped 22 of 25 shots in the loss.

Brennan Saulnier and Max McHugh each registered an assist on Wednesday, and both still lead the team with 11 points each. Saulnier still has six goals, and McHugh has three. Brears’s tally was his fourth of the season.

Larose’s 2.48 goals against average is seventh in the WCHA, while his .918 save percentage is sixth. Guerriero now has a 2.99 goals against average and .891 save percentage.

UAH Tale of the tape
(WCHA rank)
Northern Michigan
3-8-1
2-7-1 WCHA
(10th)
Record 4-5-3
3-4-3 WCHA (5th)
2.67 (2nd) Goals/game 2.36 (8th)
3.17 (10th) Goals allowed/game 2.36 (3rd)
14.1 (4th) Pen. minutes/game 15.3 (1st)
13.5% (9th) Power play 20.7% (3rd)
79.2% (8th) Penalty kill 82.0% (4th)

About the Wildcats: Northern Michigan (4-5-5 overall, 3-4-3) has seen a lot of ties this season.

The Wildcats wish they could have had one more after last Saturday night, when they lost at Bowling Green with six second left in overtime to finish a sweep by the Falcons. NMU is winless in its last four games, and is currently in fifth place in the WCHA.

Senior forward Darren Nowick leads the Wildcats with eight points on four goals and four assists. Junior John Siemer has five goals this season, and Shane Sooth and Robbie Payne each have four goals.

The real star for NMU has been a freshman goaltender by the name of Atte Tolvanen, who took over starting duties from injured star netminder Mathias Dahlström. The 6-0 native of Finland has won the WCHA Rookie of the Week award three times (including Rookie of the Month for October), and Defensive Player of the Week one other time. In 14 games, he has a .930 save percentage and a 2.25 goals against average.

This week in the WCHA:

All times Central. Games featuring WCHA teams at home can be seen on WCHA.tv.

Friday, Dec. 4
Northern Michigan at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
Minnesota State at #14 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
Bemidji State at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
Alaska Anchorage at #17 Michigan Tech, 6:07 p.m.
Lake Superior State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, Dec. 5
Northern Michigan at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
Minnesota State at #14 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
Bemidji State at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
Alaska Anchorage at #17 Michigan Tech, 6:07 p.m.
Lake Superior State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

Hoof Beats: Anatomy of a slump

Remember when the Chargers were 3-2-1? UAH had come off its first road sweep since 2009 after two wins at Lake Superior State, including its first shutout in five years. Those were good times.

Unfortunately, the Chargers have lost six straight games after being swept at home by Bemidji State on Wednesday and Friday. UAH is now 3-8-1 overall and 2-7-1 in the WCHA, and has fallen to last place in the league standings.

So what has changed? For one, the competition has gotten tougher. UAH faced two teams expected to compete for the WCHA title in Michigan Tech and Bowling Green, each having hot goaltending in Jamie Phillips and Chris Nell. Even so, UAH remained competitive against them, losing the four games by a total of five goals.

That competitiveness against Michigan Tech and Bowling Green boded well for the Chargers coming into the Bemidji State series. The Beavers are not a bad team, but they appeared to be right where the Chargers wanted them: At the VBC, struggling to score goals and winning only one game in their last nine.

Brandon Carlson

A bright spot: Brandon Carlson, back among the forward lines, has two goals in the last four games. (Photo by UAH Athletics/Doug Eagan)

What happened instead was UAH continuing its struggles to score, only getting two goals in the series. After scoring 22 goals in the first six games of the season, the Chargers have only scored 10 in the last six. Meanwhile, Bemidji State got timely goals for its first series sweep of the season.

UAH’s top two scorers, Brennan Saulnier and Max McHugh, have been particularly neutralized after strong starts. Saulnier started with six goals and nine points in the first six games (although he was suspended for one game), earning WCHA Player of the Month honors for October, but has only two assists since. McHugh had three goals and eight points in the first six games, but has had just three assists since.

What happened during the Bemidji State series that saw the Chargers play their worst hockey of the season?

“Our fundamental hockey wasn’t very good,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett told Penalty Box Radio on Saturday. “We want to be aggressive, and we weren’t very aggressive. You play tentatively, and so you’re overthinking it a little bit. You’re passing when you should shoot, and shooting when you should pass. That’s where we need to get a little confidence and be able to feel good about ourselves.”

First 6 games Last 6 games
Record 3-2-1 0-6-0
Goals scored 22 (3.67 per game) 10 (1.67 per game)
Goals allowed 17 (2.83 per game) 21 (3.5 per game)
Power play 3-24 (12.5 percent) 4-28 (14.3 percent)
Penalty kill 18-21 (85.7 percent) 20-27 (74.1 percent)
Penalty minutes 64 (10.7 per game) 105 (17.5 per game)

 

How hard will it be to get back into the groove? The next six games/three opponents offer varied levels of difficulty. And while UAH is in last place, it is only four points out of fifth, so the opporunity to climb quickly is there.

This weekend the Chargers are back at the VBC, hosting Northern Michigan. UAH swept the Wildcats last season at home. NMU is 1-3-2 in its last six, just coming off two one-goal losses at Bowling Green. Like the Bemidji State series, this looks like a prime opportunity to get back into the win column if they execute. NMU goaltender Atte Tolvanen has played very well in his freshman season.

Next, UAH goes to Minnesota State, the defending WCHA champion, preseason favorite, and current league leader with a conference record of 7-1-2. The Chargers are 0-6 against the Mavericks since joining the WCHA, and 0-4 in Mankato (scoring only two goals), so this will be the hardest spot to get points.

Finally, the Chargers return home on Dec. 18-19 against NCHC opponent Colorado College, which just got its first win Saturday against Air Force. The struggling Tigers are 1-13-0 this season, scoring only 22 goals in 14 games (and shut out five times). UAH should be favored in that series.

Goaltending grind: With his fourth start of the season on Wednesday, Matt Larose has now played enough minutes to qualify for the WCHA’s goaltending leaderboards. His 2.48 goals against average is seventh in the WCHA, while his .918 save percentage is sixth. He made 20 saves on 23 shots in Wednesday’s 4-1 loss to Bemidji State.

The goaltending rotation has been established with Larose playing the openers of series and Carmine Guerriero playing the second game. Guerriero stopped 22 of 25 shots in Friday’s 4-1 loss, and now has a 2.99 goals against average and .891 save percentage.

This week’s festivites: The Chargers host Northern Michigan on Friday and Saturday. Game time is 7 p.m. both nights.

On Friday, the first 500 fans receive a free set of UAH Hockey trading cards, presented by Spirit Coach. On Saturday, the first 500 fans can bring the noise after receiving a free set of UAH Hockey thunder sticks, presented by SportsMed.

The Blue Line Club lunch will take place Friday at noon at the Varsity Room of Spragins Hall. Northern Michigan coach Walt Kyle and the UAH coaching staff will be there to talk about this week’s series. Bojangles will be catering.

WCHA Standings Record Pts.
Minnesota State 7-1-2 16
Michigan Tech 8-4-0 16
Bowling Green 6-2-2 14
Ferris State 5-5-2 12
Northern Michigan 3-4-3 9
Bemidji State 3-5-2 8
Alaska-Anchorage 3-4-1 7
Lake Superior State 2-3-3 7
Alaska 2-6-2 6
UAH 2-7-1 5

WCHA roundup: Bowling Green extended its home unbeaten streak to 11 games after two one-goal victories against Northern Michigan. The Falcons are ranked 14th in this week’s USCHO.com poll. … Minnesota State stayed in a tie for first place in the WCHA after sweeping Alaska Anchorage. Teddy Blueger had a five-point night on Saturday, all coming in the first period (a goal and four assists). … Michigan Tech kept pace with MSU with a sweep of Alaska in Fairbanks. The Huskies are tied for 17th in the USCHO.com poll. … Lake Superior State ended a five-game home losing streak Saturday to earn a split with Ferris State.

Wednesday, Nov. 25
Bemidji State 4 at UAH 1

Friday, Nov. 27
Bemidji State 4 at UAH 1
Northern Michigan 1 at #15 Bowling Green 2
Ferris State 1 at Lake Superior State 0
Alaska Anchorage 0 at Minnesota State 2
#19 Michigan Tech 4 at Alaska 1

Saturday, Nov. 28
Northern Michigan 3 at #15 Bowling Green 4, OT
Ferris State 2 at Lake Superior State 3
Alaska Anchorage 2 at Minnesota State 6
#19 Michigan Tech 3 at Alaska 1

Cold offense leads to Chargers’ sixth straight loss

UAH could not break out of its slump on Saturday, falling 4-1 to Bemidji State at the Von Braun Center for its sixth straight loss.

The Chargers (3-8-1 overall, 2-7-1 WCHA) could only muster a second-period goal by Chad Brears as they stayed tied with Lake Superior State at the bottom of the WCHA standings. Bemidji State (4-6-3 overall, 3-5-2 WCHA) earned its first series sweep of the season after winning 4-1 on Wednesday.

Cory Ward scored the game’s first goal for the Beavers at 16:06 of the first.

Brears notched his fourth goal of the season at 7:04 of the second to tie the game at 1-1, assisted by Max McHugh and Brennan Saulnier, but the Beavers took the lead again just 15 seconds later on a goal by Graeme McCormack.

BSU extended its lead just 1:32 after that, as Justin Baudry scored his first collegiate goal. The Beavers scored an empty-netter by Charlie O’Connor with 56 seconds left in the third for the final score.

UAH managed only 17 shots on Bemidji goaltender Reid Mimmack, who made 16 saves. The Beavers had 26 shots on net, with 22 stopped by Charger goaltender Carmine Guerriero.

The Chargers are back in action next Friday and Saturday, Dec. 4 and 5, against Northern Michigan. Puck drop is 7:07 p.m. both nights.

Chargers fall to Bemidji State, 4-1

Bemidji State scored three third-period goals, including two in the final minute to put the game away, to defeat UAH 4-1 on Wednesday in Huntsville.

Brandon Carlson scored his third goal of the season just 1:36 into the contest to give UAH (3-7-1 overall, 2-6-1 WCHA) the early lead, but the Chargers could not find any more offense as they lost their fifth straight game.

John Parker tied the game up at 1-1 at 7:20 of the second. Gerry Fitzgerald notched his eighth goal of the season with 7:05 remaining in the third to put Bemidji State (3-6-3 overall, 2-5-2 WCHA) up for the first time.

Graeme McCormack scored an empty netter with 43 seconds to go to seal the win for the Beavers. Nate Arentz followed with a goal with eight seconds left.

Bemidji State outshot UAH 24-20. UAH goaltender Matt Larose made 20 saves on 23 shots. Bemidji State goaltender Reid Mimmack made 19 saves.

Game two of the series is Friday night at 7:07 p.m. at the Von Braun Center.

Series Preview: vs. Bemidji State, Nov. 25 & 27

CATCHING THE GAMES
Wednesday Nov. 25, 2015 – 7:07 p.m.
First 500 fans get free UAH Hockey trading cards
Friday, Nov. 27, 2015 – 7:07 p.m.
First 500 fans get free turkey stress balls
Kids 12-under get free gen. admission to both games
Team statistics: UAH | Bemidji State

The Chargers look to snap their losing streak against rival Bemidji State in a rare Wednesday-Friday series around the Thanksgiving holiday.

On Wednesday night at 7, the first 500 fans will receive a free set of UAH hockey trading cards, courtesy of Wells Fargo. On Friday night at 7, the first 500 fans will receive a free UAH hockey turkey stress ball, courtesy of SportsMed. All kids 12 and under get free general admission, courtesy of Huntsville International Airport.

Fans are encouraged to donate toys and clothes at both games of the series as part of the University Place Elementary holiday drive. Interested donors will be able to drop their item off in the VBC lobby.

Matchup history: The UAH-Bemidji State rivalry goes back to 1994, during the programs’ Division II days. The Chargers and Beavers have met 76 times, the most of any UAH opponent. Bemidji State leads the series 43-29-4, buffered with a 30-4-3 mark over the last 37 games since 2006. UAH still holds a 19-15-3 advantage in Huntsville, but Bemidji State is 11-2-3 in the last 16 meetings at the VBC.

Brandon Parker

Brandon Parker scored a more conventional goal Saturday at Bowling Green. (Photo by UAH Athletics/Doug Eagan)

Charger recap: UAH (3-6-1 overall, 2-5-1 WCHA) was swept at Bowling Green over the weekend, extending its losing streak to four games and falling to eighth place in the WCHA. Both were one-goal affairs, with the Falcons winning 3-2 in overtime on Friday and 4-3 on Saturday.

On Friday, Chad Brears and Jetlan Houcher scored third-period goals, each tying the game for the Chargers. However, UAH lost in overtime as Brandon Hawkins scored with 2:08 remaining. All five goals in the game were on the power play.

Saturday’s game was more physical, with more cross-checking, boarding, and hitting from behind penalties called. Brandon Carlson scored to tie the game at 1-1 in the first, and Brandon Parker and Brent Fletcher scored in the final two minutes to keep UAH in it, but it was not enough.

Brennan Saulnier is still the Chargers’ leading scorer this season with six goals and 10 points, but has only registered one assist in his last four games. Max McHugh also has 10 points after getting his sixth and seventh assists in the Bowling Green series. Brears, who was a late scratch from Saturday’s game, and Cody Marooney each have three goals.

UAH split goaltending duties for the third straight series at Bowling Green. Matt Larose had 36 saves in Friday’s loss, and has a .929 save percentage and 2.30 goals against average in three starts. Carmine Guerriero had 24 saves on Saturday, and has a .893 save percentage and 2.98 goals against in seven starts.

The special teams went in opposite directions last weekend. The Chargers scored three power play goals against Bowling Green — the most of any series this season. However, penalty-killing was only 5-for-10.

UAH Tale of the tape
(WCHA rank)
Bemidji State
3-6-1
2-5-1 WCHA
(8th)
Record 2-6-3
1-5-2 WCHA (10th)
3.00 (2nd) Goals/game 2.36 (8th)
3.00 (8th) Goals allowed/game 2.82 (6th)
15.7 (2nd) Pen. minutes/game 10.3 (8th)
14.9% (8th) Power play 26.4% (1st)
76.7% (9th) Penalty kill 87.5% (1st)

About the Beavers: Bemidji State (2-6-3 overall, 1-5-2 WCHA) has had a slow start to the season, currently sitting in last place in the WCHA. Last weekend, the lost and tied at home to Lake Superior State.

Goal-scoring has been tough to come by for the Beavers, who are eighth in the WCHA with 2.36 goals per game. It hasn’t been for a lack of shots — BSU had 83 shots on goal against the Lakers, but had only three goals to show for it.

Sophomore Gerry Fitzgerald is BSU’s top scorer with seven goals and 10 points. Their second-leading scorer is a defenseman, senior Greame McCormack, with four goals — all on the power play — and nine points. Brendan Harms, an all-WCHA third-team selection last season, is 2-6–8.

Michael Bitzer, the league’s all-rookie goaltender last season, has an .882 save percentage and 2.78 goals against average in nine starts of his sophomore year.

One aspect the Beavers have been strong on this season has been special teams. Bemidji State is tops in the WCHA in both power play (26.4 percent, 5th in Division I) and penalty kill (87.5 percent). The power play has been the majority of their offense: 14 of the their 26 goals this season have come with a man advantage.

Wednesday fact: This will be only UAH’s fifth game to fall on a Wednesday, and the first one at home. The last time UAH played on Wednesday was at Merrimack in 2011, which also was the day before Thanksgiving. UAH is 1-3 all-time on Wednesdays.

This week in the WCHA:

All times Central. Games featuring WCHA teams at home can be seen on WCHA.tv.

Wednesday, Nov.  25
Bemidji State at UAH, 7:07 p.m.

Friday, Nov. 27
Bemidji State at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
Northern Michigan at #15 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
Ferris State at Lake Superior State, 6:37 p.m.
Alaska Anchorage at Minnesota State, 7:07 p.m.
#19 Michigan Tech at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 28
Northern Michigan at #15 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
Ferris State at Lake Superior State, 6:07 p.m.
Alaska Anchorage at Minnesota State, 7:07 p.m.
#19 Michigan Tech at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

Chargers suffer rough 4-3 loss at Bowling Green

A flurry of hits, then a flurry of goals. But the result is the same: The Chargers lost to Bowling Green.

The 15th-ranked Falcons finished a two-game sweep of UAH with a 4-3 win in Ohio on Saturday night. UAH has lost eight straight and 15 of 16 to BGSU.

BOX SCORE

This despite outshooting the Falcons 36-28. But UAH could not capitalize where Bowling Green could in a jagged game which saw several boarding, cross-checking, and hitting from behind penalties.

Brandon Carlson, Brandon Parker, and Brent Fletcher scored the goals for the Chargers (3-6-1 overall, 2-5-1 WCHA), who have lost four straight games heading into their holiday series with rival Bemidji State.

Bowling Green (7-3-3 overall, 4-2-2 WCHA) extended its home unbeaten streak to nine games.

Each team had its share of offensive zone time in the first period, but no goals to show for it. The Chargers had a 12-8 shots on goal advantage for the period thanks to two power plays.

UAH lost the services of its leading scorer, Brennan Saulnier, for late in the first and early in the second because of a 10-minute misconduct penalty, earned after slapping the puck in frustration after the whistle on an offsides call.

Speaking of frustration, the hitting level started to rise in the second period. Richard Buri was penalized for boarding Bowling Green leading scorer Kevin Dufour. Then Dufour was cross-checked by Cam Knight, and the Falcons took advantage of that power play as Matt Pohlkamp beat UAH goaltender Carmine Guerriero on a rising shot at 10:04 for a 1-0 BG lead.

Then it was the Chargers’ turn on the power play after Fletcher was creamed into the boards by Jakob Reichert. It didn’t take long for UAH to level the game as Carlson deflected a Max McHugh shot, trickling the puck past BG goalie Chris Nell at 11:32. It was Carlson’s second goal of the year, assisted by McHugh and Jetlan Houcher.

The minor penalties did not deter the hitting, and Bowling Green’s Mark Cooper finally was the first to be served a major as he crunched Parker from behind in the corner of the UAH zone. Cooper was also given a game misconduct with 5:28 left in the second.

On the ensuing major power play, the Chargers were able to pass the puck well, but Nell, who led the WCHA with a 1.28 goals against average coming into the game, was able to weather the storm with some big saves and covers. The second period ended with the Chargers holding a 29-17 shots on goal advantage, but with the teams tied at 1-1.

Bowling Green took control of the game in the third period with the first even-strength goal by either side in the series. Pohlkamp netted is second goal of the game on a nice centering pass from Pierre-Luc Mercier to give the Falcons a 2-1 lead at 3:26.

At 7:26 of the third, UAH’s Madison Dunn received a major checking-from-behind penalty and a game misconduct, which had to be called after Cooper’s penalties in the second period. The Falcons made them pay, with Brent Tate scoring to make it 3-1 at 8:41.

The Chargers weathered the rest of the major penalty — and another penalty for too many men on the ice. By then, UAH had yet to register a shot on goal, while Bowling Green had 10.

UAH then got its chances to stay in the game. However, the Chargers could not capitalize on a Tate roughing penalty (that occurred during a scuffle between UAH’s Buri and BG’s Pohlkamp) with 6:56 to go and Mitch McLain’s intereference penalty with 4:45 to go.

A total of 15 penalties were called in the game, eight on the Chargers for 27 minutes, and seven on the Falcons for 33 mnutes.

But then came the barrage in the final two minutes. Carlson’s second goal of the year came from the left circle with 1:24 remaining to cut the Falcons’ lead to 3-2. He was assisted by Matt Salhany.

UAH pulled Guerriero, who finished with 24 saves, for the extra attacker in the final minute, but Pierre-Luc Mercier won the draw and later took the puck to the house for an empty netter and a 4-2 Falcon lead with 26 seconds left.

UAH was still not done. Fletcher found the net after a scramble in front to make it 4-3 Bowling Green with 10.2 seconds left.

A desperation shot by UAH from its own zone in the final seconds turned into an icing call, and Bowling Green was able to secure the win.

UAH hosts Bemidji State at the Von Braun Center on Wednesday and Friday. Puck drop is 7:07 both nights.

Notes: The Chargers had two scratches. Jack Prince, who has hurt in Friday’s game, was substituted with Tyler Poulsen at right wing, which moved Cody Marooney to left. Chad Brears was a late scratch, replaced with Hans Gorowsky.

Falcons overpower UAH in overtime, 3-2

Special teams give UAH a chance, but special teams gave this game away.

Brandon Hawkins’ goal with 2:08 left in overtime lifted 15th-ranked Bowling Green (6-3-3 overall, 3-2-2 WCHA) to a 3-2 victory over the Chargers (3-5-1 overall, 2-4-1 WCHA) on Friday night.

BOX SCORE

All five goals in the game were power play goals, but none more costly than the third PPG allowed by UAH after Josh Kestner was called for boarding in the extra session.

The Chargers did hang tough with the Falcons, who have typically dominated the series having won 13 of the last 14 meetings. Bowling Green is now 8-1-1 all-time against the Chargers at BGSU Ice Arena.

Bowling Green outshot the Chargers 28-18.

Most of the first period saw a lot of back and forth, with not many scoring chances.

Both teams ranked at the bottom of the WCHA in power play efficiency coming in, but with the offensive potential of the Falcons, Charger penalties would tempt fate.

So it happened on UAH’s second penalty — a cross-checking call by Brandon Parker — that Bowling Green would break through with the first goal. Kevin Dufour was on the spot with the rebound putback past UAH goaltender Matt Larose gave the Falcons a 1-0 lead at 10:04. It was Dufour’s seventh goal of the season.

No goals in the second period, but both teams had few more chances, as well as a few more hits.

Bowling Green had a great chance short handed as Sean Walker had a breakaway, but Larose made a huge glove save to keep it a one-goal game.

For the Chargers, there was a three-minute span where they rolled lines twice while keeping the puck on the Falcon end. UAH could not find the net as Falcon goaltender Chris Nell was able to save five shots.

UAH would make its move in early in the third period, when on a two-man advantage, Chad Brears tied the game at 1-1 at the 1:34 mark. His third goal of the season was assisted by Max McHugh and Kurt Gosselin.

Bowling Green retook the lead after a Cody Champagne cross-checking penalty, one of three cross checks called against the Chargers. Brett D’Andrea’s blast beat Larose with 13:08 left.

Keeping the power play trend, UAH tied it up after Dajon Mingo was sent to the box for kneeing. Jetland Houcher, all alone in the right circle, rifled the puck past Nell to tie the match at 2-2 with 10:34 to go. Kestner and Madison Dunn got the assists.

Larose kept the game tied with big saves throughout the rest of regulation, and Nell was also up to the task after stopping Houcher on a 2-on-1 break.

In overtime, UAH never got a shot on net. Bowling Green had three chances during the delayed boarding call, followed by Hawkins’s goal to give the Falcons the win.

Larose finished with 25 saves as he started the Friday night game for the second consecutive series. Chris Nell made 16 saves.

Game two of the series is at 6:07 p.m. Central Time.

 

Series Preview: at Bowling Green, Nov. 20-21

CATCHING THE GAMES
Friday, Nov. 20, 2015 – 6:07 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 21, 2015 – 6:07 p.m.
Team statistics: UAH | Bowling Green

After an off week, the Chargers are back in WCHA action with a trip to their nearest conference foe, Bowling Green. Puck drop Friday and Saturday nights in Ohio are at 6:07 p.m. Central Time.

Matchup history: Bowling Green has a commanding 14-3-1 record over UAH since their first meeting in 2000, and has won 12 of the last 13 meetings. The Falcons are 7-1-1 against the Chargers on their home ice. Since both clubs joined the WCHA in 2013, Bowling Green is 7-1-0. Last season, the Falcons won both games in Huntsville and both games in Bowling Green.

Carmine Guerriero made 28 saves against Michigan Tech on Nov. 7. (Photo by UAH Athletics/Doug Eagan)

Carmine Guerriero made 28 saves against Michigan Tech on Nov. 7. (Photo by UAH Athletics/Doug Eagan)

Charger recap: UAH (3-4-1 overall, 2-3-1 WCHA) was off last week. Two weeks ago, the Chargers were swept at home by Michigan Tech by scores of 4-2 and 2-1. UAH currently is seventh in the WCHA standings.

In the first game, Josh Kestner scored just 1:21 in to give UAH a 1-0 lead, but the Huskies responded with three straight goals. Brandon Parker scored from his own zone, but that would be as close as the Chargers got. UAH goaltender Matt Larose made 36 saves.

In the second game, Michigan Tech scored both goals in the first period. Cam Knight got his first collegiate goal in the third period for UAH’s only score. Carmine Guerriero had his best outing of the season in net, stopping 28 of 30 shots.

Brennan Saulnier got an assist in the series, giving him 10 points on the season. His 0.86 goals per game average (six goals in seven games played) leads the WCHA and is third-best in NCAA Division I. Max McHugh is secon on the team with eight points, and he and Cody Marooney each have three goals.

UAH has the eighth-highest penalty minute per game average at 14.2.

UAH Tale of the tape
(WCHA rank)
Bowling Green
3-4-1
2-3-1 WCHA
(7th)
Record 5-3-3
2-2-2 WCHA (6th)
3.12 (2nd) Goals/game 2.18 (8th)
2.88 (6th) Goals allowed/game 1.91 (1st)
14.2 (3rd) Pen. minutes/game 8.5 (9th)
11.1% (9th) Power play 10.3% (10th)
84.8% (2nd) Penalty kill 82.5% (5th)

About the Falcons: Bowling Green (5-3-3 overall, 2-2-2 WCHA) comes into the series ranked 15th in the latest USCHO.com poll. They stand in sixth place in the WCHA standings, one point ahead of the Chargers.

Last week, the Falcons split a pair at Michigan Tech in the battle between the WCHA’s two ranked teams. Bowling Green was shut out 2-0 on Friday before winning 3-2 on Saturday.

Bowling Green’s top scorer is Kevin Dufour, a junior who has six goals — tied with Saulnier and four others for the league lead — and eight points. Senior Mark Cooper has five goals this season, three of which are game-winners, including the one over Michigan Tech on Saturday.

Sophomore goaltender Chris Nell has been stellar this season. In eight games (seven starts), he has a 1.20 goals against average and a .958 save percentage, both tops in the WCHA and third in the nation. Nell has been a big reason the Falcons are ninth nationally in goals allowed per game.

This week in the WCHA:

All times Central. Games featuring WCHA teams at home can be seen on WCHA.tv.

Friday, Nov. 20
UAH at #15 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
Alaska at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
Minnesota State at Northern Michigan, 6:07 p.m.
Lake Superior State at Bemidji State, 7:37 p.m.
Penn State at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 21
UAH at #15 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
Alaska at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
Minnesota State at Northern Michigan, 6:07 p.m.
Lake Superior State at Bemidji State, 7:07 p.m.
#19 Michigan Tech at Michigan State, 6:05 p.m.
Penn State at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 22
#19 Michigan Tech at Michigan State, 3:05 p.m.