Chargers earn big 10th win over No. 19 NMU

Tyler Poulsen

Tyler Poulsen scores his second-period goal. (Photo by Todd Thompson/RiverCat Photography)

The Chargers got a huge win Sunday in their battle for a WCHA playoff spot, beating No. 19 Northern Michigan 4-2 at the Von Braun Center to earn a series split.

The Chargers (10-18-2 overall, 9-13-2 WCHA) got their first double-digit win season since the 2009-10 campaign, and moved back into sixth place in the WCHA standings with four games to go. UAH is five points behind fifth-place Michigan Tech, one point up on Alaska, and two up on Ferris State.

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“When you play the top teams in the league, the best players have to be your best players,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett said. “And our best players were our best players, starting with Uhelski to Gosselin and Knight to Kestner and Poulsen. And Hans Gorowksy was his normal self.”

Goaltender Jordan Uhelski fought off a fierce NMU attack, stopping 34 of 36 Wildcat shots on goal.

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EE9_qQE0_Q[/embedyt]

 

“I feel tired, but ecstatic for the team and the guys,” Uhelski said. “I thought that was one of the best games we played all season, from the drop of the puck, to when we were up by two and they get one, to really be resilient and make sure we get that next one.”

“He played fantastic,” Corbett said of Uhelski. “And we need that in order to beat the top teams in the league.”

The Chargers got huge contributions from their top offensive players, Josh Kestner and Tyler Poulsen, who each got two goals.

“Our coach always said this is playoff time, even though it’s not necessarily the playoffs,” Kestner said. “We like to treat these last remaining games as playoffs. After last night’s loss, we moved to eighth, and after tonight’s win, we moved to sixth, so that’s a huge push going into the Mankato series next weekend.”

NMU, which stayed one point ahead of Minnesota State atop the league standings, fell to 18-11-3 overall and 16-6-2 in the WCHA.

The Chargers wanted to be faster after Saturday night’s 4-3 loss, and they were at the start.

Poulsen put UAH on the board first at the 2:05 mark, a snapper during a 2-on-1 break. Max McHugh got the assist.

“Getting the first goal is always an objective of our team,” Poulsen said. “I just put one off the glass, their D pinched and he bounced off the wall and it just came to me and we had a 2-on-1. He took the pass, and I took the shot, then it went in and the boys got hyped right away.”

Northern Michigan tied the game up with 6:43 remaining in the first. Philip Beaulieu fired from inside the blue line, just getting under the crossbar.

The Wildcats had several chances to take the lead in the second period with four power plays. Seven of NMU’s 15 shots in the period were with the man advantage.

Seven of those shots were also by NMU’s and the WCHA’s leading scorer, Troy Loggins, who was denied twice by Uhelski on breakaways.

“When someone gets a breakaway and you’re the goalie, you know that it’s a one-on-one,” Uhelski said. “It’s you versus him. Just with the support from the team that I get on a daily basis, I try to do a little extra and focus a little harder to make that save. If they score, that’s a difference maker. You make the save, that’s a difference maker.

“It’s just trying having your team’s back like they have had mine all year.”

The Chargers only got three shots on goal, but also had the only goal to retake the lead. On the power play, Kestner blasted a one-timer from the left circle for his 19th goal of the season at the 11:31 mark.

“It’s just my one-timer side,” the right-winger Kestner said. “Usually the left-handed guys are on the other side, too. I’ve a lot of good D partners that feed me a pass right in the slot, and I just let it go and hope it goes in.”

That D partner this time was Brandon Parker, who tallied his sixth assist of the year, and Poulsen got his team-leading 14th assist.

Poulsen got his second goal of the game and ninth of the season on a breakaway with 9:47 left in the 3rd, giving UAH a 3-1 lead.

“I saw the puck in the middle and the D was trying to beat me to it,” Poulsen said. “I just poke checked it past him and was off to the races after that. I ended up breaking free, making a good move, and he bit.”

NMU would not go quietly in the third period. Robbie Payne knocked in a rebound on the power play to cut UAH’s lead to 3-2 with 5:27 left.

The Wildcats pulled goaltender Atte Tolvanen (11 saves) late for an extra attacker, and UAH got a power play after a Denver Pierce boarding penalty with 41 seconds left.

From there, after a couple of close calls with NMU having the extra attacker, Kestner was able to get a breakaway and score on the empty net for his 20th goal of the season with 3.7 seconds left to seal the victory.

“Not even close,” Kestner responded when asked if he imagined getting 20 goals at this point of the season. “I go day to day, game to game.”

Kestner is the first Charger to get 20 goals since the 2004-05 season when Bruce Mulherin had 24, which is also UAH’s modern Division I record, and Jared Ross scored 22.

“It was a good game,” Corbett said. “We didn’t chase the scoreboard tonight. We were ahead of the scoreboard most of the time, and it was nice for us to be able to play that way.

“We executed better. Our boys play hard. When the puck’s moving and we’re more efficient, we’re playing faster. It’s moving the puck and getting the puck up the ice. We moved the puck a heck of a lot better and forced them to chase us a little bit.”

UAH hosts Minnesota State, which was ranked No. 7 in the country in last week’s poll and is fighting for the MacNaughton Cup as WCHA regular-season champion, next Friday and Saturday nights at Propst Arena. The Chargers will be looking to carry the result of this series as they fight to clinch a playoff spot for the first time in three years.

“This is a huge confidence booster,” Kestner said. “It’s one of those things where if we had gotten swept, we wouldn’t have been too motivated, too prepared for the upcoming weekend, but we’re ready to go. We don’t want to embarrass our fans on our home ice.”

“We’re looking forward to them coming in,” Uhelski said. “Although this was a great win, we’re not satisfied until we have an ‘x’ next to our name and we have a playoff spot.”

“We got to keep working on our fundamentals and keep everything simple,” Poulsen said. “The more we complicate things, the more we turn pucks over and get in trouble. They’re a good team coming in, so we’re looking to get one against them.”

NMU nips UAH 4-3 after Charger rally

UAH rallied from a two-goal deficit, but 19th-ranked Northern Michigan scored with 6:41 remaining to defeat the Chargers 4-3 at the Von Braun Center on Friday.

UAH fell to 9-18-2 overall and 8-13-2 in the WCHA. The Chargers sit in seventh in the WCHA standings pending action later tonight. NMU (18-10-3 overall, 16-5-2 WCHA) regained sole possession atop the WCHA standings, and clinched home ice in the first round of the WCHA playoffs.

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Not much happened to start the game, but UAH goaltender Jordan Uhelski started getting busy during Northern Michigan’s first power play, making five saves.

But NMU wouldn’t get on the board until UAH’s first power play, taking advantage of a turnover. Zach Diamantoni got a breakaway and scored with 4:13 left in the first period for a 1-0 Wildcat lead. It was Northern Michigan’s seventh shorthanded goal, which leads the nation.

Max McHugh

Max McHugh chases the puck against NMU’s Jordan Klimek. (Photo by Todd Thompson / RiverCat Photography)

NMU made it 2-0 on the power play, as Joseph Nardi scored with 11:13 left in the second period.

“In the beginning of the first we kind of looked a little slow so they got a good jump on us,” UAH junior defenseman Kurt Gosselin said.

“We just need to play faster,” UAH head coach Mike Corbett said. “That was the biggest thing. We held on to the puck a lot and let them get set up so they were able to defend us. To me, that’s what hurt us early in the game. They played fast and we weren’t moving the puck.”

UAH answered with a power play goal with 4:24 remaining in the frame. Gosselin found Hans Gorowsky in the slot, and while his shot was not the most powerful, the puck went between Atte Tolvanen’s legs for Gorowsky’s fifth goal of the season.

“I was hopping off the bench, and one of my D partners yelled shoot the puck once you get it off the draw,” Gosselin said. “So I walked the line, shot it — it actually shot Goro in the stomach and he got a lucky bounce, hopped down and he put it on net.”

The Wildcats got another power play goal to regain their two-goal lead at 3-1. Mitchel Slattery scored with 1:26 left in the period.

But the Chargers answered again with just 22.6 left in the second, as Tyler Poulsen notched his seventh goal of the season, skating in on Tolvanen almost unabated.

Josh Kestner tied the game at 3-3 with 10:57 left. Gorowsky won the offensive-zone faceoff and got it to Kestner, who roofed it in the upper left corner of the net over Tolvanen for his WCHA-leading 18th goal of the season.

“Hans was good,” Corbett said of Gorowsky’s two-point game. “The power play goal kind of hit him and he was able to turn around (on it). On Kestner’s goal, like we told him: ‘Get the puck to him. He shoots.’ Quick face-off goal and we were able to tie it up.

“Hans is a warrior for us. He plays a lot of minutes, and now he’s playing power play and penalty kill. It’s nice to see him get some points along the way.”

“It’s good that we’ve got good morale every time we’re down,” Gosselin said. “I think one big thing is our goalie. Uhelski has been the backbone of this team since day one. I think without him giving that little extra boost, games would be a little more different. Since he’s been able to help us, we’ve been able to rally off it, create some chances, and pull out some wins.”

Uhelski finished the game with 31 saves, including a crucial cover during a late NMU power play when Troy Loggins had an open net, and another on a one-time blast.

However, Loggins would eventually not be denied, scoring his 16th goal of the season with 6:41 to go. It was his 33rd point, the most overall in the WCHA.

Corbett liked how the Chargers were able to rally and get that tying goal. “Now it’s winner take all the last 10 minutes and they get a bounce on their fourth goal, a bounce that goes to their best player. That hurts you.”

“Just play faster, I think that’s the biggest thing,” Corbett said. “And that’s going to be the biggest question mark, too. Last weekend we were kind of out of gas the second night [5-1 loss to Bemidji State] and I’m hoping we come out and play faster. Let the puck do the work and not run around, not waste our energy.”

“We’ve just got to bring some energy and start finishing our checks, too,” added Gosselin.

Notes: Jordan Larson returned to the lineup after missing the last two games with a concussion. Andrew Dodson also was back from an injury.

Preview: Northern Michigan at UAH

Where: Propst Arena, Von Braun Center, Huntsville, Ala.
When: Saturday, 2:07 p.m.; Sunday, 2:07 p.m.
Watch: WCHA.tv
Team stats: UAH | Northern Michigan

Madison Dunn

Madison Dunn had a 3-
point night against Bemidji State last Friday.
(Photo by Todd Thompson/ RiverCat Photography)

Charger update: UAH (9-17-2 overall, 8-12-2 WCHA) split its series with Bemidji State in the first home games in two months. The Chargers won 5-1 on Friday and lost 5-1 on Saturday.

UAH currently sits in seventh place in the WCHA standings with six games to go. The top eight go to the WCHA playoffs.

Josh Kestner opened Friday’s victory with his 17th goal of the season, which ties him with Northern Michigan’s Robbie Payne for most in the WCHA. In league play overall, Kestner is on top alone with 15 goals.

Senior captain Max McHugh made a solid return to the lineup, making his season debut Friday with an assist. He scored his first goal of the season for the lone UAH tally on Saturday.

Tyler Poulsen and a goal on Friday and an assist on Saturday, giving him 19 points on the season. He leads the Chargers with 13 assists.

Senior Brennan Saulnier, who is tied for second on the team in goals and tied for third in points, will miss this series and the next as he is suspended for his actions on Saturday.

Players to watch:
Josh Kestner (Sr., F, 17 goals-6 assists-23 points in 28 games played)
Tyler Poulsen (Jr., F, 6-13-19 in 26 GP)
Christian Rajic (Fr., F, 8-6-14 in 28 GP)
Kurt Gosselin (Jr., D, 5-7-12 in 28 GP)
Jordan Uhelski (Sr., G, 2.79 goals against average, .913 save percentage in 23 starts)

About the Wildcats: Northern Michigan (17-10-3 overall, 15-5-2 WCHA) is hands down the surprise team in the WCHA under first-year head coach Greg Potulny. The Wildcats have won six straight games, all in conference, to move to the top of the WCHA standings and enter the USCHO poll at No. 19.

NMU has a number of offensive weapons. Troy Loggins and Adam Rockwood lead the WCHA in overall points with 32, and Darien Craighead and Philip Beaulieu are tied for seventh with 25.

Craighead and Loggins are second in the league in overall goals with 15, and Robbie Payne is tied with Kestner at the top with 17. Loggins scored two goals in the series against UAH in Marquette in December.

Rockwood, who has a seven-game scoring streak, leads the country in assists with 25.

Goaltender Atte Tolvanen is fourth in the league in overall goals against average at 2.52.

Players to watch:
Robbie Payne (Sr., F, 17-7-24 in 30 GP)
Troy Loggins (Jr., F, 15-17-32 in 30 GP)
Darien Craighead (So., F, 15-10-25 in 29 GP)
Adam Rockwood (Jr., F, 7-25-32 in 30 GP)
Philip Beaulieu (So., D, 8-17-25 in 30 GP)
Atte Tolvanen (Jr., G, 2.52 GAA, .906 SV%, 2 SHO in 22 starts)

UAH Tale of the tape
(per game averages)
Northern Michigan
9-17-2 Overall record 17-10-3
8-12-2 WCHA record 15-5-2
2.55 (7th) Goals/game 3.14 (3rd)
3.00 (7th) Goals allowed/game 2.32 (T-3rd)
16.2 (3rd) Penalty minutes 12.4 (9th)
16.5% (6th) Power play 21.2% (3rd)
82.9% (5th) Penalty kill 84.9% (3rd)
WCHA rank in parentheses, conference games only

 

Series notes: Northern Michigan leads the overall series 12-5-3, with a 4-2-2 mark at the Von Braun Center. The teams met in Marquette back on Dec. 1-2, with NMU winning 3-1 and UAH winning 3-2. The last six games have been at NMU: The last series in UAH was Dec. 4-5, 2015, a 4-3 NMU win and a 1-1 tie.

Promotions: On Saturday, the first 500 fans get a free UAH Hockey trading card set courtesy of Colonial Printing

Free general admission is available to all home games, courtesy of Huntsville International Airport.

This week in the WCHA: All times are Central. Games featuring WCHA teams at home can be seen on WCHA.tv.

Friday, Feb. 2
Michigan Tech at #14 Bowling Green, 6:37 p.m.
Lake Superior State at Bemidji State, 7:07 p.m.
Alaska Anchorage at #7 Minnesota State, 7:07 p.m.
Ferris State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, Feb. 3
#19 Northern Michigan at UAH, 2:07 p.m.
Michigan Tech at #14 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
Lake Superior State at Bemidji State, 7:07 p.m.
Alaska Anchorage at #7 Minnesota State, 7:07 p.m.
Ferris State at Alaska, 10:07 p.m.

Sunday, Feb. 4
#19 Northern Michigan at UAH, 2:07 p.m.

Saulnier suspended four games

Senior forward Brennan Saulnier will miss a total of four games after an accumulation of game misconduct penalties and a two-game suspension handed down by the WCHA on Monday.

Saulnier checked Bemidji State forward Myles Fitzgerald from behind into the boards 33 seconds into UAH’s 5-1 loss on Saturday. Saulnier got a five-minute major and a game misconduct, his third of the season, which by NCAA rule results in a one-game suspension.

Saulnier was assessed a game disqualification penalty for abuse of officials, which is another one-game suspension.

On Monday, after review, the WCHA determined that the “hit was delivered in a manner that warranted” a two-game suspension, for a total of four games. This is Saulnier’s fourth suspension by the league in his UAH career and second this season.

Saulnier will miss home series against Northern Michigan on Feb. 3-4, and Minnesota State on Feb. 9-10. He will be eligible to return for the regular-season final series at home against Bowling Green (Feb. 23-24).

Saulnier has scored eight goals this season, tied for second most on the team. His 14 points are tied for third.

Bemidji bites back with 5-1 win over UAH

Bemidji State controlled the game almost from the start, beating the Chargers 5-1 at the Von Braun Center and getting a series split.

UAH (9-17-2 overall, 8-12-2 WCHA) honored the 1998 NCAA Division II national champions during the first intermission, but unlike Friday’s 5-1 Charger win, this game didn’t resemble those good times.

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UAH dropped to seventh place in the WCHA standings with the loss and Ferris State’s win, while Bemidji State (14-8-6 overall, 11-5-4 WCHA), in fourth place, clinched a spot in the WCHA playoffs.

The Chargers managed only 12 shots on goal to the Beavers’ 36 in the 86th meeting between the rivals. And they were in a hole just 33 seconds in.

Brennan Saulnier checked Myles Fitzgerald into the boards chasing the puck. Saulnier was assessed a five-minute major and a game misconduct, the ninth of his UAH career. For refusing to leave the ice, Saulnier was called for abuse of officials, for a total of 25 penalty minutes. The incident will likely be reviewed by the WCHA, which could hand down his fourth career suspension.

After that, the Beavers were relentless. Charlie Combs scored during the major power play to give BSU a 1-0 lead.

UAH had a chance to equalize with 6:10 left in the 1st, when Dillon Eichstadt also got a five-minute checking from behind penalty and a game misconduct for running Josh Kestner.

But Kestner, who leads the WCHA in goals with 17, had to be escorted to the locker room, and without him and Saulnier, UAH could not set up anything on their major power play.

If it weren’t for goaltender Jordan Uhelski, the Chargers could have found themselves in much deeper trouble. But the senior made 15 saves in the period to keep it 1-0 at intermission.

Kestner did return to action in the second period, and UAH did have a few more scoring opportunities (six shots on goal) and a more cohesive power play.

The Chargers still had to weather the storm of two shorthanded situations and a late flurry in the second period, but still found themselves down only a goal heading into the third.

That would be short-lived as BSU put up three unanswered goals in the third. Justin Baudry scored twice, at 7:05 and 12:19, sandwiching a power play goal by Aaron Miller and the Beavers led 4-0.

The Chargers didn’t get their first shot on goal of the third period until it was nine minutes remaining.

UAH averted a shutout for BSU’s All-American goaltender Michael Bitzer with 6:57 to go, as Max McHugh got his first goal of the season, deflecting a Cam Knight shot. It was McHugh’s second game of the season, coming back from a preseason injury.

T.J. Roo added an empty-net goal with 1:22 remaining.

Uhelski finished with 31 saves, adding to the 30 he had on Friday. Bitzer had 11 saves.

Notes: Saulnier has 325 career penalty minutes, moving him into fifth-most in UAH history. He now has 15 penalties counted as 10 minutes: Five misconducts, nine game misconducts, and one game disqualification.

Photo Gallery: UAH 5, Bemidji State 1, Jan. 26, 2018

Throwback victory: Chargers down Bemidji State 5-1

Jordan Uhelski

Jordan Uhelski makes one of his 30 saves. (Photo by Todd Thompson/RiverCat Photography)

Just like old times?

This weekend, the Chargers are wearing throwback jerseys commemorating the 20th anniversary of the 1998 NCAA Division II national championship team, who defeated Bemidji State for the title.

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Friday night had the feeling of that time. The Chargers took down the Beavers again, a 5-1 decision in their first game at the Von Braun Center in two months.

UAH (9-16-2 overall, 8-11-2 WCHA) got a stalwart performance from senior goaltender Jordan Uhelski, who stopped 30 of 31 shots to snap the eight-game WCHA winning streak of Bemidji State (13-8-6, 10-5-4).

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOi2coy-6a0[/embedyt]

 

The Chargers stayed in sixth place in the WCHA standings, moving to seven points behind fifth-place Michigan Tech (a 4-3 loser to Ferris State).

Also making a long-awaited appearance was Max McHugh, who hadn’t seen action this season because of injury. The senior captain got an assist in his debut, a nifty pass from the left circle to a scoring Hans Gorowsky in the second period for UAH’s third goal.

The rivals will meet again Saturday night as members of the 1998 championship team will be honored during the first intermission.

UAH pulled out to a 4-0 by 3:10 of the third period, getting to Bemidji’s All-American goaltender Michael Bitzer early.

Josh Kestner

Josh Kestner breaks away in the first period. He would score his 17th goal of the season for a 1-0 UAH lead. (Photo by Todd Thompson/RiverCat Photography)

John Teets intercepted a Beaver pass near the benches in the neutral zone, and forwarded the puck to Josh Kestner. Kestner made a move around a BSU defenseman for a breakaway, and wristed the puck over Bitzer. His 17th goal of the season came at the 6:36 of the first period.

Bemidji State picked up the pace afterward, and kept Uhelski busy. The Beavers picked up the next 11 shots on goal, including five during a power play.

But Uhelski kept his cool, and finished the first period with 14 saves.

The Chargers got two more in the second period.

At 3:34, Madison Dunn ripped a one-timer off a faceoff win by Christian Rajic to make it 2-0. It was Dunn’s fourth goal of the season.

UAH made it 3-0 with 2:51 on the power play. Hans Gorowsky in the slot deflected McHugh’s pass from the bottom of the left circle for his fourth goal of the season and McHugh’s first point. Kurt Gosselin also got his seventh assist.

In the third, Tyler Poulsen notched his sixth goal of the season with an assist by Dunn at the 3:10 mark and UAH led 4-0.

Bemidji State ended the shutout attempt 56 seconds later on an Aaron Miller goal.

With 4:34 to go, Adam Wilcox upended BSU’s Brendan Harris, who was favoring his left leg as he was helped off the ice. Wilcox got a five-minute major for kneeing, giving the Beavers a power play the rest of the way.

UAH’s penalty killing was solid from there. BSU pulled Bitzer for a 6-on-4 situation with under two minutes to go.

Dunn then scored his second goal of the game and third point of the night when he found the empty net clearing the puck from the UAH zone. The shorthanded finished the 5-1 score.

Three stars of the game:
1. Jordan Uhelski, UAH (30 saves)
2. Madison Dunn, UAH (2 goals, 1 assist)
3. Josh Kestner, UAH (1 goal)

Preview: Bemidji State at UAH

Where: Propst Arena, Von Braun Center, Huntsville, Ala.
When: Friday, 7:07 p.m.; Saturday, 7:07 p.m.
Watch: WCHA.tv
Team stats: UAH | Bemidji State

Hans Gorowsky

Hans Gorowsky had a goal and an assist in the win over UAA. (UAH Athletics)

Charger update: UAH (8-16-2 overall, 7-11-2 WCHA) spent last week off after finishing off a long road trip. The last stop was two weeks ago at Alaska Anchorage, where the Chargers won 4-2 and lost 2-1.

The Chargers sit in sixth place in the WCHA standings, 10 points behind fifth-place Michigan Tech. UAH looks to secure a WCHA playoff spot during this home stand, which has four series in the final five weeks of the regular season.

Josh Kestner had three points in the 4-2 win at Anchorage, and has four goals in the last six games. His 36 career goals have moved him into a tie for seventh in UAH’s modern Division I era.

UAH should have senior captain Max McHugh back in the lineup. McHugh, who is still UAH’s active leader with 64 career points, has missed the entire season so far after in injury in the preseason.

Players to watch:
Josh Kestner (Sr., F, 16 goals-6 assists-22 points in 26 games played)
Tyler Poulsen (Jr., F, 5-12-17 in 24 GP)
Brennan Saulnier (Sr., F, 8-6-14 in 24 GP)
Christian Rajic (Fr., F, 8-4-12 in 26 GP)
Kurt Gosselin (Jr., D, 4-6-10 in 26 GP)
Jordan Uhelski (Sr., G, 2.82 goals against average, .912 save percentage in 21 starts)

About the Beavers: Bemidji State (13-7-6 overall, 10-4-4 WCHA) is on a tear, winning its last eight conference games and getting points in its last 11 against WCHA opponents to move into fourth place. Last week, the Beavers swept Ferris State on the road by scores of 2-0 and 4-1.

BSU is led by their senior goaltender, Michael Bitzer, who posted his fifth shutout of the season against FSU on Saturday. It was his 21st career shutout, moving him into second place on the NCAA’s all-time list. Bitzer earned his fourth WCHA goaltender of the week award of the season.

The Beavers are stalwarts on defense, ranked 10th in the country in goals allowed per game overall (2.35). If you get a power play opportunity (BSU is committing only 8.5 penalty minutes per game), it likely won’t amount to much: The Beavers are second in the nation in penalty kill at 89.5 percent. Add in their 8th-ranked power play and BSU has been a special teams force.

Three weeks ago in Bemidji, Adam Brady scored three goals against the Chargers in BSU’s sweep.

Players to watch:
Kyle Bauman (Sr., F, 9-17-26 in 26 GP)
Gerry Fitzgerald (Sr., F, 6-17-23 in 25 GP)
Jay Dickman (Jr., F, 13-7-20 in 26 GP)
Zach Whitecloud (So., D, 3-10-13 in 24 GP)
Michael Bitzer (Sr. G, 2.11 GAA, .915 SV%, 5 shutouts in 25 starts)

UAH Tale of the tape
(per game averages)
Bemidji State
8-16-2 Overall record 13-7-6
7-11-2 WCHA record 10-4-4
2.50 (7th) Goals/game 3.28 (2nd)
3.00 (T-6th) Goals allowed/game 2.17 (1st)
15.7 (4th) Penalty minutes 8.5 (10th)
16.3% (5th) Power play 24.7% (2nd)
83.3% (5th) Penalty kill 91.7% (1st)
WCHA rank in parentheses, conference games only

 

Series notes: UAH has played Bemidji State 84 times, the most of any opponent. BSU holds the series lead at 49-30-5, but UAH holds the edge in Huntsville at 20-18-3. Last season, the teams split a series in Huntsville, with the Beavers winning 3-2 and the Chargers winning 5-2.

Promotions: UAH will be celebrating the 20th anniversary of the 1998 NCAA Division II national championship team. A special ceremony with members of the 1997-98 squad will take place during the first intermission of Saturday’s game.

The Chargers will be wearing throwback uniforms, which will be available to fans through a silent auction. Bids will be final at the start of the third period on Saturday.

On Friday, the first 500 fans will receive a special trading card set featuring members of the 1997-98 Chargers, sponsored by Wells Fargo. On Saturday, the first 250 kids aged 12 and under get a free replica 1997-98 UAH youth jersey.

Free general admission is available to all home games, courtesy of Huntsville International Airport.

This week in the WCHA: All times are Central. Games featuring WCHA teams at home can be seen on WCHA.tv.

Friday, Jan. 26
Bemidji State at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
Michigan Tech at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
Bowling Green at Lake Superior State, 6:07 p.m.
Northern Michigan at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 27
Bemidji State at UAH, 7:07 p.m.
Michigan Tech at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
Bowling Green at Lake Superior State, 6:07 p.m.
Northern Michigan at Alaska Anchorage, 10:07 p.m.
USA Under-18 Team at Minnesota State, 7:07 p.m. (exhibition)

Hoof Beats: Finally home, UAH looks to ‘finish’ games, secure playoffs

Mike Corbett

The Chargers get their last eight regular season home games at home. (UAH Athletics)

John Denver sang, “Hey, it’s good to be back home again.” For the Chargers, the Von Braun Center probably does feel like a long lost friend.

The Chargers have completed a stretch of six road series over seven weeks, including a three-week continuous trip from Bemidji, Minnesota, to Fairbanks, Alaska, to Anchorage, Alaska.

UAH finished the grueling 12-game swing with 3-8-1 record, which isn’t great. UAH did finish with wins in the last two series in Alaska, coming out of it in sixth place in the WCHA standings.

The Chargers came home Sunday and took three days off to rest, resuming normal practice on Thursday. This is a bye week before an eight-game home stand to finish the regular season.

The home stand starts Friday, Jan. 26, against Bemidji State.

The bye week is surely welcome, as the Chargers were fighting the injury bug near the end of the trip. Freshman winger Andrew Dodson was out most of the road trip, and sophomore forward Brandon Salerno missed the series at Anchorage.

“We got banged up along the way,” Corbett said. “Physically, we were pretty good towards the end of the road trip, for the guys who were able to play. I think it’s more mental health than anything. We need to get away from each other for a little bit.”

Sophomore winger Jordan Larson returned to action last Friday at Anchorage after missing the first 24 games of the season due to an ankle injury. But he left the second game Saturday with a concussion.

“It was unfortunate for Jordan, because he wasn’t 100 percent by any means conditioning wise, but his ankle felt very good and we were down a forward,” Corbett said. “He was comfortable enough to be able to go out there and play and he had some dynamite scoring chances.”

Then it seemed everyone got sick. Tyler Poulsen missed a couple of games in Alaska. Connor Merkley left after the first period on Saturday in Anchorage.

“I like the resolve of our group because we were able to do that,” Corbett said. “We finished one game with roughly two lines and an extra Saturday against Fairbanks (a 3-1 win), and we were able to get points in that game. We had literally seven forwards to play with in Anchorage on Friday (a 4-2 win).

“I was impressed by our conditioning. I was impressed by our actual energy levels physically coming down the stretch in that last week of the road trip.”

So the Chargers will get a chance to heal, and they may get an extra boost when they take the ice against Bemidji with the return of senior captain Max McHugh. McHugh also hasn’t suited up this season because of an injury, but he was scheduled to join the optional skate on Wednesday. Corbett is optimistic that he’ll be able to help down the stretch.

While the Chargers do get the rest of the regular season at home with four series in five weeks, it won’t be easy.  All four opponents are in the top four of the WCHA standings: Bemidji State (4th), Northern Michigan (2nd), Minnesota State (1st), and Bowling Green (3rd). The Chargers faced those four opponents on the road before going to Alaska, going 1-6-1.

“The goal is to get as many guys as healthy as possible,” Corbett said. “These are going to be well-earned points. These are teams that have come into our building and done well, so we have to be as prepared as we can. We don’t want to have it come down to that last weekend against Bowling Green.

“We played well in our past stretch at home (3-2-1 back in November), so we’d like to feel we’re coming into our friendly confines, and what better challenge is there than to play the top teams in the league to be able to solidify your playoff position.”

Goaltending has been solid for UAH, even when the scoring has been inconsistent. Jordan Uhelski has been in goal for all eight wins this season, but freshman backup Mark Sinclair has been making strides even if his statistics don’t bear it out.

“As much as Mark’s record and his numbers don’t look great, he’s played well,” Corbett said. “He deserved a better fate on Friday in Fairbanks (3-2 loss).”

“I have no qualms with our goaltending. Obviously, Jordan’s our go-to guy right now. Jordan has kept us in games and he’s given us a chance to win every night, and that’s all we can ask. Some nights we’re scoring, and some night’s we’re not.

“Our biggest thing right now is we’ve got to finish. In Fairbanks, we don’t finish on Friday, and we do on Saturday. We played a better game on Friday than we did on Saturday, but we finished on Saturday.”

Kestner for Hobey: For the second straight year, Josh Kestner is on the initial list of Hobey Baker Award nominees. Fan voting has begun on Facebook.

Kestner is 13th in Division I in goals per game (0.62). He is tied for 10th in power play goals with six. Overall, he has 16 goals this season, already the most by a Charger in 11 years. Fourteen have come in WCHA play, tops in the league.

“Josh has taken steps every year,” Corbett said. “As much as people see, what they have to understand is Josh has taken off more off the ice, physically in the weight room and things like that. He’s matured that way off the ice and it’s shown on the ice.

“He’s at the top of everybody’s scouting report, the guy that people are trying to stop. The biggest key for an offensive player and a guy like Josh who is a shooter is to be able to find ways to get open, to put himself in position where he’s going to get a shot off and put the puck where he wants to put it. He’s learned to move well without the puck.”

“He has to have a good stretch, not only for himself, but for our team. He’s a guy we’re going to rely on, but we’re also going to need some other guys to chip in from an offensive standpoint.”

Overtime talks: The Wisconsin State Journal last week reported that a standard overtime format across all conference is being debated. However, there is no consensus.

Currently, all NCAA games have a 5-on-5 sudden death overtime period if it is tied after regulation. If neither team scores, the result is a tie.

In the western leagues (WCHA, Big Ten, NCHC), games continue to determine which team gets an extra point in the league standings, even though the game is still officially a tie. The WCHA and NCHC play five minutes of 3-on-3 and, if needed, a sudden-death shootout. The Big Ten uses a three-round shootout only.

The eastern leagues (Hockey East, ECAC, Atlantic Hockey) do nothing: When 5-on-5 overtime ends, they go home.

Corbett, who is on the Division I championships committee, said overtime was a topic of discussion over the summer. The NCAA tournament field is based on the Pairwise rankings. A component of the Pairwise is the Ratings Percentage Index (RPI), which basically “shuts off” once the 5-on-5 overtime period is over.

Corbett said there is concern among college coaches should the NCAA adopt the NHL system, which uses a 3-on-3 overtime right after regulation. “I think college coaches are afraid that then all of a sudden they’re going to turn the RPI back on on the five minutes of 3-on-3. And they don’t want RPI points being given from a gimmick.”

This is the second year the WCHA adopted the three-point conference game system with an additional 3-on-3 overtime and shootout, and Corbett says it is good.

“It’s a little bit about the fan experience when it comes with 3-on-3 and the shootout. I like it. You know you’re getting points, it’s a little strategic and makes you work harder as a coach, thinking a bit more about who you’re putting out there. And you’re going to see that it’s going to make a difference at the end of the year.”

This week in the WCHA: All times are Central. Games featuring WCHA teams at home can be seen on WCHA.tv.

Friday, Jan. 19
* Bemidji State at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
* Alaska at Michigan Tech, 6:07 p.m.
* Lake Superior State at Northern Michigan, 6:07 p.m.
* Alaska Anchorage at #17 Bowling Green, 6:37 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 20
* Bemidji State at Ferris State, 6:07 p.m.
* Alaska at Michigan Tech, 6:07 p.m.
* Lake Superior State at Northern Michigan, 6:07 p.m.
* Alaska Anchorage at #17 Bowling Green, 6:07 p.m.
#9 Minnesota State at #3 St. Cloud State, 5:07 p.m.

Tuesday, Jan. 23
#14 Minnesota Duluth at #9 Minnesota State, 7:07 p.m.