MEN’S HOCKEY 2009-10 CHRISMCKELVIE
BRADHUNT
SOPHOMORE D
SENIOR F
MATTREAD JUNIOR F
2008-09 Peters Cup Champions 2009 McLeod Cup Champions 2009 NCAA Midwest Regional Champions 2009 Frozen Four
Bemidji State University Media Guide
Bemidji State University
Location: Bemidji, Minn. (15,000) Founded/Enrollment: 1919 (5,020) Conference: College Hockey America CHA Members: Bemidji State; Ala.-Huntsville; Niagara; Robert Morris. Affiliation: NCAA Division I Nickname: Beavers School Colors: Green (PMS 3305) and White Home Ice: John S. Glas Fieldhouse Size (capacity): 200x85 (2,399) President: Dr. Jon E. Quistgaard Athletics Director: Dr. Rick Goeb Assoc. Athletic Director/SWA: Sarah Levesque Head Trainer: Bill Crews Assistant Trainer: Corinne Dauksavage Assistant Trainer: Travis Shock Trainer Phone: (218) 755-2769 Compliance Coordinator: Sarah Levesque Compliance GA: Dolly Fieldman Compliance Phone: (218) 755-2769 Rink Manager: Vance Balstad Equipment Manager: Justin Enfield Equipment Phone: (218) 755-3292 Ticket Manager: Pamala Papp Ticket Phone: (218) 755-3993 Athletics Office Manager: Debbie Slough Athletics Phone: (218) 755-2941 Athletics Fax: (218) 755-3898
Athletic Media Relations
Director/Hockey: Brad Folkestad (Bemidji St ‘01) Office: (218) 755-4603 Cell: (218) 308-1115 e-mail: bfolkestad@bemidjistate.edu Ass’t Director: Dax Larson (Minnesota State ‘07) Office: (218) 755-2763 e-mail: dlarson@bemidjistate.edu Grad Ass’t: Ross LaDue (Iowa State ‘09) e-mail: gladue@bemidjistate.edu SID Phone: (218) 755-2763 SID Fax: (218) 755-3898 Hockey Press Box: (218) 755-3700 Web: http://www.bemidjistate.edu/athletics Mailing Address: Bemidji State University #29 (PE 203) 1500 Birchmont Drive NE Bemidji, MN 56601
Team Information 2008-09 Record: CHA Record: Skaters Returning: Skaters Lost:
20-16-1 12-5-1 (1st) 17 (10-F, 6-D, 1-G) 9 (5-F, 2-D, 2-G)
Program History
First Year of Hockey: 1947-48 First Season in Division I 1998-99 Overall Record: 943-458-82 (54th year/.664) Division I record: 152-156-34 (10th year/.494) CHA Championships: 4 (2004-05-08-09) Tournament Champions: 3 (2005-06-09) Years in Post-Season Play: 29 ...in Div. I Post-Season Play: 3 (2005-06-09) National Championships: 13 NCAA Division II (5): 1984-93-94-95-97 NCAA Division III (1): 1986 NAIA (7): 1968-69-70-71-73-79-80
Coaching Staff
Head Coach Tom Serratore Alma mater Bemidji State ‘87 Office Phone: (218) 755-2879 e-mail tserratore@bemidjistate.edu Record at BSU: 140-118-29 (9th year) Career Record: 140-118-29 (9th year) Ass’t Coaches (218) 755-2765 Bert Gilling (Minnesota Duluth ‘99) e-mail: bgilling@bemidjistate.edu Ted Belisle (Bemidji State ‘01) e-mail: ebelisle@bemidjistate.edu Graduate Assistant: Ryan Marvin (Brockport State ‘06) e-mail: rmarvin@bemidjistate.edu
Bemidji State Season Outlook 2009-10 Team Captains 2009-10 Schedule
BSU History and Records 2-8 3 7
2 Coaching and Support Staff
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Head Coach Tom Serratore Assistant Coaches Graduate Assistant Support Staff
9-12 13 13 13
Bemidji State Beavers
2009-10 Roster & Breakdowns 14 Returning Beavers 15-27 Beaver newcomers 28-29
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Bemidji Regional Events Center 90-91 Western Collegiate Hockey Assoc. 93
90
2009-10 Opponents
30
Non-Conference Opponents 30-32 CHA Opponents 33 All-Time Series Results 34 Series Results vs Opponents 35-37
2008-09 Season Recap
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Schedule and Results Final Team Statistics Final Individual Statistics Game-by-Game Scoring BSU’s Record When... The Last Time 2008-09 Game Recaps Line Combinations
38 38 39 40-41 40 41 42-54 55
College Hockey America
55
College Hockey America 2008-09 CHA Recap CHA Statistical Leaders 2008-09 Players of the Week
56 57 58 58
BSU History and Records
65
Beaver National Championships 79-80 BSU’s 31-0-0 Perfect Season 72 Bemidji State Coaching Records 73 Division I-Era Exhibition Results 77 National Playoff History 79-85 2005 NCAA Tournament 81 2006 NCAA Tournament 82 2009 NCAA Tournament 83-84 2009 Frozen Four 85 John S. Glas Fieldhouse 86-87 Strength and Conditioning 88-89 Previous BSU Arenas 92
BSU’s ice hockey Future
24
table of contents
2009-10 Season Outlook
Quick Facts
Year-by-Year Results 59 All-Time Captains 59 Year-by-Year Team Stats 60-61 Indv. Year-by-Year Leaders 63-63 Indv. Career Scoring Leaders 64 Division I-Era Career Leaders 64 Division I-era Scoring Leaders 64 All-time Scoring Leaders 64 Defensemen Scoring Leaders 65 Individual Career Records 65 All-Time Goaltending Leaders 66 Indv. Game & Season Records 67 Team Records 67 Indv. Single-Season Leaders 67 All-Time Hat Trick List 68 All-Time Results 69-78
Our Foundation: Beaver Hockey Alumni
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Coach R.H. “Bob” Peters 94-95 BSU All-America Honorees 96-97 In Memory of Galen Nagle 97 Joel Otto: 1984 Hobey Baker 97 Beaver Hockey Alumni 98-101 50 Legends for 50 Years 102 BSU’s Retired Numbers 103 Division I-Era Player Awards 104 Academic Excellence 105 Division I-Era Beavers in Post-Collegiate Hockey 106 BSU Traditions 107 NHL Players & Olympians 107
Your INtroduction: Bemidji State University
101
Welcome to Bemidji Bemidji State University BSU Athletics Facilities Beaver Pride Media Information NCAA Rules Compliance BSU Media Outlets BSU Administration BSU Athletics Staff Directory Media Speed Chart
108 109 110 111 112 112 113 114 115 116
The 2009-10 Bemidji State University Men’s Ice Hockey Media Guide is a production of the Bemidji State Office of Athletic Media Relations Executive Editor Brad Folkestad, Director of AMR Assistant Editors Dax Larson, Assistant Director of AMR; Ross LaDue, Graduate Assistant; Alayna Skibness, Student Assistant; Eric Story, Student Assistant; Courtney Anderson, Student Assistant; Corrine Milien, Student Assistant; John Peterson, Student Assistant; Andy Bartlett, Associate Director of Marketing; Rose Jones, Director of Marketing Cover Design Kristina Hendrickson, Communications/Marketing Interior Covers Brad Folkestad Interior Design Brad Folkestad and Andy Bartlett Stats Research Bob Wolbeck Photography John Swartz, BSU Photo Services; Andy Visockis; Monte Draper, Bemidji Pioneer Printing Arrow Printing; Bemidji, Minn.
Copyright © 2009 Bemidji State University. All Rights Reserved. Reprint rights allowed to accredited media outlets only. For additional copies of this guide, contact the BSU Office of Athletic Media Relations at (218) 755-2763.
2009-10
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2009-10 outlook
FORWARDS
junior Matt Read
sophomore Ben Kinne
RETURNING Matt Read Ben Kinne Shea Walters Ian Lowe Jamie MacQueen Chris McKelvie Tyler Lehrke Ryan Cramer Emil Billberg Darcy Findlay
Yr. Jr. So. So. Jr. So. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So.
LOST Tyler Scofield Matt Francis Brandon Marino Travis Winter Brent Tamane
sophomore Shea Walters GP 73 37 34 57 36 83 86 63 31 14
GP g-a=p 129 48-63=111 63 18-23=41 116 15-36=51 118 28-37=65 4 0-1=1
NEWCOMERS Last Team Jordan George NAHL-Topeka Matt Hartmann NAHL-Topeka Aaron McLeod CJHL-Ottowa Brance Orban AJHL-Olds
T
g-a=p 27-40=67 20-23=43 28-41=69 47-48-95
Defensemen
he 53-year history of the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey program may be best told by the banners that adorn the rafters of John S. Glas Fieldhouse--the home of Beaver Hockey for the last 43 seasons. There, BSU teams have been recognized for 13 national championships and 21 conference titles at the NAIA, NCAA Division II and III levels and three NCAA Division I Tournament berths. In addition, the Beavers are quickly approaching 1,000 all-time wins and have earned those victories at a 70-percent clip. For those associated with a program of such lore comes an intense pressure to reach the bar set so high by the men who have dawned the green and white during the last five decades, not only adding to legacy, but to make them proud. The 2008-09 Beavers not only met those standards, they blazed a trail into uncharted territory, even for BSU, and this fall, they will raise a banner in recognition of reaching the pinnacle of collegiate hockey--the Frozen Four. In just its 10th season at the NCAA Division I level, the Bemidji State men’s hockey team captured the hockey world and took it for a ride from its humble College Hockey America home nestled in the north woods of the “State of Hockey,” through the land of hockey giants and into a starring role on the national stage in Washington D.C. What can we expect as an encore? According to head coach Tom Serratore the team’s sights really haven’t changed. The Beavers intensely focused on conference play and the automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament that comes with the 2010 College
2
g-a=p 24-43=67 8-7=15 4-11=15 4-16=20 4-4=8 10-5=15 9-13=22 6-5=11 4-2=6 0-2=2
Hockey America Tournament championship. “Obviously you’d hope the success we had last year carries over, but there are no guarantees,” commented Serratore. “Your roster changes, your opponents change and how people perceive you changes.” “We reached the pinnacle last year when we clinched a spot in the Frozen Four, but quite honestly we’ve been very consistent over the course of the last eight years and we want to continue that,” added Serratore. Since Serratore took the reigns of the BSU men’s hockey program prior to the 2001-02 season, the Beavers have posted four 20-win seasons, won four conference championships, rolled up CHA wins at a .672 pace and posted three conference tournament titles. The BSU 2009-10 roster features 17 players that have returned to Bemidji State with at least one season of college hockey under their belts. Included in that mix are: 10 forwards, six defenders and a goaltender. In addition, Bemidji State brings nine newcomers into the fold in the form of four forwards, three blue liners and two goaltenders. Offensively, the team is coming off a season during which it managed 3.06 goals per game to lead the CHA. The Beavers’ top scorer from each of the last two seasons, Matt Read, is back to lead the attack after equalling a BSU Division I-era record with 15-25=40 points. He will be looked at to lead an offensive attack made of young and talented student-athletes, poised to take their games to a new level. The tandem of
2009-10
Sophomore Brad Hunt
Senior Chris Peluso
RETURNING Brad Hunt Chris Peluso Ryan Adams Kyle Hardwick Dan MacIntyre Tyler jundt
Yr. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. So.
Junior Ryan Adams GP 37 97 24 49 24 20
g-a=p 9-23=32 1-28=29 1-2=3 1-4=5 0-1=1 0-0=0
GP 140 68
g-a=p 15-39=54 6-16=24
NEWCOMERS Last Tm Jake Areshenko USHL-Fargo Matt Carlson NAHL-Fairbanks Brady Wacker SJHL-Humbolt
g-a=p 2-7=9 4-22=26 17-65=82
LOST Cody Bostock Graham McManamin
Goaltenders
sophomore Dan BAKALA RETURNING Dan BAKALA
freshman Travis Bosch Yr. So.
LOST Matt Dalton
freshman Mathieu Dugas GP GAA/Sv% 0 .000/.000 GP GAA/Sv% 36 2.29/.915
NEWCOMERS Last TM GAA/Sv% Travis Bosch SJHL-Melville 2.50/.915 Mathieu Dugas NAHL-Wenatchee 3.05/.904
senior Chris McKELVIE
senior Kyle Hardwick
junior Matt Read
The 2009-10 Bemidji State men’s hockey team will be captained by the trio of Chris McKelvie, Kyle Hardwick and Matt Read. While McKelvie has been selected to wear the “C,” Hardwick and Read will serve as alternate captains.
“Selecting captains is something
that our players are responsible for, and I think they really thought this through and have done a wonderful job picking three high-character, hard-working players to be the face of our program in 2009-10,” commented head coach Tom Serratore. “Our captains are truly an extension of our coaching staff.” He added, “We lean heavily on them not only to give direction to the younger players, but also to lead by example. There is no doubt in my mind these three players will do exactly that.”
McKelvie captains the team after
serving as an alternate a year ago. He joins an exclusive list of Beaver hockey players to captain the team for two seasons or more.
Hardwick, a senior defenseman, and
Read, a junior forward, are both in their first seasons filling the role marked as a
Shea Walters and Ben Kinne really came on in the back half of the season and finished as two of the top five scoring freshmen in the CHA a year ago, adding punch and proven playmaking ability to the line up. Defense has come to be a trademark of Beaver hockey over the past few seasons and should be a steady force for Serratore again this winter. The return of six veterans from a unit that allowed a league-low 2.11 goals per game a year ago--just 38 goals in 18 CHA contests--will be the foundation for success in 2009-10. Brad Hunt, 2009 CHA Rookie of the Year and First-Team All-CHA selection, will anchor the blue line and after netting seven power-play goals, will serve as a point man on the BSU power-play. In goal, Bemidji State will look to sophomore Dan Bakala to fill the void in the wake of the departures of Orlando Alamano to graduation and Matt Dalton to the professional ranks and backstop a team that ranked among college hockey’s elite defenses last winter.
Forwards
Although the Beavers lost over 260 points of productivity up front at the conclusion of the 2008-09 season with the loss of Tyler Scofield (48-63=111), Travis Winter (28-37=65), Brandon Marino (15-36=51) and Matt Francis (18-23=41), BSU returns 10 forwards, headlined by 2008-09 First-Team All-CHA selection and 2009 CHA Tournament Most Outstanding Player Matt Read, 2008-09 all-rookie selection Ben Kinne and 2009-10 captain Chris McKelvie. Read tallied 15-25=40 points to pace the Beavers and rank second in the league in scoring. At times Read exhibited his ability to take the team on his back and lead them to victory. The best example of this was in the 2009 CHA Tournament. After setting a career-high with two goals in the 4-1 semifinal win over Ala.-Huntsville, Read piled up a goal and an assist versus Robert Morris in the
2009-10 outlook
Captains
championship game, leading the team to overtime. In the extra frame, he punched the Beavers’ ticket to the big dance with a rebound goal. “I think we all realize Matt Read is our best player,” stated Serratore. “Over the last two years he has generated more offense than anyone else on our team. He is a special player and we are going to lean on him heavily to be our point-producer again this year.” “With the loss of Scofield, Francis and Winter, we need some other guys to step up and pick up a share of the scoring load.” Serratore explained, “Those guys played a key role in the success that we were able to achieve last year.” “Ben Kinne and Shea Walters had a tremendous second half last year and along with Ryan Cramer, I think they were our most productive line down the stretch.” Serratore added, “They click together, they compliment each other very well and we are hoping that line in particular will elevate their game offensively.” Both Kinne and Walters were part of a freshman class that gained valuable experience down the stretch last year. With Kinne making an appearance in each of the Beavers’ 37 games and Walters skating in 34, the duo was thrust into action and asked to contribute night in and night out. Kinne was second among BSU rookies and ranked seventh on the team in scoring with 8-7=15 points. The St. Paul, Minn. native showed he belonged late in the season against some of collegiate hockey’s best by posting a goal and an assist in the NCAA Midwest Regional. Linemate and fellow Minnesotan Walters also rolled up 4-11=15 points in 34 games for the Beavers. Cramer is a big, physical player who brings far more to the ice than goals and assists. Despite suffering a knee injury late in the season and sitting out five games, he posted two goals and two assists.
leader. The trio have not only proven themselves as role models by their performances on the ice, they have also been recognized for their hard work and dedication in off-the-ice training as well as in the classroom as all three are CHA All-Academic honorees.
“It’s an honor to be named as a
captain of any team and it’s no different with our program. When you look at the history and the tradition of Bemidji State hockey and the captains and the leaders that we’ve had, it’s a tremendous honor for these players to be named among that group.” Serratore added, “With that said, you don’t necessarily have to wear a letter in order to be a leader. We call on all of our upper classmen to help ingrain the traditions and values of Beaver hockey into our younger players.” Above: Matt Read chases a loose puck en route to a 5-1 victory over No. 2 Notre Dame--the Beavers’ first NCAA Division I Tournament victory.
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2009-10 outlook
Also key to the Beavers’ offensive attack in 2009 are seniors Chris McKelvie and Tyler Lehrke. “Chris McKelvie is not only our fastest skater, but he is also our hardest working player,” said Serratore. “He’s extremely reliable and is a kid that we can count on to lead this team.” McKelvie saw his point production go up last year skating in all 37 games for the Beavers. He posted three goals and four assists using his speed to create scoring chances for himself and others. “Tyler Lehrke is an unsung hero on this team,” commented Serratore. “He’s a blue collar player that does what ever is asked of him.” Although each year Lehrke has been a part of the program Serratore and his staff have seen a boost in his offensive output, statistical totals may not be the best way to judge the value of a player like Lehrke. “Every player has a role on this team. As much as scoring is emphasized, ultimately we have to keep goals out of our net in order to put ourselves in position to win games,” explained Serratore. “Tyler Lehrke will get some scoring opportunities, but we often have him matched up with our opponent’s top line and we count on him defensively.” Serratore added, “He is a tough, competitive kid that skates very well.” In addition to Read and Cramer, the Beavers return the services of two junior forwards to the line-up for 2009-10. Ian Lowe posted 2-8=10 points in 33 games a year ago, while Emil Billberg continues to transition from the European brand of hockey. Hindered by injury most of his sophomore campaign, Billberg showed flashes of brilliance when he cracked the line-up. Posting a goal in each game of the series sweep over Ala.-Huntsville Dec. 5-6, including the game-winner in the series finally, the sophomore was named INCH National Player of the Week Runner up. Jamie MacQueen and Darcy Findlay round out the Beavers’ core of returning forwards. Both were mentioned by Serratore as players that have the potential to jump up and help fill the scoring void. MacQueen consistently exhibited himself as one of the Beavers’ top skaters in 2008-09, scoring 4-4=8 points
in 36 games. Findlay wrapped up his rookie campaign posting a pair of assists in 16 games played. In addition to its returning forwards, BSU gains the services of four freshman attackers for 2009-10. Jordan George, Matt Hartmann, Aaron McLeod and Brance Orban will be in the mix for a spot on one of the Beaver’s front lines. Each comes in with impressive scoring pedigrees, and more than any other position, the forward spot is loaded with opportunities for young players to step in and contribute immediately. The question is just how quickly each will transition to collegiate hockey. George comes to BSU after anchoring a wing spot for the Topeka RoadRunners of the NAHL. He recorded 27 goals and 40 assists in 58 games a year ago to pace the team and tie for second-most among all NAHL players during the regular season. Hartmann is coming off a season during which he collected 20 goals and 23 assists for the Topeka RoadRunners to rank fourth on the team with 43 points. A proven threat on the power play, Hartmann led the squad with 10 power-play markers and added eight helpers on the man advantage. McLeod comes to Bemidji State after playing each of the last two seasons in the CJHL. For Ottawa in 2008-09 he piled up 28 goals, 41 assists to finish as the Junior Senator’s leading scorer and rank 16th in the CJHL with 69 points. McLeod recorded at least a point in 43 of 58 games and posted 21 multi-point efforts. Orban, a three-year veteran forward for the Olds Grizzlys of the AJHL, is coming off his most productive season. He accumulated 47 goals and 48 assists in 76 games to lead his team and rank fourth in the league in total points (95). Nearly half of his 47 goals (19) came on the man advantage.
Defensemen Returning six players from a defensive unit that held opponents to a league-low 2.11 goals per game, the extremely balanced Beavers’ blue line comes into
junior forward Matt READ
sophomore forward Ben KINNE
senior forward Chris McKelvie Above: Junior defenseman Ryan Adams is one of the veteran blue liners that will be called upon this season to minimize opponent scoring opportunities.
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2009-10
senior defenseman Chris Peluso
2009-10 outlook
sophomore defenseman Brad Hunt
2009-10 with plenty of experience. But with that said, there is no doubt there will be a void on the blue line left by perennial All-CHA pick Cody Bostock. Bostock played in 140 games for BSU over the past four seasons and graduated after piling up 15-39=54 points to climb to No. 31 on the Beavers’ all-time defensemen scoring list. Obvious candidates to fill that role are senior Chris Peluso and sophomore Brad Hunt. Both were regulars on the BSU blue line a year ago, and each has exhibited an ability to create scoring opportunities. “Last year was very interesting for us defensively. We gave up more goals that we would have liked early in the year, but we also chipped in offensively and Brad Hunt was a big part of that,” said Serratore. “Brad has tremendous offensive skills. He shoots the puck like an NHLer, he has good vision and in general, good things are going to happen when he has the puck.” Hunt broke onto the scene last winter to rank eighth in the country in scoring among defensemen with 9-23=32 points. He found a knack for generating scoring opportunities and was the trigger man on the Beavers’ power play. Of his nine goals, seven came on the man advantage. His 23 points not only paced all BSU freshmen, Hunt finished third on the team and surpassed BSU great and current Columbus Blue Jacket Andrew Murray to tie for the top spot on BSU’s Division I-era rookie scoring list. For the third consecutive season, Peluso saw his scoring output increase. Although he went without a goal, his 13 helpers were good for second among BSU defensemen. A multi-talented defender, his transition skills contributed to the Beavers’ scoring output, while his skating ability gave Serratore a solid penalty killer. “Chris Peluso has the ability to chip in offensively largely because he skates so well,” commented Serratore. “That skating ability not only enables him to transition the puck well, he is also able to get to where he needs to be in order to be a solid defender for us.”
Rounding out the defensive unit are Kyle Hardwick, Ryan Adams, Tyler Jundt and Matt Carlson. Statistically speaking, this quartet may not put up big offensive numbers, but they will certainly be called upon to be accountable defensively in an effort to keep BSU opponents off the scoreboard. Hardwick returns for his senior campaign with the captain’s “A” on his chest. The fourth-year player blossomed into a trusted defensive constant a year ago seeing time in a career-high 26 games, which included the final 14 games of the season. He wasn’t called on to score often, but he made it count when he did. Without a point during the regular season, Hardwick pitched in an assist in each of the Beavers’ Midwest Regional games, including a helper on Tyler Scofield’s game-winning goal to clinch a spot in the 2009 Frozen Four. “Kyle Hardwick is what you’d call a defenseman’s defenseman. He is tremendously reliable on the penalty kill and is one of our best stoppers back there,” said Serratore. Adams is another defender that worked his way into the line-up and continued to build confidence as the season rolled on. After posting just one point during the regular season, he recorded an assist in the CHA Championship victory and netted his first goal in the green and white in the Midwest Regional Championship. In addition, his 6-1 frame adds length to a blue line that may be a bit undersized in 2009-10. “Very much like Peluso, Ryan Adams possesses good transition skills and brings a tremendous battle level to our unit,” commented Serratore. “He is someone we will lean on heavily this year.” Not unlike Adams or Hardwick, Tyler Jundt worked his way into the line-up 19 times last season with a significant portion of that experience coming late in the season. “Tyler Jundt is very reliable and has good puck skills. He’s got a good depth to his game and we’re hoping that he’ll elevate his play this year,” said Serratore. “He’s a veteran now and we need him to play like a veteran.”
senior defenseman Kyle Hardwick Above: Sophomore defenseman Brad Hunt led all BSU defenders and freshman in scoring in 2008-09 with 9-23=32 points.
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2009-10 outlook
Although he isn’t new to the Beavers, sophomore defenseman Matt Carlson will log his first collegiate game experience this season. After sitting out last season as a redshirt, his size and strength will be a welcomed addition to the defense. At 6-3 and 220 pounds, Carlson stands as one of the biggest players to fill a BSU uniform in quite some time and will be looked at to provide the unit with another solid defensive defenseman. “Matt brings a unique dimension to our defensive corps. He’s 6-foot-three, works extremely hard and has a long reach,” said Serratore. “We feel he’s got the ability to be a defenseman that will not only eat up a lot of minutes for us, but because he is so mobile for a big man, he will be very difficult to play against.” In addition to the Beavers’ returning blue liners, BSU gains the services of two freshmen, Jake Areshenko and Brady Wacker. “Jake Areshenko and Brady Wacker each bring unique intangibles to our corps,” Serratore explained. “Brady is a dasher, second-wave defenseman with an extremely high battle-level, but also has solid offensive attributes. Jake is extremely strong and powerful and has a competitive nature that will allow him to be a stopper for us.” Wacker spent the last three seasons as a defenseman for the Humbolt Broncos of the SJHL. In 2008-09, he finished third in the league in scoring, pacing the Broncos to their third consecutive SJHL Credit Union Cup with 17 goals and 65 assists for 82 points. His 65 assists led all players and his total of 50 points on the power play (10g-40a) was second to none in the league. Wacker concluded the 2008-09 regular season as the first player in SJHL history to be selected as the league’s Player of the Year and its Defenseman of the Year while he fell just six points shy of the league’s scoring championship. Areshenko patrolled the blue line in 68 of 70 games for the USHL‘s Fargo Force in 2008-09. In addition to scoring two goals and seven assists, Areshenko’s defensive unit ranked second in the league’s Western Division in goals allowed (166).
“We feel this is a defensive corps that will be extremely fun to work with and could honestly be our best core in a while,” commented Serratore. The confidence Serratore has in his defensive unit’s skill, bodes well for a young and inexperienced goaltending trio looking to break into the collegiate ranks.
Goaltenders If there was any spot on the BSU roster that might evoke questions it would be goaltender. After having the good fortune to rely on Matt Climie and Matt Dalton over the past two seasons--both of which have since moved on to professional hockey--BSU faithful haven’t had reason to question who would be in net. This year is very different, though it’s not due to lack of talent, more unfamiliarity and lack of collegiate experience. “Goaltending is the million-dollar question. Everybody knows it and we see it,” said Serratore. “We are inexperienced at that position, but we truly believe we have three capable guys back there.” The veteran of the group is Dan Bakala. A sophomore who posted solid numbers in three exhibition contests a year ago, Bakala went a perfect 3-0 versus Manitoba and the U.S. National Development U-18 Team, which included a 7-0 shutout over the Bisons in his first collegiate action. After a 4-3 win the following night, Bakala posted a season-high 24 saves in a 3-1 victory over the U.S. U-18 squad to cap his collegiate experience. Travis Bosch comes to Bemidji State after spending the 2007-08 and 2008-09 campaigns in the net for the Melville Millionaires of the SJHL, where he compiled a 30-24-5-0 record with a goals against average of better than 2.50 and a save percentage of .915. In 2008-09, Bosch backstopped a team that went 37-16-3-0 and rode a winning streak into the league championship series. Bosch posted a 2.36 goals against average and a league-leading .928 save percentage in 2,776 minutes of play. On the season he went 29-16-3-0 with a shutout.
sophomore forward Jamie MacQueen
junior defenseman Ryan Adams
sophomore goaltender Dan BAKALA Above: As a 2009-10 captain, senior forward Chris McKelvie joins an elite group of players to have worn the “C” in two or more seasons.
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2009-10
Special Teams: Power Play
junior forward Ian LOWE
senior forward Tyler Lehrke
In 2008-09, Bemidji State garnered recognition as one of the elite power-play teams in the country posting 40 goals in 195 opportunities to rank sixth in all of NCAA Division I at 20.5-percent. In conference play, the Beavers were second-to-none. BSU scored on nearly one out of every four opportunities to record a league-leading 21.2-percent efficiency. “In order to be successful over the course of an entire season, you’ve got to have good play from your special teams,” stated Serratore. “Our power play was consistent last year and we are hoping for the same level of consistency this year. The keys to that success are guys like Matt Read and Brad Hunt and we have both of them back.” Hunt settled into the point of the BSU power-play early and the triggerman produced. His heavy stick is magnified when up by a man. Seven of his nine goals came on the power play, falling just one shy of equalling BSU’s all-time record for power-play goals by a defender set by Stefan Bjork in 1999-2000. He was second on the team in power-play goals and finished atop the CHA power-play scoring charts with 3-9=12 points in conference action. With 25 of the team’s 40 power-play goals lost largely due to the departures of Scofield, Bostock, Francis and Winter, Hunt will likely play a vital role on the Beavers’ power-play unit again in 2009-10. Other possible sources of point production will be junior and leading
2009-10 outlook
Mathieu Dugas comes to Bemidji State after posting a 17-12-0 record with the Wenatchee Wild of the North American Hockey League (NAHL). In nearly 2,100 minutes between the pipes, Dugas turned away 988 shots for a .904 save percentage, while allowing 3.05 goals per game. On the strength of a 7-1-1 postseason in goal, he guided his team to the national championship. “It’s going to be an interesting competition among our goaltenders this year,” stated Serratore. “We need someone to step to the plate and be our stopper.”
scorer Matt Read and sophomore Shea Walters. Read potted just two power-play goals a year ago but his playmaking ability and drive to win makes him a lock for big things this year. Walters came on as a scorer down the stretch and, like Read, has good vision and a knack for finding the stick of the open man.
Special Teams: Penalty Kill “The penalty kill is typically as good as your goaltending,” opened Serratore. “We’ve had very good penalty-kill numbers over the course of the last six or seven years because we have had very good goaltending. That was no different last season with Matt Dalton in the net.” Serratore added, “This year a big part of our penalty kill is going to be the person who ends up in goal for us. In order to be successful, our best penalty-killer has to be our goaltender.” The BSU penalty kill unit was nothing short of a dead end for its opponents in 2008-09. The Beavers finished the season snuffing out 85.2-percent, or 178 of 209, opponent power-play chances and fell just a few percentage points shy of setting a BSU Division I-era team record for efficiency. Under Serratore, the penalty kill has become the team’s identity and BSU used that as its calling card again in 2008-09. The Beavers set the league standard for penalty-kill efficiency for the fifth consecutive campaign and the sixth in eight seasons under its current head coach. Bemidji State held its CHA opponents scoreless on 81-of-94 power-play chances, while adding four short-handed goals. As an example of just how potent the BSU penalty-kill was, in the team’s final 13 games, the Beavers allowed just seven goals in 77 power-play opportuntiies--that’s nearly 92-percent efficiency. “Every year, the penalty kill is one of Bemidji State’s strengths,” Serratore said. “It is something we hang our hat on; we’re aggressive in the zone and we’re very aggressive up ice. Our philosophy is to make teams beat us – we’re not going to lay back. If there is a breakdown, we lean on our goaltenders to back us up.”
2009-10 BSU Men’s Ice Hockey Schedule
sophomore forward Shea WALTERS
Date Opponent Oct. 9-10 Air Force Oct. 23-24 at Northern Michigan Oct. 31-Nov. 1 at u Alabama-Huntsville Nov. 6-7 u Robert Morris Nov. 14-15 at Minnesota Nov. 20-21 u Alabama-Huntsville Nov. 27 1 Miami (Ohio) Nov. 28 1 Ohio State Dec. 4-5 u Niagara Dec. 11-12 Minnesota State Jan. 2-3 at Western Michigan Jan. 15-16 at u Niagara Jan. 22 Minnesota Duluth Jan. 23 at Minnesota Duluth Jan. 29-30 u Robert Morris Feb. 12-13 at u Robert Morris Feb. 19-20 u Niagara Feb. 26-27 at Nebraska-Omaha Mar. 5-6 at u Alabama-Huntsville Mar. 13-14 CHA Tournament Mar. 26-28 NCAA Regionals Apr. 8 & 10 Frozen Four
Location Time Arena Conf Bemidji, Minn. 7:35/7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse AH Marquette, Mich. 6:35/6:35 p.m. Berry Events Center CCHA Huntsville, Ala. 7:00/1:00 p.m. Von Braun Center CHA Bemidji, Minn. 7:35/7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse CHA Minneapolis, Minn. 7:37/6:07 p.m. Mariucci Arena WCHA Bemidji, Minn. 7:35/7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse CHA Grand Forks, N.D. 4:00 p.m. Ralph Engelstad Arena CCHA Grand Forks, N.D. 4:00 p.m. Ralph Engelstad Arena CCHA Bemidji, Minn. 7:35/7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse CHA Bemidji, Minn. 7:35/7:00 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse CHA Kalamazoo, Mich. 6:30/3:30 p.m. Lawson Ice Arena CCHA Lewiston, N.Y. 6:05/6:05 p.m. Dwyer Arena CHA Bemidji, Minn. 7:35 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse WCHA Duluth, Minn. 7:07 p.m. D.E.C.C. WCHA Bemidji, Minn. 7:35/7:05 p.m. John. S. Glas Fieldhouse CHA Moon Township, Pa. 6:05/6:05 p.m. RMU Island Sport Center CHA Bemidji, Minn. 7:35/7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse CHA Omaha, Neb. 7:05/8:05 p.m. Quest Center Omaha CCHA Huntsville, Ala. 5:30/3:00 p.m. Von Braun Center CHA Lewiston, N.Y. 1:00/6:00 p.m. Dwyer Arena Host Sites TBA TBA Detroit, Mich TBA Ford Field
bold= home game; John S. Glas Fieldhouse // u- College Hockey America game // 1- Subway Holiday Classic; Grand Forks, N.D. All times LOCAL
2009-10
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2009-10 outlook
2009-10 Schedule A rematch of the 2009 national semi-final game versus Miami University, first-ever clashes with Northern Michigan University and The Ohio State University and a match up with University of Minnesota for the first time since 2003 highlight Bemidji State’s 34-game slate. In addition to the Beavers’ 18-game College Hockey America (CHA) line up, BSU has a CCHA-heavy, 16game nonconference schedule which includes a holiday tournament at Ralph Engelstad Arena. “We always play a competitive and demanding schedule and this season will be no different,” said Serratore. “With six teams that were in the NCAA tournament last spring and six teams that finished in the top 20 in the country, it is going to be a challenge--but we are no strangers to this kind of schedule. It will just be very interesting to see how this team reacts to a schedule this demanding.” Serratore added, “What is unique about the upcoming schedule is the number of CCHA opponents we will face. In the past we’ve predominantly played a WCHA nonconference schedule, but in 2009-10 we will play eight games versus the CCHA, which will give our fans a chance to see some of the high-end teams in that league.” BSU will treat fans to a 15-game home slate in the team’s final full season in the John S. Glas Fieldhouse-one of the most storied and revered hockey barns in all of college hockey--before departing the venue to make its new home on the south shore of Lake Bemidji in the state-of-the-art Bemidji Regional Events Center in the fall of 2010-11. The Beavers lift the lid on their 54th season of play with an Oct. 9-10 series versus a very familiar foe at the Glas. The United States Air Force Academy, under the direction of former Beaver goaltender and brother of BSU bench boss, Frank Serratore, makes its first appearance on BSU’s home ice since the team left the CHA for Atlantic Hockey following the 2005-06 campaign. The Beavers continue nonconference competition Oct. 23-24 when they make their inaugural trip to Marquette, Mich. to face Northern Michigan for the first time in school history. The two-time defending CHA champion Beavers remain on the road to open their 11th CHA slate at long-time rival and fellow founding member University of Alabama-Huntsville Oct. 30-31. BSU then returns home Nov. 6-7 to face Robert Morris University in a rematch of the epic 2009 CHA Tournament championship game that launched Bemidji State to its historic run through the national tournament. The series marks the first of three versus the Colonials in 2009-10 with four games taking place at the Glas. Due to the CHA’s unbalanced, 18-game league schedule, the Beavers will also clash with Niagara University on six occasions with two series set for BSU’s home ice and a pair of games at NU’s Dwyer Arena. “From a conference standpoint, we paid our dues last season having to be on the road for the majority of our league games. This year that is reversed and
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we have 10 of our 18 CHA games at home.” Serratore added, “It will be nice not to have to be on the road as much during league play.” November 14-15 brings a long awaited match-up with Minnesota at Mariucci Arena. After hosting Alabama-Huntsville for the only time of the season Nov. 20-21, the team heads west to Grand Forks, N.D. to participate in University of North Dakota’s Subway Holiday Classic November 27-28. The Beavers open the event with a rematch of last year’s Frozen Four match-up with Miami (Ohio) Friday. The following afternoon, BSU will take the ice versus Ohio State. “This schedule is very fan friendly,” stated Serratore. “Playing at Minnesota and in the tournament at North Dakota versus teams like Ohio State and Miami gives our fans an opportunity to follow the Beavers as we take on some of the country’s premier teams in world-class venues.” The Beavers open the month of December with a four-game homestand--it’s longest of the upcoming slate. Niagara makes their first trip of the season to Bemidji December 4-5, while the Beavers host Minnesota State University the following weekend (Dec. 11-12) in an extension of a non-conference series spanning six seasons. Bemidji State then rings in 2010 with a non-conference battle at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, Mich. January 2-3. The rare Saturday-Sunday series marks the Beavers’ second trip to Michigan in 2009-10 after failing to log a game in the Wolverine State for the first time since 1999-2000. January 15-16 the Beavers make their only trip to Niagara Falls, N.Y. before entering into a home-and-home series with University of Minnesota Duluth to extend its series to nine straight seasons. The teams will first meet at the Glas to open the series January 22 with a return game at UMD’s D.E.C.C. the following evening for ownership rights to the coveted “Babe the Blue Ox” traveling trophy. In an odd two-week span, the Beavers will face Robert Morris in their next four contests. January 29-30, the BSU hosts the Colonials, while the team wraps up the season series 16 days later (Feb. 12-13) in a battle on the fringes of Pittsburgh, Pa. at the RMU Island Sports Center. BSU closes the home portion of its season by hosting Niagara February 19-20 in what is thought to be the Beavers’ farewell to the John Glas Fieldhouse after 43 years. February 26-27 the Beavers wrap up non-conference play with a trip to Omaha, Neb., to face the Mavericks of Nebraska at Omaha in just the fifth and sixth meetings versus UNO all time. Finally, the Beavers draw the regular-season to a close Mar. 5-6 at Alabama-Huntsville. The 2010 CHA Tournament is set for March 12-13 at Dwyer Arena In Lewiston, N.Y. The Beavers will look to make it two in a row and the fifth conference tournament title in the last seven seasons and look to shack the let down of a 7-5 loss to Niagara in the 2008 CHA Championship game at the same venue.
2009-10
junior forward Emil BILLBERG
sophomore forward Darcy FINDLAY
junior forward Ryan Crameer
• led BSU to College Hockey America regular-season championships in 2004, 2005, 2008 and 2009, the 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st conference titles, respectively, in BSU’s storied men’s ice hockey history but its first at the NCAA Division I level. • guided BSU to its first NCAA Division I Tournament win over No. 2 Notre Dame Mar. 28, 2009. • led the Beavers to their first appearance in the Frozen Four to cap the 2009 campaign. • directed BSU to championship-game appearances in the CHA Tournament in a league-record four consecutive seasons (2003-06). • led BSU to the CHA Tournament championship in 2005, 2006 and 2009, becoming the first CHA program to garner back-to-back appearances in the NCAA Tournament. • directed BSU to a record of .500 or better during the last seven seasons. • helped BSU become only the second CHA program to win both the league regular-season and tournament crowns during the same campaign, achieving that feat in 2005 and repeating the feat in 2009. • helped BSU earn its first Division I-era invitation to the NCAA Tournament on the strength of its 2005 CHA Tournament win. • oversaw the first Division I-era BSU program to be nationally-ranked in the USA Today poll, when the Beavers earned a nod at No. 15 on Oct. 17, 2005. • is a four-time College Hockey America Coach of the Year (2004, 2005, 2008, 2009). • has been named a finalist for the Spencer Penrose Award, awarded to the National Coach of the Year, five times and was runner up for the national award in 2009.
head coach tom serratore
R
unning down a list of Tom Serratore’s list of achievements as head men’s ice hockey coach at Bemidji State, one might think he has assembled a lengthy and respected career. After all, Serratore has only:
As for Serratore’s career... Respected? Without question. Lengthy? Anything but. Serratore has led Bemidji State’s remarkable rise from a floundering Division I neophyte to national heights and back-to-back appearances in the NCAA Tournament after just seven short seasons. The legacy Serratore was asked to continue when named the seventh head coach at Bemidji State in 2001 was one of the finest in all of college athletics. Serratore was hand-selected to succeed future Hockey Hall of Fame member R.H. “Bob” Peters, who won 702 games and 13 national championships at Bemidji State while carving out one of the true dynasties in the history of athletics at any level. “I can’t approximate what Coach Peters did at BSU. No coach can,” Serratore said. Conventional sports wisdom has long contended it is never wise to follow a legend, but Serratore has never been one to shy away from a challenge. His remarkable resume and the arrival of Bemidji State as a legitimate Division I program proves Serratore is more than comfortable following a legend, and his achievements over the last seven years have him well on the path to a legend of his own. BSU has continued to build success during each year of the Serratore era improving from 12 victories during his inaugural 2001-02 season to 14-14-8, then to 2013-3 in 2003-04 to 23-13-1 in 2005-06 and ultimately to 20-15-1 in 2009 en route to the school’s first appearance in the Frozen Four. The Beavers finished 4-26-4 in 2000-01, the year before Serratore took over, giving the Beavers an 18game improvement under his guidance. And Serratore is already just the second coach in BSU history to coach in more than 250 games, while his 140 career wins rank him second all-time at the school.
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head coach tom Serratore
Championship run for the ages
Bemidji State’s 2008-09 season was one not even a Caldecott Medalwinning author would have dreamed of penning. After dropping their first four games by a total score of 21-6 and wrapping up the first month of competition just 5-1, the defending regular-season College Hockey America champions seemed to be in a tail spin. After a one-week hiatus, the Beavers traveled to longtime rival Ala.-Huntsville. Bemidji State was uncharacteristically held to just 15 shots on goal in a 4-2 loss, but the following evening BSU’s Matt Read would net a third-period goal to knot the game at 1-1 and Brandon Marino powered the Beavers to their first CHA victory, 2-1. The triumph kick started a run of seven games during which BSU won six, including a sweep of the WCHA’s Michigan Tech. Serratore’s Beavers hit a funk to open 2009. BSU dropped its next six games including back-to-back, one-goal losses to perennial powerhouse North Dakota. During the final week of January, Serratore regrouped his team to split with Niagara at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. The win over the bitter CHA rival again sparked a BSU winning streak, this time extending over five games and two conference series sweeps. It was at that point that the Beavers began to realize their potential and convince their faithful fans to believe. Bemidji State would finish the season posting an 8-2-1 record down the stretch to capture its fifth CHA title with a win over Robert Morris in the final game of the regular season to secure the top seed in the 2009 conference tournament. For the first time in the 10-year history of the league, the CHA Tournament was held at The Glas--a venue as rich in championship tradition as any--but little did anyone know that the final collegiate tournament game ever played in the hallowed barn, may have been its finest. The Beavers would coast through their semifinal contest versus Ala.Huntsville leaving them just 60 minutes from their third NCAA Tournament berth. Scorned by a near miss in the 2008 tournament, the green and white were determined to make a run and the big dance. Tyler Scofield potted his team-leading 18th goal of the season to get the Beavers on the board early, but before the first period would expire, Robert Morris evened the score. Read opened the second stanza with a goal only to be matched by RMU’s Chris Margott just three minutes later. The scoreboard remained locked at 2-2 through the final 20 minutes of play setting up a sudden-death situation. With a capacity crowd on the edges of their seats in anticipation, Read would send the BSU faithful into a frenzy 8:05 into the extra frame firing a rebound into the back of the net. Read would be named as the tournamnt MVP for his efforts. The storybook season continued to Grand Rapids, Mich. where BSU, the unranked 16th seed, was pitted against Notre Dame--the No. 2 team in the land. It would take BSU just 1:42 to find the scoreboard and the team would build a 2-0 advantage heading into the first intermission. With 40 minutes gone, BSU led 3-0, then 4-0 in the opening minute of the third. A stunned Fighting Irish team and college hockey world was begining to take notice. BSU won the game 5-1. After their first NCAA Division I Tournament win, the Beavers continued to ride a wave of momentum into the Midwest Regional Championship game versus No. 9 Cornell. The Big Red scored first, but BSU would answer with four consecutive goals to secure its second straight win over a top 10 team and a most unlikely spot in the 2009 Frozen Four in Washington, D.C. The Beavers’ once-in-a-lifetime ride would come to an end at the hand of Miami (Ohio) in the national semifinal, but not before the BeaPersonal Information
year 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09
BSU All-Time Coaching Victories
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R.H. “Bob” Peters uTom Serratore Vic Weber Mike Gibbons Eric Hughes
Back-to-Back NCAA Tournament Berths
Bemidji State’s 2005-06 season seemed neatly divided into three distinct and radically different thirds - two highly successful, and one much less so. The Beavers garnered national recognition and charged into the Top 15 of the USA Today / USA Hockey Magazine poll for the first time as a Division I program after a record-setting start, suffered through a difficult stretch in December and January, then closed with a rally which saw BSU capture a share of second place in the CHA regular-season race on the season’s final day and win a second consecutive CHA Tournament. Serratore’s Beavers opened the season in historic fashion, opening 4-0-0 on the strengths of back-to-back sweeps of Western Collegiate Hockey Association programs. BSU posted its first-ever sweep of Minn.Duluth on the road to open, then picked up its first sweep of Minnesota State since 1994 in its home-opening series. The four-game sweep propelled BSU into the national polls. BSU pushed that start to 8-2-0, the team’s best 10-game start as a Division I program. The Beaver schedule became more difficult from
Head Coaching History
Home town: Coleraine, Minn. Alma Mater: Bemidji St. ‘87 (B.A. education) Family: wife Cindy, children Matt, Megan and Emily
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
vers, the first 16th-seed to ever win its way into the Frozen Four, turned the hockey world on its ear, putting Bemidji State University and Bemidji, Minn. on the map in the process. BSU had six players garner recognition in the CHA’s season-ending awards. Matt Read and Brad Hunt were selected First-team All-CHA, while Tyler Scofield and Matt Dalton pulled down second-team laurels. In addition, Hunt was picked as the league’s Rookie of the Year and both he and Ben Kinne earned spots on the CHA All-Rookie Team. Academically, it was business as usual for BSU. For the seventh consecutive season, the Beavers led all conference institutions with 15 Academic All-CHA performers as the team logged a 3.5 overall GPA. In addition to Serratore garnering his fourth CHA Coach of the Year award, he was also a finalist for the Spenser Penrose Award, the American Hockey Coaches’ Association’s National Coach of the Year award, where he would take runner up honors.
702 120 42 31 17
1966-2001 2001-p 1959-66 1982-83 1948-50
college Bemidji State Bemidji State Bemidji State Bemidji State Bemidji State Bemidji State Bemidji State Bemidji State Totals
overall NCAA 12-18-5 14-14-8 20-13-3 23-13-1 NE Semifinals 20-14-3 MW Semifinals 14-14-5 17-16-3 20-16-1 Frozen Four 140-118-29 (8 years)
Assistant Coaching History
year 1993-94 1994-98 1998-01
college St. Cloud State St. Cloud State Bemidji State
2009-10
position assistant associate head associate head
Coaching Honors and Awards 1998 Ass’t Coach - WCHA All-Stars 2002 Spencer Penrose Award finalist 2004 College Hockey America Coach of the Year 2004 Spencer Penrose Award finalist 2005 College Hockey America Coach of the Year 2005 Spencer Penrose Award finalist 2008 College Hockey America Coach of the Year 2008 Spencer Penrose Award finalist 2009 College Hockey America Coach of the Year 2009 Spencer Penrose Award finalist 2009 National Coach of the Year Runner-Up
Army uAir Force Bentley Connecticut Sacred Heart Total
2-0-0 0-2-0 2-0-0 3-1-0 0-0-2 7-3-2
College Hockey America Air Force uAlabama-Huntsville Findlay uNiagara uRobert Morris Wayne State (Mich.) Total
18-1-1 26-14-2 10-1-3 16-15-6 14-8-2 23-8-4 107-47-17
CCHA Ferris State Lake Superior State uMiami (ohio) uNebraska-Omaha Notre Dame uWestern Michigan Total
3-3-0 1-2-1 0-1-0 0-2-0 1-0-0 2-2-0 7-10-1
ECAC Clarkson Cornell Dartmouth Union College Total
1-2-2 1-0-0 0-2-0 0-2-2 2-6-4
Hockey East Merrimack Maine Massachusetts Total
1-3-0 0-2-0 1-0-0 2-3-0
WCHA Colorado College Denver Michigan Tech uMinnesota uMinnesota Duluth uMinnesota State North Dakota St. Cloud State Wisconsin Total u 2009-10 opponents
1-2-0 0-3-0 2-2-0 0-4-0 7-9-0 5-9-2 0-10-1 1-7-0 0-1-0 16-47-3
CHA Tournament Air Force Alabama-Huntsville Findlay Niagara Robert Morris Wayne State (Mich.) Total
1-0-0 4-1-0 2-0-0 1-2-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 10-5-0
NCAA Tournament Cornell Denver Miami (Ohio) Notre Dame Wisconsin Total
1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-2-0
there, however, and a 4-3 loss to Niagara opened an 11-game stretch which saw them go 2-6-3. A road sweep at the hands of Ala.-Huntsville saw BSU at 13-10-3, but from there the Beavers rallied and won seven of their final 11 games. The Beavers retaliated for the road sweep at Huntsville by sweeping the Chargers, 3-1 and 5-0, on the final weekend of the regular season to erase a four-point deficit and tie for second in the CHA regular season standings. BSU continued that hot streak by again defeating Ala.-Huntsville, this time rallying from 3-1 down in the third to post a 4-3 overtime win in the CHA Tournament semifinals. A 4-2 win over CHA regular-season champion Niagara in the CHA Tournament championship game gave BSU a second consecutive tourney crown and made it the CHA’s first repeat visitor to the NCAA Tournament. There, BSU again squared off with a team eventually crowned national champion in the first round, as the Beavers were bested by Wisconsin. BSU placed two skaters on the All-CHA first team for the fourth consecutive year as Luke Erickson and Andrew Martens were honored for their efforts on the ice. Tyler Scofield and Cody Bostock earned spots on the All-Rookie Team. Academically, it was business as usual for Serratore’s Beavers. BSU tied its own conference single-season record by placing 16 players on the Academic All-CHA Team, extending its streak of consecutive seasons leading CHA in all-academic picks to four. Lou Garritan, Jean-Guy Gervais and Ryan Huddy brought BSU’s alltime number of three-time All-CHA selections to 11. The record-tying group of honorees brought BSU’s all-time total to 76 Academic All-CHA picks, and its 69 picks in five seasons under Serratore is far and away most in the league. Niagara is a distant second with 55 selections.
BSU’s First NCAA Appearance
Serratore helped lead Bemidji State to its mostsuccessful Division I season in 2004-05, finishing with a 23-13-1 record, setting a school Division I-era record for wins in a season and posting the secondmost wins in a season by any team in the six-year history of College Hockey America, and tying its own CHA single-season record with 16 wins in league play. BSU became just the third College Hockey America program to capture both the R.H. “Bob” Peters Cup, awarded to the CHA regular-season champions, and the Bruce McLeod Cup, awarded to the CHA Tourna-
ment champions, in the same season. As the CHA Tournament champions, BSU earned its first berth in the NCAA Tournament since making the jump to Division I in 1999. There, the Beavers garnered national attention for taking No. 1 Denver into overtime before falling, 4-3, in the semifinals of the Northeast Regional. Four Beavers earned All-College Hockey America honors, and for the third consecutive season two BSU skaters were named First Team All-CHA. Senior captain Andrew Murray was one of two unanimous FirstTeam All-CHA selections and became the first skater in league history to capture both CHA Player of the Year and CHA Student-Athlete of the Year honors in the same season. Senior defenseman Peter Jonsson joined Murray on the All-CHA First Team; senior wing Brendan Cook was named Second-Team All-CHA and freshman goalie Matt Climie, the CHA Tournament MVP, was named to the CHA All-Rookie Team. BSU continued its recent domination of the Academic All-CHA Team. BSU led the league in Academic All-CHA picks with 14 , seven of which were repeat selections from 2004. Brendan Cook, Peter Jonsson and Andrew Murray became BSU’s sixth, seventh and eighth three-time Academic All-CHA picks. For the third time in four seasons at BSU, Serratore’s achievements were recognized nationally as he was named a finalist for the Spencer Penrose Award, given annually to the National Coach of the Year by the American Hockey Coaches Association.
BSU Garners First CHA Title
Serratore, the 2004 College Hockey America Coach of the Year, helped lead Bemidji State to a 20-13-3 finish, marking the program’s first 20-win season since making the jump to Division I in 1999. BSU also captured the R.H. “Bob” Peters Cup, awarded to the CHA regular-season champions. The regular-season title was the first conference championship in BSU’s Division I era. En route to the title, Bemidji State set a school record for points in CHA play (33) and set a conference record with 16 victories in CHA play. The Beavers finished with a five-point cushion over second-place Niagara, the largest margin by any winner of the six Division I men’s hockey conferences. The Beavers led CHA in scoring and scoring defense, finished with the second-best power-play percentage in CHA games in league history, and were
2009-10
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head coach tom serratore
Serratore vs All Foes Atlantic Hockey
head coach tom Serratore
just the sixth team in league history to post a powerplay efficiency of .200 or better. But again, BSU’s ultimate goal of an NCAA Tournament berth was just out of reach. For the second consecutive season, BSU was defeated by a single goal in the championship game of the CHA Tournament. During the season, BSU defeated eventual Frozen Four participant Minnesota-Duluth, posted four-game season sweeps of three CHA opponents, including its first-ever road sweeps at Findlay and Wayne State, snapped an eight-game road losing streak at Ala.Huntsville, shut out NCAA Tournament participant Niagara, and won at Niagara for the first time. Serratore’s 2004 Bemidji State team tied a school record with six All-CHA honorees, including a second consecutive season with two First-Team All-CHA picks. Junior forward Brendan Cook and senior defenseman Bryce Methven were named to the All-CHA first team, while junior forward Riley Riddell, senior defenseman Anders Olsson and senior goaltender Grady Hunt were named to the second team. Freshman wing Luke Erickson earned CHA Rookie of the Year honors, becoming the second BSU player under Serratore’s watch to be so honored.
The Beavers’ Return to Contention
Bemidji State entered the 2002-03 campaign with one goal in mind - win the College Hockey America post-season tournament and earn the league’s firstever automatic qualifier to the NCAA Championships. The Beavers fell just one goal shy of that lofty achievement, dropping a 3-2 decision to Wayne State (Mich.) in the championship game of the CHA Tournament. Still, the 2002-03 campaign continued the evolution of the Bemidji State program into a legitimate Division I presence and the team set several Division I-era team standards. Serratore led BSU to a .500 finish for the first time as a Division I program and assembled a Division I-era record seven-game unbeaten streak (6-0-1), which was snapped in their CHA championship-game loss. The team’s run to the CHA Tournament championship was remarkable on a number of fronts. Entering the fray as the fourth seed after a 10-6-4, 24-point regular-season campaign, Serratore’s Beavers became the lowest seed to advance to the title game in the four-year history of the Tournament, and also became the first team to knock the tournament’s No. 1 seed out of the field before the title game. Serratore’s Beavers also gained notoriety for playing an NCAA single-season record 15 overtime contests, including a school-record five in a row to open the season. Along the way, BSU set school records for ties in a season (eight, tied for fifth-most in NCAA history) and overtime wins in a season (four). Key to the team’s historic success in 2002-’03 was its play on defense. In front of junior goaltender Grady Hunt, the Beavers assembled one of the program’s finest defensive performances in decades. BSU led College Hockey America and tied for 16th in the nation by allowing just 2.72 goals per game. Offensively, senior Marty Goulet became the program’s first Division I-era player to score 100 career points, and he also became the first-ever repeat FirstTeam All-CHA pick. Defenseman Bryce Methven also earned First-Team All-CHA honors, making BSU the third program in CHA history to have three players named First-Team All-Conference the same season.
Serratore’s Strong Debut
A stellar debut campaign in 2001-’02 left little doubt that Serratore would rekindle BSU’s past hockey glory. In his rookie season as BSU’s head coach, the Beavers dramatically improved as a team in their third year of life as an NCAA Division I program. BSU’s 12-18-5
12
record in 2001-02 marked an eight and one-half game improvement from a 4-26-4 finish in 2000-01. In addition, BSU’s 12 regular-season wins tied the 1999-00 team for most by a Beaver team in a Division I season (since broken). From Jan. 26-Feb. 9, 2002, the Beavers put together a five-game unbeaten streak which tied the school Division I-era record (since broken). Serratore led the Beavers on an impressive run through College Hockey America. The Beavers enjoyed a 21-day run tied atop the CHA standings, the first time BSU had been in first place in the conference since Jan. 1, 2000. BSU eventually finished second in the league and earned a first-round bye in the CHA Tournament. BSU also posted the program’s third-best single season with 22 points in CHA play, surpassed only by a 23-point (8-8-1) season in 1999-2000, the league’s inaugural season, and a record 24-point campaign in 2002-03. Under Serratore’s guidance, right wing Marty Goulet was named First-Team All-CHA while center Riley Riddell earned CHA Rookie of the Year and SecondTeam All-CHA honors. Goaltender Grady Hunt, a four-time CHA Defensive Player of the Week winner during the 2001-02 season, also earned Second-Team All-CHA honors. In addition, three Beavers - Riddell, center Andrew Murray and defenseman Anders Olsson - were named to the CHA All-Rookie Team. Serratore was eventually named a finalist for the Spencer Penrose Award, given annually to the national coach of the year as voted by the American Hockey Coaches Association. Serratore took over the reigns for BSU after having spent the previous three seasons as the associate head coach for R.H. “Bob” Peters. Brought on board in August 1998, Serratore helped Peters oversee the transition of the BSU program from a small-college dynasty to the ranks of Division I.
BSU Shutouts Under Serratore 10/26/2001 10/27/2001 11/15/2002 3/7/2003 3/8/2003 3/14/2003 1/30/2004 3/6/2004 11/13/2004 2/4/2005 2/12/2005 3/13/2005 3/14/2005 1/6/2006 3/4/2006 11/11/2006 12/1/2006 10/13/2007 11/3/2007 11/9/2007 12/8/2007 1/5/2008 1/11/2008 1/26/2008 11/28/08 2/6/09
Serratore came to the Beaver hockey program after spending five years as the recruiting coordinator for Western Collegiate Hockey Association member St. Cloud State University. He helped the Huskies to a 96-84-15 record, including three 20-win seasons and four WCHA Final Five berths during his tenure. Serratore recruited several National Hockey League draft selections while at St. Cloud State, including Matt Cullen, Mark Parrish and Josh DeWolf. He also was an assistant coach for the 1998 WCHA All-Star Team which participated in the Kolin Cup in Zug, Switzerland. Serratore began his coaching career as an assistant at Brainerd (Minn.) High School (1987-’91). He took his first head job at Henry Sibley High School (1991-’93), leading Henry Sibley to a Class A thirdplace finish at the state tournament. An active member of USA Hockey for the past eight years, Serratore coached the USA Hockey Select 17 camp in 1994.
Playing Career
Serratore knows first-hand the tradition of BSU men’s hockey, having played two years under Peters in the mid-1980s. He was a two-year letterwinner at forward for BSU from 1985-’87 and played in two NCAA Division III Tournaments. Serratore was a member of BSU’s 1986 NCAA Division III national championship team and captained the 1986-’87 team. He averaged 1.03 points per game in his BSU career (1986--2023=43 points, 1987--12-27=39 points) and led the 1986-87 team with four game-winning goals. Serratore began his playing career at Mankato State, scoring 31-28-59 points in two seasons for the Mavericks before transferring to BSU. For his collegiate career, Serratore scored 63-78=141 points.
2009-10
9-0 2-0 2-0 5-0 2-0 4-0 4-0 5-0 5-0 2-0 3-0 6-0 3-0 2-0 5-0 3-0 1-0 2-0 3-0 2-0 2-0 2-0 4-0 4-0 3-0 2-0
*26 total shutouts
Serratore’s Milestone Victories 1* 10/12/01 vs Minn. State-Mankato 25 3/14/03 vs Findlay 43a 2/27/04 at Air Force 50 11/19/04 at Niagara 75 11/11/05 at Wayne State (Mich.) 100 2/16/07 at Ala.-Huntsville 119b 3/28/09 vs Notre Dame * coaching debut = moved into 2nd on BSU career list = first NCAA Tournament win
a
Prior to BSU
vs Connecticut vs Connecticut at Wayne State (Mich.) at Air Force at Air Force vs Findlay vs Findlay vs Niagara vs Bentley vs Wayne State at Robert Morris vs Air Force vs Ala.-Huntsville at Robert Morris vs Ala.-Huntsville vs Robert Morris at Wayne State (Mich.) vs Army vs Niagara at Ala.-Huntsville vs Ala.-Huntsville vs Minnesota Duluth at Ala.-Huntsville vs Robert Morris vs Michigan Tech vs Ala.-Huntsville
b
(W, 7-6) (W, 4-0) (W, 7-4) (W, 5-3) (W, 4-1) (W, 4-3) (W, 5-1)
BErt Gilling
Ryan Marvin
Assistant Coach Minnesota Duluth 1999 11th Season at Bemidji State
Graduate Assistant Coach Brockport State 2006 Second Season at Bemidji State
ed Belisle is entering his seventh season on the coaching staff at his alma mater. Belisle was a captain on BSU’s 2000-2001 team, the program’s second year at the Division I level and its final season under legendary head coach R.H. “Bob” Peters. Belisle serves as Bemidji State’s recruiting coordinator, oversees the program’s forwards and assists in the day-to-day operations of the team monitoring academics, strength and conditioning programs and video. Belisle came to BSU for the 2003-04 season and has helped the team to its first three 20-win seasons in BSU’s Division I era (2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06) and to the championship game of the CHA Tournament in five of six years with back-to-back championships in 2005 and 2006. He was on the bench when BSU captured its first Division I-era conference title with a 2005 CHA regular-season crown and helped guide the first CHA program to make consecutive trips to the NCAA Tournament (2005, 2006) an to the Frozen Four in 2009. Belisle has recruited or helped recruit BSU standouts such as Matt Climie, BSU’s career leader in goals against average, shutouts, a two-time First-Team All-CHA pick and the 2005 CHA Pre-Season Player of the Year, as well as Tyler Scofield, Cody Bostock, Matt Read and 2009 CHA Rookie of the Year and First-Team All-CHA selection Brad Hunt. Belisle joined Tom Serratore’s staff after a two-year stint as a scout and assistant coach in the United States Hockey League. After serving one year on the scouting staff for the Sioux City Musketeers, Belisle spent the 2002-03 season as an assistant with the Sioux Falls Stampede. There, he oversaw recruiting, coached the team’s defensive corps and was involved in budget management and day-to-day team operations. Belisle served as interim head coach for the Stampede for the last eight games of the 2002-03 season. He took over for Tony Gasparini, who left his position as head coach in March 2003 in a mutual agreement with the franchise. The Stampede went 3-5 under his guidance. Belisle played four years at Bemidji State from 1997-2001, during the program’s transitional era into Division I. He played 90 games at forward during his career, scoring 10-12=22 points.
The Belisle File
Birthdate: Dec. 1, 1976 Home town: Nipigon, Ontario, Canada Alma mater: Bemidji State ‘01 Family: wife, Jennifer
B
ert Gilling is in his ninth season as assistant coach at Bemidji State and his 11th year overall as a member of the program’s coaching staff. Gilling holds responsibilites overseeing the defensive corps and serves as the program’s academic advisor and strength and conditioning coach. As academic advisor, Gilling has helped raise BSU’s team overall GPA to 3.5. Under his guidance, BSU has placed a CHA-leading 116 student-athletes on the Academic All-CHA team, including a leaguerecord 18 picks in 2008. Additionally, BSU has had 11 Academic All-District honorees and in 2005 Peter Jonsson was named First-Team Academic All-America. Gilling joined Serratore’s staff after having served as a graduate assistant under R.H. “Bob” Peters from 1999 until Peters’ retirement in 2001. Under Peters, Gilling held responsibilities for game-plan preparation, practice sessions, video breakdown and also served as the team’s bench and defensive coach. He held numerous other responsibilities within the program ranging from recruiting to academic advising to strength and conditioning. As a player, Gilling was a four-year letterwinner, senior captain and member of the 1998-99 Captain’s Committee at Minnesota Duluth. There, he built a reputation as one of the finest defensemen in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association. He was nominated for WCHA Defensive Player of the Year in 1997-98 and was a member of the 1998 WCHA All-Star Team which played in Zug, Switzerland. He won awards as Duluth’s top freshman and won the team’s Bob Junkert Plus/ Minus Award in 1995-96. A native of Alexander, Manitoba, Gilling played with the Estevan Bruins of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey league from 1992-95. During his career, he won two team MVP (1994, 1995) and two team Most Valuable Defenseman (1994, 1995) awards, was the Most Valuable Rookie during 1992-93 and won the inaugural Bill Shinske Ethics Award in 1995. Gilling has also compiled an impressive academic resume. In 1999, Gilling was a nominee for the College Hockey Humanitarian Award and WCHA Student Athlete of the Year, and was named Rasmussen Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year at Duluth. Gilling was a three-time Academic All-WCHA honoree, a member of the Dean’s List and received the Top Scholastic Player award from his junior club in 1993. He began graduate work at BSU in 1999 and in 2000 won a Beck Scholarship.
The Gilling File Birthdate: Home town: Alma mater: Post-graduate: Family:
R
y a n Marvin is in his second season on the Bemidji State coaching staff, serving as the team’s graduate assistant coach. He brings leadership honed competing as a player and a coach from coast to coast. He came to BSU after a one-year stint as the head coach of the Valencia (Calif.) Flyers of the Western States Hockey League. Marvin led the Junior A Tier III Flyers to a .540 winning percentage and into the post-season in hi first season as a head coach. Prior to his appointment with Valencia, Marvin served as an assistant coach at Morrisville State College, a NCAA Division III institution in New York. A native of California, Marvin is familiar with New York. He played his entire collegiate career in the northeast. After helping Morrisville to a NJCAA Region III Championship, he led the Mustangs to a trip to the national championship before bowing out. For his efforts he was named to the league’s all-rookie team. In 2003-04 Marvin was a member of the Buffalo State men’s hockey team before capping his career at Brockport State, where he was an assistant captain in 2006. Marvin also has roller hockey playing experience. Marvin is no stranger to Minnesota. He pent the better part of the last four summers in Northern Minnesota as a coach and instructor at Minnesota Hockey Camps in Brainerd, Minn. Marvin has attained Level 4 Certification by USA Hockey has been a contributing writer to USA Hockey Magazine and recently was a presenter at the USA Hockey Level 4 Coaches’ Clinic in Las Vegas.
Support Staff
Dec. 31, 1974 Killarney, Manitoba, Canada Minn.-Duluth ‘99 (BA, applied arts) Bemidji State 2001 (MS - sports studies) wife, Sheila; daughters Kyra and Amelie equipment manager Justin Enfield
2009-10
head athletic trainer Bill CREWS
faculty athletics rep Doug LEIF
13
assistant coaches
T
Ted Belisle Assistant Coach / Recruiting Coordinator Bemidji State 2001 Seventh Season at Bemidji State
2009-10 roster breakdown
Numerical Roster
No Name 1 Travis Bosch 2 Tyler Jundt 3 Ryan Adams 4 Dan MacIntyre 5 Matt Carlson 6 Darcy Findlay 7 Brance Orban 8 Jake Areshenko 9 Chris Peluso 11 Shea Walters 14 Aaron McLeod 15 Ryan Cramer 16 Emil Billberg 17 Jamie MacQueen 19 Matt Read 20 Ben Kinne 21 Matt Hartmann 22 Ian Lowe 23 Chris McKelvie 25 Brady Wacker 26 Tyler Lehrke 27 Kyle Hardwick 28 Jordan George 29 Brad Hunt 33 Dan Bakala 35 Mathieu Dugas
Pos G D D F/D D F F D D F F F F F F F F F F D F D F D G G
Retired Numbers
10 24
Bryan Grand Joel Otto
Yr Fr. So. Jr. Jr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. Sr. So. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. So. Fr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Fr. So. So. Fr.
F 1967-70 F 1980-84
Geographical Breakdown United States Minnesota North Dakota Wisconsin
11 8 2 1
Canada Alberta British Columbia Manitoba Ontario Quebec Saskatchewan
15 2 1 2 4 2 2
Sweden
1
Class Breakdown Upperclassmen Seniors Juniors
11 4 7
Underclassmen Sophomores Freshmen
15 6 9
Position Breakdown Forwards Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen
15 2 5 4 4
Defensemen Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen
8 2 1 2 3
Goaltenders Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen
3 0 0 1 2
14
2009-10 alphabetical roster
No 3 8 33 16 1 5 15 35 6 28 27 21 29 2 20 26 22 4 17 23 14 7 9 19 25 11
Name Ryan Adams Jake Areshenko Dan Bakala Emil Billberg Travis Bosch Matt Carlson Ryan Cramer Mathieu Dugas Darcy Findlay Jordan George Kyle Hardwick (A) Matt Hartmann Brad Hunt Tyler Jundt Ben Kinne Tyler Lehrke Ian Lowe Dan MacIntyre Jamie MacQueen Chris McKelvie (C) Aaron McLeod Brance Orban Chris Peluso (PIT) Matt Read (A) Brady Wacker Shea Walters
HEAD COACH: ASSISTANT COACH: ASSISTANT COACH: GRADUATE ASSISTANT:
Pos D D G F G D F G F F D F D D F F F F/D F F F F D F D F
Ht 6-1 6-0 5-11 5-11 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-0 5-10 5-8 5-11 6-0 5-9 6-0 6-0 5-8 5-9 6-1 6-1 6-1 5-9 5-9 5-10 5-10 5-7 5-11
Wt 190 200 185 195 185 210 210 165 205 155 205 195 168 190 190 175 170 195 185 190 165 160 190 185 155 180
Yr S/C Jr. L Fr. L So. L Jr. L Fr. L Fr. L Jr. R Fr. R So. R Fr. L Sr. L Fr. R So. L So. R So. L Sr. R Jr. R Jr. L So. L Sr. L Fr. L Fr. L Sr. L Jr. R Fr. R So. R
Birthday 9/12/86 7/17/88 12/23/87 7/1/88 2/14/88 5/29/87 8/29/86 2/6/88 9/29/87 8/20/90 10/24/86 4/13/89 8/24/88 3/7/88 6/4/88 4/21/86 9/4/86 8/31/06 8/2/88 2/22/85 9/10/88 9/27/88 8/21/86 6/14/86 6/26/88 3/5/87
Hometown (prev team) Deloraine, Manitoba (Wayne State) Port Cocquitlan, British Columbia (USHL-Fargo) Calgary, Alberta (AJHL-Calgary) Stockholm, Sweden (Sodertalje J20) Regina, Saskatchewan (SJHL-Melville) Grand Forks, N.D. (NHAL-Fairbanks) International Falls, Minn. (USHL-Waterloo) L’Assomption, Quebec (NAHL-Wenatchee) Bristol, Quebec (CJHL-Cornwall) Verona, Wis. (NHAL-Topeka) Warroad, Minn. (USHL-Lincoln) Hugo, Minn. (NHAL-Topeka) Ridge Meadows, British Columbia (BCHL-Burnaby) Williston, N.D. (NAHL-North Iowa) St. Paul, Minn. (USHL-Sioux City) Park Rapids, Minn. (USHL-Green Bay) Bradwardine, Manitoba (MJHL-Swan Valley) Fort Frances, Ontario (OPJHL-Port Hope) St. Thomas, Ontario (OPJHL-Vaughn) New Brighton, Minn. (NAHL-Bozeman) Ottawa, Ontario (CJHL-Ottawa) Lethbridge, Alberta (AJHL-Olds) Wadena, Minn. (USHL-Sioux Falls) Ilderton, Ontario (USHL-Des Moines) Jansen, Saskatchewan (SJHL-Humbolt) Hibbing, Minn. (NJHL-North Iowa)
Tom Serratore (Bemidji State ‘87) / 140-118-29 (9th year) Bert Gilling (Minnesota Duluth ‘99 / 11th year) Ted Belisle (Bemidji State ‘01 / 7th year) Ryan Marvin (Brockport State (N.Y.) ‘06 / 2nd year)
Pronunciation Guide Players
Players
Jake ARESHENKO
ah-ray-SHEN-ko
Dan MACINTYRE
mac-IN-ty-er
EMIL Billberg
EE-mill
Aaron MCLEOD
mac-LOWD
Dan BAKALA
BACK-a-lah
Chris PELUSO
pell-OO-soe
Ryan CRAMER
KRAY-mer
SHEA Walters
SHAY
Mathieu DUGAS
DOO-gahs
Tyler Jundt
JUHNT
Ben KINNE
KIN-ee
Tyler LEHRKE
LAHR-kee
Tom SERRATORE
ser-a-TOR-ee
IAN LOWE
EYE-ann LOW
Ted BELISLE
bell-EYE-el
2009-10
Coaching Staff
2008-09 / Sophomore
Put on the green and white for 24 games as a sophomore transfer... Was announced in the starting line up two times... Made his BSU debut Oct. 10 in a 2-5 loss at Minnesota State... His first point as a Beaver came as an assist at Niagara Jan. 23... Added an assist on a Matt Read goal to win the CHA Tournament Championship and earn an automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Tournament with a 3-2 overtime win over Robert Morris Mar. 14... Scored his first goal in a Beavers’ sweater Mar. 29, helping Bemidji State defeat No. 9 Cornell and advance to the Frozen Four for the first time in school history... Was named to the Midwest Regional All-Tournament Team.
in the MJHL, two with Dauphin Kings and one with OCN Blizzard... Most recently, he played one year at the NAHL’s FargoMoorhead Jets... While at FM, he posted 48 points on 13 goals and 35 assists.
Personal Born Sept. 12, 1986... Ryan Gregory Adams is the son of Craig and Debbie Adams... Majoring in business administration at BSU.
goaltender Sophomore • 5-11 • 185 Calgary, Alberta AJHL - Calgary
2008-09 / Freshman
Did not take the ice for any regularseason action, but posted a 3-0-0 record in exhibition play... Registered his first collegiate shutout in his first collegiate action, gaining a 7-0 victory over University of Manitoba Oct. 31... Posted a 4-2 win the following night, while making 18 saves... Turned away 24 shots in an exhibition win over a talented U.S. National Development U-18 Team Feb 27 to vault the Beavers to a 3-1 victory.
Prior to BSU Dan Bakala joined the Beavers after playing three seasons for the Alberta Junior Hockey League’s Calgary Royals... Bakala saw time in 122 games for the Royals and logged 4,840 minutes between the pipes.
Prior to BSU
33
Bakala earned decisions in 43 of the Royals’ 62 contests in 200708 accounting for 14 of the team’s 19 victories while piling up 2,610 minutes in net for Calgary. In his final game as a junior, Feb. 26, Bakala earned the first star for his role in preserving a 5-4 victory over the Canmore Eagles... The goaltender stopped 39 shots in the third period alone and finished the contest with 62 saves. He finished the season with a 3.52 goals against average and an .895 save percentage.
Personal Dan Bakala... Born Dec. 23, 1987 to Henryk and Ursula Bakala... Is in his second year as a sport management major.
Transferred to Bemidji State for his sophomore season after beginning his career at Wayne State University... Posted a goal and six assists for the Warriors in 32 contests... Ranked fifth among WSU defensemen with seven points... All seven came in CHA play to sit 12th among the league’s blue liners in scoring and ninth on the league’s rookie scoring charts... Was named to the 2008 CHA AllRookie squad... Earned Wayne State University Rookie of the Year laurels. Prior to his stint at Wayne State, he played three years
Ryan Adams: Career Stats Year 2007-08* 2008-09 Career
G 32 24 56
G-A 1-6 1-2 2-8
Pts 7 3 10
+/+2 -2 0
Dan Bakala: Career Stats
PIM 6/12 4/8 10/20
vs College Hockey America Year 2007-08* 2008-09 Career
G 18 11 29
G-A 1-6 0-1 1-7
Pts 7 1 8
+/+2 0 +2
PIM 6/12 2/4 8/16
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0
Year 2008-09 Career
G 0 0
GS 0 0
Min 0:00 0:00
GA 0 0
GAA 0.00 0.00
vs College Hockey America
Year 2008-09 Career
G 0 0
GS 0 0
Min 0:00 0:00
GA 0 0
GAA 0.00 0.00
Sv 0 0
Sv% .000 .000
W 0 0
L 0 0
T SHO 0 0 0 0
Sv 0 0
Sv% .000 .000
W 0 0
L 0 0
T SHO 0 0 0 0
* with Wayne State University
BSU Highs Goals: 1, vs. Cornell (3/29/09); Assists: 1, vs. Niagara (1/23/09) & vs. Robert Morris (3/14/09); Points: 1; three times; SOG: 1 6 times; PIM: 2 four times.
2009-10
15
Returning Beavers
3
Defense Junior • 6-1 • 190 Deloraine, Manitoba Wayne State University
Returning Beavers
15
Forward Junior • 6-2 • 210 International Falls, Minnesota USHL - Waterloo
2008-09 / Sophomore 2008-09 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Skated in 32 games for the Beavers as a sophomore... Suffered a knee injury Feb. 19 at Niagara and sat out for the remainder of the regular season and CHA Tournament... Posted his first point of the season Jan. 2 in a 4-3 loss to North Dakota... Added an assist in a 4-2 victor over Ala.-Huntsville Feb. 7... Scored a goal in a 3-3 draw at Robert Morris Feb. 15... Made his return to the line up for the Beavers’ NCAA Tournament run and registered an assist in his first game back as BSU defeated No. 2 Notre Dame Mar. 28.
2007-08 / Freshman
2007-08 Honors: u 3/5/08 CHA Rookie of the Week u 3/5/08 INCH National Player of the Week Runner-Up Ranked third among all freshman posting 4-3=7 points in 31 games for the Green and White as a mainstay on the team’s third line... Netted all but one of his assists in CHA play... Matured into a legitimate scoring threat down the stretch for BSU piling up four goals and an assist in the team’s final seven games, after netting just two assists in his first 24 appearances. Logged his first collegiate point on an assist in a loss to Merrimack (10/20/08)... Scored his first goal as
a Beavers at Robert Morris (2/15/08) to help BSU to a 7-2 CHA victory. Was named uCHA Rookie of the Week 3/5/08 after the biggest series of his young career... Cramer posted back-to-back multipoint games to pull his share of the weight as the Beavers clinched their third CHA regular-season championship in five years... Registered a goal and an assist Friday night as the Beavers came back to edge the Warriors 7-5 and collected his first multi-goal game netting two lamplighters the following night, including the game-winner, to kick off the championship celebration and claim the Bruce McLeod Trophy for the Beavers.
Prior to BSU Came to BSU after one year with the Waterloo (Iowa) Blackhawks of the USHL... Was a third-round pick of the Blackhawks in the 2006 USHL Draft, selected in the third round with the 36th overall pick... Helped lead Waterloo to the USHL Anderson Cup. In 60 games during the 200607 regular season, Cramer scored 26-26=52 points with a +11 rating... He scored 9-12=21 points on the power play and had four gamewinning goals.... 52 points were third on the team and 24th in the USHL, while his 26 goals paced the team and tied for 10th in the league. Prior to his season with the Blackhawks, Cramer played two
Ryan Cramer: Career Stats
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 31 32 63
G-A 4-3 2-2 6-5
Pts 7 4 11
+/0 0 -1
vs College Hockey America
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 17 15 32
G-A 4-2 1-1 5-3
Pts 6 2 8
+/+3 0 +3
PIM 9/18 10/20 19/38
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 1 1
GW 1 0 1
GT 0 0 0
PIM 5/10 4/8 9/18
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 1 1
GW 1 0 1
GT 0 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 2, vs. Wayne State (3/1/08); Assists: 1, five times; Points: 2, vs. Wayne State (3/1/08) & vs. Wayne State (2/29/08); SOG: 5, vs. Niagara (11/2/07); PIM: 4, at Ala.-Huntsville (1/12/08), at Ala.-Huntsville (11/10/07) & vs. Niagara (1/24/09).
16
2009-10
years with the Fargo-Moorhead Jets of the NAHL... He played 110 games for the Jets during the 2004-05 and 2005-06 campaigns with 28-43=71 points scored. A graduate of International Falls High School... Played prep golf in addition to hockey.
Personal Ferris Ryan Cramer... Born August 29, 1986... Son of Ferris and Beth Cramer... Undecided on a major.
2008-09 / Sophomore
2008-09 Honors: u 12/9/09 - INCH National Player of the Week Runner up u Academic All-CHA Saw time in 17 of Bemidji State’s 37 games in 2008-09... Missed the entire month of February due to a broken finger... Returned to the line up Mar. 7 as the Beavers captured the CHA RegularSeason championship with a 6-4 victory over Robert Morris... Was named INCH National Player of the Week Runner-up Dec. 9 after posting a goal in each game of a series sweep over CHA foe Ala.Huntsville Dec. 5-6... Netted his first collegiate game-winner in the series finale... Added an assist in the Beavers’ Jan. 31 5-1 win at Robert Morris.
2007-08 / Freshman Saw time in 15 games for the Beavers before losing the final 12 games of the year to a knee injury... Scored two goals and an assist to rank fourth among rookies... Skated in nine games before scoring his first point as a Beaver (1/4/08) at Minnesota Duluth, but netted all three of his points in his final five contest of 2007-08. The first point of Billberg’s collegiate career came on an assist to Matt Francis at Minnesota Duluth (1/4/08)... Billberg followed that performance with a goal the fol-
lowing night igniting the Beavers to a 2-0 victory over the Bulldogs to enable the team to retain the Babe the Blue Ox traveling trophy. Potted his second goal of the season at Colorado College (1/18/08)... Suffered a seasonending knee injury in the next game he skated in (1/25/08).
Prior to BSU Joined the Bemidji State program after playing the majority of the past three seasons for Sodertalje J20 in Sweden... Last season he scored 20-24=44 points with 36 penalty minutes in 40 games played... Added 2-2=4 points in 2006-07 playoffs... In three seasons, he netted 31-38=69 points in 81 games... Spent the 2004-05 campaign with Sodertalje J18... Totaled 8-4=12 points in 14 games played... Has also spent time on Team Sweden U16 and U17 teams.
Personal Emil John Billberg... Born July 1, 1988... Son of Bertil and Lena Billberg... Majoring in business administration.
Emil Billberg Career Stats
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 15 16 31
G-A 2-1 2-1 4-2
Pts 3 3 6
+/+4 -1 +3
vs College Hockey America
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 8 6 14
G-A 0-0 2-1 2-1
Pts 0 3 3
+/+2 +2 +4
2008-09 / Freshman
Skated in 14 games a freshman forward... Made his BSU debut Oct. 18 at Air Force... Registered his first point as a Beaver with an assist at Ala.-Huntsville Dec. 5... Followed that up with another assist the following night... Cracked the BSU line up just three times after the beginning of February.
Prior to BSU In one season with the Cornwall Colts Darcy Findlay posted a team-leading 44-38=82 points to sit eighth among all CJHL scorers, while his 44 goals ranked second in the league. He posted scoring streaks of nine and 10 consecutive games a year ago and 10 times scored three or more points in a game, which included six hat tricks. Findlay also exhibited himself as a special teams threat netting 15 power-play goals and potting a pair of short-handed markers.... He was selected to the CJHL AllStar team and was named as the RBC Canadian Junior “A” Championship MVP. Prior to joining the CJHL, Findlay played at least a portion of three seasons in the Quebec Junior AAA Hockey League. He began 200607 with the St. Jerome Panthers, which posted 42-10-2-0 overall record and a divisional championship during his run. He netted 1218=30 points in the first 27 games with the Panthers before being
traded to Cornwall. With the Colts he scored 15 goals and 19 assists to tie for second on the team with 34 points despite playing in only 28 of the teams’ 51 contests. In 200506 Findlay posted 28 goals and 18 assists for 46 points in 45 games to finish third on a College Champlain Cougars team that went 38-9-1-3 to finish second in the QJAHL. In 2005, Findlay was selected by Central Scouting Service as a ‘Player to Watch’ for the NHL Draft.
Personal Darcy Robert Findlay... Born Sept. 29, 1987... Son of Jang Ann Findlay...Plans to major in physical education.
Darcy Findlay: Career Stats
PIM 1/2 2/4 3/6
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 1 0 1
GW 0 1 1
GT 0 0 0
PIM 1/2 2/4 3/6
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 1 1
GW 0 1 1
GT 0 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 1, four times; Assists: 1, at Robert Morris (1/31/09) & vs. Minnesota Duluth (1/5/08); Points: 1, six times. SOG: 2, five times; PIM: 2, vs. Robert Morris (3/7/09), vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/5/08) & at Ala.-Huntsville (1/11/08).
6
Forward Sophomore • 5-10 • 205 Bristol, Quebec CJHL - Cornwall
Year 2008-09 Career
G 14 14
G-A 0-2 0-2
Pts 2 2
+/-3 -3
vs College Hockey America
Year 2008-09 Career
G 7 7
G-A 0-2 0-2
Pts 2 2
+/0 0
PIM 8/16 8/16
PP 0 0
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 0 0
GT 0 0
PIM 2/4 2/4
PP 0 0
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 0 0
GT 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 0; Assists: 1, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/6/08) & vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/5/09); Points: 1; vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/6/08) & vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/5/09). SOG: 2, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/6/09), vs. St. Cloud State (10/25/08) & St. Cloud State (10/24/08); PIM: 4, at North Dakota (1/3/09) & vs. St. Cloud State (10/24/08).
2009-10
17
Returning Beavers
16
Forward Junior • 5-11 • 195 Stockholm, Sweden Sodertalje J20
Returning Beavers
27
Defense Senior • 5-11 • 205 Warroad, Minnesota USHL - Lincoln
clinched the 2007-08 CHA regularseason title for Bemidji State--its third in five years.
2009-10 / Sunior 2008-09 Honors: u Alternate Captain
2006-07 / freshman
2008-09 / Junior 2008-09 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Saw time among the BSU blue line parings in 27 games... Entered the NCAA Tournament as one of three BSU players in search of their first points of the 2008-09 campaign... Posted an assist in each of the Beavers’ Midwest Regional victories, which includes a helper on Tyler Scofield’s game-winning goal versus No. 9 Cornell that punched BSU’s ticket to the Frozen Four... Was been a mainstay in the line up after Jan. 17, making 17 consecutive appearances.
2007-08 / Sophomore 2007-08 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Broke into the line up down the stretch dressing for 17 of the last 21 contests... Scored a goal and added an assist as a sophomore and saved all his scoring for one game... Hardwick’s first collegiate multi-point game could not have come at a better time... The Warroad, Minn. native recorded his first lamplighter as a Beaver in a 5-3 win over Wayne State in the 2007-08 season finale (3/1/08)... His goal knotted the game at 2-2 and he assisted on Ryan Cramer’s game-winner... The win
Saw time in two games as a rookie... Made college debut at the John Glas Fieldhouse, Jan. 6 in a 7-5 BSU victory over Wayne State (Mich.)... Recorded a shot in the game and was whistled for a minor penalty... Appeared on BSU’s second line of defense seven games later in a contest at Robert Morris (2/10).
Prior to BSU Scored 4-5=9 points in 43 games played for the Lincoln Stars in 2005-06... Had two power-play goals. Three-year letterwinner helped lead Warroad High to state championships in 2003 and 2005... Led all Minnesota prep defenders in scoring in 2005... Also a four-time state tournament participant in golf.
Personal Kyle Roberts Hardwick... Born Oct. 24, 1986... Son of Brian and Liz Hardwick... Majoring in business administration... Family has a long tradition of college hockey participation: grandfather Dick Roberts captained Minnesota in 1948-49; three uncles played Division I hockey; brother Jay Hardwick played for Minn.-Duluth from 2001-04, sister Maureen Hardwick played hockey and golf for St. Thomas (Minn.) from 2002-05.
Kyle Hardwick: Career Stats
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 2 20 27 48
G-A 0-1 1-1 0-2 2-3
Pts 1 2 2 5
+/-1 +8 -1 +6
vs College Hockey America
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 2 10 16 28
G-A 0-1 1-1 0-0 1-2
Pts 1 2 0 3
+/-1 +6 +1 +6
PIM 1/2 6/12 5/10 12/24
PP 0 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0 0
PIM 1/2 2/4 4/8 7/14
PP 0 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 1, vs. Wayne State (3/1/08); Assists: 1, four times; Points: 1-1=2 vs. Wayne State (3/1/08); SOG: 3 vs. Wayne State (2/1/08); PIM: 12, seven times.
18
2009-10
2008-09 / Freshman
2008-09 Honors: u 11/10/08 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week u 1/9/09 - CHA Rookie of the Week u 1/26/09 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week u 2/2/09 - CHA Rookie of the Week u 2/6/09 - HCA National Rookie of the Month Honorable Mention u 2/9/09 - CHA Rookie of the Week u 3/9/09 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week u CHA All-Rookie Team u First-Team All CHA u CHA Rookie of the Year u INCH All-CHA Team u INCH CHA Freshman of the Year u CHA All-Tournament Team u NCAA Midwest Regional AllTournament Team Was one of five BSU players to log time in all 37 games of 2008-09... Third on the team in scoring with 9-23=32 points... His total of 32 points matched Riley Riddell (200102) and Luke Erickson (2003-04) for tops in BSU’s Division I-era... With 23 helpers, he toped all BSU Division I-era defenseman assists totals... He led College Hockey America in scoring by defensemen and rookies with 4-15=19 points... Was second in the league among all scorers with 15 assists... A constant on the BSU power-play unit that entered the NCAA tournament ranked sixth in the coun-
Returning Beavers
Defense Sophomore • 5-9 • 168 Ridge Meadows, B.C. BCHL - Burnaby
29
try at 20.4-percent... Hunt led all players with 7-16=23 power-play points... His 3-9-12 points on the man advantage in league play led all players... His 9-23=32 points is fifth in the nation among rookies and ranked sixth for defenseman scoring... Was named as the College Hockey America Rookie of the Year... Earned a spot on the CHA All-Rookie Team... Was selected First Team All-CHA by the league’s coaches... Garnered NCAA Midwest Region All-Tournament Team honors.
Burnaby (2006-07), Hunt posted four goals and 34 assists with all four markers coming on the man advantage. Prior to his time with the Express, Hunt patrolled the blue line for the Junior ‘B’ Ridge Meadow Flames where he was selected as the Flames’ Rookie of the Year and earned a roster spot in the PIJHL All-Star and Prospect Game. Hunt joins fellow defenseman and current Beaver Cody Bostock as alums of the BCHL. Bostock played for the Vernon Vipers in 2004-05.
Prior to BSU
Personal
Brad Hunt came to Bemidji State after two full seasons with the Burnaby Express of the British Columbia Hockey League... In 200708 he helped lead the Express to a 33-22-0-3 overall record and a berth in the BCHL Coastal Conference Divisional Playoffs. In 60 games during the 200708 regular season, Hunt averaged nearly one point per game totaling 16 goals and 39 assists for 55 points to finish fourth on the team and second in the league in scoring among all defensemen... Of his 16 goals, 10 came on the power play placing him third on the team in special teams scoring... For his efforts he was named the Express’ Most Valuable Defenseman at the conclusion of the regular season. During his first full season with
Bradley Shawn Hunt... Son of Steve and Tricia Hunt... Born on Aug. 24 1988...Lists business administration as his major.
Brad Hunt: Career Stats Year 2008-09 Career
G 37 37
G-A 9-23 9-23
Pts 32 32
+/+5 +5
vs College Hockey America
Year 2008-09 Career
G 18 18
G-A 4-15 4-15
Pts 19 19
+/+8 +8
PIM 12/24 12/24
PP 7 7
SH 0 0
FG GW 2 1 2 1
GT 0 0
PIM 5/10 5/10
PP 3 3
SH 0 0
FG 1 1
GT 0 0
GW 1 1
Career Highs Goals: 2, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (2/9/09); Assists: 3, vs Robert Morris (3/7/09); Points: 0-3=3, vs Robert Morris (3/7/09); SOG: 7, at Niagara (11/21/09); PIM: 2, 12 times.
2009-10
19
Returning Beavers
2
Defense Sophomore • 6-0 • 190 Williston, North Dakota NAHL - North Iowa
2008-09 / Freshman
Saw time in 19 games, including three of the last four of the regular season... Was in the Beavers’ Frozen Four line up April 9 versus Miami (Ohio)... Made his collegiate debut Oct. 11 at Minnesota State... Was on the ice for a 4-2 victory over St. Cloud State Oct. 24... Was a part of the Bemidji State defensive pairings in the 3-2 overtime victory over Robert Morris to earn a berth into the 2009 NCAA Tournament... Was among the defensive parings for the Beavers’ Frozen Four game versus Miami (Ohio)... BSU finished the season 11-9-0 when Jundt found his way into the line up.
Prior to BSU Tyler Jundt joined the BSU men’s hockey program after playing in 51 games for the North Iowa Outlaws of the North American Hockey League in 2007-08... The backliner netted seven goals and 13 assists to rank third among Outlaws’ defensemen with 20 points... His +19 plus/minus rating was good for second on the team, while he logged a total of 51 penalty minutes. In 2007-08, Jundt recorded four multi-point games, which included a pair of multi-goal contests... He also added a game-winning goal in a 6-2 victory over Bismarck (1/25) and registered one of the team’s 12 short-handed goals. Jundt helped direct North Iowa
to a 38-16-4 overall record and a 2007-08 NAHL Central Division Championship... The Outlaws were bumped from the Robertson Cup playoffs by the Springfield Junior Blues in the first round... In three playoff games, Jundt posted an assist and recorded 10 shots on goal. Prior to 2007-08, Jundt recorded a goal and five assists in 47 games for the United States Hockey League’s Green Bay Gamblers. Jundt joined former North Iowa teammate and Hibbing, Minn. native Shea Walters in the 2008-09 freshman class.
Personal Tyler James Jundt... Born March 7, 1988... Son of Mic and Traci Kornkven... Is an accounting major at BSU.
G 20 20
G-A 0-0 0-0
Pts 0 0
G 11 11
G-A 0-0 0-0
Pts 0 0
2008-09 Honors: u CHA All-Rookie Team
One of five players, which included two freshman, to see time in all 37 of BSU’s games in 2008-09... Heard his named called in the starting line up four times... Scored three of the Beavers’ eight empty net goals... His 8-7=15 points was good for third among BSU rookies and eighth on the team overall... Ranked fifth in the CHA in rookie scoring with 5-3=8 points... Made his BSU debut at Minnesota State Oct. 10... Recorded a point in two of his first three games... Posted a helper at Minnesota State Oct. 11 and added another at Air Force Oct. 17... Registered his first college goal as the Beavers defeated non-conference intrastate foe St. Cloud State, 4-2... Posted a careerbest, two-goal effort in a 4-2 victory over Ala.-Huntsville... Tallied one of BSU’s three short-handed goals in a BSU 6-4 victory to cap the regularseason schedule Mar. 7... Posted a goal in the victory over No. 2 Notre Dame Mar. 28... Added a helper in the Mar. 29 win over No. 9 Cornell to clinch the Midwest Regional Championship and garner the Beavers’ first ever trip to the Frozen Four... Was named to the CHA All-Rookie team to cap the 2008-09 regular season.
20
in the USHL playing for the Sioux City Musketeers... Seeing time in each of the Musketeers’ 60 contests last winter, Kinne ranked fifth on the team with 43 points, which included 17 goals and 26 assists... Of his 17 lamplighters, three came on the power play, while one was short-handed... He also added a pair of game-winners. Kinne recorded a 2007-08-best three assists in a 7-1 victory over Indiana (1/5) while in the midst of a streak of 13 games in which he recorded 6-8--14 points, netting a point in nine of the 13 contests. Kinne joined a long list of former Musketeers to lace up their skates for the green and white, most recently, three-time captain and defensive mainstay David Deterding. Prior to his time in the USHL, Kinne experienced a tremendous amount of success at Cretin-Durham Hall High School... In addition to being an all-conference and AllState Honorable Mention pick in 2006, he helped guide the Raiders to a “AA” State Championship... For his efforts in the event, he was named to the All-Tournament Team.
Personal Born June 4, 1988... Benjamin James Kinne is the son of Mike and Carrie Kinne... Has not selected a major field of study.
Kinne came to BSU after a season
+/-6 -6
vs College Hockey America
Year 2008-09 Career
2008-09 / Freshman
Prior to BSU
Tyler Jundt Career Stats
Year 2008-09 Career
Forward Sophomore • 6-0 • 190 St. Paul, Minnesota USHL - Sioux City
+/-4 -4
PIM 3-6 3-6
PP 0 0
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 0 0
GT 0 0
PIM 1-2 1-2
PP 0 0
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 0 0
GT 0 0
Ben Kinne Career Stats
Year 2008-09 Career
G 37 37
G-A 7-8 7-8
Pts 15 15
+/+5 +5
vs College Hockey America
Year 2008-09 Career
G 18 18
G-A 5-3 5-3
Pts 8 8
+/+4 +4
PIM 7/14 7/14
PP 0 0
SH 1 1
FG 3 3
GW 0 0
GT 0 0
PIM 2/4 2/4
PP 0 0
SH 1 1
FG 2 2
GW 0 0
GT 0 0
Career Highs
Career Highs
Goals: 0; Assists: 0; SOG: 1, five times; PIM: 2, at Minnesota Duluth (1/17/09), vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/6/08) & vs. St. Cloud State (10/25/08).
Goals: 2, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (2/7/09); Assists:1, 8 times; Points: 2, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (2/7/09); SOG: 5, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (2/7/09); PIM: 2, seven times.
20
2009-10
2008-09 / Junior 2007-08 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Participated in 31 games as a junior... Missed six games during the month of December due to a broken collar bone... Registered a point in three consecutive games (2-1=3) between Feb. 15 and Feb. 20... Skated in 22 games before netting his first goal of 200809, then scored in back-to-back games to help the Beavers to a series sweep over Niagara in N.Y. for the first time in more than five years... His goal Feb. 20 stood as the game-winner in a 4-1 victory over the Purple Eagles--the first of his career.
2007-08 / Sophomore 2007-08 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Rolled up 10 points on two goals and eight assists seeing time in 35 of 36 games in 2007-08... One goal and six assists came versus College Hockey America competition... Although he didn’t get in the scoring column during the Beavers’ first 10 games of the year, and had just two assist in the first 18, he posted a game-tying helper at Ala.-Huntsville (11/10/08)... His second point of his sophomore campaign again came at an opportune time versus the Chargers... He was credited with an assist on
teammate Chris McKelvie’s gamewinning goal (12/8/08)... The Beavers posted a 8-1-1 record in games that Lehrke was in on the scoring in some capacity. An assist in a 2-0 victory over Minnesota Duluth (1/5/08) sparked a string of eight points (2 goals, 6 assists) in the final 17 games of the season, which included a goal that gave the Beavers a 2-1 lead midway through the second period of the 2008 CHA Tournament Championship game.
2006-07 / Freshman Saw time in 20 games for the Beavers as a freshman forward including a stretch of 11 consecutive games between Dec. 1 and Jan. 12... Third on the team in scoring among rookies with 5-2=7 points... Five goals tops among freshman teammates... Five of seven points came in CHA competition. Recorded first career point in his first collegiate debut (11/3) and did it with style finding Garrett Roth 2:20 into overtime for 4-3 victory over Minnesota State. Netted first career goal in the first period of a 5-2 win over Minnesota, Duluth (12/8). Posted first multi-point contest of his young BSU career finding the back of the net for the Beavers’ first two goals as BSU defeated Wayne State (Mich.) (1/5).
G 20 35 31 86
G-A 5-2 2-8 2-3 9-13
Pts 7 10 5 22
+/+3 0 -6 -3
vs College Hockey America
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 13 19 16 48
G-A 4-1 1-6 2-2 7-9
Pts 5 7 4 16
Joins Bemidji State after completing a two-year career with the Green Bay Gamblers... Served as team captain and scored 1417=31 points in 53 games in 2005-06... finished sixth in scoring, fifth in goal scoring and sixth in assists... Added one power-play goal and two short-handed goals. Scored 4-8=12 points for the Gamblers in 59 games in 200405... Also had one short-handed goal. Originally signed a National Letter of Intent with BSU during the 2004 spring period, but was deferred for an additional year of junior experience. Standout prep career at Park Rapids (Minn.) High School, prior to his USHL stint... Set school
career records for points scored (192) and set single-season records for goals (34), assists (45) and points scored (79) as a senior in 2003-04... Won the Minnesota State High School League Hobey Baker Character Award and earned All-Section and All-Conference honors in 2004.
Personal Tyler J. Lehrke... Born April 21, 1986... Son of Dave and Mary Lehrke... Is a business administration major.
Prior to BSU
Tyler Lehrke: Career Stats
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
26
+/+2 0 -2 0
PIM 2/4 9/18 6/23 17/35
PP 0 0 1 1
SH 0 0 0 0
FG 1 0 0 1
GW 0 0 1 1
GT 0 0 0 0
PIM 2/4 8/16 4/19 14/39
PP 0 0 1 1
SH 0 0 0 0
FG 1 0 0 1
GW 0 0 1 1
GT 0 0 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 2 vs. Wayne State (Mich.) (1/5/07); Assists: 1, 13 times; Points: 2 vs. Wayne State (Mich.) (1/5/07); SOG: 4 vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/15/06); PIM: 15, at Niagara (11/22/08).
2009-10
21
Returning Beavers
Forward Senior • 5-8 • 175 Park Rapids, Minnesota USHL - Green Bay
Returning Beavers
Forward Junior • 5-9 • 170 Bradwardine, Manitoba MJHL - Swan Valley
2008-09 / Sophomore 2008-09 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Saw action in 32 games, including the Beavers’ last 15... Was on the starting forward line six times... His 2008-09 total of 2-8=10 points was a mirror image of his total as a freshman... Opened the season with an assist at Minnesota State Oct. 10... Posted a helper in each game of the Nov. 7-8 CHA series at Ala.-Huntsville as the Beavers swept the Chargers 3-1 and 4-2... Scored his first goal of the season on the power-play at Minnesota Duluth Jan. 17... Recorded assists in back-to-back games versus Robert Morris Jan. 30-31 to help the Beavers button up a series sweep in Pittsburgh, Pa... Scored a goal and added an assist in a series sweep at Niagara Feb. 19-20 to conclude his offensive output as a sophomore.
2007-08 / Freshman Like so many of BSU’s 2007-08 freshman, Lowe took some time to adjust to the collegiate game, but by the end of the season, the rookie had assimilated and was a regular contributor to the Beavers’ effort... Recorded 2-8=10 points to rank second among BSU newcomers... Played in just nine of the first 21 games of the season with three assists... Netted two goals and five assists as he saw time in each of the Beavers’ final 15 con-
Ian Lowe: Career Stats
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 24 33 57
G-A 2-8 2-8 4-16
Pts 10 10 20
tests of the season... Registered both of his goals during CHA play... Lowe’s 2-4=6 points in league play matched teammate Ryan Cramer for 10th on the CHA Rookie Scoring charts...The Beavers were a perfect 2-0 when Lowe found the back of the net. Made his Bemidji State debut in a 3-0 victory versus Army (10/13/07)... Posted an assist on the game-winning goal for his first collegiate point...The first goal of his BSU career came on the power-play in a 7-1 win over Ala.Huntsville (1/12/08). His other marker as a freshman came in a 7-5 victory over Wayne State in the team’s final series of the season.
Prior to BSU Played three seasons with the Swan Valley Stampeders of the MJHL before coming to BSU... In 175 games, scored 72-131=203 points... Led the Stampeders in scoring each of the past two seasons earning the team’s MVP award at the conclusion of both years... In 2006-07, he totaled career-highs of 31-57=91 points with 132 penalty minutes in 54 games... Earned a spot in the inaugural prospects East-West game... Garnered second star in the contest.
Personal Ian Daniel Lowe... Born Sept. 4, 1986... Son of Kerry and Teresa Lowe... Is majoring in industrial technology.
+/0 -7 -7
vs College Hockey America
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 15 16 31
G-A 2-4 1-5 3-9
Pts 6 6 12
22
+/-1 +4 +3
PIM 6/12 9/18 15/30
PP 1 1 2
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0
PIM 3/6 2/4 5/10
PP 1 0 1
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 1, at Niagara (2/20/09), at Minnesota Duluth (1/17/09), vs. Wayne State (2/29/08) & at Ala.-Huntsville (1/12/08); Assists: 1, 16 times; Points: 1, 20 times; SOG: 4, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/6/09); PIM: 4, at Robert Morris (1/30/09) &. at Minnesota State (10/10/08).
22
2009-10
2008-09 / Sophomore 2008-09 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Laced up his skates for 13 games in 2008-09, including the Beavers’ first six contests of the year... Started one game on the BSU blue line... Was on the ice for non-conference victories over St. Cloud State (10/24/08), Michigan Tech (11/28/08) and UMass (12/28/08)... Last made the BSU line up Jan. 16 at Minnesota Duluth.
2007-08 / Freshman Found a place on the Bemidji State line chart in 11 games as a freshman... Made his debut as a Beaver in front of a John S. Glas Fieldhouse crowd that saw BSU shut out Army 3-0 (10/13/08)...Played in just three games before suffering a broken collar bone that would force him to miss more than two months-a stretch spanning12 games... Brought his physical frame back to the BSU line up for a 4-0 shut out at Ala.-Huntsville (1/11/08)... Played in eight of the Beavers’ last 16 games of 2007-08... Recorded his first collegiate point on an assist in a 7-2 victory at Robert Morris (2/16/08).
In 49 games played during the 2006-07 regular season, he scored 17-28=45 points with 105 penalty minutes... Was a force on special teams, racking up 14-18=32 points on the power play, and also added two game-winning goals... During the 2007 OPJHL Playoffs, he added 3-4=7 points with 2-4=6 coming on the power play in eight games... The performance earned him a position in the 2007 OPJHL SouthEast Conference All-Star game. Prior to his season with the Predators, MacIntyre spent two seasons with the Quesnel Millionaires of the BCHL... Scored 2-6=8 points in 33 games for the Millionaires during the 2005-06 season and 3-4=7 points in 60 games played in 2004-05. Played his high school hockey at Fort Frances High School.
Dan Peter MacIntyre... Born August 31, 1986... Son of Wayne and Gail MacIntyre... Has chosen biology/pre-dentistry as a major field of study.
Prior to BSU Joined the BSU program after one year with the Port Hope Predators of the OPJHL, where he served as team captain.
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 11 13 24
G-A 0-1 0-0 0-1
Pts 1 0 1
+/+2 -3 -1
vs College Hockey America
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 6 2 8
G-A 0-1 0-0 0-1
Pts 1 0 1
+/+2 0 +2
2008-09 / Freshman
Played in 36 of Bemidji State’s 37 games in 2008-09... Missed only the Beavers’ series finale versus St. Cloud State Oct. 25... Made three starts... Had 4-4=8 points on the season to rank fourth among BSU rookies... Posted his first collegiate goal and point in a 3-0 victory over non-conference opponent Michigan Tech Nov. 28... Recorded his first NCAA helper Jan. 24 as the Beavers earned a 3-1 win at Niagara... His first collegiate multi-point effort came in a Jan. 31, 5-1 victory at Robert Morris... Posted an assist Mar. 13 to lift BSU to a 4-1 victory over Ala.-Huntsville and help get the Beavers into the CHA Tournament Championship game... Wore No. 28 as a rookie.
Prior to BSU
Personal
Dan MacIntyre: Career Stats
Forward Sophomore • 6-1 • 185 St. Thomas, Ontario OPJHL - Vaughn
PIM 2/4 10/20 12/24
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0
PIM 2/4 1/2 3/6
PP 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 0; Assists: 1 at Robert Morris (2/16/08); Points: 1 at Robert Morris (2/16/08); SOG: 2, vs. Robert Morris (1/25/08); PIM: 4, at Minnesota Duluth (1/16/09), at Air Force (10/18/08) & at Ala.-Huntsville (1/12/08).
Jamie MacQueen came to Bemidji State after netting 75 points for the Vaughn Vipers and Pickering Panthers in 2007-08... After posting 22 goals and 21 assists and being named OPJHL South Player of the Month for Pickering during the first 32 games of the season, MacQueen was traded to Vaughn. After swapping jerseys, he registered 15 goals and 17 assists to average nearly two points per game... He was potent on special teams potting 11 power-play goals while collecting three short-handed markers.
MacQueen saved his best hockey for last... He finished the regular-season on a 19-game scoring streak, which included a string of nine consecutive multi-point games between Jan. 5 and Feb. 2... During that streak, he also registered eight games of three or more points and tallied four game-winning goals. The Vipers posted a 41-4-4 regular-season mark to nab the No. 2 seed and a bye in the first round of the OPJHL South playoffs. MacQueen netted a pair of goals in the best-of-five, second-round series versus Markham, but Vaughn was defeated 3-1. During the 2006-07 campaign, MacQueen spent time with Pickering and Aurora. He posted 15 goals and 11 assists in 27 games for the Tigers and totaled seven goals and 10 assists in 19 games with Pickering.
Personal Jamie Robert MacQueen... Born Aug. 2, 1988... Has selected business administration as his major... Is the son of Todd and Laurie Butterwick.
Jamie MacQueen: Career Stats
Year 2008-09 Career
G 36 36
G-A 4-4 4-4
Pts 8 8
+/-7 -7
vs College Hockey America
Year 2008-09 Career
G 18 18
G-A 2-3 2-3
Pts 5 5
17
+/-4 -4
PIM 9/18 9/18
PP 2 2
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 1 1
GT 0 0
PIM 3/6 3/6
PP 1 1
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 1 1
GT 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 1, at Robert Morris (1/31/09), at Minnesota Duluth (1/16/09), vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/5/08) & vs. Michigan Tech (11/28/08); Assists: 1, vs. Ala.-Huntsville (3/13/09), vs. Ala.-Huntsville (2/6/09), at Robert Morris (1/31/09) & vs. Niagara (1/24/08); Points: 2, at Robert Morris (1/31/09); SOG: 5, at Robert Morris (1/31/09); PIM: 4, vs. Michigan Tech (11/28/08).
Jamie MacQueen: Career Stats
2009-10
23
Returning Beavers
4
Forward/Defense Junior • 6-1 • 195 Fort Frances, Ontario OPJHL - Port Hope
Returning Beavers
Forward Senior • 6-1 • 190 New Brighton, Minnesota NAHL - Bozeman
2009-10 / Senior u Captain
2008-09 / Junior u Alternate Captain u Academic All-CHA One of five BSU players to skate in each of the Beavers’ 37 games in 2008-09... Recorded three goals and four assists... Potted a goal in a 6-2 loss at Air Force Oct. 17... Contributed an assist in a 3-1 victory over Ala.-Huntsville Dec. 5... After failing to put his name in the scoring column in 14 consecutive games, McKelvie went on a three-game scoring streak (1-2=3)... He scored a goal in a 3-3 tie at Robert Morris and followed that with an assist in each of the wins at Niagara the following weekend... Scored the Beavers’ first goal of the NCAA Tournament, propelling BSU to a 5-1 victory over No. 2 Notre Dame Mar. 28... Was +2 on the season.
goals and an assist last winter... McKelvie’s total of six goals was good for sixth among BSU forwards... All six goals came versus just two teams--Ala.-Huntsville and Colorado College. McKelvie matched his rookie season scoring total in the second game of the season posting an assist in a 3-0 shutout of Army (10/13)... His first career goal tied the game in second period of a 3-3 stalemate at Ala.-Huntsville (11/10). The sophomore recorded one of the single greatest individual performances in BSU hockey history versus Colorado College (1/18)... McKelvie posted the schools’ eighth hat trick of the Division I-era netting all three goals in succession during the second period... Also fired a career-high seven shots on goal in the contest... Did not score a single point in the Beavers’ final 13 contests of the season.
2006-07 / Freshman
2007-08 / Sophomore 2007-08 Honors u Academic All-CHA
Was one of nine BSU players to play in 35 or more games last winter... The Beavers fastest skater used his speed to create scoring chances for himself... Increased his scoring from an assist as a freshman to seven points on six
Suited up 11 times as a freshman including seven of the Beavers’ last nine contests... Made collegiate debut at Niagara in the 2006-07 CHA opener (10/27)... Netted first goal in a 3-2 victory at Minnesota State (11/4)... Fired a career-high three shots twice on the season (2/9 and 2/24).
Chris McKelvie: Career Stats
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 11 35 37 83
G-A 1-0 6-1 3-4 10-5
Pts 1 7 7 15
+/-3 -5 +2 -6
vs College Hockey America
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 9 19 18 46
G-A 0-0 3-0 1-3 4-3
23
Pts 0 3 4 7
+/-1 -2 +5 +2
PIM 6/12 8/16 17/34 31/62
PP 0 0 0 0
SH 0 1 0 1
FG 0 0 1 1
GW 0 0 0 0
GT 0 1 0 1
PIM 4/8 4/8 7/14 15/30
PP 0 0 0 0
SH 0 0 0 0
FG 0 0 0 0
GW 0 0 0 0
GT 0 1 0 1
Career Highs Goals: 3, at Colorado College (1/18/08); Assists: 1, five times; Points: 3, at Colorado College (1/18/08); SOG: 7, at Colorado College (1/18/08); PIM: 4, six times.
24
2009-10
Prior to BSU Came to BSU as a three-year NAHL veteran, having played all three seasons with the Bozeman IceDogs... Played just 56 games during his first two years with Bozeman, including just 18 games in 2004-05, due to injury, but appeared in 51 games in 2005-06... Posted 23-33=56 points last year, finishing second on the team in goals and points... Led the team and tied for fourth in the NAHL with 12 power-play goals... Tied for sixth in the NAHL with four short-handed goals. Helped Bozeman to the NAHL regular-season championship after a dominant 48-9-1 season which included a 22-game unbeaten streak and 20-game winning streak... Bozeman won the NAHL’s West Division by 27 points over second-place Fairbanks, and its 97 points for the season were nine more than the second-best league finisher, Texas (42-12-4, 88 points).
March 12, 2006 NAHL Offensive Player of the Week after scoring four goals in a weekend sweep of North Iowa and Billings.
Personal Chris Richard McKelvie... Born Feb. 22, 1985... Son of Rick and Vicky McKelvie... Majoring in sport management. McKelvie has two brothers who have played Division I men’s ice hockey... Older brother Ryan completed his eligibility as a forward at Minnesota State in 200506, and is now an assistant coach in the NAHL after two seasons as BSU’s graduate assistant coach... Twin brother Zach was a defenseman at Army where he was also a captain in 200809... All three McKelvie brothers played for Bozeman, with Zach and Chris playing as teammates from 2003-05.
2008-09 / Junior 2008-09 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Dressed for 36 of the Beavers’ 37 contests in 2008-09... Started on the BSU blue line six times... Posted 0-13=13 points to finish third among BSU defensemen... His total of 13 assists was thirdbest at BSU this season... A member of a BSU power-play unit that entered the NCAA Tournament ranked sixth in the country at just under 21-percent efficiency, Peluso contributed eight assists to the effort... Dished out assists in three consecutive games Dec. 6-29... Matched a career-high with two assists Jan. 31 in a 5-1 victory over Robert Morris... Was +2 in 2008-09.
2007-08 / Sophomore 2007-08 Honors: u Academic All-CHA
Was one of five Beavers, and was the only defenseman, to see time in all 36 games in 2007-08... Started 20 contests... His 1-9=10 points ranked fourth among BSU blue liners... He scored 1-5=6 in conference play. Scored his first collegiate goal at Ala.-Huntsville (11/10) 36 games into his Bemidji State career... Scored in back-to-back games for the first time as a Beaver Jan. 12
and Jan. 18 at Ala.-Huntsville and Colorado College... Posted a career-best six shots on goal in 2-2 tie versus Robert Morris (1/25)... Finished the season with three assists in Bemidji State’s final four games including an helper in each of the Beavers’ CHA Tournament contests (3/15-16).
2006-07 / Freshman
2006-07 Honors: u 12/4/06 CHA Rookie of the Week u 12/18/06 CHA Rookie of the Week After playing just four of the first nine games due to coaches decision, cemented himself on BSU third line of defensemen and played 22 of the final 24 games... Made collegiate debut in the Beavers’ 2006-07 season-opener at Maine. u CHA Rookie of the Week (12/4)after he notched first point of his career on an assist on Matt Pope’s game-winner in a 1-0 win over Wayne State (Mich.)(12/1)... Moved to +2 in the series posting a pair of assists the following evening for the first multi-point game of his BSU career... Capped the series with 0-3=3 points and +2. u CHA Rookie of the Week (12/18) for collecting assists in consecutive contests versus Ala.Huntsville (12/15-16). Spent a career-high 10 min-
Chris Peluso: Career Stats
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 26 36 34 106
G-A 0-6 1-9 0-13 1-28
Pts 6 10 13 29
+/-1 +1 +2 +2
vs College Hockey America
Year 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 15 20 18 33
G-A 0-6 1-5 0-7 1-18
Pts 6 6 7 19
+/+2 +1 +4 +7
PIM 12/24 13/26 17/34 42/84
PP 0 1 0 1
SH 0 0 0 0
FG 0 1 0 1
GW 0 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0 0
PIM 5/10 7/14 7/14 19/38
PP 0 1 0 1
SH 0 0 0 0
FG 0 1 0 1
GW 0 0 0 0
GT 0 0 0 0
utes in the penalty box after being whistled for five penalties at Colorado College (12/29)... Was tagged for just seven penalties for 14 minutes in the other 25 games he saw time in. Posted final point of his season helping on a Tyler Lehrke goal in a 3-2 victory over Wayne State (Mich.) (1/5). Fired a career-best five shots versus Ala.-Huntsville (2/17).
Prior to BSU Joined the Bemidji State program after a two-year USHL stint with Sioux Falls... Finished second among Stampede defensemen with 5-19=24 points in 57 games played... Added three power-play goals... Tied for 10th amongst USHL defenders with 24 points... Finished with a +10 rating.
Scored 1-7=8 points for the Stampede in 2004-05 with a +2 rating in 53 games played... Also had 54 penalty minutes. Played for Brainerd (Minn.) High School prior to his USHL tour... Scored 11-33=44 points as a junior in 2003-04.
Personal Chris Joseph Peluso... Born Aug. 21, 1986... Son of Joe and Patti Peluso... Majoring in nursing at BSU and has a regular on the Dean’s List. Nephew of former New Jersey Devils standout Mike Peluso... Mike Peluso was New Jersey’s 10th selection, and was the 190th player taken overall in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft; played 192 games for the Devils from 199397, scoring 9-35=44 points.
Career Highs Goals: 1, at Ala.-Huntsville (11/10/07); Assists: 2, at Robert Morris (1/31/09) & at Wayne State (12/2/06); Points: 2, Robert Morris (1/31/09) & at Wayne State (12/2/06); SOG: 6 vs. Robert Morris (1/25/08); PIM: 10 at Colorado College (12/29/06).
2009-10
25
Returning Beavers
9
Defense Senior • 5-10 • 190 Wadena, Minnesota USHL - Sioux Falls
Returning Beavers
19
Forward Junior • 5-10 • 185 Ilderton, Ontario USHL - Des Moines
2009-10 / Junior 2009-10 Honors: u Alternate Captain
2008-09 / Sophomore
2008-09 Honors: u 2008 Preseason All-CHA u Academic All-CHA u First-Team All-CHA u CHA All-Tournament Team u CHA Tournament Most Outstanding Player u 2008 Preseason All-CHA 3/17/09- INCH National Player of the Week Runner Up u NCAA Midwest Regional AllTournament Team Played each of BSU’s 37 contests in 2008-09... An appearance in the national semifinals stood as Read’s 73 consecutive contest--BSU’s longest running games played streak... Led BSU with 15-25=40 points... His 40 points matched Brendan Cook’s 2005 total of 40 for tops in BSU’s Division I history... His 25 assists is also second in BSU’s Division I-era... Posted a team-leading 10 multi-point games... The Beavers finished 12-2-0 when Read scored a goal... Opened the season with a five-game scoring streak (2-6=6) stretching from a goal and an assist in a 4-2 win over St. Cloud State Jan. 24 to an assist at Niagara Nov. 22... Posted a goal and two assists in the 6-4 season finale victory over Robert Morris... In the game Read notched a short-handed goal while assisting on a pair of additional
shorties... He also scored a shorthanded goal in BSU’s Mar 28 victory over Notre Dame to have a hand in all four of BSU’s short-handed markers of 2008-09... Recorded the first collegiate multi-goal effort of his career in a 4-1 win over Ala.Huntsville in the CHA Tournament semifinal... Matched that effort in the championship game victory over Robert Morris as he netted the game-winning goal 8:05 into overtime to clinch BSU spot in the national tournament... His back-toback three-point games matched a career-high for the sophomore... Capped the season riding a sixgame scoring streak (7-7=14), which includes five straight multipoint efforts... Was +16 for the season... Was named First Team All-CHA to cap the 2008-09 regular season... Earned a spot on the 2009 CHA All-Tournament Team and was named Tournament Most Outstanding Player... Was named to the NCAA Midwest Region AllTournament team.
2007-08 / Freshman
2007-08 Honors: u11/19/07 CHA Rookie of the Week u12/3/07 CHA Rookie of the Week u12/10/07 CHA Rookie of the Week u 1/14/08 CHA Offensive Player of the Week u CHA All-Rookie Team u CHA Rookie of the Year Burst onto the scene and compet-
Matt Read: Career Stats
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 36 37 74
G-A 9-18 15-25 24-43
Pts 27 40 67
+/+10 +16 +26
vs College Hockey America
Year 2007-08 2008-09 Career
G 20 18 38
G-A 7-14 5-10 12-24
Pts 21 15 36
+/+11 +10 +21
PIM 13/37 21/50 34/87
PP 4 2 6
SH 1 2 3
FG 2 3 5
GW 1 2 3
GT 0 0 0
PIM 6/12 11/30 17/42
PP 4 0 4
SH 1 1 2
FG 2 2 4
GW 1 1 2
GT 0 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 2, vs. Robert Morris (3/14/09) & vs. Ala.-Huntsville (3/13/09); Assists: 2, five times; Points: 3, vs. Robert Morris (3/14/09), vs. Robert Morris (3/7/09) & at Ala-Huntsville (1/12/08); SOG: 7, vs. Minnesota State (12/14/07); PIM: 15, at North Dakota (2/23/08).
26
2009-10
ed at a level equal to that of anyone in the league in 2007-08... Played in each of BSU’s 36 games... Held down the right wing spot on the Beavers top line all season... Led the team in scoring with 9-18=27 points... His 27 points placed him alone in fifth place on BSU’s Division I-era freshman scoring charts... Posted the Beavers’ third-best rookie assists total since 1999-2000 with 18... Netted seven goals and 14 assists in league play to sit atop the CHA freshman scoring charts and rank fifth among all conference scorers. It didn’t take Read long to find his way into the box score, assisting on the game-wining goal in the season-opener versus Army (10/12)... The rookie went the next for games without recording a point--the longest scoring drought of the season, but got back in the scoring column with a helper in a 6-1 loss at St. Cloud State (10/27)... An assist on the game-winner at Ala.-Huntsville (11/9) sparked a five-game scoring streak for the rookie and kicked off a stretch in which he posted 5-6=11 points during the Beavers’ next nine games. Read’s first NCAA goal and the first of a team-leading seven multipoint games came on an unassisted goal in a 3-1 victory at Wayne State (11/16)... He followed that up with a goal the following night and was named uCHA Rookie of the Week (11/19) for his efforts. Netted the first short-handed goal of the season for BSU in a 2-2 tie with Niagara (12/1) to earn his second league uRookie of the Week honor (12/3)... Recorded a goal and two assists, including a helper a the game-winner as the Beavers swept Ala.-Huntsville (12/7-8) to garner his third uCHA Rookie of the Week laurel (12/10). The best weekend of his freshman campaign came in a trip to Ala.-Huntsville shortly after the first of the year. In the series he posted a goal and four assists as the Beavers registered
their second weekend sweep at UAH in 2007-08... The rookie recorded a career-high two assists in game one of the series (1/11) and matched that the following night, while adding a goal... For his efforts, he was rewarded with the uCHA Offensive Player of the Week award... Participated in the Boston Bruins’ Developmental camp in the summer of 2008.
Prior to BSU Came to Bemidji State after a year with Des Moines of the USHL... In 58 games with the Buccaneers he totaled 28-34=62 points to rank fourth on his team and 14th in the USHL... Scored 17 power-play goals and notched two gamewinners... Racked up 110 penalty minutes... Scored at least a pint in 37 of 58 games with a seasonhigh 2-3=5 points in a 5-2 road win at Lincoln... Posted a sevengame scoring streak beginning Jan. 27 with two goals and an assist and stretched through a Feb. 20th game in which he posted an assist... During the streak he scored 6-6=12 points... Earned a spot on the USHL Western Division All-Star Roster where he helped the team to a 7-5 win over the East squad netting a goal. Prior to his stint at Des Moines he spent the 2005-06 season playing for the Milton IceHawks Junior A team of the Ontario Hockey Association... Played 2003-05 for St. Marys Lincolns of the Western Ontario Hockey league.
Personal Matt Zachary Jarrett Read... Born June 14, 1986... Son of Lorne and Nancy Read... Is a physical education major.
2008-09 / Freshman
2008-09 Honors: u 10/13/08 - CHA Rookie of the Week u 11/24/08 - CHA Rookie of the Week Skated in 34 of the Beavers’ 37 games a freshman, including BSU’s last 25 games consecutively... Made his Bemidji State debut Oct. 10 at Minnesota State... Began his collegiate scoring with a goal in the second game of his BSU career... Recorded his first assist versus St. Cloud State Oct. 25... Was second among BSU rookies with 4-11=15 points... Posted a game-winning goal in a 3-1 victory at Niagara Nov. 22... Saw considerable time on a BSU power-play unit that opened NCAA Tournament play sixth in the nation at 20.4-percent... Lit the lamp on the power-play in a 4-2 victory at Ala.-Huntsville Dec. 6... Registered his first multi-point game Feb. 20 in a 4-1 win over Niagara... Contributed an assist in BSU’s 5-1 victory over No. 2 Notre Dame Mar. 28... BSU 5-1-1 in the final seven games in which Walters has recorded a point.
Prior to BSU Shea Walters came to BSU after an extremely successful 200708 season at North Iowa of the NJHL... He registered 24-60=84 points in 57 games helping the
Outlaws to a 38-16-4 overall record... His 84 points was good for third in the league while his 60 helpers paced all NJHL scorers... He scored in 42 of 57 outings and opened the season with a streak of 25 games in which he tallied 12 goals and 32 assists... He posted multi-point games on 25 occasions and recorded a career-best five assists in a 6-4 victory over Springfield (12/31) Prior to joining the Outlaws, Walters logged two seasons with the Green Bay Gamblers of the USHL. In two seasons, the Hibbing, Minn. native suited up for the Gamblers 110 times netting 5-34=39 points with 23 points coming during his final season. His 22 assists was good for fourth on the team while he finished eighth on the squad in scoring. Was named NAHL Froward of the Year to conclude the 2007-08 campaign... A member of the Hibbing High School hockey team as a prep, Walters helped HHS to a third place finish in the Minnesota State High School Tournament. Walters rejoined former teammate Tyler Lehrke on the BSU roster...Walters and Lehrke played together at Green Bay in 2005-06.
G 33 33
G-A 4-11 4-11
Pts 15 15
G 16 16
G-A 3-6 3-6
Pts 9 9
Did not play during the 2008-09 campaign.
Prior to BSU Matt Carlson may be a new face in the 2009-10 line up, but he is no stranger to the BSU men’s hockey program... Carlson spent the 2008-09 season as a red shirt practicing with the team on a dayin-day out basis. He came to the Beavers after a two-year stint with the Fairbanks Ice Dogs of the NAHL. In 97 games for the Ice Dogs from 2006-08, Carlson netted eight goals and 26 assists for 34 points, with 4-22=26 points coming during
the 2007-08 season to rank fourth among Fairbanks’ defensemen. Prior to his junior college career, Carlson was a member of back-to-back North Dakota State High School championship teams at Grand Forks Central.
Personal Born May 29, 1987... Matt James Carlson is the son of Kirk and Deb Carlson... Is a sport management major at Bemidji State.
Shea Steven Walters... Son of Kris and Cheryl Walters... Born March 5, 1987... Is undecided on a major.
+/-3 -3
vs College Hockey America
Year 2008-09 Career
2008-09 / Freshman
5
Personal
Shea Walters: Career Stats
Year 2008-09 Career
Defense Sophomore • 6-3 • 210 Grand Forks, N.D. NAHL - Fairbanks
+/+1 +1
PIM 5/10 5/10
PP 1 1
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 1 1
GT 0 0
PIM 2/4 2/4
PP 1 1
SH 0 0
FG 0 0
GW 1 1
GT 0 0
Career Highs Goals: 1, at Robert Morris (1/31/09), vs. Ala.-Huntsville (12/6/08), at Niagara (11/22/08) & at Minnesota State (10/11/08); Assists: 2, at Niagara (2/20/09); Points: 2, at Niagara (2/20/09); SOG: 5, vs. Robert Morris (3/7/09) & at Niagara (11/22/08); PIM: 2, five times.
2009-10
27
Returning Beavers
11
Forward Sophomore • 5-11 • 180 Hibbing, Minnesota NJHL - North Iowa
Beaver newcomers
Defense Freshman • 6-0 • 200 Port Coquitlam, British Columbia USHL - Fargo Prior to BSU Areshenko played in 68 of 70 games as a defenseman for the Fargo Force of the United State Hockey League (USHL) in 200809... Patrolled a blue line for a team that ranked second in the league’s Western Division in goals allowed (166). In addition, Areshenko recorded two goals and seven assists, which included a lamplighter and three helpers on the power play. He carried a +7 plus/minus rating on the season. The Force, 32-23-5 in its first season as a member of the USHL, clinched a playoff berth and after sweeping Omaha. After discarding Lincoln, Fargo was knocked out of the postseason by Indiana... Areshenko posted 0-4=4 points in 10 playoff games... Areshenko
8
contributed an assist on the powerplay in Fargo’s 4-2 win over the Lancers April 11. Highlights of the 2008-09 season in addition to his playoff helper included: Scoring is first goal as a member of the Force Oct. 18 in a 6-1 loss at Sioux City and recording a goal and an assist in a 6-2 victory over Green Bay Feb. 6.
Personal Jake Thomas Areshenko... Born July 15, 1988... Son of Jerry and Christy Areshenko... Is undecided on a major... His grandfather, Dave Gunther, a long-time collegiate basketball coach in this region, served as BSU’s head men’s basketball coach from 1995-2001.
Goaltender Freshman • 6-0 • 165 L’Assomption, Quebec NAHL - Wenatchee
Prior to BSU Travis Bosch spent the 2007-08 and 2008-09 campaigns in the net for the Melville Millionaires of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League (SJHL), where he compiled a 30-24-5-0 record with a goals against average of better than 2.50 and a save percentage of .915... Most recently, Bosch backstopped a team that went 37-16-3-0 and rode a winning streak into the league championship series only to be defeated by current teammate Brady Wacker and the Humbolt Broncos... Bosch posted a 2.36 goals against average and a .928 save percentage in 2,776 minutes of play... On the season he went 29-16-3-0 with a shutout... He led the league in wins, minutes played and save percentage, while finishing second in goals against average... At
35
Prior to BSU
Personal
Mathieu Dugas comes to Bemidji State after posting a 17-12-0 record with the Wenatchee Wild of the North American Hockey League (NAHL) in 2008-09... In nearly 2,100 minutes between the pipes, Dugas turned away 988 shots a for a .904 save percentage, while allowing 3.05 goals per game... He guided his team to the national championship where they lost a 3-2 heartbreaker... compiled a 7-1-1 postseason record and earned a West Division roster spot for the prospect tournament. Prior to his time in the NAHL, Dugas play two seasons in the Maritime Junior “A” Hockey League... In 90 games in the league, Dugas posted a .915 save percentage.
Mathieu Dugas... Born Feb. 6, 1988... Son of Claude Dugas and Chantal Pepin... Has selected physical education a major field of study.
28
Goaltender Freshman • 6-0 • 185 Regina, Saskatchewan SJHL - Melville
2009-10
the conclusion of the season, the three-time SJHL Goaltender of the Month, was named as the team’s most valuable player an earned a spot in the SJHL All-Star game en route to first-team all-league honors. Prior to his time at Melville, Bosch played Junior “B” hockey.
Personal Travis Adam Bosch... Son of Ron and Rose Bosch... Born Feb. 14, 1988... Is focusing on general studies.
Forward Freshman • 5-8 • 155 Verona, Wis. NAHL - Topeka Prior to BSU
Jordan George comes to BSU after anchoring the attacking lines of the Topeka RoadRunners of the North American Hockey League (NAHL) each of the past two seasons... Recorded 27 goals and 40 assists in 58 games played during 2008-09 to lead the team in both categories... His 67 points paced the RoadRunners and tied for second-most among all NAHL players during the regular season... Of his 27 goals, five were game-winners, four came on the power play and three were short-handed... Opened 2008-09 with a 12-game scoring streak which included eight goals and 15 assists... Posted 21 multi-point contests... Highlights of the 2008-09 season include: a four-assist night in an 8-2 victory
1
28
over Marquette and a five-point outing (2 goals, 3 assists) helping the RoadRunners to a 8-2 win over Wenatchee. George, a native of Madison, Wis., will not only become the first Bemidji State player to be plucked from the state of Wisconsin in the team’s Division I-era, he is one of just three players on record in the history of the program hailing from Minnesota’s neighbor to the east.
Personal Jordan Paul George... Born August 20, 1990... The son of Kevin and Julie George... Is undecided on a major field of study.
Prior to BSU Hartmann rejoins former Topeka RoadRunners teammate Jordan George as BSU newcomers in 2009-10... Hartmann is coming off a season during which he collected 20 goals and 23 assists to rank fourth on the team with 43 points... Led the team with 10 power-play markers and added eight helpers on the man advantage... Matched George’s total of five game-winning goals to rank second among his teammates... Registered 12 multipoint efforts, which includes a twogoal, three-assist night to help the RoadRunners to a 8-2 victory over Marquette Sept. 18, 2008. During the 2007-08 season Hartmann registered 20-17=37 points and finished +16 as Topeka, the NAHL Club of the Year, took the
South Division title and made a run deep into the 2008 post season. Despite starting a bit slow, Hartmann assembled a streak of 10 games, stretching from the end of October to the middle of November, during which he scored in seven games and accumulated 11 points (6g, 5a). He capped the season netting multi-point efforts in five of the final eight games in which he scored. Hartmann native of Minnesota played prep hockey for White Bear Lake High School. He joins teammate Shea Walters as NAHL veterans from Minnesota.
Orban, a three-year veteran forward for the Olds Grizzlys of the Alberta Junior Hockey league (AJHL), skated in 201 games and piled up 84 goals and 123 assists for an impressive 203 points as a Grizzly... A proven scorer, Orban had his most productive season in 2008-09... He accumulated 47 goals and 48 assists in 76 games to lead his team and rank fourth in the league in total points (95), which included 19 goals on the power play and four short-handed tallies... His total of 47 goals ranked second in the AJHL, while his 48 assists seated him ninth among his league counterparts. Highlights of the 2008-09 season include: Twenty-eight multi-point efforts, three times piling
Prior to BSU
McLeod comes to Bemidji State after playing each of the last two seasons in the Central Junior Hockey League (CJHL) playing the majority of that time with Ottawa... in 2008-09 he piled up 28 goals, 41 assists for 69 points to finish as the Junior Senator’s leading scorer and rank 16th in the CJHL... McLeod recorded at least a point in 43 of 58 games a year ago, 21 multi-point efforts... Assembled a 13-game scoring strand stretching from Nov. 27, 2008 to Jan. 14, 2009, which included nine goals and 14 assists. A proven special teams threat, nearly 36-percent of his junior hockey points have come on the power-play (16-37=53) with Personal seven goals and 21 assists coming Born April 13, 1989... Matt Joseph in 2008-09 alone. Hartmann is the son of Steve and A native of Ottawa, Ontario, Cindy Hartmann... Is undecided McLeod is a veteran of the CJHL. on a major field of study at BSU. A year ago he posted 20-32=52
Forward Freshman • 5-9 • 160 Lethbridge, Alberta AJHL - Olds Prior to BSU
21
Forward Freshman • 5-9 • 165 Ottawa, Ontario CJHL - Ottawa
7
up four points in a single game... March 16, Orban led the Grizzlys to a 7-1 playoff victory over the Okotoks Oilers with a season-best three goals and an assist. Dec. 16, the forward put up a season-high three assists, which included helping on the game-winner in a 7-3 victory over the Brooks Bandits... He also added a goal in the game.
Personal Brance Jerad Todd Orban... Born Sept. 27, 1988... Son of Chris and Valerie Orban... Has selected Elementary education as a major field of study.
points for the Jr. Senators before being traded to Brockville for a playoff run. The centerman posted 11 goals and 15 assists in 20 games for Brockville helping the Braves to a post-season berth. In five playoff contests, he rolled up five assists, with two coming on the power play, as the Braves made it to the second round before falling to Smiths Falls and exiting the playoffs. In the off-season, Ottawa reclaimed the rights to McLeod. McLeod joins CJHL alumnus Darcy Findlay on the BSU roster in 2009-10... Findlay played his junior hockey career with the CJHL’s Cornwall Colts.
Personal Aaron Robert McLeod... Son of Wesley and Kay McLeod... Born Sept. 10, 1988... Has not selected a major field of study.
Defense Freshman • 5-7 • 155 Jensen, Saskatchewan SJHL - Humbolt Prior to BSU Wacker spent the last three seasons as a defenseman for the Humbolt Broncos of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League (SJHL)... He finished third in the league in scoring, pacing the Broncos to their third consecutive SJHL Credit Union Cup with 17 goals and 65 assists for 82 points... His 65 assists led all SJHL players and his total of 50 points on the power play (10g40a) was second to none. Wacker, the Broncos’ captain, concluded the 2008-09 regular season as the first player in SJHL history to be selected as the league’s Player of the Year and its Defenseman of the Year while he fell just six points shy of the league’s scoring championship... The five-time SJHL Defenseman of the Week in 2008-09, was also
2009-10
14
25
named to the SJHL ITECH Conference All-Star roster and was a finalist for the Canadian Junior Hockey League’s (CJHL) National Player of the Year. Highlights of the 2008-09 season include: Thirty-one multipoint contests... The defenseman also assembled a 15-game scoring streak stretching from Oct. 22 to Dec. 7 during which he posted eight goals and 28 assists. Wacker and the Broncos extended their season to May by advancing the Royal Bank Cup Finals... Humbolt fell short of a repeat Junior “A” National Championship falling to the Vernon Vipers.
Personal Brady Justin Wacker... Born June 26, 1988... Son of Curtis and Jodi Wacker... Plans to study business.
29
beaver newcomers
Forward Freshman • 6-0 • 195 Hugo, Minnesota NAHL - Topeka
2009-10 opponents
Air Force Falcons
Northern Michigan Wildcats
October 9-10, 2009; 7:35 p.m. / 7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji, Minn.
Minnesota Gophers
October 23-24, 2009; 6:35 p.m. / 6:35 p.m. Barry Events Center; Marquette, Mich.
November 14-15, 2009; 7:37 p.m. / 6:07 p.m. Mariucci Arena; Minneapolis, Minn.
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Location: Colorado Springs, Colo. Founded (Enrollment): 1954 (4,400) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: Atlantic Hockey Nickname: Falcons School Colors: Blue and Silver Home Ice: Cadet Ice Arena Size (capacity): 200x85 (2,502) Superintendent: Lt. Gen. Michael Gould Athletic Director: Dr. Hans Mueh Athletic Phone: (719) 333-4008 Tickets: (719) 472-1895 1-800-666-USFA
Quick Facts
Location: Marquette, Mich. Founded (Enrollment):1899 (9,400) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CCHA Nickname: Wildcats School Colors: Old Gold & Olive Green Home Ice: Berry Events Center Size (capacity): 200x100 (3,902) President: Leslie Wong Athletic Director: Ken Godfrey Athletic Phone: (906) 227-1015 Athletic Fax: (507) 389-2904
head coach forward Frank Jeff Hockey SID: Dave Toller Serratore Hajner dave-toller@usafa.edu Phone: (719) 333-3478 Oct. 5 Calgary (exh.) Cell: (719) 200-2802 Oct. 9 at Bemidji State SID Fax: (719) 333-3798 Oct. 10 at Bemidji State Press Box: (719) 472-1554 Oct. 16 Alabama-Huntsville http://www.goairforcefalcons.com Oct. 17 Alabama-Huntsville Oct. 23 *RIT Program History First Year of Hockey: 1968-69 Oct. 24 *RIT Overall Record: 584-613-60 Oct. 31 at *Canisius Years in Div. I post-season: 2 Nov. 1 at *Canisius Postseason Record: n/a Nov. 6 *Bentley Nov. 7 *Bentley Coaching Staff Nov. 13 at *Holy Cross Head Coach: Frank Serratore. Nov. 14 at *Holy Cross alma mater: Bemidji State ‘82 Nov. 20 at *Connecticut at USAFA: 198-212-32 (11th) Nov. 21 at *Connecticut Career: 247-304-41 (15th) Phone: (719) 333-2188 Dec. 4 *American Intl. Contact: contact SID Dec. 5 *American Intl. Dec. 11 *Mercyhurst Assistants: Mike Corbett Denver ‘98 Dec. 12 *Mercyhurst Capt. Andy Berg Air Force ‘03 Jan. 2 at *Sacred Heart Jan. 3 at *Sacred Heart The Falcons Jan. 8 *Connecticut 2008-09 record: 28-11-2 Jan. 9 *Connecticut Atlantic Hockey 20-6-2 (1st) Jan. 15 at *Bentley postseason: NCAA Tournament Jan. 16 at *Bentley Final national ranking: 14 Returning: 19 (10f, 6d, 3g) Jan. 22 *Holy Cross Lost: 6 (2f, 4d, 0g) Jan. 23 *Holy Cross Jan. 29 at *Army Jan. 30 at *Army Series vs USAFA Standing: 23-8-2 Feb. 5 at Colorado College home: 14-1-2 Feb. 6 Denver away: 8-7-0 Feb. 19 at *RIT neutral: 2-0-0 Feb. 20 at *RIT overtime: 1-2-2 Feb. 26 *Sacred Heart Feb. 27 *Sacred Heart Mar. 19-20 AHA Final Four
Sports Information
* Atlantic Hockey contest
Location: Minneapolis, Minn. Founded (Enrollment): 1851 (50,402) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: WCHA Nickname: Golden Gophers School Colors: Maroon & Gold Home Ice: Mariucci Arena Size (capacity): 200x100 (10,000) President: Robert Bruininks Athletic Director: Joel Maturi Athletic Phone: (612) 624-4497
head coach Walt David Faiella Kyle
Sports Information Hockey SID: dfaiella@nmu.edu Phone: (906) 227-1013 SID Home: (906) 226-8435 SID Cell (906) 458-3558 SID Fax: (906) 227-2492 Press Box: (906) 227-1720 http://www.nmu.edu/athletics
forward Mark Olver
head coach Don Jim Strick Lucia
Sports Information Hockey SID: stric085@umn.edu Phone: (612) 625-9379 Cell: (651) 592-5741 Media Relations Fax: (612) 625-0359 Press Box: (612) 626-0844 www.gophersports.com
Oct. 4 Ryerson University Oct. 9 at Michigan Tech Oct. 11 at Minnesota-Duluth Oct. 23 Bemidji State Oct. 24 Bemidji State Oct. 30 *Miami Program History Oct. 31 *Miami First Year of Hockey: 1976-77 Nov. 6 at *Ohio State Overall Record: 679-550-94 Nov. 7 at *Ohio State Years in Div. I post-season: n/a Nov. 14 at *Notre Dame CCHA Season Titles: n/a Nov. 15 at *Notre Dame CCHA Tournament Titles: n/a Nov. 20 *Nebraska-Omaha NCAA I National Title: 1 (1991) Nov. 21 *Nebraska-Omaha Nov. 27 at *Alaska Coaching Staff Nov. 28 at *Alaska Head Coach: Walt Kyle alma mater: Northern Michigan ‘81 Dec. 4 *Michigan State at NMU: 141-121-26 (7th) Dec. 5 *Michigan State Career: 141-121-26 (7th. Dec. 11 at *Lake Superior State Phone: (507) 389-5196 Dec. 12 at *Lake Superior State Contact: contact SID Dec. 18 Michigan Tech Assistants: Jan. 2 1 TBA John Kyle Northern Michigan ‘82 Jan. 3 1 TBA Robert Facca Nebraska-Omaha ‘00 Jan. 12 at Michigan Tech Jan. 15 *Bowling Green The Wildcats Jan. 16 *Bowling Green 2008-09 record: 19-17-5. CCHA: 11-12-5-3 (6th) Jan. 22 at *Nebraska-Omaha postseason: 1-1 CCHA Tourn. Jan. 23 at *Nebraska-Omaha Final national ranking: none Jan. 29 *Alaska Returning: 18 (11f, 6d, 1g) Jan. 30 *Alaska Lost: 5 (3f, 2d, 0g) Feb. 5 at *Ferris State Feb. 6 at *Ferris State Series vs NMU Feb. 12 *Western Michigan Standing: First Meeting. Feb. 13 *Western Michigan home: 0-0-0 Feb. 19 at *Michigan away: 0-0-0 Feb. 20 at *Michigan neutral: 0-0-0 overtime: 0-0-0 Feb. 26 *Lake Superior State Feb. 27 *Lake Superior State Mar. 19-20 CCHA Tournament * CCHA contest 1 Dodge Holiday Classic
Oct. 4 British Columbia (exh.) Oct. 16 at *North Dakota Oct. 17 at *North Dakota Oct. 23 *Denver Oct. 24 *Denver Program History Oct. 30 *Alaska Anchorage First Year of Hockey: 1921 Nov. 1 *Alaska Anchorage Overall Record: 1,593-895-162 Nov. 6 at *Wisconsin National Titles: 5 (74, 76, 79, 02, 03) Nov. 7 at *Wisconsin NCAA Tournament: 32 ( 50-33 .602) Nov. 14 Bemidji State WCHA Season Titles: 12 Nov. 15 Bemidji State WCHA Playoff Titles: 14 Nov. 20 *Minnesota Duluth Nov. 21 *Minnesota Duluth Coaching Staff Nov. 27 at Michigan Head Coach: Don Lucia Nov. 28 at Michigan State alma mater: Notre Dame ‘81 at UM: 256-126-45 (10th) Dec. 4 *Minnesota State Career: 535-281-74 (22nd). Dec. 5 at *Minnesota State Phone: (612) 625-2886 Dec. 11 at *Michigan Tech Contact: contact SID Dec. 12 at *Michigan Tech Assistants: Jan. 2 1 Bowling Green John Hill Alaska Anchorage ‘88. Jan. 3 1 TBA Grant Potulny Minnesota ‘04 Jan. 8 Harvard Jan. 9 Harvard The Gophers Jan. 15 *North Dakota 2008-09 record: 17-13-7 Jan. 16 *North Dakota WCHA: 12-11-5 (5th). post-season: WCHA Final Five Jan. 22 at *St. Cloud State Jan. 23 *St. Cloud State quarter finals Final national ranking: none Jan. 29 at *Alaska Anchorage Returning: 20 (12f, 6d, 2g) Jan. 30 at *Alaska Anchorage Lost: 4 (3f, 1d, 0g) Feb. 12 at *Denver Feb. 13 at *Denver Series vs UM Feb. 19 *Colorado College Standing: 0-6-0 Feb. 20 *Colorado College home: 0-1-0 Feb. 26 at *Minnesota Duluth away: 0-5-0 Feb. 27 at *Minnesota Duluth neutral: 0-0-0 overtime: 0-0-0 Mar. 5 vs *Wisconsin Mar. 7 *Wisconsin Mar. 18-20 WCHA Final Five *WCHA contest 1 Dodge Holiday Classic
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Position Players ## Player POS YR 21 Jacques Lamoureux F SO 12 Matt Fairchild F JR 26 Jeff Hajner F JR 17 Derrick Burnett F SO 23 Scott Mathis D FR 8 Scott Kozlak F SO 22 Blake Page F SO 25 Tim Kirby D FR 10 Paul Weisgarber F FR 3 Brad Sellers D SO
Position Players ## Player POS YR 21 Mark Olver F SO 9 Gregor Hanson F SO 7 Erik Gustafsson D SO 15 Jared Brown F SO 11 Phil Fox F SO 18 Justin Florek F FR 71 Ray Kaunisto F JR 96 Andrew Cherniwchan F FR 5 Billy Smith F JR 22 Mike Maltese F SO
Position Players ## Player POS YR 19 Jordan Schroeder F FR 26 Jay Barriball F JR 28 Cade Fairchild D SO 11 Mike Hoeffel F SO 22 Ryan Flynn F JR 12 Tony Lucia F JR 16 Mike Carman F JR 10 Aaron Ness D FR 7 Patrick White F SO 20 David Fischer D JR
Goaltenders ## Player YR 1 Andrew Volkening JR
30
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 33 20 53 11/ 30 15 0 9 0 17 20 37 4/ 8 5 4 4 1 10 19 29 27/ 54 6 0 2 0 8 16 24 15/ 30 3 0 1 0 4 19 23 6/ 12 1 0 1 0 5 10 15 16/ 32 0 3 0 0 6 7 13 5/ 10 1 0 1 0 2 11 13 11/ 33 0 0 0 0 6 6 12 6/ 12 0 0 0 0 0 12 12 9/ 18 0 0 0 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T 2503 82 9 37 .920 1.97 28 11 2
Goaltenders ## Player 41 Brian Stewart 33 Devan Hartigan 1 Derek Janzen
2009-10
YR JR FR JR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 16 19 35 38/ 84 6 3 3 0 13 21 34 11/ 22 5 0 3 0 4 30 34 5/ 10 1 0 0 0 12 13 25 10/ 20 3 1 4 0 11 7 18 12/ 24 5 0 2 0 9 8 17 3/ 6 1 0 1 0 7 7 14 28/ 56 0 0 0 0 4 8 12 14/ 42 0 0 2 0 3 7 10 3/ 6 0 1 1 0 3 6 9 7/ 25 0 0 1 0
Min. GA 1812 70 339 14 325 17
Sv Sv% GAA W 866 .925 2.32 14 131 .903 2.48 1 148 .897 3.14 4
L 13 3 1
goaltender Alex Kangas
T 3 2 0
Goaltenders ## Player YR 33 Alex Kangas SO 35 Kent Patterson FR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 13 32 45 9/ 29 3 0 2 1 11 23 34 18/ 52 4 0 3 1 9 24 33 26/ 52 5 0 0 0 12 8 20 19/ 38 6 0 2 0 6 13 19 31/ 62 1 1 0 0 9 8 17 16/ 43 4 0 0 0 8 9 17 16/ 32 2 0 2 0 2 15 17 8/ 16 1 0 0 0 7 9 16 9/ 18 3 0 1 1 2 11 13 8/ 16 1 0 0 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T 2019 94 852 .901 2.79 17 11 6 231 9 111 .925 2.34 0 2 1
Ohio State Buckeyes
Minnesota State Mavericks
November 27, 2009; 4:00 p.m. Subway Holiday Classic Ralph Engelstad Arena; Grand Forks, N.D.
November 28, 2009; 4:00 p.m. Subway Holiday Classic Ralph Engelstad Arena; Grand Forks, N.D.
December 11-12, 2009; 7:35 p.m. / 7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji, Minn.
Quick Facts
Location: Oxford, Ohio Founded (Enrollment): 1809 (16,300) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CCHA Nickname: RedHawks School Colors: Red & White Home Ice: Steve Cady Arena Size (capacity): 200x85 (3,462) President: Dr. David C. Hodge Athletic Director: Brad Bates Athletic Phone: n/a Athletic Fax: n/a
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
head coach forward John John Albert Hockey SID: Leann Parker Markell parker.387@osu.edu Phone: (614) 688-0294 Oct. 8 Quinnipiac SID Cell: (614) 266-4309 Oct. 9 Quinnipiac SID Fax: (614) 292-8547 Oct. 15 Denver Press Box: (614) 688-5330 Oct. 17 Denver or (614) 688-5331 http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/ Oct. 23 at Lake Superior State* Oct. 24 at Lake Superior State* Program History Oct. 30 at Notre Dame* First Year of Hockey: 1963-64 Oct. 31 at Notre Dame* Northern Michigan* Overall Record: 742-759-113 (.495) Nov. 6 Years in Div. I post-season: n/a Nov. 7 Northern Michigan* CCHA Season Titles: n/a Nov. 13 Western Michigan* CCHA Tournament Titles: n/a Nov. 14 Western Michigan* Nov. 20 at Ferris State* Coaching Staff Nov. 21 at Ferris State* Head Coach: John Markell Nov. 27 1 North Dakota alma mater: Bowling Green ‘79 at OSU: 265-249-50 (14th) Nov. 28 1 Bemidji State Career: 265-249-50 (14th). Dec. 4 Michigan* Phone: (614) 292-0820 Dec. 5 Michigan* Contact: contact SID Dec. 11 Miami (Ohio)* Assistants: Dec. 12 at Miami (Ohio)* Jason Lammers Geneseo ‘98 Jan. 8 Bowling Green* Steve Brent Ohio State ‘98 Jan. 9 Bowling Green* Jan. 15 U.S. Under-18 Team The Buckeyes Jan. 22 at Michigan State* 2008-09 record: 23-15-4. Jan. 23 at Michigan State* CCHA: 13-11-4 (5th) Ferris State* post-season: 2-2 WCHA Tourn. Jan. 29 Final national ranking: none Jan. 30 Ferris State* Returning: 21 (14f, 7d, 2g) Feb. 5 at Nebraska-Omaha* Lost: 3 (2f, 1d, 0g) Feb. 6 at Nebraska-Omaha* Feb. 12 Alaska* Series vs OSU Feb. 13 Alaska* Standing: First Meeting Feb. 19 at Western Michigan* home: 0-0-0 Feb. 20 at Western Michigan* away: 0-0-0 Feb. 26 at Miami (Ohio)* neutral: 0-0-0 Feb. 27 Miami (Ohio)* overtime: 0-0-0 Mar. 19-20 CCHA Tournament
Sports Information
Location: Mankato, Minn. Founded (Enrollment): 1868 (14,028) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: WCHA Nickname: Mavericks School Colors: Purple & Gold Home Ice: Alltel Center Size (capacity): 200x100 (4,832) President: Dr. Richard Davenport Athletic Director: Kevin Buisman Athletic Phone: (507) 389-3216 Athletic Fax: (507) 389-2904
Location: Columbus, Ohio Founded (Enrollment):1870 (53,715) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CCHA Nickname: Buckeyes School Colors: Scarlet and Grey Home Ice: Value City Arena Size (capacity): 200x85 (17,500) President: Gordon Gee Athletic Director: Eugene Smith Athletic Phone: (614) 292-7572 Athletic Fax: (614) 292-0506
head coach forward Enrico Carter Camper Hockey SID: Jim Stephan Blasi Office: (513) 529-4330 Cell: (513) 330-1939 Oct. 3 Windsor (exh.) Press Box: (513) 529-1427 Oct. 9 St. Cloud State Oct. 10 St. Cloud State Program History Oct. 16 at New Hampshire First Year of Hockey: 1978-79 Oct. 17 at New Hampshire Overall Record: 538-565-83 Years in Div. I post-season: n/a Oct. 23 *Michigan State CCHA Season Titles: n/a Oct. 24 *Michigan State CCHA Tournament Titles: n/a Oct. 30 at *Northern Michigan Oct. 31 at *Northern Michigan Nov. 6 at *Michigan Coaching Staff Head Coach: Enrico Blasi Nov. 7 at *Michigan alma mater: Miami ‘94 Nov. 13 *Ferris State at MSU: 210-151-29 (10th) Nov. 14 *Ferris State Career: 210-151-29 (10th). Nov. 20 at *Western Michigan Contact: contact SID Nov. 21 at *Western Michigan Assistants: Brent Brekke Western Michigan ‘94 Nov. 27 1 Bemidji State Chris Bergeron Miami ‘93 Nov. 28 1 North Dakota Dec. 4 *Notre Dame Dec. 5 *Notre Dame The Redhawks 2008-09 record: 23-13-1. Dec. 11 at *Ohio State CCHA: 17-7-4 (3rd) Dec. 12 *Ohio State post-season: n/a Jan. 8 at Robert Morris Final national ranking: 2 Jan. 10 Robert Morris Returning: 17 (10f, 5d, 2g) Jan. 15 at *Ferris State Lost: 6 (4f, 2d, 0g) Jan. 16 at *Ferris State Jan. 22 at *Alaska Series vs MU Standing: 0-3-0 Jan. 23 at *Alaska home: 0-2-0 Jan. 29 *Western Michigan away: 0-0-0 Jan. 30 *Western Michigan neutral: 0-1-0 Feb. 5 *Lake Superior State overtime: 0-0-0 Feb. 6 *Lake Superior State Feb. 12 at *Bowling Green Feb. 13 at *Bowling Green Feb. 19 *Nebraska-Omaha Feb. 20 *Nebraska-Omaha Feb. 26 *Ohio State Feb. 27 at *Ohio State Mar. 19-20 CCHA Tournament
Sports Information
head coach defense Kurt Hockey SID: Paul Allan Troy Jutting Davis paul.allen@mnsu.edu Phone: (507) 389-2625 SID Cell: (507) 381-7503 Oct. 3 Lethbridge (exh.) SID Fax: (507) 389-1923 Oct. 9 Bowling Green Press Box: (507) 389-3000 Oct. 10 Bowling Green http://www.msumavericks.com Oct. 16 at Minnesota Duluth Program History Oct. 17 at Minnesota Duluth First Year of Hockey: 1969-70 Oct. 23 Wisconsin Overall Record: 694-511-123 (.569) Oct. 24 Wisconsin Years in Div. I post-season: none Oct. 30 at Denver WCHA Season Titles: none Oct. 31 at Denver WCHA Tournament Titles: none Nov. 13 Colorado College Nov. 14 Colorado College Coaching Staff Nov. 20 at Alaska-Anchorage Head Coach: Troy Jutting Nov. 21 at Alaska-Anchorage alma mater: Minnesota State ‘87 Nov. 27 Michigan Tech* at MSU: 142-162-44 (10th) Nov. 28 Michigan Tech* Career: 142-162-44 (10th). Phone: (507) 389-5196 Dec. 4 at Minnesota Contact: contact SID Dec. 5 Minnesota Dec. 11 at Bemidji State Assistants: Todd Knott Bemidji State ‘02 Dec. 12 at Bemidji State Darren Blue Minnesota State ‘96 Dec. 18 Nebraska-Omaha Dec. 19 at Nebraska-Omaha The Mavericks Jan. 1 RIT 2008-09 record: 15-17-6. Jan. 2 RIT WCHA: 11-13-4 (8th) Jan. 8 at North Dakota post-season: none Jan. 9 at North Dakota Final national ranking: none Returning: 18 (13f, 5d, 0g) Jan. 15 Minnesota Duluth Lost: 6 (2f, 2d, 2g) Jan. 16 Minnesota Duluth Jan. 29 at Michigan Tech* Jan. 30 at Michigan Tech* Series vs MSU Standing: 44-33-13 Feb. 12 at Wisconsin home: 29-11-5 Feb. 13 at Wisconsin away: 15-22-8 Feb. 19 Alaska-Anchorage neutral: 0-0-0 Feb. 20 Alaska-Anchorage overtime: 1-0-0 Feb. 26 Denver* Feb. 27 Denver* Mar. 5 St. Cloud State* Mar. 6 at St. Cloud State* Mar. 18-20 WCHA Final Five
Sports Information
*CCHA Contest 1 - Subway Holiday Classic
* CCHA contest 1 - Subway Holiday Classic
*WCHA Games
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Position Players ## Player POS YR 11 Carter Camper F SO 20 Pat Cannone F SO 17 Andy Miele F SO 9 Tommy Wingels F SO 19 Jarod Palmer F JR 6 Chris Wideman D FR 12 Gary Steffes F JR 22 Justin Vaive F SO 14 Vincent LoVerde D SO 8 Brandon Smith D JR
Position Players ## Player POS YR 15 John Albert F SO 8 Hunter Bishop F SO 26 Peter Boyd F SO 19 Zac Dalpe F FR 44 Sergio Somma F SO 16 Ian Boots F FR 24 Shane Sims D SO 3 Matt Bartkowski D FR 10 Kyle Reed F SO 11 Mathieu Picard F JR
Position Players ## Player POS YR 22 Kurt Davis D SO 9 Kael Mouillierat F JR 19 Geoff Irwin F JR 12 Rylan Galiardi F SO 11 Mike Louwerse F FR 23 Trevor Bruess F JR 10 Zach Harrison F JR 20 Jason Wiley F JR 15 Jerad Stewart F JR 7 Andrew Sackrison F SO
Goaltenders ## Player YR 31 Connor Knapp FR 30 Cody Reichard FR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 20 22 42 12/ 24 12 1 4 1 11 24 35 8/ 16 5 0 2 1 15 16 31 17/ 34 4 0 3 0 11 1 7 28 29/ 66 2 1 2 0 8 19 27 13/ 34 7 1 2 1 0 2 6 26 24/ 56 0 0 0 0 11 12 23 17/ 34 1 0 1 0 6 6 12 22/ 44 2 0 0 0 1 7 8 20/ 40 0 0 1 0 2 5 7 9/ 18 1 0 1 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T 1350 47 445 .904 2.09 13 5 3 1139 40 424 .914 2.11 10 8 2
Goaltenders ## Player 41 Dustin Carlson 1 Cal Heeter 34 Joseph Palmer
YR SO FR JR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 11 28 39 10/ 20 1 0 3 0 14 17 31 9/ 18 1 0 2 1 13 18 31 15/ 41 3 1 2 0 13 1 2 25 7/ 25 2 0 3 0 11 14 25 26/ 52 4 0 1 0 9 16 25 19/ 71 1 0 1 0 7 17 24 21/ 42 5 1 1 0 5 15 20 23/ 46 3 0 1 0 8 10 18 9/ 18 0 0 2 0 6 9 15 16/ 43 0 0 1 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W 2206 92 1014 .917 2.50 21 201 11 97 .898 3.29 2 122 11 56 .836 5.40 0
L 12 1 2
T 3 0 1
2009-10
Goaltenders ## Player none
YR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 6 25 31 8/ 16 4 0 0 0 17 13 30 24/ 48 8 1 2 0 12 16 28 32/ 67 2 3 1 0 8 20 28 10/ 20 6 0 0 1 13 13 26 17/ 45 9 0 0 0 12 5 17 50/117 2 1 0 0 9 6 15 22/ 55 0 4 1 0 8 2 10 5/ 10 1 0 3 0 7 3 10 12/ 27 0 1 2 0 3 5 8 9/ 18 2 0 2 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T
31
2009-10 opponents
MIami Redhawks
2009-10 opponents
Western Michigan Broncos
Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs
Nebraska Omaha Mavericks
January 2-3, 2010; 6:30 p.m. / 3:30 p.m. Lawson Ice Arena; Kalamazoo, Mich.
January 22, 2010; 7:35 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji, Minn. January 23, 2010; 7:07 p.m. Duluth Entertainment & Convention Center; Duluth, Minn.
February 26-27, 2010; 7:05 p.m. / 8:05 p.m. Quest Center Omaha; Omaha, Neb.
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Location: Kalamazoo, Mich. Founded (Enrollment) 1903 (24,818) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CCHA Nickname: Broncos School Colors: Brown & Gold Home Ice: Lawson Ice Arena Size (capacity): 200x85 (3,667) President: Dr. John M. Dunn Athletic Director: Kathy Beauregard Athletic Phone: (269) 387-3120 Athletic Fax: (269) 387-4139
Quick Facts
Location: Duluth, Minn. Founded (Enrollment): 1895 (11,300) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: WCHA Nickname: Bulldogs School Colors: Maroon & Gold Home Ice: DECC Size (capacity): 190x85 (5,294) Chancellor: Dr. Kathryn Martin Athletic Director: Bob Nielson Athletic Phone: (218) 726-8168 Athletic Fax: (218) 726-6529 Tickets: (218) 726-8595
head coach forward Jim Tyler Hockey SID: Adam Bodnar Culhane Ludwig Phone: (269) 387-4122 Cell: (269) 760-5133 Oct. 7 Windsor (exh.) SID Fax: (269) 387-4139 Oct. 9 Brown & Gold Game Press Box: n/a Oct. 16 Mercyhurst College http://www.wmubroncos.com Oct. 17 Mercyhurst College Program History Oct. 23 at Alabama-Huntsville First Year of Hockey: 1973-74 Oct. 24 at Alabama-Huntsville Overall Record: 618-641-103 Oct. 30 at Michigan State* Years in Div. I post-season: n/a Oct. 31 Michigan State* CCHA Season Titles: n/a Nov. 6 Lake Superior State* CCHA Tournament Titles: n/a Nov. 7 Lake Superior State* Nov. 13 at Ohio State* Coaching Staff Nov. 14 at Ohio State* Head Coach: Jim Culhane Nov. 20 Miami (Ohio)* alma mater: Western Mich. (‘87) Nov. 21 Miami (Ohio)* at WMU: 150-202-40 Career: Same Nov. 27 at Nebraska-Omaha* Phone: n/a Nov. 28 at Nebraska-Omaha* Contact: contact SID Dec. 4 Alaska* Dec. 5 Alaska* Assistants: Marc Fakler Eastern Mich. ‘02 Dec. 11 Ferris State* Scot Robson Quinnipiac ‘98 Dec. 12 at Ferris State* Allan Avery (volunteer) Jan. 2 Bemidji State Jan. 3 Bemidji State The Broncos Jan. 8 Michigan* 2008-09 record: 14-20-7. Jan. 9 at Michigan* CCHA Hockey: 9-13-6-2 (7th) post-season: 2-3 (2nd) Jan. 22 at Bowling Green* Final national ranking: none Jan. 23 at Bowling Green* Returning: 18 Jan. 29 at Miami (Ohio)* Lost: 7 Jan. 30 at Miami (Ohio)* Feb. 5 Notre Dame* Series vs WMU Feb. 6 Notre Dame* Standing: 2-2-0 Feb. 12 at Northern Michigan* home: 1-1-0. Feb. 13 at Northern Michigan* away: 1-1-0 Feb. 19 Ohio State* neutral: 0-0-0 Feb. 20 Ohio State* overtime: 0-2-0 Feb. 26 at Ferris State* Feb. 27 Ferris State* Mar. 19-20 CCHA Tournament
Location: Ohama, Neb. Founded (Enrollment): 1908 (14,200) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CCHA Nickname: Maverics School Colors: Crimson & Black Home Ice: Qwest Center Ohama Size (capacity): 200x85 (16,000) Chancellor: Dr. John Christensen Athletic Director: Trev Albert Athletic Phone: (402) 554-2305 Athletic Fax: (402) 554-6287 Tickets: (402) 554-2555
head coach wing Scott Mike Hockey SID: Bob Nygaard Sandelin Connolly bnygaard@d.umn.edu Phone: (218) 726-8191 Oct. 3 British Colombia Cell: (218) 341-0524 Oct. 9 Lake Superior State SID Home: (218) 724-6366 Oct. 11 Northern Michigan SID Fax: (218) 726-6529 Press Box: (218) 727-7939 Oct. 16 *Minnesota State Oct. 17 *Minnesota State http://www.umdbulldogs.com Oct. 23 at *St. Cloud State Program History Oct. 24 at *St. Cloud State First Year of Hockey: 1930-31 Oct. 30 Clarkson Overall Record: 911-978-122 Oct. 31 Clarkson Years in Div. I post-season: 6 Nov. 6 at *Colorado College WCHA Season Titles: 3 Nov. 7 at *Colorado College WCHA Tournament Titles: 3 Nov. 13 *Michigan Tech Nov. 14 *Michigan Tech Coaching Staff Nov. 20 at *Minnesota Head Coach: Scott Sandelin alma mater: North Dakota ‘87 Nov. 21 at *Minnesota at UMD: 144-173-45 (10th) Dec. 4 North Dakota Career: Same Dec. 5 North Dakota Phone: (218) 726-8579 Dec. 11 *Denver Contact: contact SID Dec. 12 *Denver Assistants: Jan. 2 Mercyhurst Steve Rohlik Wisconsin ‘90 Jan. 3 Ala.-Huntsville/Ver. Brett Larson UMD ‘04 Jan. 8 *Colorado College Bill Watson UMD ‘90 Jan. 9 *Colorado College Jan. 15 at *Minnesota State The Bulldogs 2008-09 record: 22-13-8 Jan. 16 at *Minnesota State WCHA: 10-11-7 (7th) Jan. 22 at Bemidji State post-season: n/a Jan. 23 Bemidij State Final national ranking: 8 Jan. 29 *Wisconsin Returning: 17 (10f, 6d, 1g) Jan. 30 *Wisconsin Lost: 8 (5f, 2d, 1g) Feb. 5 at *Michigan Tech Feb. 6 at *Michigan Tech Series vs UMD Feb. 19 at *North Dakota Standing: 7-18-0 Feb. 20 at *North Dakota home: 3-5-0 Feb. 26 *Minnesota away: 4-13-0 neutral: 0-0-0 Feb. 27 *Minnesota overtime: 1-0-0 Mar. 5 at *Alaska-Anchorage Mar. 6 at *Alaska-Anchorage Mar. 18-20 WCHA Final Five
Sports Information
Sports Information
head coach forward Dean Blais Eddie Hockey SID: Dave Ahlers Blais Del Grosso dahlers@unohama.edu Phone: (402) 554-2140 Oct. 5 Lethbridge Press Box: (402) 599-6620 Oct. 9 1 Army http://www.OMavs.com Oct. 10 1 TBA Oct. 16 at Colgate Program History Oct. 17 at Colgate First Year of Hockey: 1997-98 Oct. 30 Bowling Green* Overall Record: 177-204-53 (.469) Oct. 31 Bowling Green* Years in Div. I post-season: n/a Nov. 5 at Michigan State* WCHA Season Titles: n/a Nov. 6 at Michigan State* WCHA Tournament Titles: n/a Nov. 13 Lake Superior State* Nov. 14 Lake Superior State* Nov. 20 at Northern Michigan* Coaching Staff Head Coach: Dean Blais Nov. 21 at Northern Michigan* alma mater: Minnesota ‘73 Nov. 27 Western Michigan* at UNO: 0-0-0 (1st) Nov. 28 Western Michigan* Career: 262-115-33 (10th) Dec. 4 at Ferris State* Phone: (402) 554-3423 Dec. 5 at Ferris State* Contact: contact SID Dec. 11 at Alaska* Dec. 12 at Alaska* Assistants: Mike Hastings St. Cloud ‘93 Dec. 18 at Minnesota State Dec. 19 at Minnesota State Nick Fohr Nebraska-Ohama ‘03 Jan. 1 2 Denver Jan. 2 2 St. Lawrence The Mavericks Jan. 8 Alaska* 2008-09 record: 15-17-8 Jan. 9 Alaska* CCHA: 8-13-7 (8th) Jan. 15 at Lake Superior St.* post-season: none Jan. 16 at Lake Superior St* Final national ranking: none Jan. 22 Northern Michigan* Returning: 19 Jan. 23 Northern Michigan* Lost: 4 Jan. 29 at Norte Dame* Jan. 30 at Norte Dame* Series vs UNO Feb. 5 Ohio State* Standing: 0-4-0 Feb. 6 Ohio State* home: 0-0-0 Feb. 12 Michigan* away: 0-4-0 Feb. 13 Michigan* neutral: 0-0-0 Feb. 19 at Miami (Ohio)* overtime: 0-0-0 Feb. 20 at Miami (Ohio)* Feb. 26 Bemidji State Feb. 27 Bemidji State Mar. 19-20 CCHA Tournament
Sports Information
* CCHA contest 1 Mutal of Ohama Icebreaker 2 Denver Cup
*CCHA Games * WCHA contest
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Position Players ## Player POS YR G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 8 Max Campbell C SO 16 15 31 22/ 44 11 0 4 0 21 Tyler Ludwig D JR 8 21 29 31/ 62 6 0 1 0 26 Greg Squires RW FR 7 22 29 14/ 28 4 0 0 0 10 J.J. Crew RW FR 7 11 18 4/ 8 1 0 1 0 6 Kevin Connauton D FR 7 11 18 22/ 44 3 0 2 0 24 Kyle O’Kane RW FR 10 6 16 3/ 17 3 0 1 0 19 Cam Watson LW JR 5 8 13 15/ 30 0 0 0 0 25 Derek Roehl LW FR 5 6 11 5/ 10 1 0 0 0 23 Jared Katz RW JR 2 9 11 5/ 10 0 0 1 0 27 Chris Clackson C JR 7 2 9 20/ 40 3 0 0 0
Position Players ## Player POS YR 37 Justin Fontaine W SO 22 Mike Connolly W FR 12 Jack Connolly C FR 4 Evan Oberg D SO 23 Jordan Fulton W JR 7 Drew Akins C JR 24 Mike Montgomery D SO 54 Trent Palm D JR 13 Travis Oleksuk W FR 21 Cody Danberg W SO
Position Players ## Player POS YR 7 Eddie Del Grosso D JR 9 Rich Purslow F SO 12 Joey Martin F SO 24 John Kemp F FR 27 Matt Ambroz F SO 26 Alex Hudson F FR 18 Nick Fanto F JR 4 Nick Von Bokern D SO 23 Eric Olimb D SO 11 Jeric Agosta F JR
Goaltenders ## Player YR 30 Riley Gill JR 35 Jerry Kuhn SO 1 Matthew Federico SO
Goaltenders ## Player 30 Brady Hjelle
32
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W 1731 84 9 70 .920 2.91 13 783 44 411 .903 3.37 1 1:13 0 0 --- 0.00 0
L 13 7 0
T 3 4 0
2009-10
YR FR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 15 33 48 9/ 18 11 0 2 1 13 29 42 21/ 53 5 0 2 0 10 19 29 18/ 47 5 0 2 0 7 20 27 21/ 50 5 0 0 0 12 5 17 26/ 60 0 0 3 0 5 10 15 33/ 82 2 0 1 0 2 8 10 10/ 20 1 0 0 0 0 6 6 20/ 40 0 0 0 0 0 5 5 5/ 10 0 0 0 0 2 2 4 6/ 23 0 0 0 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T 80 2 32 .941 1.50 1 0 0
Goaltenders ## Player YR 1 Jeremie Dupont JR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 6 28 34 19/ 38 1 1 1 0 12 12 24 8/ 16 4 0 1 0 10 14 24 16/ 40 3 0 1 0 2 20 22 16/ 32 0 0 1 0 12 9 21 28/ 83 8 1 1 1 6 10 16 13/ 26 1 0 1 0 6 8 14 14/ 28 0 0 0 1 5 5 10 10/ 20 3 0 2 0 3 7 10 12/ 35 1 0 0 1 4 4 8 9/ 18 0 0 2 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T 1190 53 533 .910 2.67 6 7 5
Robert Morris Colonials
Niagara Purple Eagles
October 13-November 1, 2009; 7:00 p.m. / 1:00 p.m. Von Braun Center; Huntsville, Ala. November 20-21; 7:35 p.m. / 7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji, Minn. March 5-6, 2010; 5:30 p.m. / 3:00 p.m. Von Braun Center; Huntsville, Ala.
November 6-7, 2009; 7:35 p.m. / 7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji, Minn. January 29-30, 2010; 6:05 p.m. / 6:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji, Minn. February 12-13; 7:35 p.m. / 7:05 p.m. RMU Island Sports Center; Moon Township, Pa.
December 4-5, 2009; 7:35 p.m. / 7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji Minn. January 15-16, 2010; 6:05 p.m. / 6:05 p.m. Dwyer Arena; Lewiston, N.Y. Febuary 19-20, 2010; 7:35 p.m. / 7:05 p.m. John S. Glas Fieldhouse; Bemidji Minn.
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Location: Huntsville, Ala. Founded (Enrollment): 1969 (6,700) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CHA Nickname: Chargers School Colors: Royal Blue & White Home Ice: Von Braun Center Size (capacity): 200x85 (6,800) President: Dr. Frank Franz Athletic Director: Jim Harris Athletic Phone: (256) 824-6144 Athletic Fax: (256) 824-7306 Tickets: (256) 824-6939 head coach defense Danton Ryan Hockey SID: Jamie Gilliam Cole Burkholder gilliaj@email.uah.edu Phone: (256) 824-2201 Oct. 9 at Notre Dame Cell: (256) 655-0526 Oct. 10 at Notre Dame SID Home: (256) 430-5441 Oct. 16 at Air Force SID Fax: (256) 824-6947 Press Box: (256) 518-6167 Oct. 17 at Air Force or (256) 518-6168 Oct. 23 Western Mich. Oct. 24 Western Mich. http://www.uahchargers.com Oct. 31 Bemidji State* Program History Nov. 1 Bemidji State* First Year of Hockey: 1979-80 Nov. 13 UMass-Lowell Overall Record: 531-290-46 (.639) Nov. 14 UMass-Lowell Years in Div. I post-season: 1 Nov. 20 at Bemidji State* CHA Season Titles: 2 (2001-03) Nov. 21 at Bemidji State* CHA Tournament Titles: 1 Dec. 4 at Robert Morris* Dec. 5 at Robert Morris* Coaching Staff Head Coach: Danton Cole Jan. 2 1 Vermont alma mater: Michigan St. ‘91 Jan. 3 1 Mercyhurst/UM-Duluth at UAH: 11-41-9 (2nd) Jan. 8 at Clarkson Career: 11-41-9 (2nd) Jan. 9 at Clarkson Phone: (256) 824-2205 Jan. 15 at Robert Morris* Contact: contact SID Jan. 16 at Robert Morris* Assistants: Jan. 29 Niagara* Chris Luongo Michigan State Jan. 30 Niagara* John McCabe UAH Feb. 12 at Niagara* Feb. 13 at Niagara* The Chargers 2008-09 record: 5-20-4 Feb. 19 Robert Morris* CHA: 3-11-4 (4th) Feb. 20 Robert Morris* post-season: n/a Feb. 26 at Niagara* Final national ranking: none Feb. 27 at Niagara* Returning: 19 Mar. 5 Bemidji State* Lost: 7 Mar. 6 Bemidji State* Mar. 12-13 CHA Tournament
Series vs UAH Standing: home: away: neutral: overtime:
30-27-3 18-8-1 9-18-2 3-1-0 5-2-3
Quick Facts
Location: Moon Township, Pa. Founded (Enrollment): 1921 (5,000) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CHA Nickname: Colonials School Colors: Red & White Home Ice: RMU Island Sports Center Size (capacity): 200x85 (981) President: Dr. Gregory G. Dell’Omo Athletic Director: Craig Coleman Athletic Phone: (412) 262-8295 Athletic Fax: (412) 262-8557 Tickets: (412) 262-8449
Sports Information
*CHA Contest 1 Catamount Cup
2009-10 opponents
Ala.-Huntsville Chargers
Location: Niagra, N.Y. Founded (Enrollment): 1856 (3,853) Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: CHA Nickname: Purple Eagles School Colors: Purple & White Home Ice: Dwyer Arena Size (capacity): 200x85 (2,100) President: Rev. Joseph L. Levesque Athletic Director: Ed McLaughlin Athletic Phone: (716) 286-8600 Athletic Fax: (716) 286-8609 Tickets: (716) 286-8622
head coach Derek Jim Duzyk Schooley
head coach Dave Chris Smith. Burkholder
forward Nathan Longpre
Sports Information Hockey SID: duzyk@rmu.edu Phone: (412) 397-4314 SID Fax: (412) 397-5857 Press Box: (412) 865-4907 http://www.rmucolonials.com
Sports Information Hockey SID: csmith@niagara.edu Phone: (716) 286-8724 Cell: (517) 628-0833 SID Fax: (716) 286-8582 Press Box: (716) 286-8794 http://www.purpleeagles.com
forward Chris Moran
Oct. 3 York (exh.) Oct. 9 Colgate Oct. 16 at Clarkson Oct. 17 at St. Lawrence Oct. 22 at Michigan Program History Oct. 30 at Cornell First Year of Hockey: 1996-97 Oct. 31 at Cornell Overall Record: 235-179-45 (.578) Nov. 6 at UMass-Amherst Years in Div. I post-season: 2 Nov. 8 UMass-Amherst (2000,04) Nov. 13 Robert Morris* CHA Titles: 1 (2000) Nov. 14 at Robert Morris* CHA Tourn. Titles: 2 (2000-04) Nov. 18 RPI Nov. 25 at Robert Morris* Coaching Staff Dec. 4 at Bemidji State* Head Coach: Dave Burkholder alma mater: R.I.T ‘84 Dec. 5 at Bemidji State* at NU: 144-121-28 (8th) Dec. 11 Robert Morris* Career: 144-121-28 (8th) Dec. 12 at RIT Phone: (716) 286-8239 Jan. 2 1 North Dakota Contact: contact SID Jan. 3 1 TBA Assistants: Jan. 8 St. Lawrence Tim Madsen Jan. 9 St. Lawrence Greg Gardner Niagara ‘00. Jan. 15 Bemidji State* Jan. 16 Bemidji State* The Purple Eagles Jan. 22 at Quinnipiac 2008-09 record: 16-14-6 Jan. 23 at Quinnipiac CHA: 9-5-4 (2nd) Jan. 29 at Ala.-Huntsville* post-season: 0-1 NCAA Jan. 30 at Ala.-Huntsville* Final national ranking: none Feb. 12 Ala.-Huntsville* Returning: 18 Feb. 13 Ala.-Huntsville* Lost: 8 Feb. 19 at Bemidji State* Feb. 20 at Bemidji State* Series vs NU Feb. 26 Ala.-Huntsville* Standing: 17-20-8 Feb. 27 Ala.-Huntsville* home: 9-6-5 Mar. 5 at Robert Morris* away: 7-13-3 neutral: 1-1-0 Mar. 6 Robert Morris* overtime: 1-2-8 Mar. 12-13 CHA Tournament
Oct. 9 Queens (exh.) Oct. 10 Queens (exh.) Oct. 16 Alaska-Fairbanks Oct. 17 Alaska-Fairbanks Program History Oct. 23 at Ferris State First Year of Hockey: 2004-05 Oct. 24 at Ferris State Overall Record: 59-94-20 (.399) Oct. 30 Quinnipiac Years in Div. I post-season: none Nov. 1 Quinnipiac CHA Season Titles: none Nov. 6 at Bemidji State* CHA Tournament Titles: none Nov. 7 at Bemidji State* Nov. 13 at Niagara* Coaching Staff Nov. 14 Niagara* Head Coach: Derek Schooley Nov. 20 at Colorado College alma mater: W. Michigan ‘94 Nov. 21 at Colorado College at RMU: 59-94-20 (5th) Career: 59-94-20 (5th) Nov. 25 Niagara* Phone: (412) 397-4477 Dec. 4 Alabama-Huntsville* Contact: 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Dec. 5 Alabama-Huntsville* Dec. 11 at Niagara* Assistants: Joe Shawhan Northern Mich. ‘08 Dec. 15 at Canisius Matt Nicolson Colgate ‘04 Jan. 2 Lake Superior State Jan. 3 Lake Superior State The Colonials Jan. 8 Miami (Ohio) 2008-09 record: 10-19-7 Jan. 10 at Miami (Ohio) CHA: 5-8-5 (3rd). Jan. 15 Ala.-Huntsville* post-season: n/a Jan. 16 Ala.-Huntsville* Final national ranking: none Returning: 18 Jan. 22 at Colgate Lost: 8 Jan. 23 at Colgate Jan. 29 at Bemidji State* Jan. 30 at Bemidji State* Series vs RMU Standing: 14-8-2 Feb. 12 Bemidji State* home: 8-2-1 Feb. 13 Bemidji State* away: 6-5-1 Feb. 20 at Ala.-Huntsville* neutral: 0-1-0 Feb. 21 at Ala.-Huntsville* overtime: 3-0-2 Mar. 5 Niagara* Mar. 6 at Niagara* Mar. 12-13 CHA Tournament
* CHA Contests 1 Shillelagh Tournament (Chicago, Ill.)
* CHA Contest
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Returning Leaders
Position Players ## Player POS YR 9 Cody Campbell F FR 10 Andrew Coburn F SO 4 Brandon Roshko D JR 16 Tom Train F JR 25 Kevin Morrison F JR 13 Joey Koudys F SO 5 Brennan Barker D JR 11 Neil Ruffini F SO 24 Tom Durnie D FR 14 Cale Tanaka F JR
Position Players ## Player POS YR 21 Nathan Longpre F SO 44 Denny Urban D SO 17 Chris Kushneriuk F SO 10 Trevor Lewis F FR 12 Kyle Burton F SO 16 Scott Kobialko F SO 5 James Lyle D FR 18 Ron Cramer F FR 28 Stefan Lachapelle F FR 27 Brandon Blandina F FR
Position Players ## Player POS YR G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 21 Chris Moran F JR 12 19 31 15/ 41 8 0 1 0 10 Egor Mironov F JR 16 1 2 28 12/ 24 5 1 3 0 19 Brian Dowd F FR 6 11 17 28/ 78 4 0 0 0 26 David Ross F SO 6 11 17 6/ 12 2 0 2 0 7 Tyler Gotto D JR 3 13 16 13/ 26 1 0 0 0 29 Dan Baco F FR 4 11 15 6/ 12 0 0 0 0 11 Ryan Olidis F JR 5 8 13 14/ 36 0 0 1 0 22 Bryan Haczyk F SO 4 9 13 7/ 14 0 0 2 0 23 Sam Goodwin F FR 5 7 12 4/ 8 2 1 2 1 16 Ryan Annesley D JR 2 10 12 6/ 12 0 0 0 1
Goaltenders ## Player YR 33 Cameron Talbot SO 29 Blake MacNicol JR
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 7 1 4 21 3/ 6 3 0 1 0 9 1 0 19 8/ 16 5 0 2 0 1 15 16 9/ 18 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 13 21/ 42 0 0 1 0 7 3 10 10/ 28 3 0 0 0 4 5 9 8/ 16 0 0 0 0 2 6 8 22/ 44 0 0 0 0 2 4 6 14/ 28 0 0 0 0 0 6 6 5/ 10 0 0 0 0 4 1 5 12/ 32 0 0 0 0
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T 1320 65 6 35 .907 2.95 2 16 3 500 29 2 52 .897 3.48 3 4 2
Goaltenders ## Player YR 30 Wes Russell JR 35 Brooks Ostergard FR 31 Jim Patterson SO
G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT 12 29 41 7/ 14 5 1 0 1 4 23 27 17/ 34 3 0 0 0 9 10 19 5/ 10 6 1 0 0 7 10 17 5/ 10 2 0 2 0 7 7 14 16/ 40 4 0 0 0 5 9 14 6/ 12 1 0 0 1 3 8 11 6/ 12 1 0 0 0 4 3 7 27/ 73 0 1 0 0 2 3 5 12/ 38 0 0 1 0 1 4 5 6/ 12 0 0 0 0
Min. GA 1078 65 817 35 296 16
Sv Sv% GAA W 504 .886 3.62 5 389 .917 2.57 5 160 .909 3.24 0
L 13 3 3
T 3 3 1
2009-10
Goaltenders ## Player YR 1 Adam Avramenko SO
Min. GA Sv Sv% GAA W L T 288 12 1 40 .921 2.50 0 1 3
33
all-time series results
Superlatives Most Games, One Opponent 129 Wisconsin-Superior 91 St. Scholastica
1966-99 1973-99
Most Wins, One Opponent 92 Wisconsin-Superior 74 St. Scholastica
1966-99 1973-99
Series Lead, One Opponent +59 Wis.-Superior +59 St. Scholastica
1966-99 1973-99
Most Losses, One Opponent 36 St. Cloud State 33 Wisconsin-Superior
1948-08 1966-99
Series Deficit, One Opponent -16 North Dakota -11 Minn.-Duluth -10 Wis.-Stevens Point -6 Minnesota -5 Denver -5 Lake Superior State
1970-p 1948-p 1987-99 2000-04 1967-08 1966-05
Longest Undefeated Series 15-0 Wisconsin-Stout 9-0 Minn. State-Moorhead
1976-99 1963-65
Division I-Era Superlatives Most Games, One Opponent 52 Ala.-Huntsville 45 Niagara 40 Wayne State (Mich.) 29 Air Force 24 Robert Morris
1999-p 1999-p 2000-p 2000-08 2004-p
Most Wins, One Opponent 27 Ala.-Huntsville 26 Wayne State (Mich.) 21 Air Force 17 Niagara 14 Findlay
1999-p 2000-08 2000-06 1999-p 1999-04
Series Lead, One Opponent +17 Wayne State (Mich.) +15 Air Force +9 Ala.-Huntsville +9 Findlay +6 Robert Morris
2000-08 2000-06 1999-p 1999-04 2004-p
Most Losses, One Opponent 22 Ala.-Huntsville 20 Niagara 13 Minnesota Duluth 13 Minnesota State 12 North Dakota 11 St. Cloud State
1999-p 1999-p 2000-p 1999-p 2000-09 1999-08
Series Deficit, One Opponent -12 North Dakota -10 St. Cloud St. -8 Minnesota State -6 Minnesota -6 Minnesota Duluth -4 Denver
2000-09 1999-08 1999-p 2000-04 2000-p 2000-08
Longest Undefeated Series 4-0 Army 2-0 Princeton 2-0 Bentley
34
1999 1999 2004
Overall H A uAir Force 23-8-2 14-1-2 8-7-0 uAla.-Huntsville 30-27-3 18-8-1 9-18-2 Alaska 3-0-0 3-0-0 0-0-0 Alberta 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 Army 4-0-0 4-0-0 0-0-0 Augsburg 33-8-2 20-2-1 12-4-1 Babson 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Bentley 3-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 Bethel (Minn.) 11-0-0 9-0-0 2-0-0 Bloomington Jr. Stars 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 Brandon 7-4-1 6-2-1 1-2-0 British Columbia 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Brunswick Aces 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Calgary 3-1-0 3-1-0 0-0-0 Clarkson 1-2-2 0-1-1 1-1-0 Colorado College 1-3-0 0-0-0 1-3-0 C’cdia-Moorhead 47-1-0 24-0-0 22-1-0 Connecticut 3-1-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 Crookston City 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 Cornell 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Dartmouth 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 Denver 0-5-0 0-0-0 0-4-0 Det. Lakes Rangers 5-0-0 4-0-0 1-0-0 Elmira 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 Emo Dulms 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Estevan 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-0 Fargo-Moorhead 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Ferris State 3-5-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 Findlay 14-5-3 7-1-2 5-4-1 Ft. Frances 1-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 Ft. Frances Aces 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 Ft. Frances (Al’s Lunch) 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Ft. Frances All-Stars 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 Grand Forks Americans 1-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 Grand Forks Legion 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 Grand Rapids 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 Gustavus Adolphus 18-10-0 10-5-0 6-3-0 Hamline 8-0-0 4-0-0 3-0-0 Int’l Falls 1-3-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 Iowa State 8-0-0 4-0-0 4-0-0 Itasca JC 1-2-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 Jr. North Stars 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 Lake Forest 18-4-0 6-2-0 10-2-0 Lake Superior State 16-21-2 8-10-1 8-10-1 Lakehead 40-14-3 23-3-1 16-11-2 Maine 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-2-0 Manitoba 19-12-2 14-8-2 5-3-0 Mass.-Boston 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Massachusetts 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Mercyhurst (Pa.) 4-0-0 4-0-0 2-0-0 Merrimack 3-3-0 2-2-0 1-1-0 uMiami (Ohio) 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 Michigan-Dearborn 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Michigan Tech 2-2-0 2-0-0 0-2-0 uMinnesota 0-6-0 0-1-0 0-5-0 Minn., Crookston 4-1-0 1-1-0 2-0-0 uMinn. Duluth 7-18-0 3-5-0 4-13-0 uMinnesota State 44-33-13 29-11-5 15-22-8 MSU-Moorhead 9-0-0 5-0-0 4-0-0 Minnesota Nat’ls 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 uNeb.-Omaha 0-4-0 0-0-0 0-4-0 uNiagara 17-20-8 9-6-5 7-13-3 North Dakota 1-17-1 0-5-0 1-10-1 North Dakota State 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 Northland (Wis.) 3-0-0 3-0-0 0-0-0 uNorthern Michigan 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Notre Dame 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 uOhio State 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Plattsburgh State 2-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 Princeton 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 Rainey River J.C. 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 Rainey River Legion 2-1-0 2-0-0 0-1-0 Rensselaer 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 uRobert Morris 14-8-2 8-2-1 6-5-1 R.I.T. (N.Y.) 1-2-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 Roseau Leafs 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 Sacred Heart 0-0-2 0-0-2 0-0-0 Salem State 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Saskatchewan 6-1-0 6-1-0 0-0-0 St. Cloud State 43-36-3 26-16-1 17-19-2 St. Francis (Maine) 3-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 St. John’s (Minn.) 17-4-1 10-2-1 7-2-0 St. Mary’s (Minn.) 19-1-0 11-0-0 7-1-0 St. Norbert 5-4-1 3-2-1 2-2-0 St. Olaf 4-0-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 St. Scholastica 74-15-2 39-5-1 33-9-0 St. Thomas (Minn.) 24-3-1 19-2-1 5-1-0 Thief River Falls VFW 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 U.S. Nat’l Team 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 U.S. Olympic Team 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 Union (N.Y.) 0-2-3 0-1-1 0-1-1 Warroad 3-2-0 2-0-0 1-2-0 Wayne St. (Mich) 26-9-5 15-3-2 10-5-3 uWestern Michigan 2-2-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 Winnipeg 32-5-1 30-4-0 2-1-1 Wisconsin 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 Wis.-Eau Claire 49-12-3 28-3-1 21-9-2 Wis.-River Falls 46-21-6 22-5-5 19-13-1 Wis.-Stevens Point 20-30-6 10-11-3 6-13-1 Wis.-Stout 15-0-0 10-0-0 4-0-0 Wis.-Superior 92-33-4 50-15-1 39-15-3 Wisconsin 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
2009-10
N 2-0-0 3-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-2-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-0-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 3-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 2-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-1 0-0-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 2-3-0 4-6-2 1-0-0 3-3-0 0-1-0
OT Division I Era H A N OT 1-2-2 21-6-2 12-1-2 6-7-0 2-0-0 0-2-2 5-2-3 27-22-3 16-8-1 8-13-2 3-1-0 5-2-3 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 4-0-0 4-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-2 1-2-2 0-1-1 1-1-0 0-0-1 0-0-2 0-0-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 3-1-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-4-0 0-0-0 0-3-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-4-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 14-5-3 7-1-2 5-4-1 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-2 1-2-1 0-1-1 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 2-1-3 0-0-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 3-1-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-2-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-2-0 2-0-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-6-0 0-1-0 0-5-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 7-13-0 3-3-0 4-10-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 5-13-2 3-4-1 2-9-1 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-4-0 0-0-0 0-4-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-2-8 17-20-8 9-6-5 7-13-3 1-1-0 1-2-8 0-1-1 0-12-1 0-5-0 0-7-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 3-0-2 14-8-2 8-2-1 6-5-1 0-1-0 3-0-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-2 0-0-2 0-0-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-3 1-11-0 1-3-0 0-8-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-1 1-1-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-2-2 1-2-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-3 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-5 26-9-5 15-3-2 10-5-3 1-1-0 1-1-5 0-2-0 2-2-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-2-0 0-0-1 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 2-1-6 2-2-6 0-0-0 3-0-4 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0
1st mtg 12/5/97 11/3/94 1/3/81 1/10/71 10/15/99 1/1/85 3/10/83 12/12/98 11/30/79 12/12/75 1/5/71 12/5/71 2/29/48 2/1/70 11/22/02 12/2/00 2/5/49 10/26/01 12/14/49 3/29/09 12/31/05 12/16/67 1/9/49 3/14/86 2/26/49 2/2/79 1/9/75 11/12/99 11/22/99 12/8/66 2/5/50 1/22/50 2/8/50 2/12/48 1/28/48 11/22/68 1/29/62 11/20/79 2/1/48 1/31/75 1/27/50 12/1/72 11/20/83 12/3/66 2/20/65 10/13/06 2/24/62 3/8/68 12/28/08 3/19/93 3/17/84 11/10/00 3/2/80 1/12/07 10/14/00 12/15/94 2/8/48 11/25/74 1/14/63 11/17/67 2/18/99 11/5/99 2/6/70 1/25/48 2/20/60 never 3/28/09 never 3/22/85 12/10/99 1/16/49 2/23/49 11/23/74 1/14/04 3/11/83 12/29/79 10/18/02 3/7/69 12/6/70 1/18/48 2/23/77 1/5/61 2/6/62 1/13/95 2/29/80 2/3/73 2/10/61 1/11/50 12/6/70 12/3/71 12/30/00 12/15/68 2/18/00 12/17/04 1/16/65 3/25/06 1/3/79 2/13/76 1/16/87 3/5/76 1/8/66 3/25/06
last mtg 10/18/08 3/13/09 3/11/84 1/11/71 10/13/07 12/18/98 same 11/13/04 2/18/98 12/13/75 2/2/80 same same 11/23/70 10/18/03 1/18/08 1/20/98 11/28/03 same same 12/29/08 1/19/08 2/28/50 3/15/86 same 2/3/79 same 11/19/05 3/13/04 11/28/67 same same same same same 1/12/70 2/2/99 1/4/89 2/13/49 12/15/77 2/14/50 12/2/72 10/31/98 12/10/05 11/11/84 10/14/06 11/20/07 3/1/73 same 3/18/95 10/20/07 4/9/09 3/7/81 11/29/08 2/7/04 12/11/98 1/17/09 10/11/08 2/6/65 same 2/15/03 2/20/09 1/3/09 1/31/48 1/7/62 never 3/28/09 never 3/20/87 12/11/99 2/6/49 2/9/50 same 3/14/09 3/21/86 same 10/19/02 same 11/4/79 10/25/08 2/23/79 1/20/99 11/8/96 11/21/98 2/25/83 1/23/99 11/29/98 1/11/50 12/7/70 12/4/71 10/26/02 1/6/80 3/15/08 2/11/06 11/8/83 same 2/13/99 1/30/99 1/16/99 1/9/99 2/6/99 3/25/06
12/5/97 a L 3 6 12/6/97 a L 3 5 11/6/98 h W 3 2 ot 11/7/98 h W 7 3 1/14/00 - - C h W 5 3 1/15/00 - - C h W 5 4 2/26/00 - - C4 a L 3 4 ot 3/12/00 - - 1 n W 5 4 ot 12/3/00 - - C4 a L 0 3 1/12/01 - - C h T 4 4 ot 1/13/01 - - C h L 4 5 ot 1/19/02 - - C4 a W 4 2 2/8/02 - - C h W 5 1 2/9/02 - - C h T 2 2 ot 1/24/03 - - C h W 4 2 1/25/03 - - C h W 5 3 3/7/03 - - C a W 5 0 3/8/03 - - C a W 3 0 1/2/04 - - C h W 3 1 1/3/04 - - C 2 n W 5 1 2/27/04 - - C a W 7 4 2/28/04 - - C a W 9 1 1/7/05 - - C h W 4 2 1/8/05 - - C h W 4 3 ot 3/4/05 - - C a W 4 1 3/5/05 - - C a W 4 1 3/12/05 - - 3 n W 6 0 10/28/05 15 - C a L 3 4 10/29/05 15 - C a W 2 1 1/20/06 - - C h W 5 2 1/21/06 - - C h W 5 3 10/17/08 - rv a L 2 6 10/18/08 - rv a L 0 6 C= College Hockey America game C4= Four-point College Hockey America game 1- CHA Tournament; Huntsville, Ala. 2- Colearaine, Minn. 3- CHA Tournament; Grand Rapids, Minn.
Alabama-Huntsville
3/11/94 $ a L 3 5 3/12/94 $ a W 2 1 3/8/96 $ a L 1 7 3/9/96 $ a L 0 3 3/14/97 $ h W 3 2 3/15/97 $ h W 4 2 3/13/98 $ a L 2 6 3/14/98 $ a L 2 5 12/3/99 - - C h L 4 6 12/4/99 - - C h L 3 6 2/4/00 - - C a W 5 4 2/5/00 - - C a L 1 6 3/11/00 - - 1 a L 4 5 10/27/00 - - C h L 4 5 10/28/00 - - C h L 2 4 2/2/01 - - C a L 2 3 2/3/01 - - C a L 1 2 11/16/01 - - C h W 7 3 11/17/01 - - C h L 3 6 3/8/02 - - C a L 2 5 3/9/02 - - C a L 3 5 3/15/02 - - 2 n L 2 5 1/16/03 - - C a L 2 3 1/17/03 - - C a L 3 4 2/21/03 - - C h L 3 6 2/22/03 - - C h W 3 2 3/15/03 - - 3 n W 2 1 12/11/03 - - C a L 5 7 12/13/03 - - C a W 5 3 2/20/04 - - C h T 3 3 2/21/04 - - C h W 4 2 1/21/05 - - C a W 3 1 1/22/05 - - C a L 1 5 2/18/05 - - C h L 1 3 2/19/05 - - C h W 3 2 3/13/05 - - 4 n W 3 0 2/3/06 - - C a L 1 2 2/4/06 - - C a L 2 4 3/3/06 - - C h W 3 1 3/4/06 - - C h W 5 0 3/11/06 - - 5 n W 4 3 12/15/06 - - C h W 3 2 12/16/06 - - C h W 4 2 2/2/07 - - C a T 5 5 2/3/07 - - C a W 3 1 2/16/07 - - C h W 4 3 2/17/07 - - C h L 3 4 11/9/07 - - C a W 2 0 11/10/07 - - C a T 3 3 12/7/07 - - C h W 4 1 12/8/07 - - C h W 2 0 1/11/08 - - C a W 4 0 1/12/08 - - C a W 7 1 11/7/08 - - C a L 2 4 11/8/08 - - C a W 2 1 12/5/08 - - C h W 3 1 12/6/08 - - C h W 4 2 2/6/09 - - C h W 2 0 2/5/09 - - C h W 4 2 3/14/09 - - 6 h W 4 1 C= College Hockey America game $= NCAA Division II National Championship 1= CHA Tournament; Huntsville, Ala. 2= CHA Tournament; Niagara University, N.Y. 3= CHA Tournament; Kearney, Neb. 4= CHA Tournament; Grand Rapids, Minn. 5= CHA Tournament; Detroit, Mich. 6=CHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn.
Alaska
1/3/82 h W 12 0 3/10/84 $ h W 9 6 3/11/84 $ h W 4 2 $= NCAA Division II National Championship
Alberta
1/10/71 h W 7 1/11/71 h L 1
3 2
ot
Army
12/29/06 - 8 a W 3 12/30/06 - 8 a L 3 1/18/18 - 3 a L 4
10/15/99 - - C4 a W 4 2 10/16/99 - - C4 a W 3 0 10/12/07 - - h W 2 1 10/13/07 - - h W 3 0 C4= Four-point College Hockey America game
Concordia-Moorhead
Augsburg
2/10/49 a W 3 1 1/21/61 a W 3 2 2/2/62 h W 6 5 1/13/65 a W 3 1 3/5/71 $ h W 12 1 2/22/74 h W 14 0 2/23/74 h W 5 3 11/24/75 a W 5 4 1/5/76 h W 6 3 2/25/77 $1 n W 5 2 1/2/78 h W 10 3 1/3/78 h W 4 3 2/26/78 $2 n L 3 4 11/20/78 a L 3 4 2/17/80 h W 6 4 11/24/80 a W 3 2 12/1/81 h L 3 4 2/28/82 $1 n L 3 6 11/22/82 a W 6 1 1/6/84 h W 7 4 1/7/84 h W 4 1 12/31/84 a W 6 4 1/1/85 a L 2 9 1/5/86 h W 8 6 1/6/86 h W 14 5 1/2/87 a L 3 6 1/3/87 a W 12 7 2/5/88 h W 11 4 2/6/88 h W 10 5 1/2/89 h W 6 0 11/7/89 h W 8 1 11/20/90 a W 11 2 11/9/91 h W 12 0 1/3/92 a W 4 3 12/19/92 a W 9 4 2/9/93 h W 7 6 11/9/94 h L 3 4 11/21/95 a W 10 4 11/9/96 a L! 4 7 12/14/96 h W 13 5 12/10/97 h T 5 5 12/19/97 a T 4 4 12/18/98 h W 3 1 != contest later forfeited by Augsburg $= NAIA National Championship $1= NAIA Nat’l Championship; Superior, Wis. $2= NAIA Nat’l Championship; St. Paul, Minn.
2 5 5
ot ot
ot
2/5/49 h W 7 1 2/19/49 a W 6 2 2/17/50 a W 6 0 2/11/60 a W 12 1 2/4/61 h W 6 4 1/13/62 h W 11 0 2/15/63 h W 5 1 2/15/64 h W 11 0 1/8/65 a W 10 3 2/20/66 a W 13 1 12/16/72 a W 8 2 2/10/73 h W 12 3 1/8/75 a W 6 3 2/12/75 h W 9 2 12/6/76 h W 4 2 11/19/77 a W 5 1 1/11/78 h W 6 2 12/2/78 a W 3 1 12/5/78 h W 9 0 2/25/79 $ n W 5 1 12/8/79 a W 5 4 2/6/80 h W 9 1 11/20/82 a W 4 1 12/7/82 h W 9 2 11/29/83 h W 9 1 1/31/84 a W 7 3 2/5/85 h W 12 2 2/12/85 h W 12 1 12/19/85 h W 11 3 2/18/86 a W 11 4 11/22/86 a W 11 4 2/17/87 h W 4 0 3/14/87 # h W 3 1 3/15/87 # h W 8 6 12/18/87 a W 9 2 12/19/87 a W 9 4 1/23/90 a W 4 3 ot 12/15/90 h W 9 2 1/28/92 h W 5 2 2/11/92 a W 5 4 12/1/92 a W 7 3 1/3/93 a W 9 1 11/11/94 a L 3 5 11/12/94 h W 4 1 1/8/97 h W 10 2 2/17/97 a W 6 3 12/12/97 h W 7 1 1/20/98 a W 6 5 ot $= NAIA Championship; St. Paul, Minn., #= NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals; Bemidji, Minn.
11/17/00 - - C a L 11/18/00 - - C a L 2/16/01 - - C h L 2/17/01 - - C h W 11/9/01 - - C a W 11/10/01 - - C a L 1/11/02 - - C h W 1/12/02 - - C h T 11/8/02 - - C a W 11/9/02 - - C a T 1/31/03 - - C h W 2/1/03 - - C h T 3/14/03 - - 1 n W 11/7/03 - - C a W 11/8/03 - - C a W 1/30/04 - - C h W 1/31/04 - - C h W 3/13/04 rv - 2 n W C= College Hockey America game 1= CHA Tournament; Kearney, Neb. 2= CHA Tournament; Kearney, Neb.
1 1 0 6 9 1 5 2 2 2 5 2 4 5 3 4 5 6
9 2 2 3 4 3 3 2 1 2 1 2 0 3 1 0 3 2
ot
12/8/66 a L 4 6 11/28/67 h W 4 3 2/5/50 h L 2 15
Fort Frances All-Stars 2/8/50 a L 1
9
Fort Frances (Al’s Lunch) 1/22/50 h W 7 3
Grand Forks Americans 2/12/48 a L 5 8 1/12/70 h W 14 0
Grand Forks Legion 1/28/48 a L 1 8
Grand Rapids
11/22/68 h W 11 11/23/68 h W 6
2 2
Gustavus Adolphus
Connecticut
Cornell
Bethel (Minn.)
Crookston
Dartmouth
Denver
Bloomington Jr. Stars
ot ot
ot
ot
ot
Fort Frances
Bentley
ot ot
ot
1/29/62 h W 9 1 1/28/63 a W 9 3 3/6/70 $ n W 5 2 12/21/71 1 n L 5 6 ot 1/8/72 h L 4 7 ot 3/2/73 $1 n W 6 3 12/7/73 h L 2 4 12/8/73 h W 3 2 3/5/74 $2 h W 4 2 11/26/74 a L 3 5 12/8/74 h L 2 4 11/25/75 a L 4 8 12/6/75 h W 5 3 3/17/83 $ n W 3 1 10/26/01 - - h W 9 0 3/7/76 $3 n L 4 5 $= NCAA Div. II Nat’l Championship; Lowell, Mass. 10/27/01 - - h W 2 0 11/21/78 a W 5 2 11/25/03 - - a L 3 4 12/20/79 h W 3 2 ot 11/28/03 - - a W 7 2 12/15/82 a L 6 7 12/12/98 1 n W 7 0 3/11/83 % h W 6 3 11/12/04 - - h W 9 2 3/12/83 % h L 2 3 11/13/04 - - h W 5 0 3/29/09 - 9 1 n W 4 1 12/3/83 h W 10 2 1= Radisson Inn Classic; USAFA, Colo. 1=NCAA Midwest Regional; Grand Rapids, Mich. 11/20/84 a W 4 3 3/4/85 2 h W 4 2 2/4/86 h L 4 5 11/30/79 h W 15 2 12/14/50 a L 4 12 12/11/86 a W 4 2 12/1/79 h W 4 2 12/21/88 h W 7 2 2/9/81 h W 8 1 11/20/89 a W 11 3 1/25/82 h W 10 5 12/31/05 - - 1 n L 3 4 ot 2/17/98 a W 6 3 11/25/85 h W 4 3 12/29/08 - rv 2 a L 2 4 2/2/99 h W 4 3 12/13/86 h W 10 1 1= Sheraton/BankNorth Catamount Cup; Burlington, Vt. $= NAIA Championship; Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. 11/24/87 a W 6 0 2= Ledyard Bank Classic; Hanover, N.H. $1= NAIA Championship; Thunder Bay, Ontario 1/10/89 h W 8 0 $2= NAIA Championship; Bemidji, Minn. 1/11/97 a W 5 1 $3= NAIA Championship; Superior, Wis. 2/19/97 h W 6 3 12/16/67 a L 0 12 %= NCAA Div. II Quarterfinals; Bemidji, Minn. 2/10/98 h W 3 1 2/27/00 - - a L 1 7 1= Manitoba tournament 1/18/02 - 1 a L 2 6 2= WIHA Tournament 3/14/05 rv 1 $ n L 3 4 ot 12/12/75 h W 8 4 1/19/08 - 4 a L 2 4 12/13/75 h W 12 5 $= NCAA Tourn. NE Regional; Amherst, Mass. 11/20/79 a W 5 3 11/15/81 h W 12 2 2/26/82 $ n W 6 2 1/5/71 h W 9 3 1/9/49 h W 13 0 1/14/85 h W 4 1 12/17/71 a W 5 3 1/12/49 h W 10 0 11/24/85 a W 4 3 2/14/72 h W 5 1 2/27/49 h W 10 0 12/9/86 h W 6 1 12/29/72 1 n W 5 1 12/21/87 a W 9 2 2/19/50 h W 10 4 1/12/73 h W 5 0 1/4/89 h W 16 1 2/28/50 a W 11 3 1/13/73 h T 4 4 ot $= NAIA Championship; Superior, Wis. 11/10/78 h W 8 2 11/11/78 h W 6 3 3/15/86 # h W 5 2 11/9/79 a L 2 5 3/16/86 # h L 3 5 2/1/48 h W 6 2 11/10/79 a L 1 10 #= NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals; Bemidji, Minn. 2/7/48 a L 3 5 2/1/80 h L 4 5 1/26/49 a L 1 6 2/2/80 h L 4 5 2/13/49 h L 2 6 1= Manitoba tournament 2/26/49 h W 6 4
Babson
ot ot
ot
Brandon
Hamline
Detroit Lakes
Elmira
International Falls
Emo Dulms
British Columbia 12/5/71 h W 9
Brunswick
2/29/48 h W 9
Calgary
2/1/70 h 2/2/70 h 11/22/70 h 11/23/70 h
4 4
2/2/79 a W 10 2/3/79 a W 11
W W W L
4 6 7 3
1 1 3 4
11/22/02 - rv a W 2 1 11/23/02 - rv a L 4 5 10/17/03 - - h L 2 4 10/18/03 - - h T 1 1 ot 12/30/05 - 15 1 n T 3 3 ot 1= Sheraton/BankNorth Catamount Cup; Burlington, Vt.
Colorado College - 10 a L 1
2
4 1
Fargo-Moorhead (MJHL) 1/9/75 h W 5
Clarkson
12/2/00
Iowa State
Estevan
Ferris State 11/12/99 11/13/99 1/25/02 1/26/02 10/22/04 10/23/04 11/18/05 11/19/05
- - - - - - rv rv
- h - h - a - a - h - h rv a rv a
Findlay 11/22/99 11/23/99 1/21/00 1/22/00
- - - -
- - - -
C a C a C h C h
3
L L L W W L L W
0 2 0 7 5 2 1 4
8 4 7 5 2 7 6 3
W L W W
6 3 7 6
2 4 3 3
1/31/75 h 2/1/75 h 1/9/76 h 1/10/76 h 12/15/76 a 12/16/76 a 12/14/77 a 12/15/77 a
W W W W W W W W
9 12 10 7 12 14 13 16
Itasca (Minn.) JC
1/27/50 a L 3 1/28/50 h L 0 2/14/50 h W 7
1 5 2 3 6 2 1 2 5 3 1
Junior North Stars 12/1/72 h W 7 12/2/72 h L 4 ot
Lake Forest
11/20/83 a W 6 11/21/83 a W 5 1/8/93 N a W 7
2009-10
4 7 0 2 1
1/9/93 N a W 6 3 2/12/93 N h L 4 5 2/13/93 N h W 6 1 12/3/93 N a W 4 3 12/4/93 N a W 2 1 1/28/94 N h W 8 1 1/29/94 N h W 6 2 2/18/94 1 W 6 2 2/19/94 1 W 4 1 12/9/94 N h W 6 4 12/10/94 N h W 6 3 12/8/95 N a W 3 2 12/9/95 N a L 0 3 1/4/97 N a W 6 1 1/5/97 N a W 9 3 1/3/98 N h L 4 7 1/4/98 N h W 7 1 10/30/98 N a W 2 1 10/31/98 N a L 1 2 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game 1= NCHA Tournament
ot ot
Lake Superior State
12/3/66 I a W 3 1 12/4/66 I a L 1 5 1/12/68 I h L 0 2 1/13/68 I h L 5 6 2/2/68 I a L 5 8 2/3/68 I a L 5 6 3/9/68 $ a W 5 4 ot 2/7/69 I h W 6 4 2/8/69 I h W 4 2 2/21/69 I a W 4 3 2/22/69 I a W 5 4 3/8/69 $ a W 6 2 1/23/70 I h W 5 4 1/24/70 I h W 4 1 2/27/70 I h L 3 4 2/28/70 I h L 1 11 3/7/70 $ a W 7 4 1/22/71 I a T 3 3 ot 1/23/71 I a W 4 3 2/27/71 I h W 5 1 2/28/71 I h W 4 0 1/21/72 I a L 1 7 1/22/72 I a L 3 6 2/25/72 I h L 2 9 2/26/72 I h L 5 6 1/19/73 I h W 4 2 1/20/73 I h L 4 8 2/23/73 I a L 1 4 2/24/73 I a L 2 6 12/18/73 a L 1 6 12/19/73 a L 5 9 1/18/74 h W 7 4 1/19/74 h L 1 5 3/6/74 $1 h L 1 4 12/29/00 - - 1 n L 2 4 12/3/04 - - a L 4 5 ot 12/4/04 - - a W 3 1 12/9/05 rv - h L 1 2 12/10/05 rv - h T 2 2 ot I= International Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game $= NAIA Championship; Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. $1= NAIA Championship; Bemidji, Minn. 1= Mariucci Classic; Minneapolis, Minn.
Lakehead
2/20/65 a T 1/29/66 a W 1/30/66 a W 2/11/66 h W 2/12/66 h W 1/13/67 I h W 1/14/67 I h W 2/11/67 I a L 2/12/67 I a L 12/2/67 I a L 12/3/67 I a L 1/26/68 I h W 1/27/68 I h W 1/25/69 I a L 1/26/69 I a W 2/28/69 I h W 3/1/69 I h W 1/16/70 I a W 1/17/70 I a W 2/21/70 I h W 2/22/70 I h W 1/15/71 I h W 1/16/71 I h L 2/19/71 I a W 2/20/71 I a W 3/6/71 $ h W 1/14/72 I h T 1/15/72 I h W 2/18/72 I a W 2/19/72 I a L 12/8/72 I h W 12/9/72 I h W 1/5/73 I a W 1/6/73 I a W 3/3/73 $ n W 1/4/74 I a L 1/5/74 I a L 1/11/74 I h W 1/12/74 I h W 11/22/74 I h W 11/23/74 I h W 12/20/74 I a L 12/21/74 I a L 11/20/75 I h L 11/21/75 I h W 12/18/75 I a W 12/19/75 I a W 11/12/76 I h L 11/13/76 I h W 2/4/77 I a L 2/5/77 I a T 12/3/77 I a W 12/16/78 a W
2 5 8 5 3 5 6 2 5 0 1 8 6 1 8 6 8 6 6 9 5 7 1 6 5 6 3 6 5 0 4 3 10 7 3 4 3 9 5 4 7 3 4 0 10 7 11 3 2 4 5 9 3
2 1 7 4 1 3 5 5 8 2 3 4 2 4 0 4 0 2 2 3 4 0 3 3 1 2 3 4 4 6 3 2 3 1 2 6 5 6 4 3 6 5 5 1 5 4 3 4 0 5 5 4 2
ot ot
ot
ot
ot
ot
35
results vs opponents
Air Force
results vs opponents
12/17/78 a W 6 3 2/11/79 h W 9 1 2/9/80 h W 8 2 11/11/84 a W 10 4 I= International Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game $= NAIA Championship; Bemidji, Minn. $1= NAIA Championship; Thunder Bay, Ontario
Maine
10/13/06 - 7 a L 1 10/14/06 - 7 a L 3
7 6
Manitoba
2/24/62 a L 1 2 2/11/63 a L 6 9 2/21/63 h L 5 11 1/20/64 a L 2 6 2/27/64 h L 1 2 1/10/69 h W 11 2 1/11/69 h L 5 7 12/19/69 h W 5 2 12/20/69 h W 7 1 11/29/70 a W 7 4 12/14/70 a W 4 1 12/15/70 a W 5 1 11/29/71 a W 6 2 12/22/71 1 n L 3 4 ot 2/7/72 h W 9 0 11/17/72 h W 10 6 11/18/72 h W 5 3 12/30/72 2 a W 10 3 1/15/73 h W 10 2 11/16/73 h W 9 2 11/17/73 h W 7 4 11/15/74 h L 2 7 11/16/74 h L 4 7 2/2/76 h W 7 6 1/21/77 h T 3 3 ot 1/22/77 h W 6 5 ot 11/11/77 h T 5 5 ot 11/12/77 h W 5 4 ot 1/4/78 h L 2 10 1/18/80 h L 2 5 1/19/80 h W 5 4 ot 11/14/80 h L 5 6 1= Christmas Tournament; Columbia Heights, Minn. 2= Manitoba Tournament
Massachusetts-Boston
3/8/68 $ n W 11 0 3/1/73 $2 n W 8 1 * then known as Boston State $= NAIA Championship; St. Paul, Minn. $1= NAIA Championship; Thunder Bay, Ontario
Massachusetts
12/28/08 - - 1 n W 4 2 1= Ledyard Bank Classic; Hanover, N.H.
Mercyhurst
3/19/93 $ h W 10 6 3/20/93 $ h W 5 0 3/17/95 $1 a W 6 2 3/18/95 $1 a W 5 4 $= NCAA Div. II Championship; Bemidji, Minn. $1= NCAA Div. II Championship; Erie, Pa.
Merrimack
3/17/84 $ h W 6 3 3/18/84 $ h W 8 1 11/22/03 - - a W 3 2 11/23/03 - - a L 2 3 ot 10/19/07 - - h L 2 3 10/20/07 - - h L 1 2 $= NCAA Div. II Championship; Bemidji, Minn.
Miami (Ohio)
11/10/00 - - h L 2 4 11/11/00 - - h L 2 4 4/9/09 12 4 1 n L 1 4 1=NCAA Frozen Four; Washington, D.C.
Michigan-Dearborn
3/2/80 $ n W 4 3 3/7/81 $1 n W 11 2 $= NAIA Championship; St. Paul, Minn. $1= NAIA Championship; River Falls, Wis.
Michigan-Tech 1/12/07 1/13/07 11/28/08 11/29/08
- - - -
- a - a - h - h
L L W W
1 2 3 2
4 3 0 1
Minnesota, Crookston 12/15/94 h L 2 3/5/97 a W 6 2/28/98 h W 7 3/1/98 a W 5 12/11/98 1 n W 8 1= Radisson Inn Classic; USAFA, Colo.
3 3 1 0 5
Minnesota Duluth
2/8/48 a 2/15/48 h 1/29/49 h 2/9/49 a 11/22/73 1 a 1/7/00 - - h 1/8/00 - - a 12/8/00 - - a 12/9/00 - - a 12/7/01 - - a 12/8/01 - - a 12/6/02 - - a 12/7/02 - - h 11/14/03 - 14 h 11/15/03 - 14 a 2/25/05 - - a 2/26/05 - - h 10/7/05 - rv a
36
L L L L L L L L L L L W L W L L L W
3 4 4 9 3 10 2 7 2 10 2 5 1 4 2 7 3 5 1 5 2 7 3 2 0 12 3 1 2 3 1 4 2 5 3 2
ot
10/8/05 - rv a W 5 1 12/8/06 - - h W 5 2 12/9/06 - - a W 6 5 ot 1/4/08 - rv a L 3 5 1/5/08 - rv h W 2 0 1/16/09 - - a L 2 3 1/17/09 - - a L 2 4 1= Minn.-Duluth Tournament; Duluth, Minn.
2/1/63 h 2/2/63 h 1/18/64 h 2/7/64 a 2/8/64 a 1/9/65 a 2/5/65 h 2/6/65 h
Minnesota
Nebraska-Omaha
10/14/00 1/27/01 10/19/01 10/20/01 2/6/04 2/7/04
- - - - - -
9 h 9 a 2 a 2 a 5 a 5 a
L L L L L L
3 1 2 1 1 1
9 5 7 7 2 5
2/18/99 a 2/19/99 a 2/14/03 - - a 2/15/03 - - a
6
Minnesota State
11/25/74 a L 3 4 2/24/76 h W 6 2 12/9/77 h W 7 0 12/10/77 h W 10 5 1/29/81 N a L 4 5 1/31/81 N h W 4 3 1/29/82 N a W 5 3 1/30/82 N a W 4 3 2/5/82 N h W 5 3 2/6/82 N h W 5 2 12/11/82 N h W 4 3 12/12/82 N h W 7 4 2/4/83 N a T 4 4 2/5/83 N a W 7 2 3/5/83 1 h W 5 3 1/27/84 N a W 5 4 1/28/84 N a W 3 2 2/17/84 N h W 6 3 2/18/84 N h W 9 0 1/25/85 N h W 7 2 1/26/85 N h W 7 6 2/15/85 N a W 4 2 2/16/85 N a T 2 2 3/16/85 # h L 2 4 3/17/85 # h W 9 2 1/10/86 N a W 6 2 1/11/86 N a W 5 4 2/7/86 N h W 4 2 2/8/86 N h L 4 6 3/8/86 2 h W 6 3 3/9/86 2 h L 4 6 1/9/87 N a L 2 4 1/10/87 N a L 3 4 2/6/87 N h W 3 2 2/7/87 N h L 3 4 2/28/87 3 a W 5 3 3/1/87 3 a W 4 2 11/6/87 N h W 5 1 11/7/87 N h T 3 3 1/15/88 N a L 2 5 1/16/88 N a L 0 6 12/16/88 N h W 7 2 12/17/88 N h L 3 8 2/17/89 N a W 6 1 2/18/89 N a T 2 2 11/24/89 N h W 4 1 11/25/89 N h T 4 4 2/2/90 N a L 2 3 2/3/90 N a L 5 7 2/9/90 N h L 2 5 2/10/90 N h L 3 4 11/9/90 N a T 4 4 11/10/90 N a L 2 4 11/15/91 N a L 3 5 11/16/91 N a T 5 5 11/18/91 N h L 2 4 11/19/91 N h T 5 5 11/17/92 N h W 7 4 11/18/92 N h W 8 2 12/17/93 a W 5 3 12/18/93 a L 5 8 2/4/94 h W 6 2 2/5/94 h W 4 3 11/10/95 a L 2 3 11/11/95 a T 3 3 12/15/95 h W 7 3 12/16/96 h T 6 6 11/29/96 a T 4 4 11/30/96 a W 5 3 12/19/96 h W 6 2 12/20/96 h L 2 3 2/16/99 a L 2 6 12/19/99 - rv a L 3 7 12/20/99 - rv a L 3 5 12/16/00 - - a L 2 6 12/17/00 - - a L 1 2 10/12/01 - - h W 7 6 10/13/01 - - h L 3 5 11/1/02 - - a T 1 1 11/2/02 - - a L 1 3 10/24/03 - - h L 1 3 10/25/03 - - h T 2 2 11/5/04 - - a L 0 4 11/6/04 - - a L 0 4 10/14/05 rv - h W 4 3 10/15/05 rv - h W 7 3 11/3/06 - - a W 4 3 11/4/06 - - a W 3 1 12/14/07 - rv h L 3 4 12/15/07 - rv h L 0 1 10/10/08 - rv a L 2 5 10/11/08 - rv a L 2 4 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game #= NCAA Div. II Quarterfinals; Bemidji, Minn. 1= WIHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn. 2= NCHA Championship; Bemidji, Minn. 3= NCHA Championship; Mankato, Minn.
ot
ot
ot
ot
ot
ot ot
ot ot ot
ot ot ot
1
2 3 2 2
Rensselaer
0 1 0 1 2 1 3 5
11/23/73
ot
ot
ot ot
ot ot
12/29/79 a W 6 ot
ot
ot ot ot
9 2 0 2 0
3/28/09 - 2 1 n W 5 1 1=NCAA Midwest Regional; Grand Rapids, Mich.
Plattsburgh State
3/22/85 $ n W 8 7 3ot 3/22/86 $ h W 8 5 3/20/87 $ a L 4 7 $= NCAA Div. II Championship; Schenectady, N.Y. $1= NCAA Div. II Championship; Bemidji, Minn. $2= NCAA Div. II Championship; Plattsburgh, N.Y. 12/10/99 - - h W 3 12/11/99 - - h W 2
2 1
Rainy River (Minn.) CC 1/16/49 h L 3 11 2/6/49 h W 4 3
Rainy River Legion
2/23/49 h W 7 2 1/8/50 h W 7 2 2/9/50 a L 2 3
2009-10
ot ot
ot
ot ot
4 1 2
ot ot
Salem State
3/7/69 $ n W 14 2 $= NAIA Championship; Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.
Saskatchewan ot
North Dakota State
Princeton
Sacred Heart
10/18/02 - - h T 1 10/19/02 - - h T 2
Notre Dame ot
1 3 1 0 0 2 2 2 3 0 4 4 7 2 0 4 2 3 1 3 3 3 4 2
3/19/83 $ n L 2 4 3/23/85 $1 n L 1 5 3/21/86 $2 h W 5 4 ot $= NCAA Div. II Championship; Lowell, Mass. $1= NCAA Div. II Championship; Schenectady, N.Y. $2= NCAA Div. II Championship; Bemidji, Minn.
Roseau
2/6/70 a L 4 7 2/7/70 a W 7 5 12/12/70 a L 3 4 1/19/71 a L 2 3 3/3/00 - 2 a L 2 9 3/4/00 - 2 a L 3 6 3/2/01 - 3 h L 1 5 3/3/01 - 3 h L 3 6 12/28/02 - 2 1 a L 3 4 1/28/05 - 12 a T 3 3 ot 1/29/05 - 12 a L 1 3 12/16/05 - 9 h L 1 2 12/17/05 - 9 a L 1 5 1/19/07 - rv h L 2 3 1/20/07 - rv a L 3 6 2/23/08 - 2 a L 1 5 2/24/08 - 2 a L 0 1 1/2/09 - rv h L 3 4 1/3/09 - rv a L 3 4 ot 1= Subway Holiday Classic; Grand Forks, N.D.
Northland
1/14/05 - - C h W 5 1/15/05 - - C h W 4 2/11/05 - - C a W 2 2/12/05 - - C a W 3 1/6/06 - - C a W 2 1/7/06 - - C a L 1 2/17/06 - - C h W 5 2/18/06 - - C h W 5 11/10/06 - - C h L 2 11/11/06 - - C h W 3 2/9/07 - - C a L 2 2/10/07 - - C a L 1 3/10/07 - - C 1 n L 5 1/25/08 - - C h T 2 1/26/08 - - C h W 4 2/15/08 - - C a L 1 2/16/08 - - C a W 7 1/30/09 - - C a W 5 1/31/09 - - C a W 5 2/14/09 - - C a L 0 2/15/09 - - C a T 3 3/6/09 - - C h L 2 3/7/09 - - C h W 6 3/14/09 - - 2 h W 3 C= College Hockey America game 1=CHA Tournament; Des Moines, Iowa 2=CHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn.
5
Rochester
North Dakota
1/25/48 h L 3 1/31/48 h L 1
1 n L 4
Robert Morris
8 7 5 3
11/5/99 - rv C h L 2 4 11/6/99 - rv C h T 3 3 11/19/99 - 15 C a L 2 5 11/20/99 - 15 C a L 0 10 1/5/01 - - C a L 3 6 1/6/01 - - C a L 1 3 2/9/01 - - C h W 6 2 2/10/01 - - C h T 1 1 2/1/02 - - C h W 7 4 2/2/02 - - C h W 3 2 2/14/02 - - C a L 3 4 2/15/02 - - C a L 1 3 12/13/02 - - C a L 2 3 12/14/02 - - C a T 3 3 2/28/03 - - C h T 2 2 3/1/03 - - C h W 6 1 1/9/04 rv - C a L 3 6 1/10/04 rv - C a W 3 2 3/5/04 rv - C h L 1 4 3/6/04 rv - C h W 5 0 3/14/04 rv - 1 n L 3 4 11/19/04 - - C a W 5 3 11/20/04 - - C a W 2 1 12/10/04 - - C h W 8 3 12/11/04 - - C h L 2 6 12/2/05 rv - C h L 3 4 12/3/05 rv - C h W 8 1 2/24/06 - - C a L 5 6 2/25/06 - - C a L 1 5 3/12/06 - - 2 n W 4 2 10/26/06 - - C a L 2 6 10/27/06 - - C a T 2 2 1/17/06 - - C h T 2 2 1/18/06 - - C h T 3 3 11/2/07 - rv C h L 2 3 11/3/07 - rv C h W 3 0 11/30/07 - rv C a W 5 1 12/1/07 - rv C a T 2 2 3/16/08 - rv 3 n L 2 3 11/21/08 - - C a L 1 3 11/22/08 - - C a W 3 1 1/23/09 - - C h L 3 4 1/24/09 - - C h W 3 1 2/19/09 - - C a W 3 1 2/15/09 - - C a W 4 1 C= College Hockey America game 1= CHA Tournament; Kearney, Neb. 2= CHA Tournament; Detroit, Mich.
2/20/60 h W 16 2/19/61 h W 7 1/7/62 h W 10
Minn. State-Moorhead 1/14/63 a W 4
L L L L
13 12 7 6 6 8 11 18
Niagara
Minnesota Nationals 11/17/67 h L 5
W W W W W W W W
12/6/69 h 12/7/69 h 2/7/71 h 11/21/71 h 11/22/71 h 11/3/78 h 11/4/78 h
W W W W W L W
St. Cloud State
1/18/48 h L 1/15/49 a % 2/20/49 h L 1/29/50 h W 2/18/50 a L 1/29/60 a L 2/13/60 h L 1/13/61 h L 1/14/61 a L 2/11/61 h L 2/11/61 h W 1/27/62 h L 2/10/62 h L 1/25/63 a L 1/26/63 a W 2/8/63 h L 2/9/63 h T 1/11/64 a T 1/31/64 h W 2/1/64 h W 1/22/65 a L 1/23/65 a W 2/13/65 h W 1/14/66 a W 1/15/66 a W 2/4/66 h W 2/5/66 h W 1/6/67 h W 1/7/67 h W 1/27/67 a W 1/28/67 a W 1/5/68 a W 1/6/68 a W 2/9/68 h W 2/10/68 h W 1/14/69 h W 1/15/69 h W 2/14/69 a W 2/15/69 a W 2/7/79 a W 1/14/80 h W 12/17/80 N a L 2/13/81 N h L 2/14/81 N h W 1/22/82 N h W 1/23/82 N h W 2/12/82 N a W 2/13/82 N a L 12/3/82 N a W 12/4/82 N a W 1/28/83 N h W 1/29/83 N h W 12/9/83 N a W 12/10/83 N a W 2/3/84 N h W 2/4/84 N h W 12/7/84 N h W 12/8/84 N h W 2/1/85 N h L
9 5 13 8 8 4 4
2 1 3 4 4 7 2
2 12 1 1 3 4 5 3 0 13 0 4 2 4 2 7 1 7 1 2 4 1 3 4 0 2 1 5 4 1 2 5 2 2 4 4 6 0 7 2 3 4 6 5 9 1 2 1 5 4 5 1 4 1 5 1 4 3 7 0 11 0 9 2 8 0 14 2 19 1 9 0 13 0 5 1 6 0 8 2 1 0 2 4 3 5 6 2 6 1 5 4 3 2 1 2 10 5 5 4 6 0 3 1 4 2 9 3 5 3 6 0 8 1 4 1 5 6
2/2/85 N h L 5 7 12/6/85 N a W 6 4 12/7/85 N a L 4 6 1/31/86 N h W 6 3 2/1/86 N h L 1 8 12/5/86 N h L 1 5 12/6/86 N h W 4 2 1/30/87 N a L 0 4 1/31/87 N a T 4 4 ot 3/7/87 1 a L 4 6 3/8/87 1 a L 7 9 3/21/87 $ n L 4 6 10/23/99 - - a L 1 6 10/24/99 - - a L 1 2 10/20/00 - 9 h L 1 3 10/21/00 - 9 a L 0 7 12/14/01 - 1 h L 2 4 12/15/01 - 1 a L 3 11 2/13/04 - 9 a L 2 5 2/14/04 - 9 a L 2 3 10/26/07 - - a L 1 2 10/27/07 - - a L 1 6 10/24/08 - rv h W 4 2 10/25/08 - rv h L 3 5 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game %= game called due to soft ice 1= NCHA Tournament; St. Cloud, Minn. $= NCAA Div. III Championship; Plattsburgh, N.Y.
St. Francis (Maine)
2/23/77 $ n W 11 0 2/24/78 $1 n W 16 2 2/23/79 $1 n W 17 1 $= NAIA Championship; Superior, Wis. $1= NAIA Championship; St. Paul, Minn.
St. John’s (Minn.)
1/5/61 h W 1/26/61 h L 1/19/62 h W 1/25/62 a W 1/19/63 a L 1/13/64 a W 2/5/64 h L 1/19/65 a W 2/11/65 h W 2/19/67 a W 12/10/76 h W 12/11/76 h W 12/4/79 h W 1/7/81 a W 1/24/81 h W 11/17/84 a W 11/15/85 h W 1/2/93 a W 1/4/94 h W 1/10/95 h T 12/13/97 h W 1/20/99 a L
3 1 4 4 3 8 3 4 6 4 5 6 10 10 12 4 8 6 8 5 4 3
1 4 1 2 4 2 4 1 2 0 2 2 0 0 2 2 5 3 1 5 3 4
ot
St. Mary’s (Minn.)
ot ot
2/6/62 a W 5 2 2/12/62 h W 4 1 1/27/64 a W 6 5 1/22/66 a L 4 5 ot 2/14/66 h W 5 4 ot 2/18/67 a W 5 2 1/20/68 h W 9 3 11/30/73 h W 9 3 12/1/73 h W 7 3 1/4/75 h W 8 1 1/5/75 h W 15 1 1/3/77 h W 7 0 3/5/81 $ n W 5 1 11/19/84 a W 5 3 2/10/86 h W 9 2 3/10/89 # h W 5 4 3/11/89 # h W 7 2 1/31/91 a W 4 0 1/5/92 a W 8 3 11/8/96 a W 8 5 $= NAIA Championship; River Falls, Minn. #= NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals; Bemidji, Minn.
St. Norbert
1/13/95 N h W 4 2 1/14/95 N h T 4 4 1/12/96 N a W 7 5 1/13/96 N a W 5 4 11/22/96 N h L 2 5 11/23/96 N h W 4 3 11/22/97 N a L 4 9 11/23/97 N a L 3 6 11/20/98 N h L 0 4 11/21/98 N h W 4 1 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game
St. Olaf
2/29/80 $ n W 5 1/3/81 a W 9 2/16/82 h W 9 3/1/83 1 h W 5 $= NAIA Championship; St. Paul, Minn. 1= WIHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn.
St. Scholastica
ot
ot
2/3/73 h W 11/24/73 1 n T 2/3/74 I a W 2/4/74 I a W 2/15/74 I h W 2/16/74 I h W 1/17/75 I h L 1/18/75 I h L 2/21/75 I a L 2/22/75 I a L 1/15/76 I a L 1/16/76 I a L 2/20/76 I h W 2/21/76 I h W 1/28/77 I h W
7 6 6 12 6 12 5 5 1 0 5 0 6 5 8
ot ot
2 3 0 2
2 6 2 7 3 2 6 6 2 7 7 5 4 2 3
ot
St. Thomas (Minn.)
2/10/61 h W 1/20/62 a L 2/12/73 h W 12/13/74 h L 12/14/74 h W 11/14/75 h W 11/15/75 h W 11/18/76 h W 11/19/76 h W 2/25/78 $ a W 1/12/79 h W 1/13/79 h W 11/21/79 a W 12/5/80 h W 12/6/80 h W 11/23/81 a W 1/2/82 h W 1/3/82 h W 3/3/83 1 h W 12/30/83 a W 3/10/85 # h W 3/12/88 # h W 3/13/88 # h W 1/10/90 h W 1/23/91 a W 11/10/91 h T 11/28/98 h W 11/29/98 h L
3 0 8 3 7 6 3 5 5 7 14 7 3 6 6 5 10 4 3 7 4 5 3 6 3 2 5 3
2 4 5 4 6 3 2 2 4 1 2 2 2 5 5 3 1 3 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 2 4 4
ot ot
ot ot
Thief River Falls VFW 1/11/50 a W 4
2
U.S. National Team 12/6/70 n L 3 12/7/70 h L 2
U.S. Olympic Team
4 8
12/3/71 1 n L 3 5 12/4/71 h L 1 10 1= Roseau, Minn.
Union (N.Y.)
12/30/00 - - 1 n T 2 11/2/01 - rv a L 6 11/3/01 - rv a T 2 10/25/02 - - h L 3 10/26/02 - - h T 5 1= Mariucci Classic; Minneapolis, Minn.
Warroad
12/6/66 a 12/15/68 h 1/6/80 a 12/27/80 a 1/11/81 h
L W L W W
2 8 2 4 5
ot ot ot ot
2 10 11 2 1 4 8 5 3 0
Wayne State (Mich.) 2/18/00 - - C h W 2/19/00 - - C h W 11/24/00 - - C h L 11/25/00 - - C h W 2/23/01 - - C a W 2/24/01 - - C a T 11/30/01 - - C a W 12/1/01 - - C a T 2/22/02 - - C h T 2/23/02 - - C h L 11/16/02 - - C h W 11/17/02 - - C h W 2/7/03 - - C a L 2/8/03 - - C a L 3/16/03 - - 1 n L 12/5/03 - - C h W 12/6/03 - - C h W 1/23/04 - - C a W 1/24/04 - - C a W 11/22/04 - - C a W 11/23/04 - - C a L 2/4/05 - - C h W 2/5/05 - - C h W 11/11/05 rv - C a W 11/12/05 rv - C a W 1/13/06 - - C h T 1/14/06 - - C h W 12/1/06 - - C a W 12/2/06 - - C a W 1/5/07 - - C h W 1/6/07 - - C h W 2/23/07 - - C a L 2/24/07 - - C a T 11/16/07 - - C a W 11/17/07 - - C a L 2/1/08 - - C h L 2/2/08 - - C h W 2/29/08 - - C h W 3/1/08 - - C h W 3/15/08 - - 2 n W C= College Hockey America game 1= CHA Tournament; Kearney, Neb.
5 2 6 4 4 5 8 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 2 2 4 4 0 5 2 0 2 1 2 4 1 6 2 3 3 2 5 2 6 2 6 1 3 1 4 6 2 0 5 2 4 1 3 1 3 3 6 2 1 0 4 2 3 2 7 5 1 3 1 1 ot 3 1 2 5 2 3 4 3 7 5 5 3 4 1
Western Michigan
12/17/04 12/18/04 2/10/06 2/11/06
- - - -
- h - h - a - a
L W W L
3 4 6 4
4 2 1 5
1/16/65 h W 1/17/67 a T 3/1/68 h W 3/2/68 h W 12/6/68 h W 12/7/68 h W 11/29/69 h W 11/30/69 h W 12/13/69 h W 12/14/69 h W 11/30/70 a W 11/12/71 h L 11/13/71 h W 11/10/72 h W 11/11/72 h L 11/9/73 h W 11/10/73 h W 11/8/74 h W 11/9/74 h W 11/7/75 h L 11/8/75 h L 11/5/76 h W 11/6/76 h W 11/4/77 h W 11/5/77 h W 1/19/79 h W 1/20/79 h W 11/2/79 h W 11/3/79 h W 11/7/80 h W 11/8/80 h W 12/12/80 a W 12/13/80 a L 12/16/81 h W 12/17/81 h W 11/5/82 h W 11/6/82 h W 11/8/83 h W
7 3 10 4 14 8 9 8 15 10 7 3 6 6 0 7 5 6 5 2 4 7 5 7 4 8 8 7 5 6 6 3 1 8 8 6 6 9
2 3 2 0 1 4 1 2 1 2 1 4 3 3 3 4 3 3 4 4 5 0 3 5 0 1 1 2 3 0 3 1 3 1 4 0 2 1
Winnipeg
ot ot ot ot ot
ot
W W W W W L W W W L W W
17 10 6 3 3 3 4 4 6 1 5 6
0 1 3 2 1 4 0 2 0 4 3 3
ot
ot ot
ot ot
ot
Wisconsin-River Falls
ot 2/13/76 h W 2/14/76 h W 11/28/76 a W 11/29/76 a W 2/24/79 $ n W 1/4/81 a W 2/6/81 N h W 2/7/81 N h W ot 11/13/81 N h W 11/14/81 N h W 1/15/82 N a L ot 1/16/82 N a W 2/27/82 $1 n W 11/12/82 N a L ot 11/13/82 N a L 1/21/83 N h W 1/22/83 N h W 12/15/83 N h W 12/16/83 N h W 12/14/84 N a W 12/15/84 N a W 12/13/85 N h W 12/14/85 N h L 3/1/86 1 h W 3/2/86 1 h T 12/8/86 N a W 12/9/86 N a W 12/4/87 N h W 12/5/87 N h L 2/12/88 N a W 2/13/88 N a L 3/4/88 2 a L 3/5/88 2 a L 3/18/88 $2 n L 3/19/88 $2 n L 11/11/88 h W 11/12/88 h T 1/20/89 a L 1/21/89 a L 12/15/89 N a L 12/16/89 N a W 2/16/90 N h W 2/17/90 N h T 12/7/90 N a W 12/8/90 N a T 2/8/91 N h W 2/9/91 N h W 12/13/91 N a W 12/14/91 N a W 2/7/92 N h T 2/8/92 N h W 11/13/92 N a W 11/14/92 N a L 1/15/93 N h W 1/16/93 N h W 2/26/93 3 W 2/27/93 3 W 1/7/94 N a L ot 1/8/94 N a W 2/11/94 N h L 2/12/94 N h W 1/20/95 N a W 1/21/95 N a W 2/24/95 4 L 2/25/95 4 W
Wisconsin-Eau Claire
1/3/79 h 1/4/79 h 2/20/81 N a 2/21/81 N a 12/11/81 N h 12/12/81 N h 2/19/82 N a 2/20/82 N a 1/14/83 N a 1/15/83 N a 2/18/83 N h 2/19/83 N h
1/13/84 N a W 8 5 1/14/84 N a W 11 1 1/11/85 N h W 7 2 1/12/85 N h W 7 1 2/21/86 N a W 10 3 2/22/86 N a W 9 3 2/20/87 N h W 8 4 2/21/87 N h W 7 0 12/2/87 N a W 3 2 12/3/87 N a W 5 1 2/19/88 N h T 4 4 2/20/88 N h W 7 2 12/2/88 N a L 3 7 12/3/88 N a L 1 7 2/10/89 N h L 2 6 2/11/89 N h W 6 1 2/24/89 1 a W 6 5 2/25/89 1 a T 4 4 11/10/89 N a L 6 7 11/11/89 N a L 3 8 1/19/90 N h W 7 4 1/20/90 N h W 5 2 12/22/90 N h W 9 2 12/23/90 N h W 5 1 2/15/91 N a W 5 4 2/16/91 N a L 3 7 1/10/92 N h W 8 2 1/11/92 N h W 6 5 2/14/92 N a L 3 4 2/15/92 N a W 7 3 12/11/92 N h W 7 3 12/12/92 N h W 4 1 2/5/93 N a W 11 4 2/6/93 N a W 5 3 11/12/93 N h W 4 3 11/13/93 N h W 8 2 1/14/94 N a W 4 3 1/15/94 N a T 3 3 12/2/94 N a W 6 2 12/3/94 N a W 6 5 2/10/95 N h W 2 1 2/11/95 N h W 5 3 12/1/95 N h W 6 2 12/2/95 N h W 6 4 2/9/96 N a W 4 3 2/10/96 N a L 2 3 2/14/97 N h W 7 2 2/15/97 N h W 8 3 2/13/98 N a L 3 4 2/14/98 N a W 6 5 2/12/99 N h L 3 4 2/13/99 N h W 3 2 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game 1= NCHA Tournament; Eau Claire, Wis. 8 10 8 7 7 5 10 9 5 4 2 8 7 4 1 4 7 5 5 4 5 11 4 5 3 5 5 3 2 5 4 4 0 4 3 3 1 3 3 3 4 5 4 7 3 7 3 5 5 4 5 6 4 5 9 7 7 3 6 4 5 4 8 0 5
2 2 3 5 5 4 2 0 2 2 5 3 0 7 3 1 4 3 4 3 3 1 5 4 3 3 4 1 5 2 7 7 2 6 5 1 1 9 4 6 3 3 4 1 3 1 0 4 4 4 2 5 6 2 3 3 0 4 3 8 1 3 5 3 2
ot ot
1/19/96 N h T 3 3 ot 1/20/96 N h L 4 6 1/31/97 N a L 1 4 2/1/97 N a W 3 0 1/30/98 N h L 2 3 1/31/98 N h W 6 2 1/29/99 N a W 3 2 1/30/99 N a L 2 3 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game $= NAIA Championship; St. Paul, Minn. $1= NAIA Championship; Superior, Wis. $2= NCAA Div. III Championship; Elmira, N.Y. 1= NCHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn. 2= NCHA Tournament; River Falls, Wis. 3= NCHA Tournament 4= NCHA Tournament
Wisconsin-Stevens Point
1/16/87 N h W 4 3 1/17/87 N h W 3 2 ot 11/13/87 N h T 2 2 ot 11/14/87 N h L 4 5 1/22/88 N h L 4 6 1/23/88 N h W 4 3 2/27/88 1 h L 0 4 2/28/88 1 h W 8 1 11/26/88 N h L 3 4 ot 11/27/88 N h L 2 6 2/3/89 N a L 2 7 2/4/89 N a W 4 2 3/3/89 2 a L 0 2 3/4/89 2 a T 2 2 ot 3/17/89 $ n L 0 2 3/18/89 $ n L 3 6 12/1/89 N a L 2 3 12/1/89 N a L 4 6 11/17/90 N a L 3 7 11/18/90 N a W 4 3 1/4/91 N h W 3 2 1/5/91 N h W 4 3 2/22/91 3 L 1 7 2/23/91 3 L 3 4 11/23/91 N h T 3 3 ot 11/24/91 N h L 2 4 1/24/92 N a L 4 6 1/25/92 N a L 3 10 2/21/92 4 T 3 3 ot 2/22/92 4 L 1 7 12/4/92 N a L 3 6 12/5/92 N a L 2 6 1/29/93 N h W 8 4 1/30/93 N h L 5 10 3/5/93 5 L 6 8 3/6/93 5 W 3 2 11/5/93 N a W 4 3 11/6/93 N a L 1 8 12/10/93 N h L 3 8 12/11/93 N h W 5 1 2/25/94 6 T 4 4 ot 2/26/94 6 W 4 1 1/6/95 N a W 5 4 ot 1/7/95 N a L 1 2 ot 3/3/95 7 W 6 1 3/4/95 7 W 3 2 1/5/96 N h T 6 6 ot 1/6/96 N h L 3 4 12/6/96 N a L 2 4 12/7/96 N a W 4 3 1/9/98 N h W 9 4 1/10/98 N h W 5 2 1/15/99 N a L 3 5 1/16/99 N a W 6 4 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game $= NCAA Div. III Championship; Rochester, N.Y. 1= NCHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn. 2= NCHA Tournament; Stevens Point, Wis. 3= NCHA Tournament 4= NCHA Tournament 5= NCHA Tournament 6= NCHA Tournament 7= NCHA Tournament
Wisconsin-Stout
ot
ot ot ot
ot
ot
3/5/76 $ n W 4 2 1/7/77 h W 3 0 1/8/77 h W 6 1 1/13/78 h W 8 2 1/14/78 h W 10 2 12/14/79 a W 9 3 12/15/79 a W 7 1 1/16/81 h W 15 1 1/17/81 h W 11 4 1/17/97 N h W 4 2 1/18/97 N h W 7 4 1/16/98 N a W 5 3 1/17/98 N a W 8 4 1/8/99 N h W 5 4 1/9/99 N h W 6 3 N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game $= NAIA Championship; Superior, Wis.
Wisconsin-Superior
1/8/66 h 2/16/66 a 1/20/67 I a 1/21/67 I a 2/3/67 I h 2/4/67 I h 12/8/67 I h 12/9/67 I h 2/16/68 I a 2/17/68 I a 12/18/68 I a 12/19/68 I a 1/31/69 I h 2/1/69 I h 1/27/70 I h 1/28/70 I h 2/13/70 I a 2/14/70 I a 1/29/71 I a
2009-10
W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W
5 3 5 4 13 8 10 9 6 3 5 4 8 9 16 16 9 11 9
1 2 2 2 1 1 1 5 5 2 4 2 0 5 1 1 1 0 0
1/30/71 I a W 10 0 2/12/71 I h W 16 1 2/13/71 I h W 11 2 1/28/72 I h W 6 4 1/29/72 I h W 7 5 2/11/72 I a W 6 5 2/12/72 I a L 4 5 1/26/73 I h W 6 1 1/27/73 I h L 4 7 2/16/73 I h W 8 1 2/17/73 I h W 10 4 1/25/74 I h L 2 5 1/26/74 I h W 6 0 2/8/74 I a W 9 3 2/9/74 I a W 6 1 1/24/75 I a L 2 7 1/25/75 I a L 2 5 2/6/75 I h L 2 12 2/7/75 I h W 4 3 1/23/76 I h W 5 4 1/24/76 I h W 7 4 2/6/76 I a L 3 4 2/7/76 I a W 6 5 3/6/76 $ a L 3 4 1/14/77 I a T 4 4 1/15/77 I a W 6 3 2/11/77 I h W 6 1 2/12/77 I h W 5 4 12/2/77 I a L 1 8 1/27/78 I a W 6 2 1/28/78 I a W 6 3 2/4/78 I h W 7 4 2/16/78 I h W 5 2 2/17/78 I h W 9 5 11/29/78 a W 5 3 12/14/78 h W 6 4 2/3/80 h W 6 3 2/13/80 h W 7 4 3/1/80 $1 n W 8 3 12/10/80 N h W 9 3 3/6/81 $2 n L 4 6 11/21/81 N a L 2 6 12/4/81 N a W 7 5 12/5/81 N a T 1 1 1/8/82 N h W 8 3 1/9/82 N h W 8 1 1/7/83 N h W 7 4 1/8/83 N h W 6 2 2/11/83 N a W 4 0 2/12/83 N a W 13 5 12/6/83 N h W 9 3 1/24/84 N h W 9 1 12/4/84 N h W 8 7 12/20/84 N a W 10 2 1/16/86 N a W 6 2 1/18/86 N h W 6 5 11/14/86 N h L 5 10 11/15/86 N h L 5 8 12/11/87 N a W 5 3 12/12/87 N a W 7 4 1/29/88 N h W 4 1 1/30/88 N h W 4 3 12/9/88 N a L 3 6 12/10/88 N a W 8 2 1/27/89 N h W 5 2 1/28/89 N h W 3 2 11/17/89 N h W 6 5 11/18/89 N h L 3 4 1/5/90 N a W 6 3 1/6/90 N a L 4 5 11/2/90 N h W 9 3 11/3/90 N h W 5 4 1/11/91 N a W 8 5 1/12/91 N a W 7 3 12/6/91 N h L 5 7 12/7/91 N h L 1 7 1/31/92 N a L 2 7 2/1/92 N a W 5 3 11/21/92 N h L 3 4 11/22/92 N h W 7 4 1/22/93 N a W 5 2 1/23/93 N a W 7 2 11/20/93 N a T 4 4 11/21/93 N a L 2 6 1/21/94 N h W 6 3 1/22/94 N h L 2 4 3/4/94 1 W 4 0 3/5/94 1 L 6 7 11/19/94 N a W 3 2 11/20/94 N a W 5 4 2/3/95 N h L 1 5 2/4/95 N h L 2 3 11/17/95 N h W 6 4 11/18/95 N h W 4 3 2/2/96 N a W 5 3 2/3/96 N a L 3 7 2/23/96 2 W 6 1 2/24/96 2 L 1 3 11/15/96 N h T 5 5 11/16/96 N h L 6 7 2/7/97 N a L 1 4 2/8/97 N a W 6 4 11/14/97 N a W 2 1 11/15/97 N a W 6 2 2/6/98 N h L 2 7 2/7/98 N h W 4 1 11/13/98 N h W 3 1 11/14/98 h L 3 5 2/5/99 N a L 2 4 2/6/99 a L 4 7 I= International Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game $= NAIA Championship; Superior, Wis. $1= NAIA Championship; St. Paul, Minn. $2= NAIA Championship; River Falls, Wis. 1= NCHA Tournament 2= NCHA Tournament
ot ot ot
ot
ot
ot
ot
Wisconsin
3/25/06 rv 2 $ n L 0 4 $= NCAA Midwest Regional; Green Bay, Wis.
37
results vs opponents
1/29/77 I h W 2 1 2/17/77 I a W 1 0 2/18/77 I a L 5 6 ot 2/24/77 $ n L 2 5 12/4/77 I a L 2 5 1/20/78 I a W 8 5 1/21/78 I a W 5 4 2/3/78 I h W 5 3 2/9/78 I h L 2 3 ot 2/10/78 I h W 7 4 1/24/79 a W 7 1 1/25/79 a W 6 2 2/16/79 h W 5 2 2/17/79 h W 7 6 1/26/80 h W 6 5 1/27/80 h L 5 8 2/22/80 a W 3 1 2/23/80 a L 4 5 12/30/82 a W 5 2 2/14/83 h W 7 1 2/10/84 N a W 4 3 2/11/84 N a W 9 1 11/20/84 N h W 5 3 11/21/84 N h W 7 1 1/18/85 N a L 3 6 1/19/85 N a W 6 2 2/8/85 N h W 7 2 2/9/85 N h W 8 3 3/2/85 % h T 5 5 ot 3/3/85 % h W 5 1 1/24/86 N h L 2 4 1/25/86 N h W 7 6 2/14/86 N a L 3 5 2/15/86 N a W 12 4 1/23/87 N h W 6 3 1/24/87 N h W 5 3 2/13/87 N a W 5 3 2/14/87 N a W 7 3 11/21/87 N a W 9 2 11/22/87 N a W 11 3 1/8/88 N h W 11 3 1/9/88 N h W 7 5 11/4/88 N a W 6 1 11/5/88 N a W 7 5 1/13/89 N h W 9 4 1/14/89 N h W 10 0 12/8/89 N h W 6 4 12/9/89 N h W 4 3 1/26/90 N a W 2 1 1/27/90 N a W 8 4 11/30/90 N h W 10 5 12/1/90 N h W 4 2 2/2/91 N a W 9 3 2/3/91 N a W 9 3 12/19/91 h W 16 2 12/21/91 a W 5 2 11/4/94 N h W 6 2 11/5/94 N h W 13 2 1/27/95 N a W 13 4 1/28/95 N a W 15 2 2/17/95 2 W 6 1 2/18/95 2 W 13 1 11/3/95 N a W 4 3 11/4/95 N a W 4 1 1/26/96 N h W 6 1 1/27/96 N h W 6 4 11/1/96 N a W 7 3 11/2/96 N a W 7 5 1/24/97 N h W 9 0 1/25/97 N h W 6 2 10/31/97 N h W 12 0 11/1/97 N h W 8 1 1/23/98 N a W 6 0 1/24/98 N a W 5 2 1/22/99 N a W 7 3 1/23/99 N h W 7 1 I= International Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game N= Northern Collegiate Hockey Ass’n game $= NAIA Championship; Superior, Wis. %= WIHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn. 1= Minn.-Duluth Tournament; Duluth, Minn. 2= NCHA Tournament
a look at 2008-09
Schedule & Results Record All Games College Hockey America Non-Conference
Overall 20-16-1 12-5-1 8-11-0
Home Away Neutral 11-4-0 6-11-1 3-1-0 6-2-0 6-3-1 0-0-0 5-2-0 0-8-0 3-1-0
Date Opponent W/L Oct. 10, 2008 @ (RV) Minnesota State L Oct. 11, 2008 @ (RV) Minnesota State L Oct. 17, 2008 @ (RV) Air Force L Oct. 18, 2008 @ (RV) Air Force L Oct. 24, 2008 (RV) St. Cloud State W Oct. 25, 2008 (RV) St. Cloud State L Oct. 31, 2008 Manitoba (Exh.) W Nov. 1, 2008 Manitoba (Exh.) W • Nov. 7, 2008 @ Ala.-Huntsville L • Nov. 8, 2008 @ Ala.-Huntsville W • Nov. 21, 2008 @ Niagara L • Nov. 22, 2008 @ Niagara W Nov. 28, 2008 Michigan Tech W Nov. 29, 2008 Michigan Tech W • Dec. 5, 2008 Ala.-Huntsville W • Dec. 6, 2008 Ala.-Huntsville W Dec. 28, 2008 Massachusetts W Dec. 29, 2008 (RV) Darthmouth L Jan. 2, 2009 (RV) North Dakota L Jan. 3, 2009 @ (RV) North Dakota L Jan. 16, 2009 @ Minnesota Duluth L Jan. 17, 2009 @ Minnesota Duluth L • Jan. 23, 2009 Niagara L • Jan. 24, 2009 Niagara W • Jan. 30, 2009 @ Robert Morris W • Jan. 31, 2009 @ Robert Morris W • Feb. 6, 2009 Ala.-Huntsville W • Feb. 7, 2009 Ala.-Huntsville W • Feb. 14, 2009 @ Robert Morris L • Feb. 15, 2009 @ Robert Morris T • Feb. 19, 2009 @ Niagara W • Feb. 20, 2009 @ Niagara W Feb. 27, 2009 U.S. National U-18 (Exh.) W Feb. 28, 2009 U.S. National U-18 (Exh.) W • Mar. 6, 2009 Robert Morris L • Mar. 7, 2009 Robert Morris W ^ Mar. 13, 2009 4/Ala-Huntsville W ^ Mar. 14. 2009 3/Robert Morris W % Mar. 28, 2009 (2) 1/ Notre Dame W % Mar. 29, 2009 (9) 3/ Cornell W ! Apr. 9, 2009 (4) Miami (Ohio) L
Score 2-5 2-4 2-6 0-6 4-2 3-5 7-0 4-2 2-4 2-1 # 1-3 3-1 3-0 2-1 3-1 4-2 4-2 2-4 3-4 3-4 # 2-3 2-4 3-4 3-1 5-3 5-1 2-0 4-2 0-3 3-3 # 3-1 4-1 3-1 6-3 2-3 6-4 4-1 3-2 # 5-1 4-1 1-4
Shots 18-29 31-37 18-32 15-37 21-35 28-31 14-29 20-29 15-25 33-24 36-19 25-23 19-23 16-27 19-25 31-28 18-26 27-25 25-40 20-40 15-38 25-29 37-30 28-20 28-28 37-24 31-22 31-19 32-28 35-38 28-28 39-30 29-25 42-24 30-23 43-24 33-26 40-31 19-35 21-26 25-37
Overall 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-4-0 1-4-0 1-5-0 - - 1-6-0 2-6-0 2-7-0 3-7-0 4-7-0 5-7-0 6-7-0 7-7-0 8-7-0 8-8-0 8-9-0 8-10-0 8-11-0 8-12-0 8-13-0 9-13-0 10-13-0 11-13-0 12-13-0 13-13-0 13-14-0 13-14-1 14-14-1 15-14-1 - - 15-15-1 16-15-1 16-15-1 18-10-1 19-10-1 20-15-1 20-16-1
CHA Time Attend - 2:34 4,123 - 1:53 4,174 - 2:05 2,317 - 2:05 2,023 - 2:23 2,414 $ - 2:17 1,911 - 2:14 1,648 - 2:14 1,939 0-1-0 2:15 3,474 1-1-1 2:34 4,368 1-2-0 2:05 1,124 2-2-0 1:50 1,051 - 2:09 1,838 - 2:08 1,985 3-2-0 2:08 1,968 4-2-0 2:09 1,896 - 2:07 4,228 - 2:05 3,434 - 2:18 2,414 $ - 2:20 11,394 - 2:10 3,418 - 2:15 3,804 4-3-0 2:05 1,960 5-3-0 2:10 2,029 6-3-0 2:13 630 7-3-0 2:20 697 8-3-0 2:13 1,871 9-3-0 2:17 1,893 9-4-0 2:05 801 9-4-1 2:25 771 10-4-1 1:55 1,021 11-4-1 2:04 1,172 - 2:11 1,815 - 2:07 1,937 11-5-1 2:22 1,791 12-5-1 2:33 1,866 - 2:09 1,710 - 2:52 1,962 - 2:20 4,052 - 2:25 3,170 - 2:30 18,427 $
Goalie of Record Dalton (0-1-0) Alamano (0-1-0) Dalton (0-2-0) Alamano (0-2-0) Dalton (1-2-0) Alamano (0-3-0) Bakala (0-0-0) Bakala (0-0-0) Dalton (1-3-0) Dalton (2-3-0) Dalton (2-4-0) Dalton (3-4-0) Dalton (4-4-0) Dalton (5-4-0) Dalton (6-4-0) Dalton (7-4-0) Dalton (8-4-0) Dalton (8-5-0) Dalton (8-6-0) Alamano (0-4-0) Dalton (8-7-0) Alamano (0-5-0) Dalton (8-8-0) Dalton (9-8-0) Dalton (10-8-0) Dalton (11-8-0) Dalton (12-8-0) Dalton (13-8-0) Dalton (13-9-0) Dalton (13-9-1) Dalton (14-9-1) Dalton (15-9-1) Bakala (0-0-0) Alamano (0-5-0) Dalton (15-10-1) Alamano (1-5-0) Dalton (16-10-1) Dalton (17-10-1) Dalton (18-10-1) Dalton (19-10-1) Dalton (19-11-1)
(x) opponent’s rank in USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll / # overtime / $ sellout crowd / a= freshman / *= decision in relief • College Hockey America regular-season contest / ^ College Hockey America Tournament (Bemidji, Minn.) / % NCAA Midwest Regional (Grand Rapids, Mich.) / ! Frozen Four (Washington D.C)
TEAM RECORD Overall: Conference: Home: Away: Neutral: Overtime: ATTENDANCE Gms Total Total: 37 109,179 Home: 13 29,503 Away: 18 49,801 Neutral: 4 29,877
38
W-L-T 20-16-1 12-5-1 11-4-0 6-11-1 3-1-0 2-1-1
Avg. 2,951 1,966 2,767 7469
Team Statistics
BSU SHOT STATISTICS Goals-Shot attempts 106-995 Shot pct. .107 Goals/Game 2.9 Shots/Game 26.9 Assists 172 POWER PLAYS Goals-Power Plays 40-191 Conversion Percent .209 Shot Attempts 247 Shot Percent .162 GOAL BREAKDOWN Total Goals 106 Power Play 40 Short-handed 4 Empty net 8 Penalty 0 Unassisted 9 Overtime 2 Shootout 0 Delayed Penalty 0
2009-10
OPP 97-1060 .092 2.6 28.6 168 31-202 .153 212 .146 97 31 2 4 0 5 1 0 1
PENALTIES Number 239 Minutes 543 Penalties/Game 6.5 Pen minutes/Game 14.7 Minor 229 Major 3 10-minute Misconduct 5 Game Misconduct 2 Gross Misconduct 0 Match 0 SHOOTOUTS (Made-Att) 0-0 GOALS BY PERIOD Bemidji State Opponents
1 29 28
2 3 35 40 39 29
226 506 6.1 13.7 218 2 3 2 0 1 0-0 OT Total 2 106 1 97
SAVES BY PERIOD 1 2 3 OT Total Bemidji State 311 366 281 5 963 Opponents 285 298 291 15 889
Overall 20-16-1 12-5-1 8-11-0
SCORING
Home Away Neutral 11-4-0 6-11-1 3-1-0 6-2-0 6-3-1 0-0-0 5-2-0 0-8-0 3-1-0
Overall
CHA Games Only
##
Name
GP
G
A
Pts
Sh
+/-
PIM
PP
SH GW
19
Matt Read
37
15
25
40
93
+16
21-50
2
2
13
Tyler Scofield
35
22
17
39
95
+7
15-46
9
1
GT
GP
G
A
Pts
Sh
+/-
PIM
PP
2
0
18
5
10
15
50
+10
11-30
0
SH GW 1
1
GT 0
5
0
16
9
7
16
44
+5
4-8
4
1
2
0
29
Brad Hunt
37
9
23
32
91
+5
12-24
7
0
1
0
18
4
15
19
52
+8
5-10
3
0
1
0
17
Matt Francis
29
13
13
26
84
+13
11-22
5
0
3
0
16
8
7
15
53
+5
8-16
4
0
1
0
21
Brandon Marino
36
7
12
19
84
-7
13-37
4
0
3
0
17
4
5
9
43
+1
7-25
2
0
2
0
7
Cody Bostock
37
3
13
16
58
+6
23-46
3
0
0
0
18
2
8
10
32
+7
8-16
2
0
0
0
20
Ben Kinne
37
8
7
15
74
+5
7-14
0
1
0
0
18
5
3
8
43
+4
2-4
0
1
0
0
11
Shea Walters
34
4
11
15
50
-3
5-10
1
0
1
0
16
3
6
9
33
+1
2-4
1
0
1
0
9
Chris Peluso
35
0
13
13
34
+2
17-34
0
0
0
0
18
0
7
7
14
+4
7-14
0
0
0
0
22
Ian Lowe
33
2
8
10
32
-7
9-18
1
0
0
0
16
1
5
6
23
+14
2-4
0
0
0
0
5
Graham McManamin
29
3
6
9
38
+4
19-46
1
0
1
0
14
3
4
7
24
+4
10-20
1
0
1
0
28
Jamie MacQueen
36
4
4
8
69
-7
9-18
2
0
1
0
18
2
3
5
47
-4
3-6
1
0
1
0
8
Travis Winter
33
6
1
7
47
-10
9-29
4
0
1
0
16
3
0
3
20
-3
5-21
2
0
0
0
23
Chris McKelvie
37
3
4
7
46
+2
17-34
0
0
0
0
18
1
3
4
30
+5
7-14
0
0
0
0 0
26
Tyler Lehrke
31
2
3
5
28
-6
6-23
1
0
1
0
16
2
2
4
17
-2
4-19
1
0
1
15
Ryan Cramer
32
2
2
4
31
0
10-20
0
0
0
0
15
1
1
2
15
0
4-8
0
0
0
0
16
Emil Billberg
16
2
1
3
3
-1
2-4
0
0
1
0
6
2
1
3
2
+2
2-4
0
0
1
0
3
Ryan Adams
24
1
2
3
11
-3
4-8
0
0
0
0
11
0
1
1
3
0
2-4
0
0
0
0
1
Matt Dalton
31
0
3
3
0
-
0-0
0
0
0
0
17
0
0
0
0
-
0-0
0
0
0
0
6
Darcy Findlay
14
0
2
2
9
-3
8-16
0
0
0
0
7
0
2
2
4
0
2-4
0
0
0
0
27
Kyle Hardwick
27
0
2
2
8
-1
5-10
0
0
0
0
16
0
0
0
6
+1
4-8
0
0
0
0
14
Brent Tamane
4
0
1
1
2
+1
0-0
0
0
0
0
3
0
1
1
1
+1
0-0
0
0
0
0
35
Orlando Alamano
6
0
0
0
0
-
1-2
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
-
0-0
0
0
0
0
4
Dan MacIntyre
13
0
0
0
3
-3
1-2
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
1-2
0
0
0
0
2
Tyler Jundt
20
0
0
0
5
-6
3-6
0
0
0
0
11
0
0
0
2
-4
1-2
0
0
0
0
0
0
TM TEAM
37
0
0
0
0
3-6
0
0
0
0
18
0
0
0
0
0-0
0
0
0
0
Total
37
106
173
279
995
+4 239-543
40
4
20
0
18
55
91
146
558
+49 101-243
21
3
12
0
Opponents
37
97
171
268
1060
-11 226-506
31
1
16
1
18
38
65
103
459
-50 106-231
13
0
5
1
GOALTENDING
Overall
CHA Games Only
##
Name
GP
MIN
GA
EN
Avg
Saves
1
Matt Dalton
31
1861:03
68
0
2.19
35
Orlando Alamano
6
356:18
25
0
4.21
TM
Pct
W
L
T
GP
MIN
GA
EN
Avg
Saves
794
.921 19 11
1
17
1018:38
33
0
1.94
400
168
.870
1
5
0
1
59:58
4
0
4.00
20
.000
0
W
L
.924 11
Pct
5
T 1
.833
1
0
0
.000
EMPTY NET
20
18:17
4
4
0.00
0
0
0
10
8:26
1
1
0.00
0
0
0
0
Total
37
2235:38
97
4
2.60
962
.908 20 16
1
18
1087:02
38
1
2.10
420
.917 12
5
1
Opponents
37
2235:38
106
8
2.84
889
.893 16 20
1
18
1087:02
55
3
3.04
503
.901
5 12
1
Miscellaneous Team Statistics Overall
CHA Games Only
SHOTS ON GOAL Bemidji State Opponents POWER PLAYS Bemidji State Opponents GOALS BY PERIOD
Shots
Avg/G
Pct
SHOTS ON GOAL
Shots
Avg/G
Pct
995
26.89
.106
Bemidji State
558
31.0
.098 .082
1060
28.65
.091
Opponents
458
25.44
Goals
Chances
Pct
POWER PLAYS
Goals
Chances
Pct
40
195
.205
Bemidji State
21
99
.212
31
209
.148
Opponents
13
94
.138
1
2
3
OT
Total
GOALS BY PERIOD
1
2
3
OT
Total
Bemidji State
29
35
40
2
106
Bemidji State
14
19
21
1
55
Opponents
28
39
29
1
97
Opponents
13
13
12
0
38
2009-10
39
2008-09 final stats
Record All Games College Hockey America Non-Conference
2 Tyler Jundt
3 Ryan Adams
4 Dan MacIntyre
5 Graham McManamin
6 Darcy Findlay
7 Cody Bostock
8 Travis Winter
9 Chris Peluso
11 Shea Walters
13 Tyler Scofield
14 Brent Tamane
15 Ryan Cramer
16 Emil Billbrg
Opponent at (RV) Minnesota State at (RV) Minnesota State at (RV) Air Force at (RV) Air Force (RV) St. Cloud State (RV) St. Cloud State • at Ala.-Huntsville • at Ala.-Huntsville • at Niagara • at Niagara Michigan Tech Michigan Tech • Ala.-Huntsville • Ala.-Huntsville vs. U-Mass
Date GA-SV Oct. 10 5-24 Oct. 11 DNP Oct. 17 6-26 Oct. 18 DNP Oct. 24 2-33 Oct. 25 DNP Nov. 7 4-21 Nov. 8 1-23 Nov. 21 3-16 Nov. 22 1-22 Nov. 28 0-23 Nov. 29 1-26 Dec. 5 1-24 Dec. 6 2-26 Dec. 28 2-24
G-A-P DNP 0-0-0 DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
G-A-P 0-0-0 DNP DNP 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 DNP
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0
G-A-P DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 DNP
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1 0-1-1
G-A-P 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 1-0-1
G-A-P DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1
G-A-P 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 DNP DNP 1-0-1 0-0-0 DNP 0-1-1 1-0-1 0-1-1
G-A-P 0-0-0 1-0-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-0-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1
G-A-P DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 1-0-1 0-0-0
at (RV) Dartmouth (RV) North Dakota at (RV) North Dakota at Minnesota Duluth at Minnesota Duluth • Niagara • Niagara • at Robert Morris • at Robert Morris • Ala.-Huntsville • Ala.-Huntsville • at Robert Morris • at Robert Morris • at Niagara • at Niagara • Robert Morris • Robert Morris Ala.-Huntsville Robert Morris vs (2) Notre Dame vs (9) Cornell vs (4) Miami (Ohio)
Dec. 29 Jan. 2 Jan. 3 Jan. 16 Jan. 17 Jan. 23 Jan. 24 Jan. 30 Jan. 31 Feb. 6 Feb. 7 Feb. 14 Feb. 15 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Mar. 6 Mar. 7 Mar. 13 Mar. 14 Mar. 28 Mar. 29 Apr. 9
DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 DNP DNP 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP 0-0-0
0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0
DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP 1-0-1 1-2-3 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-1-1 DNP
DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-2-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-2-2 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-2-2 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-1-1 1-1-2 1-1-2 1-0-1 0-0-0 1-1-2 0-2-2 DNP DNP 0-1-1 2-0-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 1-0-1 0-1-1 3-1-4 0-1-1 1-1-2 2-1-3 2-1-3 0-1-1
DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP
1 Matt Dalton
Individual game-by-game stats
Individual Game-by-Game Statistics
4-21 4-36 DNP 3-35 DNP 4-26 1-19 3-25 1-23 0-22 2-17 2-25 3-35 1-27 1-29 3-20 DNP 1-25 2-29 1-34 1-25 3-33
Bemidji State’s Record When... BSU plays at... Home Away Neutral Site Intermissions BSU leads at first BSU trails at first Game tied at first BSU leads at second BSU trails at second Game tied at second In overtime Games decided... Ties By one goal By two goals By three or more goals Shots on Goal BSU leads BSU trails Shots even Game’s First Goal BSU scores first Opponent scores first
2008-09 11-4-0 6-11-1 3-1-0
Division I era 87-48-19 58-107-14 14-9-1
9-1-1 3-8-0 8-4-0 15-0-0 2-11-0 3-2-1 2-1-1
80-27-13 17-84-9 59-52-11 121-9-11 12-119-11 24-33-12 16-16-34
1 3-5 11-5 6-6
34 41-57 50-38 66-70
13-5-0 5-11-1 2-0-0
107-59-19 40-97-14 8-5-1
12-3-1 8-13-0
116-57-19 40-103-15
Shots on Goal BSU < 20 5-5-0 BSU 20-29 6-5-0 BSU 30-39 7-6-1 BSU 40-49 2-0-0 BSU 50+ 0-0-0 Opponent < 20 1-1-0 Opponent 20-29 16-7-0 Opponent 30-39 3-6-1 Opponent 40-49 0-2-0 Opponent 50+ 0-0-0 Scoring Shutouts 2-2-0 BSU scores one goal 0-2-0 BSU scores two goals 4-8-0 BSU scores three goals 5-4-1 BSU scores four goals 7-0-0 BSU scores five-plus goals 4-0-0 Opponent scores one goal 10-0-0 Opponent scores two goals 5-0-0 Opponent scores three goals 1-4-1 Opponent scores four goals 1-8-0 Opponent scores five-plus goals 0-4-0
10-21-2 55-79-11 62-53-12 26-11-9 4-1-1 29-10-2 83-54-13 34-66-16 8-27-2 0-8-0 26-15-0 1-46-6 23-51-15 32-37-9 32-10-2 66-4-2 50-2-6 40-12-15 21-30-9 9-41-2 6-74-2
Penalties BSU leads BSU trails Penalties even Goals Power Play Short-Handed Unassisted BSU plays in... October November December January February March April Record against... CHA CCHA ECAC Hockey East MAAC/Atlantic Hockey WCHA Independent includes CHA Tournament
40
2009-10
9-7-1 10-7-0 1-2-0
64-82-17 63-56-11 30-26-6
40 4 7
340 49 10
1-5-0 4-2-0 3-1-0 3-5-0 4-1-1 5-1-0 0-1-0
14-27-6 33-28-7 22-32-6 35-25-5 31-34-10 23-16-0 0-1-0
14-5-1* 1-1-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 3-7-0 0-0-0
117-68-23* 7-15-1 4-6-5 2-5-0 7-3-2 16-66-3 2-0-0*
17 Matt Francis
19 Matt Read
20 Ben Kinne
21 Brandon Marino
22 Ian Lowe
23 Chris McKelvie
26 Tyler Lehrke
27 Kyle Hardwick
28 Jamie MacQueen
29 Brad Hunt
33 Dan Bakala
35 Orlando Alamano
Opponent at (RV) Minnesota State at (RV) Minnesota State at (RV) Air Force at (RV) Air Force (RV) St. Cloud State (RV) St. Cloud State • at Ala.-Huntsville • at Ala.-Huntsville • at Niagara • at Niagara Michigan Tech Michigan Tech • Ala.-Huntsville • Ala.-Huntsville vs. U-Mass
Date Oct. 10 Oct. 11 Oct. 17 Oct. 18 Oct. 24 Oct. 25 Nov. 7 Nov. 8 Nov. 21 Nov. 22 Nov. 28 Nov. 29 Dec. 5 Dec. 6 Dec. 28
G-A-P DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 1-1-2 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-1-2 0-1-1 0-1-1 1-0-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 1-1-2
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1
G-A-P 0-2-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-1-2
G-A-P 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 DNP DNP 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP
G-A-P 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0
G-A-P 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-2 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-2 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0
GA-Sv DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
GA-Sv DNP 3-33 DNP 6-31 DNP 4-23 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
at (RV) Dartmouth (RV) North Dakota at (RV) North Dakota at Minnesota Duluth at Minnesota Duluth • Niagara • Niagara • at Robert Morris • at Robert Morris • Ala.-Huntsville • Ala.-Huntsville • at Robert Morris • at Robert Morris • at Niagara • at Niagara • Robert Morris • Robert Morris Ala.-Huntsville Robert Morris vs (2) Notre Dame vs (9) Cornell vs (4) Miami (Ohio)
Dec. 29 Jan. 2 Jan. 3 Jan. 16 Jan. 17 Jan. 23 Jan. 24 Jan. 30 Jan. 31 Feb. 6 Feb. 7 Feb. 14 Feb. 15 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Mar. 6 Mar. 7 Mar. 13 Mar. 14 Mar. 28 Mar. 29 Apr. 9
1-0-1 0-1-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-2 1-0-1 1-1-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-0-2 1-2-3 1-2-3 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1
0-0-0 1-1-2 0-2-2 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 1-2-3 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 1-2-3 2-0-2 2-1-3 1-1-2 0-2-2 1-0-1
0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 2-0-2 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1 0-0-0
0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-2 1-0-1 1-1-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 1-0-1 0-0-0 DNP 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0
DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 1-0-1 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
0-0-0 DNP DNP DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0
0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 1-1-2 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0
1-0-1 0-0-0 1-0-1 0-0-0 1-1-2 0-1-1 0-1-1 1-0-1 1-0-1 2-0-2 0-2-2 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-2 0-2-2 0-3-3 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 0-0-0
DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
DNP DNP 4-36 DNP 4-25 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 4-20 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP
The Last Time... Series Sweep at John Glas Fieldhouse BSU: Ala-Huntsville (2-0 / 4-2) Feb. 6-7, 2009 Opp: Minnesota State (3-4 / 0-1) Dec. 14-15, 2007
Four Goals Scored, Individual BSU: Luke Erickson (4) vs. Niagara Opp: Dallas Miller, Augsburg
Series Sweep on the Road BSU: at Niagara (3-1 / 4-1) Opp: at Minnesota Duluth (2-3 / 2-4)
Feb. 19-20, 2009 Jan. 16-17, 2008
Five Goals Scored, Individual BSU: Jamie Erb vs. St. Scholastica Opp: John Carr, Lake Superior State
Dec. 19, 1991 Feb. 28, 1970
Overtime Goal Scored, Individual BSU: Matt Read vs. Robert Morris Opp: Brett Hextall at N. Dakota
Oct. 31, 1997 Dec. 7, 2002
Three Assists, Individual BSU: Brad Hunt (3) vs. Robert Morris Opp: Tony Mosey, St. Cloud State
March 7, 2009 Oct. 25, 2008
Two Power Play Goals Scored, Individual BSU: Tyler Scofield (2) 1st vs. Ala-Huntsville Feb. 7, 2009 Opp: Matt Sweazey at Alabama-Huntsville Nov. 7, 2008
March 4, 2006 Oct. 13, 2006
Four Assists, Individual BSU: Tyler Scofield (4) vs. Niagara Opp: Rastislav Spirko (4) at N. Dakota
Dec. 3, 2005 Dec. 17, 2005
Three Shorthanded Goals, Team BSU: (3) vs. Robert Morris Opp: under research
March 7, 2009
Five Assists, Individual BSU: Shane Kalbrener vs. Wayne State Nov. 25, 2000 Opp: under research
Five Goals in Period, Team BSU: 2nd Period (5) vs. Robert Morris Opp: under research
March 7, 2009
Penalty Shot Goal, Individual BSU: Tyler Scofield vs. Ala-Huntsville Opp: under research
Feb. 17, 2007
10 Goals Scored, Team BSU: St. Scholastica (12) Opp: Minn.-Duluth (12) Five Power Play Goals Scored, Team BSU: Ala-Huntsville (5) Opp: at Maine (6) 40+ Shots on Goal, Team BSU: vs. Robert Morris (40) Opp: at North Dakota (40)
March 14, 2009 Jan. 3, 2009
Dec. 3, 2005 Jan. 2, 1987
50+ Shots on Goal, Team BSU: at Robert Morris (50) Opp: at Ala-Huntsville (50)
Jan. 6, 2006 Jan. 22, 2005
Five Points, Individual BSU: Travis Winter (2-3=5) vs. Wayne State Opp: Randy Harris (3-2=5) at Niagara
Hat Trick, Individual BSU: Tyler Scofield (3) vs. Robert Morris Opp: Randy Harris (3) at Niagara
March 7, 2009 Feb. 24, 2006
Six or More Points, Individual BSU: Shane Kalbrener vs. Wayne State Nov. 25, 2000 Opp: Dallas Miller, Augsburg Jan. 3, 1987
Jan. 6, 2007 Feb. 24, 2006
2009-10
Shorthanded Goal Scored, Individual BSU Matt Read vs. Notre Dame March 28, 2009 Opp: Jason Gregoire at N. Dakota Jan. 3, 2009 March 14, 2009 Jan. 3, 2009
Swept Non-CHA Opponent Home: Michigan Tech; Nov. 28-29, 2008 Road: Minnesota State; Nov. 3-4, 2006
41
Individual game-by-game stats
Individual Game-by-Game Statistics
2008-09 game recpas
Bemidji State Minnesota State
2 5
Bemidji State Minnesota State
October 10, 2008 Mankato, Minn. - Alltel Center Attendance : 4,123
1
2
3
Final
Bemidji State (0-1-0)
0
2
0
Minnesota State (1-0-0)
1
3
1
Second Period 3:44 BSU 1-1 7:01 MSU 1-2 9:38 BSU 2-2 11:41 MSU 2-3 18:35 MSU 2-4
3
Final
2
Bemidji State (0-3-0)
1
1
0
2
4
Air Force (3-0-0)
3
0
3
6
Final
2
Bemidji State (0-2-0)
0
0
2
5
Minnesota State (2-0-0)
0
1
3
First Period None Second Period 14:40 MSU 0-1 6x6 Third Period 6:09 MSU 0-2 10:18 MSU 0-3 17:48 BSU 1-3 18:15 BSU 2-3 19:36 MSU 2-4
Trevor Bruess (1) (Youds, Davis)
First Period 7:06 AFA 0-1 7:20 AFA 0-2 17:07 BSU 1-2 17:41 AFA 1-3
Zach Harrison (1) (Galiardi)
6x4 PP Kurt Davis (1) (Berge, Louwerse) 6x6 uJason Wiley (1) (Berge, Davis) 6x6 Shea Walters (1) (Kinne, Bostock) 6x6 EA Tyler Scofield (1) (Matt Read) 6x6 EN Geoff Irwin (2) (Berge, Bruess)
2
3
Final
6 6
6 6
6 12
18 24
BSU MSU
1
2
3
Final
9 11
10 16
12 10
31 37
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
12 14
24 28
0 0
2-for-12 1-for-10
.167 .100
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
10 11
20 22
0 0
0-for-9 1-for-7
.000 .143
BSU MSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (0-1-0)
11
6
7
24
60:00
5
MSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Zacharias (1-0-0)
6
4
6
16
60:00
2
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Cramer 2F Lowe Winter Marino 3F Kinne McKelvie Lehrke 4F MacQueen Walters Billberg 1D Bostock Hunt 2D MacIntyre McManamin 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
0-0=0 pts 1-3=4 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-0=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-3=5 pts
MANKATO, Minn. -- In a game littered with 26 penalties, rhythm and momentum were hard to come by for either team. But Minnesota State University, Mankato scored a pair of unanswered goals during the final nine minutes of the second period to shake Bemidji State University en route to a 5-2 victory in the teams’ 2008-09 season-opener, Friday at Alltel Center in Mankato, Minn. A grand total of 52 minutes were served in the penalty box resulting in 22 power-play opportunities. The Beavers capitalized on two of their 12 chances, while MSU scored on 1-of-10, but MSU used a couple transitional goals to make the difference and stretch its wining streak over the Beavers to three games. Despite the loss, there were a number of bright sports for the Beavers. In just his sixth collegiate appearance, sophomore goaltender Matt Dalton looked sharp in net. He posted 24 saves in 60 minutes of play. The Beavers also got productivity out of some of its new faces. Brad Hunt recorded his first collegiate marker on a power-play unit that featured a several newcomers. BSU also got some familiar faces in the scoring column right of the bat. Senior captain Travis Winter netted his first power-play goal of the season while Brandon Marino netted an assist of each of BSU’s goals. The Beavers dominated play as the game got underway. But two early penalties would sway the momentum in MSU’s favor. With Cody Bostock in the box for holding, Matt Read was whistled for interference at the 3:44 mark. The penalty set up a 40-second, 5-on-3 opportunity for the Mavericks. MSU would need only 24 seconds to take advantage of the chance. Mike Louwerse put Minnesota State up 1-0 at the 4:16 mark tapping a rebound passed Dalton. Dalton, who stopped 11 MSU shots in the first period, made the initial save but lost sight of the puck for a second and Louwerse made him pay. The freshman’s first collegiate goal and first of two on the game was assisted by Mick Berg and Kurt Davis. Winter knotted the game at 1-1, 3:44 into the second period when he collected a rebound off a Marino backhand and tucked it into the back of the net with just one second remaining on the Beavers’ fifth power-play chance of the contest. Along with an assist from Marino, sophomore forward Ian Lowe collected a helper on the play. Geoff Irwin put the Mavericks up 2-1 at the 7:01 mark of the period, when he posted a 5-on-5 marker with help from Jason Wiley and Ben Youds. Nine-minutes, 38-seconds into the second period, MSU’s Nick Canzanello was sent to the box to put BSU on the man advantage for the ninth time. Marino won the ensuing face off in the Beavers’ offensive zone setting up Hunt for a one-timer. The Mavericks finished the second period strong netting two unanswered goals to head into the second intermission with a 4-2 lead. The third period moved along at a snail’s pace in comparison to the helter skelter tempo of the first 40 minutes. Each team was kept off the scoreboard during the first 18 minutes of the period. But Trevor Bruess drew the curtain on the performance netting the Mavericks’ fifth goal of the night at 18:08 of the third period.
Chris McKelvie (1) (Lehrke, Kinne)
Third Period 9:27 AFA 2-4 6x6 18:31 AFA 2-5 6x4 PP 19:15 AFA 2-6 6x5 PP
Blake Page (1) (Kozlak, Phillipich) Jacques Lamoureux (4) (Kirby, Flynn) Josh Frider (4) (Page, Kozlak)
BSU AFA
1
2
3
Final
3 17
10 6
5 9
18 32
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
8 1
16 2
0 0
0-for-0 2-for-7
.000 .286
BSU AFA
Goaltending
Goaltending
BSU
Second Period 9:45 BSU 2-3 6x6
Penalties & Power Plays
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
6x6 Josh Frider (3) (Lamoureux, Mathis) 6x6 Jeff Hajner (1) (Sellers, Flynn) 6x6 Tyler Scofield (2) (Read) 6x6 uJacques Lamoureux (3) (Olson, Frider)
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal
1
Goaltending
42
2
3
Penalties & Power Plays BSU MSU
1
2
Shots on Goal BSU MSU
Scoring Summary
1
Mike Louwerse (1) (Berge, Davis)
2 5
October 17, 2008 Colorado Springs, Colo. - Cadet Ice Arena Attendance : 2,317
Scoring Summary
6x5 PP Travis Winter (1) (Marino, Lowe) 5x5 Geoff Irwin (1) (Wiley, Youds) 5x4 PP Brad Hunt (1) (Marino) 6x6 uJustin Jokinen (1) (Mueller, Schiller) 6x6 Mike Louwerse (2) (unassisted)
Third Period 18:08 MSU 2-5 6x6
Bemidji State Air Force
October 11, 2008 Mankato, Minn. - Alltel Center Attendance : 4,174
Scoring Summary
First Period 4:16 MSU 0-1 6x4 PP
2 4
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
BSU
1
Tot
Min
Alamano (0-1-0) Empty Net
11 0
15 0
7 0
33 0
59:11 0:49
3 1
Dalton (0-2-0)
14
6
6
26
60:00
6
AFA
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
MSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Volkening (3-0-0)
2
9
5
16
60:00
2
Zacharias (2-0-0)
9
10
10
29
60:00
2
1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-0=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-3=5 pts
MANKATO, Minn. -- It was business as usual at the Alltel Center in Mankato, Minn. Saturday. The Bemidji State men’s hockey team used good team defense, solid goaltending, and 60 minutes of tenacity to put itself in position for a victory versus Minnesota State University, Mankato, but the Beavers ran out of time and the Mavericks netted an empty-net goal in the final minute to take the game 4-2 and sweep the series. Down 3-0 with less than three minutes to go, BSU put together backto-back goals by Shea Walters and Tyler Scofield separated by just 26 seconds to charge into the last minute down 3-2. “We were a better team tonight and that is all I could ask,” commented Bemidji State head coach Tom Serratore. “I was very happy with our pace. He added, “We had great tempo, got some good scoring chances and were better defensively.” Scoreless through 30 minutes, the Mavericks got the first big break of the game at the 10:49 mark of the second when freshman Ben Kinne was whistled for tripping MSU’s Geoff Irwin as he streaked towards the crease. The penalty set up the Minnesota State forward with a rare penalty shot opportunity. But in the first start of his senior campaign, BSU goaltender Orlando Alamano literally stood on his head to keep MSU off the board. Alamano found himself on his back after Irwin’s deak and threw his arm up to knock the shot out of the air with his glove. The hosts would, however, take a 1-0 lead into the second intermission posting an even-strength goal by Zach Harrison on a feed from Ryan Galiardi with 5:20 remaining in the stanza. MSU added a second goal 5:09 into the third, just 13 seconds into a 5-on-3 opportunity. Kurt Davis netted his first goal of the year with help from Mick Berge and Mike Louwerse. The assist by Berge was the first of three on the night for the Maverick senior. A goal from Jason Wiley would stretch the Maverick lead to three goals, 3-0, at the 10-minute mark with Berge and Davis assisting. Though they were down, the Beavers continued to press on and prove they were not out. BSU out shot MSU 12-10 during the final 20 minutes and one of those shots found the back of the net with 2:12 remaining. Newcomer Walters notched his first collegiate goal on a “veteran” move from the back wall. Fellow freshman Kinne and alternate captain Cody Bostock collected their first points of the season on the goal. Reeling MSU to within two goals, Serratore called a timeout in an attempt to draw up a comeback plan. The Beavers returned to the ice with an extra attacker after Alamano left the ice for the bench following a BSU win on the face off. Seconds later Scofield netted his first goal of 2008-09 on a pass from Matt Read. The goal brought the score to 3-2 with just 45 seconds to go, but the Mavericks would slam the door on a BSU comeback with 24 seconds left as Irwin potted a short-angle shot on the empty net. Minnesota State finished the game with a 37-31 edge in shots on goal and was 1-for-7 on the power-play while BSU failed to capitalize on nine opportunities. Alamano piled up 33 saves in the loss, allowing three goals in 59:11.
2009-10
3
GA
Bemidji State Lines
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Cramer 2F Lowe Winter Marino 3F Kinne McKelvie Lehrke 4F MacQueen Walters Billberg 1D Bostock Hunt 2D MacIntyre McManamin 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
2
1F Scofield Read Cramer 2F Lowe Winter Marino 3F Kinne McKelvie Lehrke 4F MacQueen Walters Billberg 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Hardwick bold= starting line TOTAL
1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-2=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-3=5 pts
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- The Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team entered the Cadet Ice Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. for its series with the United State Air Force Academy unbeaten in 19 of the last 20 meetings, but the Falcons turned the tables tonight netting three goals in the first and three more in the third to cruise to a 6-2 victory. It took the Beavers a full 20-minutes period to get their legs under themselves and compete. Air Force out hustled the BSU and the 3-1 score wasn’t the only thing that the Falcons had to show for it. BSU was out shot 17-3 during the first period. “We got beat to almost every loose puck in the first,” commented head coach Tom Serratore following the non-conference contest. “We came back and made it a game in the second but just folded in the third and that was too bad. “We are not a very good team right now and need to get back to the basics.” Serratore added. “That starts with moving our feet.” The Falcons came out of the gate and put the Beavers in a 2-0 hole early. Josh Frider took a rebound off of BSU goaltender Matt Dalton to net the Falcons’ first marker of the night. Just 14 seconds later, Jeff Hajner turned a BSU turnover into a goal leaving the Beavers wondering what had just happened. Tyler Scofield sliced the Falcon lead in half with his second goal of the season on a pass from Matt Read at the 17:07 mark of the period, but Air Force would add a goal 34 seconds later to skate into the first intermission up 3-1. BSU returned from the break with an extra jump in its step. The Beavers out shot their hosts 10-6 in the period and reeled the Falcons to within a goal, 3-2. midway through the second period on junior forward Chris McKelvie’s first goal of the season. Tyler Lehrke and Ben Kinne assisted on the play. The third period made the difference in the game for the Falcons. BSU came out a bit flat and USAFA exploited it. Blake Page would beat Dalton at the 9:27 mark of the third period to give USAFA a two-goal cushion and the Falcons would add a pair of power-play goals in the game’s final 90 seconds to take the front half of the series 6-3. Just seven days removed from a 22-power-play affair with Minnesota State in which BSU was on the man advantage 12 times, the Beavers went the full 60 minutes without a single power play, marking the first time since the team made the jump to major college hockey in the 1999-2000 season that BSU has been held without a single power-play opportunity. The BSU penalty kill unit held the Falcons in check for 58 minutes but a 5-on-3 goal followed by a 5-on-4 tally allowed USAFA to finish the game 2-for-7 on the power play. Dalton made 26 saves in the 60-minute loss, including 14 in the first period. He falls to 0-2-0 on the season. Andrew Volkening made 16 stops in the game improving to 3-0-0 on the season. The Air Force victory, its first over BSU since 2005, was just its seventh in the all-time series. BSU still owns a 23-7-2 lead in the rivalry.
0 6
St. Cloud State Bemidji State
October 18, 2008 Colorado Springs, Colo. - Cadet Ice Arena Attendance : 2,023
St. Cloud State Bemidji State
2 4
5 3
October 25, 2008 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,911
October 24, 2008 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 2,414 (Sellout)
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Bemidji State (0-4-0)
0
0
0
0
St. Cloud State (2-3-0)
0
1
1
2
St. Cloud State (3-3-0)
0
4
1
5
Air Force (4-0-0)
2
2
2
6
Bemidji State (1-4-0)
0
2
2
4
Bemidji State (1-5-0)
1
0
2
3
First Period 00:30 AFA 0-1 6x6 uJacques Lamoureux (5) (Frider, Olson) 17:06 AFA 0-2 6x5 PP Greg Flynn (1) (Burnett, Mathis) Second Period 11:00 AFA 0-3 6x6 Greg Flynn (2) (Lamoureux, Olson) 18:32 AFA 0-4 6x5 PP Mike Phillipich (1) (Mathis, Olson) Third Period 8:42 AFA 0-5 6x6 16:02 AFA 0-6 6x6
Mike Phillipich (2) (Kozlak, Page) G. Burgdoerfer (1) (Lamoureux, Sellers)
Shots on Goal BSU AFA
First Period 17:18 BSU 0-1 6x5 PP Cody Bostock (1) (Hunt)
Second Period 00:59 BSU 0-1 6x6 Travis Winter (2) (unassisted) 6:38 BSU 0-2 6x5 PP Matt Read (1) (Scofield, McManamin) 19:28 SCSU 1-2 6x6 Mitch Ryan (1) (Mosey)
Second Period 8:33 SCSU 1-1 13:23 SCSU 2-1 17:14 SCSU 3-1 19:21 SCSU 4-1
Third Period 3:24 BSU 1-3 6x5 PP uBrandon Marino (1) (Peluso, Read) 19:39 BSU 1-4 6x6 EN Ben Kinne (1) (unassisted) 19:57 SCSU 2-4 6x6 Jordy Christian (1) (Volpei, Zabkowicz)
2
3
Final
6 11
5 17
4 9
15 37
SCSU BSU
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
12 6
32 12
0 0
0-for-5 2-for-11
.000 .182
1
2
3
Final
10 9
12 7
13 5
35 21
SCSU BSU
Goaltending
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
10 12
28 24
0 0
0-for-8 2-for-5
.000 .400
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Alamano (0-2-0)
9
15
7
31
60:00
6
AFA
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Volkening (4-0-0)
6
5
4
15
60:00
0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Walters 2F Kinne Winter Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F MacQueen Lowe Findlay 1D McManamin MacIntyre 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Peluso Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- The U.S. Air Force Academy got three points from Jacques Lamoureux and Brent Olson, while Greg Flynn and Mike Phillipich each scored two goals to power the Falcons for a 6-0 victory over Bemidji State University in the series finale at the Cadet Ice Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. Saturday. The Falcons used the 6-0 shutout to complete its first series sweep over the Beavers since the teams’ first meeting in 1997. Air Force took a lead just 30-seoncds into the game, on a Lamoureux goal, and would not look back defeating the Beavers in decisive fashion. “This was the toughest weekend we have had since I have been the head coach here,” stated BSU head coach Tom Serratore during his postgame comments. “We got beat in every facet of the game. “Hopefully we have bottomed out now and can move on from here.” After the Lamoureux marker would put USAFA up 1-0 early, the Falcons came back in the first periods’ final minutes to take a 2-0 cushion heading into the first intermission. Flynn netted his first goal of the season and first of two on the night with help form Derrick Burnett and Scott Mathis on the power play. The Beavers were overmatched in the second period. The team was out shot 17-5 and saw an Air Force lead swell from 2-0 to 4-0. Flynn extended the Falcons’ lead to 3-0 with his second goal of the night at the 11-minute mark of the second period. Lamoureux and Olson were credited with assists on the even-strength goal. With just 1:28 remaining in the period, Air Force would pile on another goal when Phillipich flipped a rebound over the shoulder of BSU netminder Orlando Alamano for his first goal of the evening. The initial rebound came off the shot of Mathis who earned his second assist of the game on the play. The third period was more of the same for the hosts. The Falcons got even-strength goals from Phillipich at the 8:42 mark and Greg Burgdoerfer, his first of 2008-09, with just 3:58 remaining to bring the score to its final resting place. After skating through its first game at the NCAA Division I level without a penalty 24 hours earlier, BSU went on the man advantage five times in the game but was unable to find the back of the net on any and finished the weekend 0-5 on the power play. On the other hand, BSU was whistled for 12 penalties and put Air Force up a man on 11 occasion. USAFA was 2-for-11 on the power play. For the second consecutive night and the fourth time this season, BSU was out shot in the game. Air Force edged BSU by 22 shots, 37-15. Alamano made 31 saves in the 60-minute loss, including a 15-stop second period. He falls to 0-2-0 on the season. Andrew Volkening picked up his fourth victory of the season posting 15 saves in his sixth career shutout.
2
3
Final
7 15
16 8
5 8
28 31
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
8 9
16 18
0 0
3-for-9 2-for-7
.333 .286
SCSU BSU
Goaltending
Goaltending
BSU
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen SCSU BSU
Garrett Roe (2) (Raboin, Mosey) Jared Festler (2) (Roe, Mosey) Aaron Marvin (2) (Mosey, Ryan) uJared Festler (3) (Novak, Barta)
Third Period 13:54 BSU 4-2 6x5 PP Brad Hunt (2) (Winter, Marino) 15:29 BSU 4-3 6x6 Tyler Scofield (3) (Read, Walters) 19:51 SCSU 5-3 6x6 EN Mitch Ryan (2) (Swanson, Marvin)
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
5x4 PP 6x5 PP 6x6 6x5 PP
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays BSU AFA
First Period None
SCSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dunn (1-1-0) Empty Net
9 0
5 0
3 0
17 0
59:26 00:34
3 1
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (1-2-0)
10
11
12
33
59:59
2
SCSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Weslosky (2-2-0) Empty Net
14 0
8 0
6 0
28 0
59:59 00:01
3 0
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Alamano (0-3-0) Empty Net
7 0
12 0
4 0
23 0
58:24 1:36
4 1
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Walters 2F Kinne Winter Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F MacQueen Lowe Findlay 1D Bostock Hunt 2D McManamin MacIntyre 3D Peluso Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1-2=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 4-4=8 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- There’s just nothing like a little home cookin’. After playing the first two weeks on the road and posting its the longest winless streak to open a season since 2002-03, the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team returned home to a sold out John Glas Fieldhouse and responded with a 4-2 victory over No. 15 St. Cloud State. The win not only helped the Beavers to improve to 40-11-3 all-time in home openers, it also marked the first time the Beavers have defeated the Huskies the since Dec. 6, 1986--a game BSU head coach Tom Serratore suited up for as a junior forward and most of the current roster was in diapers. Despite being out-shot 35-21 and seeing the Huskies get eight powerplay chances, the Beavers stood their ground, made the best of their special teams’ opportunities. BSU held SCSU scoreless on all eight power-play chances while its two goals on five power-play tries, made the difference in the game. After a scoreless first period, Travis Winter picked off a SCSU pass and dribbled a puck past Dan Dunn to score an unassisted goal just 59-seconds into the second period. Matt Read netted his first marker of the season with help from Tyler Scofield and Graham McManamin. The power-play goal at the 6:38 mark of the period gave the Beavers a 2-0 cushion. But SCSU would trim the lead to 2-1 heading into the second intermission when Mitch Ryan collected a rebound off a Tony Mosey shot and beat a sprawling Matt Dalton for the Huskies’ first goal of the weekend. Brandon Marino stretched the BSU lead to a pair, 3-1, 3:24 into the third stanza. Chris Peluso and Read were credited with assists on what would turn out to be the game-winning goal. Clinging to a 3-1 lead midway through the third, the Beavers’ penalty kill was tested. With Read already in the box for tripping, BSU’s Cody Bostock and McManamin were whistled for two-minute penalties putting SCSU on a 5-3 advantage for 2:38. The Beavers stood strong and kept the Huskies off the scoreboard. Ben Kinne picked up and errant pass at neutral ice, skated it top of the far circle and score on an empty net to record his first collegiate goal and put the Beavers up 4-1 with 21 seconds to play. The Huskies would pot a goal 18 seconds later, but the night belonged to Dalton and the Beavers. Dalton recorded a double-digit save totals in each period and finished the night with 33 saves in 59:59 of action. He moves to 1-2-0 on the season. For St. Cloud, Dunn faced 21 shots and stopped 17 in 59:26 of play watching his season record even to 1-1-0.
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Walters 2F Kinne Winter Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F Billberg Lowe Findlay 1D Bostock Hunt 2D Peluso Jundt 3D McManamin MacIntyre bold= starting line TOTAL
1-2=3 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-1=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-5=8 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- Despite goals by Brad Hunt and Tyler Scofield in the final 6:06 of regulation, the nationally-ranked St. Cloud State Huskies were too much for Bemidji State Saturday at the John Glas Fieldhouse. The Huskies used a four-goal second period, which included a 3-for-4 showing on the power play, to push past the Beavers, 5-3, and square the series at a game apiece. Cody Bostock gave the Beavers a one-goal lead, 1-0, at the end of the first period when he recorded his first goal of the season at the 17:18 mark with help from Hunt on BSU’s third power-play opportunity of the stanza. BSU would hold that lead until Garret Roe knotted the game at 1-1 with the first of three second period power-play markers by the Huskies at the 8:33 into the second period. Jared Festler would get help from Roe just five minutes later, scoring another goal on the man advantage to give the Huskies’ their first lead of the weekend series. It was a lead they would not relinquish as SCSU would get goals from Aaron Marvin and again from Festler before time expired on the period to take a 4-1 lead into the third. Down three goals with just over six minutes to play, Hunt supplied the Beavers with a spark sniping a slap shot past Jase Weslosky on the power play to reel St. Cloud State to within two goals. His power-play marker coupled with his first period helper gave the freshman his first collegiate multi-point night. Just 1:36 later, Scofield brought the 1,911 Beaer faithful in attendance to their feet with a dazzling move to slip the puck into the back of the net and breath life into a BSU comeback. Shea Walters and Matt Read were credited with assists on the play. After BSU head coach Tom Serratore called timeout to pull his goaltender with 1:36 to play, the Beavers came up with a couple good scoring opportunities but could not convert and the Huskies would add an empty net goal with nine seconds remaining to push the score to 5-3 and solidify the victory. Orlando Alamano made 23 saves in the outing, but allowed four goals and fell to 0-3-0 on the season. Weselosky posted 29 saves in 59:59 of action to garner the win, improving to 2-2-0 on the season. For the first time this season, the Beavers out shot their opponents, 31-28, but it would be in vain. SCSU trims BSU’s lead in the series to 43-36-3 and exits the weekend owning a 11-1-0 record versus BSU since the teams began competing at the NCAA Division I level in 1999, after going 1-1 on the weekend.
2009-10
43
2008-09 game recaps
Bemidji State Air Force
2008-09 game recpas
Bemidji State Ala.-Huntsville
2 4
Bemidji State Ala.-Huntsville
November 7, 2008 Huntsville, Ala. - Von Braun Center Attendance : 3,474
Bemidji State Niagara
2 1
1 3
November 21, 2008 Lewiston, N.Y. - Dwyer, Arena Attendance : 1,124
November 8, 2008 Huntsville, Ala. - Von Braun Center Attendance : 4,368
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Bemidji State (1-6-0; 0-1-0)
0
1
1
2
Bemidji State (2-6-0; 1-1-0)
0
0
1
1
2
Bemidji State (2-7-0;1-2-0)
0
0
1
1
Ala.-Huntsville (1-3-1;1-0-0)
0
1
3
4
Ala.-Huntsville (1-4-1;1-1-0)
1
0
0
0
1
Niagara (5-5-1; 1-0-1)
0
2
1
3
First Period None Second Period 2:08 UAH 0-1 3:16 BSU 1-1 Third Period 2:23 BSU 2-1 7:19 UAH 2-2 10:22 UAH 2-3 18:32 UAH 2-4
First Period 18:28 UAH 0-1 6x6 6x5 PP Matt Sweazey (2) (Campbell, Coburn) 6x4 PP Cody Bostock (2) (Hunt, Lowe) 6x6 Graham McManamin (1) (Read) 6x5 PP Matt Sweazey (3) (Coburn, Campbell) 6x5 PP uAndrew Coburn (2) (Durnie, Kalinchuk) 6x6 Neil Ruffini (1) (unassisted)
Shots on Goal BSU UAH
2
3
Final
6 7
4 10
5 8
15 25
Second Period None Third Period 3:56 BSU 1-1 6x6
Matt Read (2) (Tamane, Scofield)
Overtime 2:02 BSU 1-2 6x6
uBrandon Marino (2) (Hunt, Lowe)
Min
SHG
6 6
12 12
0 0
PPG/O 1-for-6 3-for-6
BSU UAH
2
3
OT
10 8
10 8
8 8
5 0
Final 33 24
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
.167 .500
6 8
12 16
0 0
0-for-6 0-for-6
.000 .000
BSU UAH
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (1-3-0) Empty Net
7 0
9 0
5 0
21 0
58:41 1:19
UAH
1
2
3
Tot
MacNicol (1-1-0)
6
3
4
13
BSU
1
2
3
OT
Tot
Min
GA
4 0
Dalton (2-3-0)
7
8
8
0
23
62:02
1
UAH
1
2
3
OT
Tot
Min
GA
Min
GA
Talbot (0-3-1)
10
10
7
4
31
62:02
2
60:00
2
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Walters 2F Kinne Winter Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F MacQueen Lowe Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1
2
3
Final
7 11
12 5
17 3
36 19
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 4
8 8
0 0
0-for-4 1-for-4
.000 .250
BSU NU
Goaltending
Goaltending 2
BSU NU
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
1
6x6 Tyler Scofield (4) (Read, Peluso) 6x6 Paul Zanette (3) (Ross, Consorti)
Shots on Goal
1
Pct.
BSU
6x6 Ted Cook (1) (Moran, Scarlato) 6x5 PP uEgor Mironov (3) (Dowd, Gotto)
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
Goaltending
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (2-4-0) Empty Net
11 0
3 0
2 0
16 0
58:24 1:36
3 0
NU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Pagliero (5-4-1)
7
12
16
35
60:00
1
Bemidji State Lines 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-0=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-3=5 pts
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. -- The University of Alabama-Huntsville got three power-play goals en route to a 4-2 victory over Bemidji State University in the teams’ 2008-09 College Hockey America opener Saturday at Von Braun Center in Huntsville, Ala. After playing the first period without a goal, it took just 3:16 for each to to get on the board in the second stanza. The Chargers were first to light the lamp as Matt Sweazey took advantage of a power-play opportunity. The UAH five crashed the net and Sweazey slipped a rebound off of an initial save by BSU goaltender Matt Dalton into the back of the net. Cody Campbell and Andrew Coburn were credited with assists on the play. Just 1:08 later, Cody Bostock netted his second goal of the young season firing a rocket past the Charger netminder to even the score, 1-1. Brad Hunt and Ian Lowe helped on the 5-on-3 power-play marker. Graham McMananin put the Beavers up 2-1 at the 2:23 mark of the second period with his first goal of the season, but the Chargers posted three unanswered goals in the game’s final 12:41 to steal the league win, 4-2. Sweazey took a feed from Campbell and Coburn and knotted the score at 2-2, with just under 13 minutes left in regulation. The Chargers got the game-winner off the stick of Coburn and Scott Kalinchuk added an insurance goal with 1:28 remaining to put the game out of reach. Dalton falls to 1-3-0 on the season after turning away 21 UAH shots and allowing four goals in 58:41 between the pipes. Ala.-Huntsville’s Blake MacNicol made 13 saves on 15 shots improving to 1-1-0 in the win. The Chargers got their three special teams goals on six power-play opportunities while the Beavers made good on just one of their six chances on the man advantage. The Beavers seemed to be chasing the Chargers all night. BSU managed just 15 shots on goal and were out shot in each of the three periods as UAH held a 25-15 advantage in shots. The Charger victory was the first over BSU since Feb. 17, 2007 and put an end to the Beavers’ six game unbeaten streak. The win also allowed UAH to hold on to a 27-24-3 lead in the all-time series.
44
First Period None Second Period 10:28 NU 0-1 11:14 NU 0-2 Third Period 00:29 BSU 1-2 14:54 NU 1-3
Joey Koudys (2) (Morrison, Ward)
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays BSU UAH
OT Final
1F Scofield Read Tamane 2F Kinne Winter Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F MacQueen Lowe Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1-2=3 pts 1-0=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-4=6 pts
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. -- Brandon Marino’s goal just 2:02 into overtime lifted the Beavers to a 2-1 victory over University of Alabama-Huntsville Saturday at the Von Braun Center in Huntsville, Ala. The win not only helped the Beavers earn a series split with the Chargers, it also stood as the first College Hockey America victory of the season for the defending regular season champions, who exited the weekend with an overall record of 2-6-0 while it is 1-1-0 in conference play. After a difficult non-conference slate during which the Beavers posted a 1-5-0 record versus three teams (Air Force, Minnesota State and St. Cloud State) that have seen time among the nation’s top 20 in the opening weeks season, BSU had high expectations for the CHA-opening series at UAH. Despite being let down by a Friday night loss, BSU head coach Tom Serratore is hoping Saturday’s dramatic victory on the road might be just what the doctor ordered. “We played 60 pretty darn good minutes of hockey tonight,” said Serratore. “There is nothing that a hard-fought victory can’t cure. Tonight we played really well and that is gratifying.” It took 18-minutes and 28-seconds, but the Chargers got a goal from Joey Koudys and would take a 1-0 lead into the second period. A scoreless second stanza would set the teams up for a race to the finish. BSU’s leading scorer Matt Read evened the score, 1-1, with his second goal of the season at the 3:56 mark of the third period. The sophomore was in the right place at the right time taking the pass from Brett Tamane and Tyler Scofield and flipped it past the UAH goaltender Cameron Talbot. The helper marked the first collegiate point of Tamane’s career who saw his first action of the season Saturday. Not a single player was whistled for a penalty during the first 14:56 of the third period, but a quartet of infractions down the stretch would supply each team with two power-play chances in the final five minutes of regulation. While making for some tense moments, neither team could capitalize on the advantages forcing the teams into extra time to settle the score. The overtime period was all BSU. The Beavers out shot the Chargers 5-0 in the stanza with the last coming at the 2:02 mark. Marino funneled the puck towards the goal from the left corner with UAH players draped all over him. BSU got the bounce it needed as the puck found its way into the net. Talbot was superb between the pipes for the Chargers. The Beavers peppered the UAH netminder with 33 shots in the game. The backstop turned away 31 shots in the loss and falls to 0-3-1 on the season. Matt Dalton earned the first conference victory of his collegiate career, making 23 saves and allowing one goal in 62:02 of work. The overtime game is the first of the season for BSU and the victory in extra time extends BSU unbeaten steak in overtime games to 12 games. Just one night removed from the teams combining for four power-play markers, tonight each team was held scoreless in six chanced on the man advantage. BSU is now 7-1-1 versus UAH since Feb. 17, 2007 and extends its lead in the all-time series to 28-24-3.
2009-10
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Tamane 2F Kinne Winter Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F MacQueen Lowe Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-2=3 pts
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. -- A regulation hockey game spans three periods and a total of 60 minutes, but tonight Niagara University needed a window of less than a minute to get all the scoring it would need to prevail over Bemidji State. The Purple Eagles scored a pair of second period goals just 46 seconds apart, and despite a marker by Tyler Scofield as the third period got underway, the Beavers were unable to ground the Eagles who gained a 3-1 victory in the College Hockey America match up. The contest, which doubled as the CHA opener for the Purple Eagles, was a match up of the league’s 2007-08 regular-season champion in the Beavers and NU, the 2008 conference tournament champion, in a rematch of the tournament title game. A pure first period of play saw just one penalty called and the teams skate to the locker rooms after 20 minutes locked in a scoreless tie. Ted Cook got the Purple Eagles on the board at the 10:28 mark of the second period when he threw the puck towards the net and got a lucky bounce off BSU goaltender Matt Dalton’s skate and into the back of the net. Chris Moran and Armondo Scarlato were credited with assists on the goal. The goal was not only the first of Cook’s senior season, his 72nd career marker also made him Niagara’s all-time goal scoring leader. After a slight delay to clear the ice of debris, play continued, but only for 12 seconds before Graham McManamin was whistled for tripping putting NU on the power play for the third time in the game. The Purple Eagles would need just 34 seconds before they went up 2-0. Brian Dowd fired a shot that was tipped over the shoulder of Dalton by Egor Mironov at the 11:14 mark. The Beavers cut the NU led in half in the opening moments of the third period. Scofield netted his team-leading fourth goal of the season just 29 seconds into the final stanza. Chris Peluso continued his hot hand versus NU recording his seventh helper in six career games versus the Purple Eagles. Matt Read also added an assist on the play registering his eighth point of the season to hold onto the team’ scoring lead. NU’s Paul Zanette recorded a back breaking goal, putting NU up 3-1 with just over five minutes to go in the game. David Ross did the dirty work slicing down the left side to set the forward up for the insurance goal. Despite a spirited third period in which Bemidji State held a 17-3 advantage in shots on goal and called time out to pull Dalton for an extra attacker late, the Beavers’ solid scoring chances were few and BSU was unable to pull the Purple Eagles any closer. Bemidji State out shot NU 36-19 including a 29-8 margin in the final two periods. Mironov’s power-play goal midway through the second period was the game’ only special teams goal as NU was 1-for-4 and BSU failed to score on four power-play opportunities. Dalton falls to 2-4-0 on the season with the loss making 16 saves. Juliano Pagliero stumped the Beavers turning away 35 shots, while allowing one goal in 60 minutes of play. The win lifts the senior to 5-4-1 on the season.
3 1
Michigan Tech Bemidji State
November 22, 2008 Lewiston, N.Y. - Dwyer, Arena Attendance : 1,051
Michigan Tech Bemidji State
2 4
1 2
November 29, 2008 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,500
November 28, 2008 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,838
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Bemidji State (3-7-0; 2-2-0)
1
1
1
3
Michigan Tech (2-10-1)
0
0
0
0
Michigan Tech (2-11-1)
0
1
0
1
Niagara (5-6-1; 1-1-0)
0
0
1
1
Bemidji State (4-7-0)
1
1
1
3
Bemidji State (5-7-0)
1
1
0
2
First Period 00:13 BSU 1-0 6x6
First Period 6:18 BSU 0-1 6x6
Ben Kinne (2) (Marino, Bostock)
Second Period 8:03 BSU 2-0 6x6 uShea Walters (2) (Francis, McManamin) Third Period 5:00 NU 2-1 6x6 David Ross (3) (Martini, Olidis) 19:47 BSU 3-1 6x6 EN Matt Francis (1) (unassisted)
First Period 5:53 BSU 0-1 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (5) (Read, Hunt) Second Period 9:14 MTU 1-1 6x5 PP Jordan Baker (7) (unassisted) 19:37 BSU 1-2 6x6 uTyler Scofield (6) (Lowe, Dalton) Third Period None
uMatt Francis (2) (Bostock, Hunt)
Second Period 3:39 BSU 0-2 6x6 Matt Read (3) (unassisted) Third Period 19:25 BSU 0-3 6x5 PP Jamie MacQueen (1) (Marino, Hunt)
Shots on Goal BSU NU
2
3
Final
11 5
8 13
6 5
25 23
Penalties & Power Plays
MTU BSU
1
2
3
Final
9 6
8 5
6 8
23 19
MTU BSU
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 3
19 6
0 0
0-for-3 0-for-3
.000 .000
Goaltending
MTU BSU
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
5 9
10 18
0 0
0-for-8 1-for-4
.000 .250
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (3-4-0)
5
13
4
22
60:00
1
NU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Pagliero (5-5-1) Empty Net
10 0
7 0
5 0
22 0
59:24 00:36
2 1
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Walters 2F Kinne Winter Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F MacQueen Lowe Francis 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
2
3
Final
8 9
11 5
8 2
27 16
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 9
8 18
0 0
1-for-8 1-for-3
.125 .333
MTU BSU
Goaltending
Goaltending
BSU
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen BSU NU
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal
1
MTU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Nolan (1-8-1)
5
4
7
16
59:53
3
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (4-4-0)
9
8
6
23
59:55
0
MTU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Robinson (1-3-0) Empty Net
8 0
4 0
2 0
14 0
58:12 1:48
2 0
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (5-4-0)
8
10
8
26
60:00
1
Bemidji State Lines 0-0=0 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-1=3 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-4=7 pts
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. -- For the second consecutive night the Bemidji State University hockey team out played Niagara University at Dwyer Arena in Niagara Falls, N.Y., but on this night, the Beavers got the bounces they needed to gain a 3-1 victory and earn a split in the two-game College Hockey America road series. The boost the BSU needed came from a pair of freshman forwards. “It was a good game, good weekend and a gutty performance by our guys,” commented head coach Tom Serratore after the victory. “We really stood tall and weathered a few storms, especially in the second period, but won the period and won the game.” The Beavers stomped the peddle to the floor from the get go. The team recorded 22 shots in the first period with 11 going on target. Just 13 seconds after the drop of the puck, Ben Kinne got BSU on the board with his second collegiate goal. Travis Winter won the opening face off. From behind the Purple Eagles’ net, Brandon Marino flung the puck out in front to set up the tip in by Kinne. Senior blue liner Cody Bostock was also credited with an assist on the play. Tyler Lehrke was called for a five minute checking from behind penalty and sent to the locker room with 18:28 remaining in the first stanza leaving the Beavers with a short bench for virtually the hole game. The penalty may have stymied some squads, but the Beavers showed resilience not skipping a beat by killing off the major penalty. Niagara battled back and had the game tying-goal in the back of the net with 56-seconds remaining in the first, but the goal was disallowed due to a high stick sending the teams to the intermission with the score at 1-0 in favor of BSU. Shea Walters put the Beavers up 2-0 at the 8:03 mark of the second with a one of the most tremendous individual efforts for the Beavers in 200809. After a steal by Graham McManamin, Walters got the puck and sliced through the offensive zone past two defenders and beat Juliano Pagliero dragging the puck between his forehand and backhand before flipping it over the glove of the NU goaltender. Five minutes into the final stanza, Robert Martini scored a goal assisted by Ryan Olidis to cut the deficit in half. But the Beavers buttoned down the hatches and kept the Purple Eagles out of the net. In just his second game back from injury, senior winger Matt Francis closed the door on a Purple Eagle comeback and sent the 1,051 in attendance to the exits on an empty-net marker with 18.7-seconds on the clock. The goal ended a streak of three games, dating back to December of 2007, without a BSU win at Dwyer Arena and allowed the Beavers to pull the Purple Eagles to 14-19-8 in the all-time series. Bemidji State out shot NU 25-23 despite NU gaining a 13-5 advantage during the second period. Although each team went on the power-play three times, including the Purple Eagles’ five-minute man advantage in the first, both BSU and NU were held without a special teams goal. Matt Dalton was between the pipes for BSU. The sophomore improved to 3-4-0 on the season turning away 22 NU shots.
1F Scofield Read Tamane 2F Kinne Walters Marino 3F McKelvie Lehrke Cramer 4F MacQueen Billberg Francis 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1-0=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-0=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-3=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-4=7 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- In a defensive battle, the puck stops at the goaltender and tonight Bemidji State University’s Matt Dalton was as sharp as they come. Dalton made 23 saves en route to his second career shutout and led the Beavers to a 3-0 win over Michigan Tech University. The teams combined for just 39 shots on net with MTU taking a 23-16 advantage on the shot board, but the Beavers connected of three-of-16 to score their first-ever victory over the Huskies. The Beavers got on the scoreboard with 6:18 gone in the first period when senior Matt Francis registered his second goal in as many games. Brad Hunt picked off a pass at neutral ice and caught the Huskies in the middle of change. Hunt found Cody Bostock who threaded the needle through a pair of MTU players to Francis. The forward shot the puck and watched it dribble between the legs of the MTU goaltender Rob Nolan. The Beavers held the momentum and the score at 1-0 through the first period killing three Michigan Tech power-play opportunities, including a oneminute, 48-seocnd 5-on-3 as the period came to a close. Bemidji State built a 2-0 lead 3:39 into the second period. Matt Read picked up a loose puck in his own defensive zone, skated through the neutral zone and fired a bullet over the right shoulder of Nolan and into the top left corner of the net. The score would stay at 2-0 in favor of the hosting Beavers through the remainder of the second and deep into the third stanza, but BSU freshman Jamie MacQueen added an exclamation point, in the form of his first collegiate goal, with just 35 seconds left on the clock. Michigan Tech’s Drew Dobson was whistled for tripping at the 19-minute mark giving BSU its fourth power-play opportunity of the contest. Hunt picked off a MTU pass at the red line and hit Brandon Marino with a pass. Marino, in turn, found MacQueen in the slot and the rookie flipped his first career marker into the back of the net. The goal stood as the Beavers’ first power-play goal since Nov. 7--a streak spanning 21 opportunities. Dalton was superb in goal for the Beavers, turning away 23 MTU shots for his second shutout of the 2008-09 campaign. He improves to 5-4-0 on the season. Nolan, who stopped 16 shots and allowed all three goals, was tagged with the loss. He falls to 1-8-1 on the season.
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Lowe 2F Kinne Marino Francis 3F MacQueen Lehrke Cramer 4F Billberg McKelvie Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Adams G Dalton bold= starting line TOTAL
2-2=4 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 2-4=6 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- Tyler Scofield netted a pair of goals, powering the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team to a 2-1 victory over Michigan Tech at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse Saturday. The victory helped BSU to complete its first series sweep of the season and the first over a team hailing from the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) since back-to-back wins over University of Minnesota Duluth Dec. 8-9, 2006. In addition to Scofield’s scoring outburst, the Beavers owe a large portion of the victory to their defensive performance and the strength of special teams play. Defensively, Matt Dalton posted his third consecutive victory, turning away 26 of 27 MTU shots while the team blocked a season-high 29 shots. The staunch defensive effort continued into special teams play. The Beavers allowed the Huskies just one power-play goal on eight chances--including a 1:28 5-on-3 opportunity. Conversely, the Beavers converted one of their three opportunities on the man advantage. Scofield netted his team-leading fifth goal of the season five-minutes and 53-seconds into the first period to give the Beavers an early a 1-0 lead. Brad Hunt picked up a loose puck in the neutral zone and found Matt Read with a pass on the red line. Read found Scofield streaking down the slot and the senior forward took care of the rest flipping the puck pass the MTU goaltender. Michigan Tech knotted the score at 1-1 at 9:14 of the second period when Jordan Baker recorded unassisted goal. The goal came out of scrum in front of the BSU net during which Dalton made two saves before Baker’s shot found the back of the net. Ten-minutes and 13-seconds later (19:37), Scofield potted the game winner. Dalton started the play from the crease glancing a shot high off the glass to Ian Lowe entering the Beavers’ offensive zone. Lowe then hit Scofield with a pass on the left post for the goal. The assist by Dalton was not only the first of his career, it also marked the first helper by a BSU netminder since Layne Sedevie assisted on a goal on a 6-2 win over Wayne State University Jan. 14, 2006. The score stuck at 2-1 in favor of the Beavers as each team would fail to score during the final 20 minutes. MTU goalie Josh Robinson was tagged with the loss allowing two goals, while making saves on 14 shots in 58:10 between the pipes. He falls to 1-3-0 on the season. The Huskies out shot BSU for the second straight game, claiming an 11-shot margin in the finale, 27-16 The series sweep of the Huskies allowed BSU to even the all-time series with MTU at 2-2. The Beavers are now 3-3 versus the WCHA this season and are 9-5-0 when playing WCHA teams at the John Glas Fieldhouse since the beginning of the 2004-05 campaign.
2009-10
45
2008-09 game recaps
Bemidji State Niagara
2008-09 game recpas
Ala.-Huntsville Bemidji State
1 3
Ala.-Huntsville Bemidji State
December 5, 2008 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,968
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
Ala.-Huntsville (2-6-1; 2-4-0)
0
0
1
Bemidji State (6-7-0; 3-2-0)
0
0
3
1
Ala.-Huntsville (2-7-1; 2-5-0)
3
Bemidji State (7-7-0; 4-2-0)
First Period None
First Period 8:51 BSU 0-1 6x6 14:44 UAH 1-1 6x6
6x6 6x6 6x5 PP 6x5 PP
Second Period 13:56 UAH 2-1 Third Period 1:40 BSU 2-2 4:50 BSU 2-3 19:32 BSU 2-4
Emil Billberg (1) (McKelvie, Findlay) uJamie MacQueen (2) (Walters) Cody Bostock (3) (Hunt, Marino) Kevin Morrison (1) (Ruffini, Baxter)
Shots on Goal UAH BSU
2
3
Final
6 5
8 6
11 8
25 19
2
3
Final
2
Bemidji State (8-7-0)
2
1
1
4
4
UMass (8-7-1)
1
1
0
2
Final
1
1
0
1
0
3
First Period 00:56 UM 0-1 4:29 BSU 1-1 14:43 BSU 2-1 Second Period 5:18 BSU 3-1 13:32 UM 3-2 Third Period 4:30 BSU 4-2
Joey Koudys (4) (Ruffini)
6x5 PP Shea Walters (3) (Hunt, Peluso) 6x6 uEmil Billberg (2) (Findlay, Bostock) 6x6 EN Matt Francis (3) (unassisted)
UAH BSU
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
8 3
16 6
0 0
1-for-3 1-for-8
.333 .125
UAH BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Talbot (1-4-1)
5
6
5
16
60:00
3
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (6-4-0)
6
8
10
24
60:00
1
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Lowe 2F Kinne Marino Francis 3F Cramer Walters MacQueen 4F Billberg McKelvie Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
6x5 PP uTravis Winter (3) (Lowe, Marino) 6x6 Justin Braun (4) (Davis, Wessbecker) 6x6
Ben Kinne (3) (Bostock, Walters)
Shots on Goal
2
3
Final
9 7
10 7
9 17
28 31
BSU UM
1
2
3
Final
6 10
8 10
4 6
18 26
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
5 4
10 8
0 0
0-for-4 1-for-5
.000 .200
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 6
16 23
0 0
2-for-6 0-for-3
.333 .000
BSU UM
Goaltending
Goaltending
UAH
6x6 Cory Quirk (6) (Berry, Marcou) 6x5 PP Brandon Marino (3) (Read, Peluso) 6x6 Matt Read (5) (Scofield, Francis)
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
Goaltending
UAH
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Talbot (1-5-1) Empty Net
6 0
7 0
14 0
27 0
59:24 00:36
3 1
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (7-4-0)
8
9
9
26
60:00
2
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
Dalton (8-4-0)
9
9
6
24
60:00
GA 2
UM
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dainton (6-4-0) Empty Net
4 0
7 0
3 0
14 0
58:18 1:42
4 0
Bemidji State Lines 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 1-2=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-5=8 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- Emil Billberg broke a scoreless tie 6:27 into the third period and the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team piled on two more goals in the game’s final 12 minutes to claim a 3-1 victory over University of Alabama-Huntsville. The College Hockey America victory extended the Beavers’ winning streak to four games while the team improved to 6-7-0 overall and 3-2-0 in league play. The Chargers got their only goal of the contest with just 69-seconds remaining to spoil BSU goaltender Matt Dalton’s shutout with a power-play goal. Dalton turned away 24 shots before allowing the Kevin Morrison marker. He improves to 6-4-0 on the season and has not lost Since Nov. 21 and has allowed just three goals in the four games since. Billberg got the Beavers on the board early in the third period netting his first goal since Jan. 18, 2007. Freshman Darcy Findlay set the play up, by chipping the puck down the ice and eventually onto the stick of Chris McKelvie. The assistant captain found Billberg streaking down the slot and the native of Sweden beat UAH goalie Cameron Talbot with a one-timer from the right circle. The Billberg goal brought a delay in play as the antsy 1,968 in attendance flooded the ice with a variety of stuffed animal toys in BSU’s annual Teddy Bear Toss. The BSU Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), which organized the event, collected several garbage bags full of donated teddy bears to be delivered to less fortunate children in the community by North Country Regional Hospital and local law enforcement agencies. Just two-minutes and five-seconds later, Jamie MacQueen lit the lamp again for Bemidji State. Fellow rookie Shea Walters hit the streaking forward with a pass and MacQueen tapped in his first collegiate game-winning goal, an his second marker in as many games. Cody Bostock put the Beavers up by three, 3-0, with 4:19 to play, flinging a wrister into the back of the net from the point. The power-play marker was the only one Beavers would score in eight opportunities and was assisted by Brad Hunt and Brandon Marino. When McKelvie, was whistled for tripping at the 17:06-mark of the third period, it set up the Chargers’ power-play goal. UAH finished the night 1-for3 on the man advantage. Despite being out shot for the third consecutive game, 25-19, BSU made the best of its scoring opportunities and minimized Ala.-Huntsville’s. In addition to the 25 shots UAH landed on target, the Beavers blocked an additional 18 from reaching the crease with it’s hard-nosed defensive play. With the win, the Beavers gain a game on the Chargers in the all-time series. Bemidji State has won six of its last seven meetings over the Chargers.
46
1
3
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays UAH BSU
Scoring Summary
2
Matt Read (4) (unassisted) Joey Koudys (3) (Train)
6x6
4 2
December 28, 2008 Hanover, N.H. - Thompson Arena Attendance : 4,228
December 6, 2008 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,896
Scoring Summary
Second Period None Third Period 6:27 BSU 0-1 8:32 BSU 0-2 15:41 BSU 0-3 18:51 UAH 1-3
Bemidji State Massachusettes
2 4
1F Scofield Read Lowe 2F Kinne Marino Francis 3F Cramer Walters MacQueen 4F Billberg McKelvie Findlay 1D Peluso Adams 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1-0=1 pts 1-0=1 pts 1-0=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 4-5=9 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- Don’t count the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team out. The Beavers may have been down 2-1 entering the final period of play Saturday night at the John Glas Fieldhouse, but for the second consecutive night, BSU netted three third period goals to capture a 4-2 victory over the University of Alabama-Huntsville and sweep the series in dramatic fashion. The victory also extended the Beaver’s current winning streak to five games--the team’s longest since a string of seven wins stretching from Dec. 1, 2006 to Dec. 29, 2006. Matt Read gave the Beavers a lead on his fourth goal of the season, eight-minutes, 51-seconds into the first period. The sophomore and BSU’s leading scorer started the play by firing a slap shot that was deflected to the back wall by the UAH goaltender. A Charger defender checked Ian Lowe off the puck, but Read picked it up, skated it out into the slot, turned around and put it in the back of the net. The Chargers evened the score at the 14:44 mark when Joey Koudys effectively used a screen in front of the BSU goaltender and deposited a wrister just inside the left post getting the visitors to the locker rooms after the first with the score tied 1-1. Ala.-Huntsville took a 2-1 edge at the 13:56 mark of the second stanza when Neil Ruffini won a face off in the Charger’s offensive zone and Koudys wound up from between the circles and found the back of the net for his second goal of the evening and fourth of the season. UAH would take the one-goal lead into the second intermission, but the lead would not last long as the Beavers returned from the break like a team possessed. After failing to record 20 shots on net during each of its last three outings, BSU totaled 17 in the final 20 minutes of the contest alone, and three fount the back of the net. With Scott Kalinchuk in the box, the Chargers began the period a man short and BSU would seize the opportunity just 1:40 into the final stanza when Shea Walters redirected a pass past Cameron Talbot to ignite the Beavers’ comeback. The power-play goal would stand as the only special teams marker for either team in the game. BSU finished 1-for-5 on the man advantage, while Ala.-Huntsville failed to score on any of its four opportunities. BSU regained the lead just minutes later when Cody Bostock checked a Charger forward off the puck along the boards. Darcy Findlay corralled the loose puck and placed it on the stick of Emil Billberg who fired a shot from the right face off dot. The goal stands as the first game-winner of his career. Senior Matt Francis drove the final nail in the coffin taking advantage of the open net to pot his third tally of the season with just 28 seconds remaining. BSU out shot its opponent for the first time since Nov. 22. In addition to the 17 shots in the third period, the Beavers managed an additional 14 attempts on net for a game total of 31. UAH totaled 28 shots on the evening. Dalton turned away 26 UAH shots and allowed two goals en route to the win. He improves to 7-4-0 overall and is currently riding a five-game winning streak between the pipes.
2009-10
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Marino 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Billberg McKelvie Lowe 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1-3=4 pts 2-1=3 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 4-8=12 pts
HANOVER, N.H. -- The Beavers are on a roll. Since Nov. 22, no opponent has been able to get the best of the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team and today, the Beavers proved that not even a three-week break could slow them down as BSU extended its current winning streak to six games with a 4-2 victory over the University of Massachusetts in the first game of the Ledyard National Bank Classic in Hanover, N.H. With a current win streak of six, the Beavers are just one victory short of matching a 2006-07 streak that stands as BSU longest winning strand in more than 10 seasons. The team also currently owns the nation’s thirdlongest win streak. In their first action since a Dec. 6 meeting with the University of Ala.Huntsville, the Beavers didn’t get much time to shake off the rust. Just 56 seconds into classic play, the Minutemen put the Beavers down 1-0. BSU responded by tying the game 3:33 later on a Brandon Marino power-play goal and then the team took a lead it would not relinquish with 5:17 to play in the first period. Marino got BSU on the board by netting his third marker of the season with help from Ian Lowe and Cody Bostock. The point was the first of the afternoon for the Beavers, but it was just the beginning for the trio as each would find their way into the scoring column again later in the contest. Matt Read, Bemidji State’s leading scorer, kept a cushion on his scoring edge when he added his fifth goal of the season at the 14:43 mark to give the Beavers a 2-1 lead heading into the first intermission. Senior wingers Tyler Scofield and Matt Francis added helpers on the Read goal. Senior captain Travis Winter scored the Beavers’ third-consecutive goal just 5:18 into the second stanza. The goal would prove to be the game winner and stood as Winter’s third of the season and the first point for the senior, who has been plagued by injury, since an Oct. 25 loss to St. Cloud State. Before the second period would come to an end, UMass began to mount a comeback. The Minutemen got a goal from Justin Braun to pull the score to 3-2, but BSU would open the final 20 minutes of play with a goal from freshman Ben Kinne and goaltender Matt Dalton would take care of the rest, keeping UMass out of the nets for the final 15:30 to solidify the win and keep the Beavers rolling. Dalton finished the game turning away 24 Massachusetts shot attempts while allowing two goals in 60 minutes of play, improving to 8-4-0 on the season. On the other end of the ice, Paul Dainton stopped 14 BSU shots but was responsible for all four goals allowed and his record slid to 6-4-0 overall. The Beavers were outshot for the 12th time this season, and they managed fewer than 20 shots on goal for the eighth time in 2008-09. The Minutemen held a 26-18 advantage on the shot board. Typical of BSU special teams play during the six-game win streak, the Beavers were 2-of-6 on the power play and went into the box just four times, killing off all three of the Minutemen’s man-advantage opportunities.
2 4
North Dakota Bemidji State
December 29, 2008 Hanover, N.H. - Thompson Arena Attendance : 3,434
Scoring Summary
1
2
3 OT
4
Bemidji State (8-10-0)
2
0
1
0
3
3
North Dakota (11-10-1)
1
1
1
1
4
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Bemidji State (8-8-0)
0
1
1
2
North Dakota (10-10-1)
2
2
0
Dartmouth (8-4-0)
1
2
1
4
Bemidji State (8-9-0)
3
0
0
Second Period 8:28 DAR 0-2 12:51 BSU 1-2 19:22 DAR 1-3 Third Period 00:22 DAR 1-4 17:04 BSU 2-4
First Period 1:41 UND 1-0 5:51 BSU 1-1 6:26 BSU 1-2 13:51 UND 2-2 18:22 BSU 2-3
Connor Shields (4) (Walsh, Pritchard)
6x5 PP Connor Goggin (2) (Boldt, Jones) 6x6 Matt Francis (4) (Marino, Bostock) 6x6 uMatt Reber (3) (Reeds, Mattila)
Shots on Goal BSU DAR
2
3
Final
6 10
7 9
14 6
27 25
UND BSU
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
3 3
6 6
0 0
1-for-5 1-for-3
.200 .333
2
3
Final
20 9
19 6
1 10
40 25
Goaltending
BSU UND
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
3 7
6 14
0 0
1-for-5 0-for-1
.200 .000
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (8-5-0) Empty Net
9 0
7 0
4 0
20 0
57:22 2:38
4 0
DAR
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
O’Neil (8-3-0)
6
6
13
25
60:00
2
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Marino 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Billberg McKelvie Lowe 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Adams Hardwick bold= starting line TOTAL
Chris VandeVelde (7) (Zajac, Watkins)
5x6 SH Jason Gregoire (5) (Genoway) 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (8) (Peluso, Bostock)
1
2
3
OT
6 17
4 14
10 8
0 1
Final 20 40
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
11 9
30 26
0 1
1-for-5 2-for-7
.200 .286
BSU UND
Goaltending
Goaltending
BSU
6x6
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen UND BSU
6x6 Brad Hunt (4) (Scofield, Read) 6x6 Matt Francis (5) (Read) 6x5 PP Chris VandeVelde (6) (Miller, Marto)
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
Final
Overtime 00:31 UND 3-4 6x5 PP uBrett Hextall (8) (Miller, Genoway)
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays BSU DAR
First Period 00:27 BSU 1-0 5:07 BSU 2-0 6:54 UND 2-1 Second Period 14:28 UND 2-2 Third Period 9:55 UND 2-3 10:44 BSU 3-3
6x6 Chris VandeVelde (5) (Trupp, Frattin) 6x6 Matt Read (6) (Scofield, Francis) 6x6 Ryan Cramer (1) (Walters, Kinne) 6x6 Evan Trupp (3) (VandeVelde, Frattin) 6x6 Tyler Scofield (7) (Read)
Second Period 3:00 UND 3-3 6x6 Brett Hextall (7) (Malone, Kozek) 7:11 UND 4-3 6x5 PP uRyan Martens (8) (Gregoire, Trupp) Third Period None
6x6 Josh Gillam (1) (Fleming, Gaudet) 6x5 PP Brad Hunt (3) (Peluso, Scofield)
3 4
January 3, 2009 Grand Forks, N.D. - Ralph Engelstad Arena Attendance : 11,394
January 2, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 2,414 (Sellout)
Scoring Summary
First Period 11:35 DAR 0-1 6x6
Bemidji State North Dakota
4 3
UND
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Eidsness (10-7-1)
6
6
10
22
60:00
3
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (8-6-0) Empty Net
18 0
17 0
1 0
36 0
58:44 1:16
4 0
BSU
1
2
3
OT
Tot
Min
GA
Alamano (0-4-0) Empty Net
16 0
13 0
7 0
0 0
36 0
59:56 00:04
4 0
UND
1
2
3
OT
Tot
Min
GA
Eidsness (11-7-0) Empty Net
4 0
4 0
9 0
0 0
17 0
59:53 00:07
3 0
Bemidji State Lines 1-1=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-4=6 pts
HANOVER, N.H. -- After assembling a string of six consecutive victories, the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team saw its streak come to an end tonight in the championship game of the Ledyard National Bank Classic. Hosting Dartmouth University scored first, piled on a pair of second period goals and held off a third-period barrage by the Beavers to claim the title, 4-2. Dartmouth was the first to draw blood netting an even-strength goal at the 11:35 mark of the first period. But with 3:46 to play, the teams were sent to the locker rooms early due to poor ice conditions, setting up what would amount to be a 23-minute, 46-second second stanza. The Big Green went up by two goals 8:28 into the second period when Peter Bolt found Connor Groggin for a power-play marker. The Beavers struggled to generate scoring chances early managing just six shots to the Big Green’s 10 during the first period, with three scoring attempts coming on the power play as the teams wrapped up the first period after the intermission. But a tripping penalty called on Scott Fleming midway through the second stanza would give the Beavers the boost they needed. Cody Bostock and Brandon Marino connected with Matt Francis, who was parked on the left post, for the senior’s fourth goal of the season. The goal reeled the Big Green to within a goal, 2-1. But the energy would be short-lived. Dartmouth swung momentum back in its favor before the period expired corralling a rebound off of BSU goaltender Matt Dalto, sliding the puck into the back of the net with just 38-seconds left in the second. Dartmouth built a 4-1 lead 22 seconds into third period setting up over 19 minutes of desperation for the Beavers. BSU managed 14 shots on net in the final period, with one off of the stick of Brad Hunt going for a goal. Despite pulling Dalton for an extra attacker for the final two minutes of play, the Beavers were unable to gain any ground on the Big Green and fell for the first time since Nov. 21. The 14-shot third, allowed the Beavers to gain an edge in shots on goal, 27-25. Bemidji State’s only power-play marker of the evening came on the team’s fifth and final opportunity of the game. Meanwhile, the Big Green scored on one of its three power-play chances. Dalton turned aside 21 Dartmouth scoring attempts, but saw his winning streak come to an end after six consecutive victories allowing four goals. He falls to 8-5-0 on the season. Dartmouth’s Jody O’Neill was superb between the pipes single-handedly keeping the Big Green in the game. He made 13 of his 25 saves during the final 20 minutes of play. He allowed two goals but earned the win, bumping his season record to 8-3-0. With assists in the game, Marino and Bostock each totaled three points for the weekend and were named to the Ledyard National Bank Classic AllClassic Team.
1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Marino 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Lowe McKelvie Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
2-3=5 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-2=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-5=8 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- The Bemidji State men’s ice hockey team got a goal and an assist apiece from Matt Read and Tyler Scofield and goaltender Matt Dalton turned away a career-high 36 shots Friday, but the University of North Dakota was too much in the final two periods, stealing a 4-3 nonconference victory in front of a capacity crowd at the John Glas Fieldhouse. Although the Beavers owned a 3-2 advantage at the conclusion of the first period, UND responded with a pair of goals in the second stanza to earn their eight consecutive win over the Bemidji State. North Dakota was the first to draw blood, when Chris VandeVelde lit the lamp just 1:41 into the first period on passes from Evan Trupp and Matt Frattin. The Beavers bounced back to take a 2-1 at the 6:26 mark after Read and Ryan Cramer netted unanswered goals just 25-seconds apart. Bemidji State got on the scoreboard when Matt Francis plucked the puck off the near boards and found Scofield streaking up the ice. Scofield dished the puck to Read, who flipped his sixth goal of the season past Brad Eidsness knotting the game at 1-1. Cramer struck on a one-timer from the top of the crease at the 6:26 mark to give the Beavers their first lead of the night and ignite the 2,414 in attendance. Cramer’s first marker of the season came on a nifty pass from Shea Walters from behind the net. Ben Kinne was also credited with an assist on the play. At the 13:51 mark, Trupp evened the score at 2-2 with his third goal of the season. Read and Scofield connected for their second points of the night with just 1:44 to play in the first. Read picked the puck off a UND defenseman’s stick and threaded a pass from blue line to blue line and onto the stick of Scofield who went one-on-one with the UND goaltender to put the Beavers up 3-2. Bemidji State spent 10 minutes of the second period with a man in the penalty box and the differential showed. UND held a 19-6 advantage in shots on goal and saw two scoring attempts find the back of the net, which included the game-winner off the stick of Ryan Martens 7:11 into the period. While the Sioux scored on 1-of-5 power-play opportunities, Bemidji State’s first and only man advantage came with just 11 seconds to play. The BSU served 14 minutes for seven penalties, including five for 10 minutes in the second period, while UND was escorted to the penalty box three times for a total of six minutes. With 40 shots on the night, UND became the first of BSU’s 2008-09 opponents to record more than 37 shots in a game. Tonight the Sioux held a 40 to BSU 25 advantage on the shot board. Dalton’s career save performance, which included 18 stops in the first and 17 in the second, came in 58:44 of play. He falls to 8-6-0 on the season. North Dakota’s Eidsness improved to 10-7-1 on the season with a 22save night in 60 minutes of play. UND now holds a 16-1-1 advantage over BSU since the rivalry began in 1970 and is unbeaten in the last 16 meetings between the teams.
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Marino 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Lowe McKelvie Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
2-3=5 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-5=8 pts
GRAND FORKS, N.D. -- The Bemidji State hockey team threw everything it had at the University of North Dakota, but in the end it wasn’t enough as the Fighting Sioux were able to find the back of the net in overtime to defeat the Beavers 4-3. The Beavers started off hot. It took BSU just 27 seconds to get on the board as the team created a 2-on-1 opportunity with Brad Hunt and Tyler Scofield. Hunt netting his fourth goal of the season to get things started for BSU. An extra assist went to Matt Read. It didn’t take long for the road green and white to light the lamp again. At the 5:07 mark, Read fired a shot and Matt Francis cleaned up the rebound for his fifth marker of the year. Unfortunately for the Beavers, the penalty box would not be their friend, and it all started when Chris VandeVelde scored a man-advantage goal at the 6:54 mark after Jamie MacQueen was whistled for tripping. Two more Beavers went into the box 37 seconds apart midway through the first, but the BSU penalty kill unit was able to hold off the 5-on-3 attack and keep the 2-1 lead intact. Despite being outshot 17-6 in the opening frame, Bemidji State entered the break with the 2-1 advantage. After a tight second period that saw both teams have chances on net, VandeVelde scored again putting the puck over BSU goaltender Orlando Alamano’s glove. The play was reviewed and upheld by the referees and Darcy Zajac and Matt Watkins were credited with assists. That was the lone goal of the second and the two teams skated to a 2-2 tie heading into what would be a thrilling third period. Brandon Marino scored a goal 4:52 into the third but it was overturned because the referee blew his whistle to stop play an instant before the puck went in. UND also scored a goal minutes later after Alamano saved a shot and a Sioux forward was there for the rebound, but it, too, was overturned when referees went to the replay and noticed a UND player in the crease. Joe Finley was called for tripping 8:56 into the frame and the Beavers went on the power play. They tried hard to get a go-ahead goal, but the Fighting Sioux countered with a 3-on-2, shorthanded attack. Jason Gregoire went five-hole for the third goal of the game with 10:05 remaining, and he was assisted by Chay Genoway. Bemidji State responded by taking advantage of the final minute of the man advantage when Scofield tipped in a shot from the point by Chris Peluso for his eighth of the season. The Beavers entered the extra session down a skater as Hunt was escorted to the bx with 58 seconds remaining in regulation, and that would inevitably cost them the game as Brett Hextall scored the game-winner just 31 seconds into overtime with assists from Brad Miller and Genoway. Bemidji State was outshot 20-40, and the Beavers went 1-for-5 on the power play. North Dakota finished the game 2-for-7 on the man-advantage. Alamano saved a career-high 36 shots but fall to 0-4 on the year.
2009-10
47
2008-09 game recaps
Bemidji State Dartmouth
2008-09 game recpas
Bemidji State 2 Minnesota Duluth 3
Bemidji State 2 Minnesota Duluth 4
Niagara Bemidji State
January 16, 2009 Duluth, Minn. - D.E.C.C. Attendance : 3,418
January 16, 2009 Duluth, Minn. - D.E.C.C. Attendance : 3,804
January 23, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,960
4 3
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Bemidji State (8-11-0)
0
2
0
2
Bemidji State (8-12-0)
0
0
2
2
Niagara (11-9-1)
2
1
1
4
Minnesota Duluth (10-7-6)
1
1
1
3
Minnesota Duluth (11-7-6)
2
1
1
4
Bemidji State (8-13-0)
1
1
1
3
First Period 11:01 UMD 0-1 6x6 Second Period 6:15 UMD 0-2 13:07 BSU 1-2 18:48 BSU 2-2 Third Period 3:13 UMD 3-2
First Period 11:11 UMD 0-1 6x6 MacGregor Sharp (10) (Kemp) 17:21 UMD 0-2 6x5 PP MacGregor Sharp (11) (Meyers, Connolly)
Michael Gergen (4) (Montgomery)
6x5 PP Jack Connolly (3) (Kishel, Akins) 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (9) (Read, Peluso) 6x6 Jamie MacQueen (3) (Marino, Dalton) 6x6
uMichael Gergen (5) (Oleksuk, Schmidt)
Shots on Goal BSU UMD
Second Period 8:58 NU 3-1 15:01 BSU 3-2 Third Period 5:02 BSU 3-3 8:44 NU 4-3
uJustin Fontaine (12) (Fulton, Kishel) Brad Hunt (5) (Read) Ian Lowe (1) (Walters, Hunt) Mike Connolly (8) (Sharp, Kemp)
Shots on Goal
1
2
3
Final
5 11
6 11
4 16
15 38
Penalties & Power Plays
BSU UMD
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
5 4
10 8
0 0
1-for-4 1-for-5
.250 .200
Goaltending
BSU UMD
2
3
Final
8 10
7 12
10 7
25 29
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (8-7-0) Empty Net
10 0
10 0
15 0
35 0
58:42 1:18
3 0
UMD
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Stalock (10-7-6)
5
4
4
13
60:00
2
6x6 6x6
Ben Kinne (4) (Peluso, Adams) uDavid Ross (5) (Mironov, Anderson)
NU BSU
1
2
3
Final
11 7
10 15
9 15
20 37
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
7 10
14 20
0 0
2-for-7 1-for-4
.286 .250
Goaltending
BSU
6x6 Egor Mironov (6) (Consorti, Baco) 6x4 PP Matt Francis (6) (Scofield, Hunt)
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen BSU UMD
Second Period 12:55 UMD 0-30 6x6 Third Period 4:10 BSU 1-3 6x4 PP 12:07 BSU 2-3 6x5 PP 18:21 UMD 2-4 6x6
First Period 10:23 BSU 0-1 6x6 Tyler Scofield (10) (Francis) 10:37 NU 1-1 6x6 Armando Scarlato (1) (Rocco, Cook) 12:22 NU 2-1 6x6 Paul Zanette (6) (Foam)
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
3 2
6 4
0 0
0-for-2 1-for-3
.000 .333
NU BSU
Goaltending
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Alamano (0-5-0) Empty Net
8 0
11 0
6 0
25 0
58:19 1:41
4 0
UMD
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Hjelle (1-0-0) Empty Net
8 0
7 0
8 0
23 0
59:55 0:05
2
NU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
Pagliero (11-8-1)
6
14
14
34
60:00
GA 3
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (8-8-0) Empty Net
9 0
9 0
8 0
26 0
58:10 1:50
4 0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Marino 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F McKelvie Lehrke Findlay 1D Peluso McManamin 2D Bostock Hunt 3D MacIntyre Adams G Dalton bold= starting line TOTAL
1-1=2 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 2-4=6 pts
DULUTH, Minn. -- The Bemidji State hockey team battled back to score pair goals during the final seven minutes of the second period and knot the game at 2-2, but Michael Gergen and the University of Minnesota Duluth offensive attack proved to be too much for the Beavers and the hosting Bulldogs skated a way with a 3-2 victory in front of 3,418 at the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center in Duluth, Minn. The Bulldogs kept BSU goaltender Matt Dalton busy from the opening face-off firing 39 shots in the direction of Dalton as UMD out shot the Beavers by a margin of 38-15. The Beavers total of 15 shots matches a season-low posted at Air Force and Ala.-Huntsville. Minnesota Duluth got the only goal of the first period as Mike Montgomery connected with Michael Gergen with 11:01 in the first period. Gergen pocket a goal out of the reach of Dalton in the far corner of the net. The Bulldogs built a 2-0 lead 6:15 into the second frame when Jack Connolly netted a power-play marker with assists from Scott Kishel and Drew Akins. Although UMD got the best of the Beavers in the second period out shooting them 11-6, two of BSU’s six shots found the back of the net and the Beavers and Bulldogs went into the second intermission with the score tied at 2-2. Bemidji State would begin its comeback at the 12:47 mark of the second period when Jay Cascalenda was sent to the penalty box for holding the stick. Just 20-seconds later, Matt Read and Chris Peluso found Tyler Scofield with a nifty pass. Scofield buried a power-play goal from the right circle to cut the deficit in half, 2-1. BSU freshman Jamie MacQueen evened the score at 2-2 beating the UMD goaltender five hole for his third goal of 2008-09 with just 1:12 left in the second stanza. Brandon Marino and Dalton assisted the freshman on the play. Dalton’s assists, his second of the season, makes him the second BSU goaltender in the school’s NCAA Division I-era to record multiple assists in a season. He matches Layne Sedevie (2003-07) who posted two assists in 2003-04. With the score tied at 2-2 entering the final 20 minutes of play, the Bulldogs pressed harder, out shooting the Beavers 16-4 and got the goahead goal just 3:13 into the frame. The goal came off the stick of Gergen, his second of the night, with help from Travis Oleksuk and Kyle Schmidt. Before the Bulldogs could finish celebrating, the Beavers came barreling back. Matt Francis put the puck into the back of the net moments after the ensuing face off, but a review of the goal caused referee to wave off goal. BSU would pull out every stop in the game’s final moments but were unable to make any ground on the Bulldogs and dropped the game, 3-2. Dalton single-handedly kept the Beavers within reach all night turning away 35 UMD scoring attempts, including 15 in the third period alone, while allowing three goals in 58:42 between the pipes. Dalton’s 35-save outing came just one stop shy of his career-mark of 36 set in a 58:44 appearance versus University of North Dakota Jan. 2. The sophomore falls to 8-7-0 on the season. UMD’s Stalock improved to 10-7-6 allowing two goals and making 13 saves in 60:00 of play. The win helps UMD build to its all-time series lead of 17-7-0 with a 127-0 mark since 1999.
48
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Marino 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F McKelvie Lehrke Lowe 1D Peluso Adams 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
Bemidji State Lines 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-0=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-3=8 pts
DULUTH, Minn. -- University of Minnesota Duluth got two first period goals from MacGregor Sharpe and the favor of some strange bounces as the team held off a third-period charge by Bemidji State University for a 4-2 victory. The Bulldogs gain possession of the coveted Babe the Blue Ox traveling trophy for the first time since Feb. 26, 2005 as it completed the first series sweep over BSU since the same season. The loss for the 8-12-0 Beavers marks the fifth strait for the green and white-the teams longest streak since a five-game strand Oct. 19- Nov. 2, 2007. After a hard fought, evenly-matched first period, Minnesota Duluth took a 2-0 lead into the first intermission after benefiting from a strange bounce off the boards and sneaking a power-play foal past BSU goaltender Orlando Alamano. The Bulldogs got on the board at the 11:11 mark of the period when a pass off the stick of Cody Bostock and was intend to wrap around the boards behind the net for his defensive partner bounced off the boards directly behind the net and onto the stick of Nick Kemp. Kemp found Sharp in the slot for a quick strike. UMD would build its lead to two goals, 2-0, just over eight minutes later (17:21) when Sharp lit the lamp for the second time when he found Alamano’s five hole just 52 seconds into a power-play after Chris McKelvie was sent to the box for tripping. Minnesota Duluth stretched its lead to three, 3-0, midway through the second period when Justin Fontaine recorded an even-strength goal with help from Jordan Fulton and Scott Kishel. Down, 3-0, the never-say-die Beavers cranked up the intensity for the final 20 minutes in a valiant run at nipping the Bulldogs. Three-minutes and nine-seconds into the frame, the Beavers would get the boost they needed to get momentum rolling in their direction. With Sharp already serving time in the box for boarding, UMD’s Mike Mongomery was whistled for the same infraction setting up a 1:43, 5-on-3 opportunity. Brad Hunt made the Bulldogs pay 61-seocnds later netting his fifth goal of the season as Matt Read added to his team-leading assists total (13) helping on the play. The Beavers got another spark at the 12:07 mark when Shea Walters funneled the puck towards the net and Ian Lowe deflected it just below the cross bar to bring the Beavers to within a goal of the hosts, 3-2. The goal stands as the first of 2008-09 for Lowe. Despite continued pressure to keep the Bulldogs on their heels, the BSU rally would end there. Mike Connolly would pot an even-strength goal with 1:39 to go to put the game out of reach for the Beavers. Just 24 hours removed from recording a total of 15 shots on the UMD defense, the Beavers peppered the Bulldog goaltender with 25 shots, which included 10 in the final period alone. UMD finished the contest with a slight edge on the shot board, 29-25. In his fifth start of the season, Alamano turned away 25 UMD shot attempts, while allowing four goals. The senior fell to 0-5-0 on the season.
2009-10
1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Marino 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F McKelvie Lehrke Lowe 1D Peluso Adams 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
2-2=4 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-0=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-5=8 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- The Niagara University men’s ice hockey team seemed to have a step on Bemidji State University early and although the Beavers grabbed a one-goal lead ten-minutes and 23-seconds into the game, NU would exploit BSU’s sluggish play to net a pair of first-period goals in just 1:45. The Beavers would not recover as the Purple Eagles came into the John S. Glas Fieldhouse and earned a 4-3 victory in the first game of the College Hockey America series, 4-3. Bemidji State senior Tyler Scofield opened a flurry of scoring the first period with his team-leading tenth goal of the season. But the BSU lead would last just 14 seconds before the Purple Eagles caught the Beavers flat footed deep in the zone and Vince Rocco centered a pass from the corner for Armando Scarlato who buried it from the top of the crease. Out shooting the Beavers 11-7 during the opening 20 minutes, Niagara added another goal at the 12:22 mark, off the stick of Paul Zanette, to take its first lead of the game and head into the first intermission up 2-1. The visitors stretched their lead to 3-1 at the 8:58 mark of the second period when Egor Mironov beat Matt Dalton with a slap shot that found its way into the back of the net despite being slowed by the BSU goaltender’s glove. Wes Consorti and Dan Baco were credited with assists on the even-strength goal. Beavers got the break they sorely needed when NU’s Ted Cook and Vince Rocco were both escorted to the box for hooking at the 13:36 mark of the period setting up a two-minute 5-of-3 opportunity for BSU. One-minute, 25-seconds into the penalty, Matt Francis netted the game’s only powerplay goal, his sixth marker of the season, on a one-timer from the top of the slot. Scofield collected his team-leading fourth multi-point game of the season picking up an assist on the play along with the help of Brad Hunt. Trailing 3-2, the Beavers kicked the tempo up a notch as they hit the ice for the third period. The team controlled play for a majority of the final frame out shouting the Purple Eagles 15-9. Ben Kinne evened the score on his fourth goal of the season just 5:02 into the period firing the puck on net and watching the rebound trickle into the goal. The defensive pair of Chris Peluso and Ryan Adams each recorded an assist on the game-tying goal. However, NU would need just 3:42 to regain its lead for good slashing a BSU comeback on a David Ross game winner with assists from Mironov and reigning CHA Defensive Player of the Week Travis Anderson. The Beavers had several solid opportunities in the game’s final minutes and emptied the net in exchange for an extra attack for the last 1:39 of regulation to no avail, as Niagara pulled away with a 4-3 victory. Dalton turned aside 26 shots for the Beavers, but allowed four goals and fell to 8-8-0 on the season after the loss. The Beavers kept NU goaltender Juliano Pagliero busy firing a season-high 37 shots on goal, but the senior rose to the occasion stopping 34, including 28 in the final two periods, to collect the win and improve to 11-8-1 on the season. BSU grabbed a 37-30 advantage in shots on goal in the game marking just the sixth time this season it has out shot its opponent.
1 3
Bemidji State Robert Morris
January 24, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 2,029
5 3
Bemidji State Robert Morris
January 30, 2009 RMU Moon Township, Pa. - Island Sport Center Attendance : 630
5 1
January 31, 2009 RMU Moon Township, Pa. - Island Sport Center Attendance : 697
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Niagara (11-10-1)
0
1
0
1
Bemidji State (10-13-0)
2
2
1
5
Bemidji State (11-13-0)
3
0
2
5
Bemidji State (9-13-0)
0
2
1
3
Robert Morris (5-14-4)
2
1
0
3
Robert Morris (5-15-4)
1
0
0
1
First Period 2:59 BSU 1-0 12:54 BSU 2-0 18:06 RMU 2-1 18:35 RMU 2-2
First Period none Second Period 5:12 BSU 0-1 7:20 BSU 0-2 18:11 NU 1-2 Third Period 13:30 BSU 1-3
6x6 Matt Read (7) (Hunt, Scofield) 6x5 PP uMatt Francis (7) (Bostock, Scofield) 6x5 PP Egor Mironov (7) (Rocco, Moran)
Second Period 1:20 BSU 3-2 3:36 RMU 3-3 9:19 BSU 4-3 Third Period 3:17 BSU 5-3
6x6 Travis Winter (4) (MacQueen)
1
2
3
Final
6 4
10 17
4 7
20 28
6x5 PP Brad Hunt (6) (Walters) 6x5 PP Chris Margott (13) (Kushneriuk, Urban) 6x5 PP uBrandon Marino (4) (Bostock) 6x6
Matt Read (8) (Lowe, Francis)
BSU RMU
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
7 5
14 10
0 0
1-for-5 1-for-7
.200 .143
2
3
Final
9 6
8 10
11 12
28 28
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 4
8 8
0 0
2-for-4 1-for-4
.500 .250
Goaltending
Goaltending NU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Pagliero (11-9-1) Empty Net
4 0
15 0
6 0
25 0
59:17 0:17
3 0
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (9-8-0) Empty Net
6 0
9 0
4 0
19 0
59:58 0:02
1 0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Billberg McKelvie Marino 1D Peluso Adams 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
2-2=4 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-5=8 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- Tyler Scofield piled up a pair of assists and Matt Francis scored for the second time in as many nights as the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team defeated Niagara University 3-1 to square the College Hockey America series Saturday at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. After a scoreless first period, the Beavers netted two goals in the second fueled by the playmaking ability of Scofield, who posted his teamleading fifth multi-point night of the year and moved into sixth place on the program’s Division I-era scoring charts with 36-55=91 points, with a pair of assists. The Beavers took a 2-1 lead into the third and added another goal for good measure winning for the first time in 2009 and snapping a six-game losing streak in the process. The Beavers got on the board five-minutes and 12-seconds into the second stanza. Matt Read built upon his team scoring lead potting his seventh marker of the season on passes from Brad Hunt and Scofield. Francis added a power-play marker at the 7:20 mark to stretch the Beavers’ lead to 2-0. From behind the net, Scofield found Cody Bostock streaking down the slot. Pagliero fended off a wrister by the senior defenseman but Francis cleaned up the rebound and neatly deposited it into the back of the net to put the Beavers up 2-0. The goal would stand as the game winner--the senior’s first of the season. But before the end of the period, Niagara would answer. Egor Mironov scored a goal 1:35 into a power play to reel the Beavers to within a goal , 2-1, 1:49 before the period was set to expire. The Beavers solidified the win 13:30 into the third period. Jamie MacQueen picked off an errant Purple Eagle pass in the neutral zone and fired a shot from the top of the point that was deflected by the NU goaltender onto the stick of Travis Winter, who potted his first goal since Dec. 28. The assist by MacQueen stands as his first in the Beaver green and white. Each team made good on one power-play opportunity in the game. BSU was 1-for-7 while the Purple Eagles netted a goal on five chances. For the second consecutive night, the Beavers out shot their opponents mounting a 28-20 advantage on the shot board, which included a 17-shot second period by BSU. Dalton earned his first victory between the pipes since Dec. 28, stopping 19 NU scoring attempts, while allowing one goal. He improved to 9-8-0 on the season. Juliano Pagliero recorded 25 saves in the game but allowed all three BSU goals and was tagged with the loss. He moved to 11-9-1 on the season.
Kyle Burton (5) (Longpre, Urban) Brad Hunt (7) (Peluso, Billberg) Graham McManamin (3) (Lowe, Bostock) J. MacQueen (4) (McManamin, Peluso)
Second Period none Third Period 10:36 BSU 4-1 6x6 Shea Walters (4) (Kinne, Bostock) 14:33 BSU 5-1 6x5 PP Travis Winter (5) (MacQueen, McManamin)
BSU RMU
1
2
3
Final
14 4
13 8
10 12
37 24
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen BSU RMU
6x4 PP 6x4 PP 6x5 PP 6x5 PP
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Penalties & Power Plays NU BSU
First Period 4:22 RMU 0-1 10:14 BSU 1-1 13:02 BSU 2-1 17:47 BSU 3-1
Matt Francis (8) (Peluso, Read) Graham McManamin (2) (Read) Jason Towsley (6) (Burton) Chris Margott (12) (Lewis, Longpre)
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal NU BSU
6x6 6x6 6x6 6x6
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
6 7
23 14
0 0
4-for-7 1-for-5
.571 .200
BSU RMU
Goaltending
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (10-8-0) Empty Net
4 0
9 0
12 0
24 0
59:51 0:09
3 0
RMU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Paterson Russell (5-11-3) Ostergard Empty Net
4 3 0 0
0 6 0 0
0 3 7 0
2 12 7 0
12:50 30:23 14:10 1:37
2 3 0 0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Francis Read Lowe 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Billberg McKelvie Marino 1D McManamin Peluso 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
2-4=6 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-0=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 5-7=12 pts
MOON TOWNSHIP, Pa. -- Matt Read recorded a goal and two assists to lead the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team to a 5-3 victory over Robert Morris University Friday at RMU Island Sports Center. The Beavers opened a two-goal lead early and fought off a pair of RMU comeback attempts scoring a season-high five goals to gain an important College Hockey America road win. Matt Francis opened the scoring for Bemidji State netting his seventh goal of the season just 2:59 after the opening face off. Chris Peluso and Read were credited with assists as Francis found a opening between the pads of Jim Patterson, the first of three Colonial goaltenders to see time in the game. Ten-minutes later, the Beavers went up 2-0 when Graham McManamin netted his second goal of 2008-09 slipping the puck into the back of the RMU bench from a scrum in front of the crease net and sending Patterson the bench. But the Colonials showed that no lead is safe in collegiate hockey. Robert Morris scored twice in the final two minutes of the period to knot the score at 2-2. Jason Towsley netted and even-strength marker at 18:06 and RMU’s leading scorer Chris Margott scored 29 seconds later to send the Beavers into the intermission with their tails between their legs. Despite having the momentum stolen in the closing minutes of the first, BSU responded with the first of two power-play goals on the night just 1:20 into the second frame. Bemidji State freshman defender and reigning CHA Defensive Player of the Week Brad Hunt put the Beavers back in front with his six goal of the season on a pass from Shea Walters. Two-minutes later (3:26), the Colonials would again come charging back taking advantage of their second power-play opportunity of the game to tie the game at 3-3. As the second period wound down the Beavers began to enforce their style of hard-nosed hockey and took control of the game for good. Brandon Marino netted what would stand as his team-leading third game-wining goal of the season on the power-play. The goal came at the 9:19 mark of the stanza with help from Cody Bostock. The final 30 minutes belonged to BSU goaltender Matt Dalton. The sophomore piled up nearly 25 saves, including 12 in the third period alone, shutting the Colonial offensive attack down to secure the win for BSU. Read added a third-period goal for good measure as the Beavers took a 5-3 victory. Dalton acquired his 10th (10-8-0) win of the season with 25 saves, while the trio of Colonial goaltenders combined for 24. Wes Russell was tagged with the loss allowing three BSU goals while making 12 saves in 30:32 between the pipes. He falls to 5-11-3 on the season. Each team finished with 28 shots on goal. The Bemidji State power-play scored on two of its four opportunities marking the sixth consecutive game with a power-play goal. The Beavers’ penalty-kill unit stopped three of the Colonials power-play chances.
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (11-8-0) Empty Net
3 0
8 0
12 0
23 0
59:39 0:21
1 0
RMU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Russell (5-12-3) Ostergard
11 0
0 13
0 8
11 21
20:00 40:00
1 0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Billberg McKelvie Marino 1D McManamin Peluso 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
0-1=1 pts 2-1=3 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-4=5 pts 1-2=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 5-10=15 pts
MOON TOWNSHIP, Pa. -- With its second-leading scorer out due to injury and a key senior sent to the locker room in the opening minutes of the game, the Bemidji State men’s hockey team tapped some untraditional scoring sources tonight as the Beavers defeated Robert Morris University at the RMU Island Sports Center, 5-1, to secure its first CHA road sweep of the season. In all, BSU had ten players in the scoring column, while four registered multipoint efforts led by a career night from defenseman Graham McManamin. Prior to the contest BSU head coach Tom Serratore commented that scoring first and winning special teams battles would be key to getting a win. The Beavers weren’t first on the scoreboard, but made up for it with four power-play goals to secure a road win and first series sweep over the Colonials on their home ice since Feb. 11-12, 2005. As convincing as the outcome was, the opening minutes looked glum for BSU. Just one-minute and 50-seconds in, senior forward Brandon Marino was whistled for a five-minute major and game misconduct for checking from behind and was escorted to the locker room, leaving the Beavers with a short bench for the remainder of the game. One-minute, 31-seconds later, Travis Winter was sent to the box setting up a two-minute five-on-three. The Colonials would need just 61-seconds to take a 1-0 lead. The goal would be a flash of what was to come in the 15:48 remaining in the period. The teams combined for four power-play goals, including a pair of five-on-three markers. Bemidji State would get the break it needed at the 10:14 mark as Brad Hunt netted a five-on-three to even the score at 1-1. Chris Peluso and Emil Billberg were credited with assists on the goal. Less than three minutes later, McManamin potted his second goal in as many nights, on the power play with help from Cody Bostock and Ian Lowe. The goal would stand as the game winner--the first of the junior’s career. Jamie MacQueen gave the Beavers a two-goal cushion with a power-play goal with 2:13 to go in the period on passes from Peluso and McManamin. The Beavers finished the frame with a up 3-1. The games only even-strength goal came midway through the third period and put BSU up 4-1. Shea Walters accounted for the goal, netting his fourth lamplighter of the season with help from fellow freshman Ben Kinne and Bostock. Winter closed the book on the BSU scoring with his fifth goal of the season at the 14:33 mark of the third. MacQueen and McManamin each recorded assists on the play as MacQueen turned in his first collegiate multi-point game. Of the Beavers’ five goals, two were scored by defensemen, while the blueline corps accounted for a season-high eight points. The Bemidji State power-play unit scored four goals on seven opportunities (.571) marking the eighth time since the team moved to NCAA Division I ranks it has scored four goals or more on the power-play in a single game and the first since Mar. 10, 2007. The Beavers out shot RMU 37-24 in the game. Wes Russell and Brooks Ostergard combined for 32 saves, while Russell was tagged with the loss after allowing three goals in 20 minutes of play. BSU’s Matt Dalton turned away 23 shots to earn the win and improve to 11-8-0.
2009-10
49
2008-09 game recaps
Niagara Bemidji State
2008-09 game recpas
Ala.-Huntsville Bemidji State
0 2
Ala.-Huntsville Bemidji State
February 6, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,871
0 2
Bemidji State Robert Morris
February 7, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,893
0 3
February 14, 2009 Moon Township. Pa. - RMU Island Sport Center Attendance : 801
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
Ala.-Huntsville (4-14-3)
0
0
0
0
Ala.-Huntsville (4-15-3)
1
1
0
2
Bemidji State (13-14-0)
0
0
0
0
Bemidji State (12-13-0)
0
2
0
2
Bemidji State (13-13-0)
3
0
1
4
Robert Morris (6-17-4)
1
0
2
3
First Period 4:25 BSU 0-1 8:03 BSU 0-2 13:10 BSU 0-3 17:03 UAH 1-3
First Period none Second Period 6:59 BSU 0-1 6x6 uBrad Hunt (8) (MacQueen, Lehrke) 11:49 BSU 0-2 6x5 PP Brad Hunt (9) (Scofield, Read) Third Period none
Second Period 3:49 UAH 2-3 6x6 Matt Sweazey (10) (Fairbanks, Tanaka) Third Period 19:37 BSU 2-4 6x6 EN Ben Kinne (6) (Peluso)
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal UAH BSU
1
2
3
Final
4 4
7 17
11 10
22 31
Pen
Min
SHG
6 10
12 20
0 0
PPG/O
2
3
Final
6 15
7 8
6 8
19 31
0-for-9 1-for-5
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
.000 .200
11 8
22 16
0 0
0-for-7 2-for-10
.000 .200
UAH BSU
Goaltending
UAH
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Talbot (1-11-2) Empty Net
4 0
15 0
10 0
29 0
59:35 0:25
2 0
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (12-8-0)
4
7
11
22
60:00
0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Findlay McKelvie Lowe 1D McManamin Peluso 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
0-2=2 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-0=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-4=6 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- Brad Hunt netted two goals to provide the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team with all the offense it would need Friday night at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. Goaltender Matt Dalton did his part at the other end of the rink by keeping the University of Alabama-Huntsville off the scoreboard to vault the Beavers to a 2-0 College Hockey America victory. With just five weeks remaining in the regular season, every point down the stretch is crucial as the Beavers attempt to defend their CHA title. Tonight the BSU gained two important points in the standings to hold a three-point edge over University of Niagara, which defeated Robert Morris University 4-2. Bemidji State busted out of the gates firing on all cylinders and threatened early, but a penalty to assistant captain Cody Bostock just 2:01 in derailed the BSU attack. The remaining 17:59 of the first period was rather uneventful. Each team struggled to gain any sort of momentum and would combine for a total of eight shots on goal to finish the frame locked in a scoreless tie. Hunt broke the 0-0 deadlock at the 6:59 mark of the period with his ninth goal of the season on a blast from the point. The rocket, which extended his team-long point string to six games, found its way through traffic in front of the net and was never seen my the Charger goaltender. Jamie MacQueen and Tyler Lehrke added assists on the eventual game-winning, even-strength goal. The freshman blueliner would add another goal less than five minutes later (11:49) to give the Beavers a 2-0 cushion. Hunt fired a second slap shot from between the circles to add to his teamleading 7-8=15 points on the man advantage with just 10 seconds remaining in Bemidji State’s third power play of the night. Matt Read and Tyler Scofield cycled the puck around the back of the net and out in front to Hunt who buried it in the back of the net for his second goal of the evening and ninth of the season. The lamplighter would supply the BSU freshman, and reigning CHA Rookie of the Week, with the first collegiate multi-goal game of his career. The goal on the man advantage also continued a second-half trend for the BSU special teams unit. It marked the Beavers’ eighth consecutive game with a power-play goal and since the team turned its focus back to CHA play Jan. 23, Bemidji State has converted 9-of-26 (34.6-percent) of its power-play opportunities into goals. As nicely as the power-play continued to click for BSU, its penalty-kill has been equally as good. The Beavers successfully snuffed out all nine Alabama-Huntsville power-play opportunities in the game and have not allowed a special teams goal in 113:38-- a streak blanketing 14 opponent power-play opportunities. The Beavers have now prevented their opponents from scoring on the man advantage seven times in 2008-09 and are 6-1-0 in those games, with three of those wins coming versus UAH. A cog to the power-play unit, Dalton improves to 12-8-0 on the season by turning aside 22 Charger shots for the second shutout this season and the third of his BSU career. The sophomore moves into a tie with four other Beaver greats for 10th place on Bemidji State’s all-time shutouts list. The victory brings the Beavers a game over .500 in their all-time record versus Ala.-Huntsville. Since the bitter rivalry began March 11, 1994, BSU leads the Chargers 27-26-3.
BSU RMU
1
2
3
Final
6 14
12 6
14 8
32 28
Penalties & Power Plays
Pct.
Goaltending
50
UAH BSU
Second Period none Third Period 12:59 RMU 0-2 6x6 Jason Towsley (7) (unassisted) 19:52 RMU 0-3 6x6 EN Ron Cramer (2) (Blandina, Longpre)
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Penalties & Power Plays UAH BSU
First Period 12:26 RMU 0-1 6x5 PP uChris Margott (16) (Longpre, Urban)
6x6 Ben Kinne (5) (Cramer, Hunt) 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (11) (Francis, Hunt) 6x5 PP uTyler Scofield (12) (Read, Francis) 5x5 Andrew Coburn (5) (Sweazey, Baxter)
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 6
8 10
0 0
0-for-5 1-for-4
.000 .250
BSU RMU
Goaltending
UAH
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
MacNicol (3-4-1) Talbot Empty Net
11 1 0
0 8 0
0 7 0
11 16 0
13:10 46:12 0:28
3 0 1
Dalton (13-9-0) Empty Net
13 0
6 0
6 0
25 0
57:58 2:02
2 1
RMU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Ostergard (1-2-0)
6
12
14
32
60:00
0
Dalton (13-8-0)
5
6
6
17
60:00
2
Bemidji State Lines
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Marino McKelvie Lowe 1D McManamin Peluso 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
2-3=5 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-1=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 4-7=11 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. --The Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team got a pair of goals from both Tyler Scofield and Ben Kinne as it completed a College Hockey America sweep over University of Alabama-Huntsville, 4-2, and extended its current winning streak to five games Saturday at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. Out shooting the Chargers 15-6 in the opening period while going 2-for2 on the power play, the Beavers dominated the opening 20 minutes of play. When the horn sounded to end the first frame, BSU skated off the ice owning a 3-1 lead. Kinne got the Beavers on the scoreboard netting his fifth goal of the season four-minutes and 25 seconds into the game. Ryan Cramer collected his first helper of the year on the play. Cramer found Kinne with a cross-ice pass near the red line and the rookie forward took care the rest. He skated the puck into the zone, cut through the Charger defense and slipped the puck between the legs of Blake MacNicol. Less than four minutes later (8:03), the Beavers made good on the first of 10 power-play opportunities they would get on the night. Matt Francis got the play started picking the puck out of a scrum along the boards in front of the UAH bench. He skated deep into the zone and slid the puck across the front of the crease to Scofield who place it just below the outstretched blocker of MacNicol for his team-leading 11th goal of the season. Hunt was credited with his second assist of the night after freeing the puck from the boards. Scofield made it 3-0, five minutes later (13:10) cleaning up a Read rebound from the right post 1:19 into the Beavers’ second power-play chance of the evening. Ala.-Huntsville broke the seal over the Beavers’ net to score their first goal of the series with 2:57 remaining in the first. Andrew Coburn was credited with the goal with help from Matt Sweazey and Matt Baxter. After a first period during which an aggressive Beaver team could do no wrong, Bemidji State seemed to be a bit more passive for the bulk of the final 40 minutes and struggled to retain the constant offensive pressure and momentum it held throughout the opening frame. Sweazey potted his 10th marker of the season 3:49 into the second reeling the hosts with within a goal, 3-2, but that was as close as the Chargers would come. Sweazey’s goal was the beginning and end to the scoring during the second period as the teams went into the second intermission with BSU on top 3-2. In the final moments third period, Kinne put BSU up 4-2 and secure the sweep with an empty-net goal. The tally not only marks the freshman’s first collegiate multi-goal effort, it also stands as his first multi-point game. Matt Dalton was again sharp in net for BSU. He stopped 17 UAH scoring attempts en route to his 13th victory of the season (13-8-0). He also backstopped a penalty-kill unit that stymied the UAH power-play for the second consecutive night. The Beavers had a total of 10 power-play opportunities in the game but after netting goals on their first two chances, the team came up dry to finish 2-for-10 in the game.
2009-10
1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Marino McKelvie Lowe 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Adams 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts
MOON TOWNSHIP, Pa. (RMU Island Sports Center) -- Robert Morris University senior Chris Margott netted a first-period, power-play goal and goaltender Brooks Ostergard slammed the door Bemidji State University stopping all 32 Beaver scoring attempts to shut BSU out, 3-0, Saturday at RMU Island Sports Center. While the loss snapped the Beavers’ five-game wining streak, the Colonials used the College Hockey America victory to reverse their recent luck posting their first win in six attempts. Despite out shooting RMU 32-28, including a 14-8 advantage in the third frame, the Beavers were unable to break Ostergard and find the back of the net, dropping their first game since January 23. The shutout also marks the first time the Beavers have been held without a goal since a 6-0 loss at Air Force Oct. 18. The Colonials got on the board at the 12:26 mark of the first period. RMU got the break it needed when Shea Walters was whistled for the first penalty of the game putting Robert Morris on the power-play 11:58 into the contest. Margott put the hosts up 1-0 just 28 seconds into the man advantage snapping a streak during which the BSU penalty-kill unit had not allowed a goal on nearly nine periods. Nathan Longpre and Denny Urban were credited with assists on the eventual game-winning goal. After a scoreless second stanza, the Colonials got an insurance goal on an unassisted talley by Jason Towsley with just over seven minutes to play. As time ticked off the clock, desperation set in on the Beavers and BSU head coach Tom Serratore played opted to pull goaltender Matt Dalton to add an extra attacker. Although the Beavers piled up quality scoring chances, they were unable to score and Ron Cramer added an empty-net goal with eight seconds left in regulation to lock up the 3-0 win. Margott’s goal on the man advantage was the only special teams marker of the game. RMU finished the contest 1-for-4 on the power-play while the Colonials held BSU scoreless on five chances. In 57:58 of play, Dalton stood in front of 25 RMU shots, but allowed two goals and was tagged with the loss. He falls to 13-9-0 on the season. Ostergard was flawless in the game turing away all 32 BSU shots for not only his first collegiate shutout, it also stood as the freshman’s first win for the Colonials. He moves to 1-2-0 in 2008-09.
3 3
Bemidji State Niagara
February 15, 2009 Moon Township. Pa. - RMU Island Sport Center Attendance : 711
Final
3 1
February 19, 2009 Lewiston, N.Y. - Dwyer, Arena Attendance : 1,021
1
2
3 OT
Bemidji State (13-14-1)
2
1
0
0
3
Bemidji State (14-14-1)
0
2
1
Robert Morris (6-17-5)
1
2
0
0
3
Niagara (15-12-2)
1
0
0
Second Period 6:09 BSU 3-1 6x6 Chris McKelvie (2) (Marino, Hunt) 14:03 RMU 3-2 6x6 Chris Kushneriuk (8) (Towsley, Kobialko) 14:41 RMU 3-3 6x6 GT Nathan Longpre (8) (Margott) Third Period none
Scoring Summary
1
2
4 1
February 20, 2009 Lewiston, N.Y. - Dwyer, Arena Attendance : 1,172
Scoring Summary
First Period 3:23 BSU 1-0 6x6 Ryan Cramer (2) (Kinne, Adams) 15:51 BSU 2-0 6x5 PP Travis Winter (6) (Bostock, Marino) 18:05 RMU 2-1 5x5 Chris Margott (17) (Lewis)
Bemidji State Niagara
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
3
Bemidji State (15-14-1)
1
2
1
4
1
Niagara (15-13-2)
0
0
1
1
First Period 4:27 NU 0-1 6x5 PP Vince Rocco (10) (Mironov, Cook)
First Period 14:11 BSU 1-0 6x4 PP Brandon Marino (6) (Hunt, Bostock)
Second Period 9:32 BSU 1-1 6x6 Brandon Marino (5) (McKelvie, Lowe) 12:00 BSU 2-1 6x6 uTyler Scofield (13) (Read) Third Period 11:12 BSU 3-1 6x5 PP Tyler Lehrke (1) (McManamin)
Second Period 8:46 BSU 2-0 6x6 uTyler Lehrke (2) (Walters, Kinne) 9:19 BSU 3-0 6x6 Ian Lowe (2) (Marino, McKelvie) Third Period 00:56 BSU 4-0 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (14) (Walters, Hunt) 16:31 NU 4-1 6x6 Egor Mironov (14) (Baco, Moran)
Overtime none
Shots on Goal BSU RMU
Shots on Goal
1
2
3
OT
14 7
8 23
9 6
4 2
Final 35 38
Penalties & Power Plays Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
6 5
12 10
0 0
1-for-4 0-for-5
.250 .000
Goaltending BSU
Shots on Goal
1
2
3
Final
10 6
13 11
5 11
28 28
BSU NU
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen BSU RMU
BSU NU
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 6
8 12
0 0
1-for-6 1-for-4
.167 .250
2
3
ot
Dalton (13-9-1)
6
RMU
1
21
6
2
2
3
Ostergard (1-2-1)
12
7
9
4
Tot
Min
GA
25
65:00
3
Tot
Min
GA
32
65:00
3
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Marino McKelvie Lowe 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Adams 3D Hardwick McManamin bold= starting line TOTAL
MOON TOWNSHIP, Pa. (RMU Island Sports Center) -- After jumping out to a two-goal, first-period lead, the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team weathered a frantic second period by Robert Morris University to skate out of Pittsburgh, Pa. with a 3-3 tie. Down 3-1 early in the second, the Colonials scored two goals in the span of 35 seconds to climb back into the College Hockey America contest Sunday afternoon at RMU Island Sports Center. The Beavers got on the board just 3:23 into the game. Ryan Cramer netted his second goal of the season with help from Ben Kinne and Ryan Adams, marking the sophomore defender’s second point as a Beaver. Travis Winter built the BSU lead to two-goals with a power-play marker at the 15:52 mark of the first. After Chris Margott’s team-leading 17th goal of 2008-09 got the Colonials on the board with just under two-minutes to play in the first period, the teams skated into the intermission with the Beavers clinging to a one-goal lead, 2-1. As the second period got underway, it was all green and white. After successfully killing off a full two-minute 5-on-3, the Beavers reconstructed their two-goal advantage on a breakaway goal by Chris McKelvie. Whistled for penalties four minutes into the frame, McKelvie and Marino were sent to the box setting up the two-man advantage for RMU. Just as it has over its recent winning streak, the staunch BSU penalty-kill unit, backstopped by sophomore goaltender Matt Dalton, stood strong. As the penalty time expired, the tandem was greeted with a Brad Hunt pass as they skated out of the box and a nifty pass by Marino on the doorstep set the assistant captain up for his second goal of the season. But after that, things began to go sour for the visitors. BSU’s lead lasted just over eight minutes. With 14:03 gone in the second period, the Colonials caught the Beavers on their heels and Jason Towsley zipped the puck across the front of the crease for Chris Kushneriuk who was waiting on the other post and one-timed it past Dalton. Thirty-five seconds later, RMU struck again. This time it was it was Nathan Longpre who fired a bullet past the BSU netminder from the top of the circle directly off a face off. Margott was credited with the lone assist on the play after winning the draw. Just like that, the score was knotted at 3-3. And despite a period during which RMU out shot the Beavers 23-8, BSU would fight and claw its way to the locker rooms with the score even after 40-minutes of play. Each team was held scoreless through the duration of the third and the five-minute overtime period. Tyler Lehrke supplied the Beavers with their best scoring chance during the final 25 minutes narrowly missing a difference-making goal in the third. The junior made a move to beat the RMU goalie and rung a short-handed shot off the post. Dalton turned away 35 RMU shots, including a 21-save second period, in his first career tie as he moves 13-9-1. The BSU penalty-kill and power-play units won the battle of special teams as the Beavers went 1-for-4 on the man advantage with Winter netting his 16th career power-play tally, while the penalty kill was flawless holding off all five of the Colonials power-play chances.
Final 39 30
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
5 4
10 8
0 0
2-for-4 0-for-5
.500 .000
Goaltending
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
1
2
3
Tot
Min
Dalton (14-9-1) Empty net
5 0
11 0
11 0
27 0
59:50 0:10
1 0
Dalton (15-9-1)
8
11
10
25
60:00
1
NU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
NU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Pagliero (15-11-1)
10
11
4
25
60:00
3
Pagliero (15-12-1) Empty net
10 0
12 0
13 0
26 0
59:50 0:10
4 0
Bemidji State Lines 0-0=0 pts 1-0=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 1-2=3 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 3-6=9 pts
3 14 11
Pen BSU NU
Goaltending 1
2 14 11
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen BSU NU
1 11 8
1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Marino McKelvie Lowe 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Adams 3D Hardwick McManamin bold= starting line TOTAL
BSU
GA
Bemidji State Lines 1-1=2 pts 1-0=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-2=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 3-4=7 pts
LEWISTON, N.Y. (Dwyer Arena) -- The Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team dominated three periods of play Thursday at Dwyer Arena and came away with a convincing 3-1 College Hockey America victory over Niagara University to show for it. Two second period goals was all the Beaver needed to earn two points in the conference standings stretching its lead over the Purple Eagles to four points. Vince Rocco put BSU in a 1-0 hole early taking advantage of Niagara’s second power-play opportunity during the first five minutes of play. Down 1-0 after the first frame, the Beavers piled up 13 shots on goal in the second and saw Brandon Marino and Tyler Scofield find the back of the net. The Beavers got on the board 9:32 into the second period with Marino’s five goal of the season. Chris McKelvie got the play started from behind the net when he found Ian Lowe between the circles. When NU’s goaltender Juliano Pagliero couldn’t corral the rebound off the Lowe shot, Marino was there to tuck it between the pipes. Just over two minutes later (12:00), Scofield would put BSU up 2-1 when he one-timed a rolling puck pass from Matt Read for his team-leading 13th marker of 2008-09. BSU took the one-goal lead into the dressing rooms after 40 minutes of play and would not look back as Matt Dalton stood in front of 27 Niagara scoring attempts, which included 11 in the third period alone, and allowed just one goal to improve to 14-9-1 on the season. Despite being out shot 11-5 during the final 20 minutes, BSU not only held off the NU charge to take the first half of the series and hold on to its lead in the CHA standings, Tyler Lehrke added an insurance goal a the 11:12 mark of the third beating Pagliero stick side. A Bemidji State penalty-kill unit that has been as stingy as any in the country over the last eight games, held off five of the Purple Eagles’ six chances in the game. Since Jan. 24, the Beavers have killed 43 of its opponents’ 47 power-play opportunities (.915). The Beavers also found the net on the power-play, going 1-for five. The Purple Eagles still own a 20-16-8 mark in the all-time series, but since Oct. 27, 2006, BSU holds a 5-4-4 edge.
1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Findlay 3F Kinne Walters Lehrke 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Adams 3D Hardwick McManamin bold= starting line TOTAL
1-0=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-3=4 pts 2-2=4 pts 0-3=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 4-8=12 pts
LEWISTON, N.Y. (Dwyer Arena) -- With its back against the wall and the College Hockey America 2008-09 regular-season title hanging in the balance, the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team took a big step towards defending its 2008-07 title Friday, earning a 4-1 victory over Niagara University at Dwyer Arena. In addition to garnering four points and stretching its lead in the CHA standings to six over second place NU, BSU also claimed its first series sweep in Niagara Falls since Nov. 19-20, 2004. Bemidji State picked up right where it left off from the 3-1 victory Thursday, playing hard-nosed defense, being efficient on special teams and capitalizing on scoring opportunities to put together six solid periods of hockey. After beginning the first period with very even play, the Beavers opened the scoring at the 14:11 mark in the midst of a five-on-three power-play. Brandon Marino funneled the puck towards the net and saw it rattle through the skates of NU goaltender Juliano Pagliero, for his second goal of the series and sixth of the season. The defensive pairing of Brad Hunt and Cody Bostock garnered assists on Marino’s 50th career point. BSU held a 1-0 lead until its offense erupted for a pair of goals separated by just 37 seconds midway through the second period. Tyler Lehrke put Bemidji State up 2-0 when he corralled a loose puck out of a scrum in front of the crease and slapped it off the right post and into the back of the net at the 8:46 mark of the stanza. Shea Walters and Ben Kinne were credited with assists on what would turn out to be Lehrke’s first collegiate game-winning goal. With 9:19 left in the second, Ian Lowe took a pass from Chris McKelvie and Marino and rung it off the pipe to give the Beavers a three-goal cushion, 3-0. Before time ran out on the period, Darcy Findlay slid the puck past Pagliero, but had the goal waved off to prevent the Beavers from a 4-0 lead heading into the dressing rooms after 40 minutes, but not before the Purple Eagles were whistled for a penalty as the horn sounded setting up a BSU power-play to open the final 20 minutes of play. The Beavers took full advantage of the opportunity. Tyler Scofield scored 56-seconds into the final frame, lifting a pass from Walters and Hunt into the back of the net for BSU’s second power-play goal of the night and a 4-0 Bemidji State lead. The marker, Scofield’s 14th of the season, stands as a career high and put the senior in elite company. He joins Beaver greats: Andrew Murray, Marty Goulet, Luke Erickson and Rob Sirianni as the only BSU Division I-era players to register 40 goals and 50 assists during a career. Matt Dalton was superb in net turning aside 29 Purple Eagle scoring attempts while allowing just one goal to Egor Mironov with 3:29 to play. The win pushes Dalton’s season record to 15-9-1, while he watched his save percentage climb to a league-best .927 and his goals against average fall to a meager 1.88 in conference play. While the Beavers scored on two of their four power-play chances, the team held NU scoreless on five opportunities continuing its streak of tremendous special teams play.
2009-10
51
2008-09 game recaps
Bemidji State Robert Morris
2008-09 game recpas
USA U-18 team Bemidji State
1 3
USA U-18 team Bemidji State
February 27, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,815
2
3
Final
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
1
USA U-18 Team
1
1
0
2
Robert Morris (9-17-7)
1
0
2
3
3
Bemidji State
3
0
1
4
Bemidji State (15-15-1) 0
0
2
2
3
Final
USA U-18 Team
1
0
0
Bemidji State
1
2
0
First Period 4:25 BSU 0-1 8:03 BSU 0-2 13:10 BSU 0-3 17:03 UAH 1-3
First Period 1:39 USA 1-0 6x6 Jeremy Morin (Shore, D’Amigo) 2:37 BSU 1-1 6x5 PP Matt Read (Walters, Francis) Second Period 0:19 BSU 1-2 5x6 SH uTyler Scofield (Read, Peluso) 11:23 BSU 1-3 6x6 Jamie MacQueen (Bostock, Hunt) Third Period none
6x6 Ben Kinne (5) (Cramer, Hunt) 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (11) (Francis, Hunt) 6x5 PP uTyler Scofield (12) (Read, Francis) 5x5 Andrew Coburn (5) (Sweazey, Baxter)
Second Period 3:49 UAH 2-3 6x6 Matt Sweazey (10) (Fairbanks, Tanaka) Third Period 19:37 BSU 2-4 6x6 EN Ben Kinne (6) (Peluso)
1
2
3
Final
8 7
9 10
8 12
25 29
UAH BSU
1
2
3
Final
6 15
7 8
6 8
19 31
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
8 12
16 24
0 1
0-for-11 1-for-6
.000 .167
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
11 8
22 16
0 0
0-for-7 2-for-10
.000 .200
UAH BSU
USA
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Maxwell Empty Net
6 0
8 0
12 0
26 0
58:46 1:14
3 1
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Bakala
7
9
8
24
60:00
1
Bemidji State Lines 1-0=1 pts 1-2=3 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-0=1 pts 3-6=9 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- Matt Read scored a goal and added an assist and a total of eight Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey players found there way into the scoring column as the Beavers dropped the United States National Development Program’s Under-18 Team tonight in front of 1,815 faithful at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. After falling behind, 1-0, just 99-seconds into the game, the Beavers bounced back to score three unanswered goals to earn a 3-1 victory and extend their exhibition winning streak to six games. Both teams kicked the pedal to the floor out of the gates, but it was USA that was first to light the lamp. Jeremy Morin netted his 22nd goal of the season from the right post when BSU goaltender Dan Bakala couldn’t corral the rebound off a Drew Shore slap shot from the slot. Jerry D’Amigo was also credited with an assist on the play. Fifty-eight seconds later, the Beavers evened the score on a power-play goal from Read. After each team put four shots on goal during the first three minutes of play BSU and USA went up and down for the remainder of the period and managed a total of seven shots in the final 17 minutes. USA took the 8-7 edge on the shot board to the locker room at the end of the first, but the score was locked at 1-1. It took BSU just 19-seconds into the second stanza to break the tie. Tyler Scofield put the Beavers up for good with teammate Kyle Hardwick in the penalty box for the Beavers’ first short-handed goal of the season. Jamie MacQueen added an insurance goal midway through the period when he tipped a Cody Bostock slap shot from the top of the left circle past Brandon Maxwell to put BSU up 3-1. That is where the score would stay as Maxwell piled up 12 third period saves to Bakala’s eight to finish the contest. Bakala totaled 24 saves in 60-minutes of play marking his third exhibition victory of the season. On the other end of the ice Maxwell stood in front of 26 shots but was tagged with the loss after allowing all three BSU goals. He moves to 14-8-0 on the season. Just as it has down the stretch, BSU again won the battle of special teams tonight. The penalty-kill unit snuffed out all 12 of Team USA’s powerplay opportunities, including a 6-on-3 stint during the final minute, while the Beavers made good on one of six chances on the man advantage. The Beavers are now 10-5-1 in exhibition play since 1999-2000 and move to 3-1-0 all-time versus the U.S. National Under-18 Team.
Chris Margott (18) (Lewis) Matt Francis (9) (Scofield, Hunt) uChris Margott (19) (Urban, Longpre) Matt Francis (10) (Read, Hunt)
6x6 6x5 PP 6x5 PP 6x6
RMU BSU
1
2
3
Final
5 12
10 4
8 14
23 30
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
7 8
25 16
0 0
1-for-8 1-for-6
.125 .167
RMU BSU
Goaltending
Goaltending
Goaltending
Jason Towsley (9) (Meadows, Kobialko)
Second Period none Third Period 5:50 RMU 2-0 7:10 BSU 2-1 12:14 RMU 3-1 16:29 BSU 3-2
Penalties & Power Plays
Penalties & Power Plays
Penalties & Power Plays
First Period 18:09 RMU 1-0 6x6
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal
52
March 6, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,791
1
2
1F MacQueen MacIntyre Findlay 2F Tamane Read Francis 3F Kinne Walters Lehrke 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Adams 3D Hardwick Mcmanamin XD/XF Jundt Schofield bold= starting line TOTAL
3 2
Scoring Summary
1
USA BSU
Robert Morris Bemidji State
February 28, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,893
Scoring Summary
USA BSU
0 2
UAH
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
RMU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
MacNicol (3-4-1) Talbot Empty Net
11 1 0
0 8 0
0 7 0
11 16 0
13:10 46:12 0:28
3 0 1
Ostergard (4-2-3) Empty net
12 0
4 0
12 0
28 0
59:59 0:01
2 0
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (13-8-0)
5
6
6
17
60:00
2
Dalton (15-10-1) Empty net
4 0
10 0
6 0
20 0
59:05 0:55
3 0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Marino McKelvie Lowe 1D McManamin Peluso 2D Bostock Hunt 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
2-3=5 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-1=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 4-7=11 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. -- For the second consecutive night the playmaking ability of Matt Read lifted Bemidji State men’s ice hockey team over the United State Development Program’s Under-18 Team at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. The Beavers won the exhibition contest 6-3, but the significance of the of the evening came about in a rink over 1,000-miles away in the outskirts of Pittsburgh, Pa. Entering the weekend with a four-point lead over second-place Niagara in the College Hockey America standings, the Beavers needed a loss by the Purple Eagles, who played at Robert Morris, to clinch at least a share of the regular-season conference championship and the No. 1 seed in the upcoming CHA Tournament. Although the Colonials didn’t pull off a victory, they did skate to a pair of draws with NU, 3-3 and 0-0, which together are worth two points-the equivalent of a win. So the pairings are set for the conference tournament March 13-14 at the Glas. No. 2 Niagara will battle No. 3 Robert Morris in the 2 p.m. semifinal, while the top-seeded Beavers will host No. 4 University of Alabama-Huntsville in the 7 p.m. contest. Bemidji State, which hosts the Colonials in the final series of the regular season, seems to be playing its best hockey of the year down the stretch. Unbeaten in its last three, which includes the sweep over Niagara, the Beavers piled up a pair of exhibition wins this weekend over a U.S. team that is .500 versus NCAA Division I competition in 2008-09 (13-13-1). Read stole the show leading all scorers with two goals and two assists. He opened the BSU scoring effort beating the U.S. goaltender up top with a wrist shot from the left circle just 1:25 into play. Matt Francis and Brent Tamane were credited with assists on the play. The Under-18 Team bit back 2:24 later when Jason Zucker stuffed a rebound past BSU goaltender Orlando Alamano on the power play for his first marker of the season. Read and the Beavers battled back to go up 3-1 midway through the first. The sophomore hit Chris Peluso with a nifty pass to the left doorstep and Peluso put the puck in the back of the net to complete the play at the 6:33 mark. Peluso and Read teamed up again nine minutes later but this time it was Peluso who supplied Read with a pass that led to a goal. Before time would expire on the period, the U.S. cut the deficit to a goal and sent the teams to the dressing rooms with the score in favor of the Beavers, 3-2. Shea Walters netted an even-strength goal 11 minutes into the period while Tamane potted a power-play marker at the 15:15 mark cap the first 40 minutes of play with the Beavers out in front by three (5-2). With just 4:04 to play, Tyler Lehrke gave BSU a four-goal cushion on a laser into the back of the net. Ryan Bourque scored at the 16:40 mark bring the score to its final resting place, 6-3. Bemidji State kept Murray busy all evening. The Beavers out shot the U.S. squad 42-24. Murray stood in front of 36 shots, but allowed six goals. Alamano turned away 21 scoring attempts on the other end of the ice, allowing three goals in 59:55 of play.
2009-10
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Findlay 3F Kinne Walters Lehrke 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso McManamin 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
2-2=4 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-2=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 2-4=6 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. (John S. Glas Fieldhouse) -- Matt Francis posted the first multi-goal effort of his career, but that’s where the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team’s offense would end as the Beavers fell to Robert Morris University, 3-2, in College Hockey America play Friday at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. The Beavers, who struggled to generate any momentum during the first 40 minutes of play, found themselves down 2-0 in the opening minutes of the third period. Francis scored twice in the final stanza, each time cutting BSU’s deficit to a goal, but that was as close as the Beavers would come before time ran out on the rally. Despite dropping the game, the Beavers still grabbed the 2008-09 College Hockey America regular-season championship outright. Niagara University and the University of Alabama-Huntsville skated to a 2-2 draw leaving NU three points behind Bemidji State with just a game and the potential of two points left on the table. After coming out of gates a bit groggy, BSU looked to get the boost it and the Glas faithful were craving as Stephan Lachapelle was whistled for a checking from behind penalty that set the Beavers up on a five-minute power-play midway through the first period. Just over three minutes later RMU’s Dave Cowan was escorted to the box for tripping to give the Beavers 5-on-3 advantage for 1:34, but the green an white were unable to convert. Three-minutes and thirty-seconds after the penalty expired, Jason Towsley netted his ninth goal of the season, giving the Colonials the first goal of the game and a 1-0 lead heading into the first intermission despite being out shot 12-5 in the period. The teams opened the third period with the scoreboard stuck 1-0 in favor of the visitors, but 5:50 into play, Chris Margott netted his 11th goal in CHA play to put the Beavers down by two. Bemidji State would respond at the seven-minute mark on a Francis power-play goal. Brad Hunt and Tyler Scofield were credited with assists on the play after some fifty passing beat the RMU goaltender to leave the senior with a largely open net. From the point, Hunt zipped a pass to Scofield nuzzled in on the right post before the playmaker quickly redirected the puck across the crease to Francis who was camped on the left post. The Colonials would get a power-play goal from Margott with more than seven minutes left to reclaim a two-goal cushion. Francis recorded his 10th goal of the season at the 16:29 mark when corralled a rebound off the pad of Brooks Ostergard and forcing back in the net, but it was too little too late. Head coach Tom Serratore pulled Matt Dalton (So., Clinton, Ontario) for the final 55 seconds but the Beavers were unable to catch break. Dalton finished the night with 20 saves, including 10 in the second period, but allowed three goals and was tagged with the loss. He falls to 15-10-1 on the season. Ostergard posted 28 saves in the win seeing his record improve to 4-2-3 overall and extend his unbeaten streak to seven games.
4 6
Ala.-Huntsville Bemidji State
March 7, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,891
1
2
3
Final
Robert Morris (9-18-7)
1
3
0
Bemidji State (16-15-1) 0
5
1
3 OT
1
Robert Morris (10-19-7) 1
1
0
0
2
4
Bemidji State (18-15-1) 1
1
0
1
3
2
3
Final
4
Ala.-Huntsville (5-20-4)
0
1
0
6
Bemidji State (17-15-1) 1
1
2
First Period 4:40 BSU 0-1 6x6
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal 2
3
Final
9 11
11 17
4 15
24 43
Penalties & Power Plays
UAH BSU
Second Period 14:08 BSU 1-2 6x6 Matt Read (12) (Francis, Scofield) 18:47 RMU 2-2 5x4 PP Chris Margott (21) (Longpre, Kushneriuk) Third Period none
uMatt Francis (12) (Scofield, Hunt) Joe Federoff (5) (Fairbanks, Durnie) Brandon Marino (7) (McKelvie, MacQueen) Matt Read (11) (Francis, Dalton)
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
7 12
22 43
0 3
2-for-10 2-for-6
.200 .333
2
3
Final
8 15
11 12
7 6
26 33
Goaltending
RMU BSU
1
2
3
OT
7 8
16 10
5 14
3 8
Final 31 40
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
2 3
4 6
0 0
0-for-3 1-for-2
.000 .500
UAH BSU
uMatt Read (13) (Adams)
Shots on Goal
1
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen
Final
First Period 3:53 RMU 1-0 6x6 Ron Cramer (4) (Cowan, Lyle) 19:30 BSU 1-1 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (18) (Read, Hunt)
Overtime Period 8:05 BSU 2-3 6x6
1
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
9 6
26 12
0 0
1-for-6 1-for-8
.167 .125
RMU BSU
Goaltending
Goaltending UAH
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
RMU
1
2
3
ot
Tot
Min
4 1 1
Talbot (1-16-3) Empty net
14 0
11 0
4 0
29 0
59:28 0:32
3 1
Ostergard (5-3-3)
7
9
14
7
37
68:05
3
BSU
1
2
3
ot
Tot
Min
GA
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (17-10-1)
6
15
5
3
29
68:05
2
Min
GA
Dalton (16-10-1)
8
10
7
25
60:00
1
59:58 0:02
4 0
RMU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Ostergard Patterson (0-3-1) Empty net
11 0 0
6 6 0
0 14 0
17 20 0
30:21 28:58 0:41
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Alamano (1-5-0) Empty net
8 0
8 0
4 0
20 0
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Billberg 3F Kinne Walters Lehrke 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso McManamin 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
Scoring Summary
Matt Read (10) (Francis, Peluso)
Second Period 1:06 BSU 0-2 6x4 PP 5:51 UAH 1-2 6x6 Third Period 2:22 BSU 1-3 6x6 19:16 BSU 1-4 6x6 EN
RMU BSU
2
1
Second Period 2:33 BSU 1-1 6x5 PP Tyler Scofield (15) (Francis, Hunt) 2:56 RMU 2-1 6x6 Chris Margott (20) (Longpre, Lewis) 4:00 BSU 2-2 6x5 PP Matt Francis (11) (Scofield, Walters) 5:03 BSU 2-3 6x6 Tyler Scofield (16) (Francis, Hunt) 7:46 RMU 3-3 6x5 PP James Lyle (3) (Towsley, Kobialko) 9:49 RMU 4-3 6x4 PP Denny Urban (3) (Longpre, Margott) 10:21 BSU 4-4 5x6 SH Tyler Scofield (17) (Read, Hunt) 16:38 BSU 4-5 5x6 SH uMatt Read (9) (unassisted) Third Period 18:57 BSU 4-6 5x6 SH EN Ben Kinne (7) (Read)
RMU BSU
1
Scoring Summary
Kyle Burton (7) (Cramer, Blandina)
2 3
March 14, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,962
March 13, 2009 Bemidji, Minn. - John S. Glas Fieldhouse Attendance : 1,710
Scoring Summary
First Period 19:53 RMU 1-0 6x6
Robert Morris Bemidji State
1 4
5-5=10 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-3=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 6-9=15 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. (John S. Glas Fieldhouse) -- On a night when the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team honored its seniors, appropriately it was a senior who took center stage as the Beavers came from behind to defeat Robert Morris University, 6-4, to wrap up the 2008-09 regular season. Fourth-year forward, Tyler Scofield netted his first collegiate hat trick during a second period in which BSU scored five goals and grabbed the lead for good. Five of the Beavers’ six goals came courtesy of special teams play. BSU finished the game 2-for-6 on the power-play and added a BSU Division I-era record three short-handed goals. After playing the first 31 games of the season without recording a single short-handed goal, the team was just 29:39 from skating through the entire regular season with out a shorty for the first time since the 1966-67 season, but the Beavers piled up three tonight to join several other teams in a tie for fifth place in NCAA Division I history. Down 1-0 after 20 minutes of play, the Beavers knotted the game 2:33 into the second period when Scofield scored a power-play marker with help from Matt Francis and Brad Hunt who each, along with Matt Read, registered three points on the night. Twenty-three seconds later, RMU’s Chris Margott would zip an evenstrength marker past BSU goaltender Orlando Alamano who was between the pipes for the Beavers for the first time since Jan. 17th. At the four-minute mark, BSU got a power-play goal from Francis to lock the score at 2-2 before Scofield put the Beavers in front for the first time all series five minutes into the second. With his second goal of the night, Scofield became the sixth player of BSU’s Division I era to post 100 points during a career. The see-saw battled continued as the Colonials regained the lead, 4-3, at the 9:49 mark of the period after James Lyle and Denny Urban posted back-toback goals separated by just 2:03. But the Beavers were determined to send their seniors out with a bang and got short-handed goals by Scofield and Read to wrap up the Beavers’ first five-goal period since a Nov. 12, 2004, 9-2 victory over Bentley and send the team to the third period grasping a 5-4 lead. Alamano kept the Colonials out of the net in the third and Ben Kinne netted his first collegiate short-handed goal on an empty net with just over a minute to play to put the win in the books. A total of six Beavers found their way into the scoring column while four of them posted three-or-more points. Alamano completed the game with 20 saves in 59:58 of work collecting his first victory of the campaign. His record moves to 1-5-0. The Colonials were goaltender by committee. After starter Brooks Ostergard allowed BSU’s fourth goal, RMU coach Derek Schooley replaced the freshman with Jim Paterson, but not before he totaled 17 saves in just over 30 minutes between the pipes. Patterson finished the game with 20 saves in nearly 30 minutes, but allowed the game-winning goal by Read and was credited with the loss. After the game the Beavers were presented with the R.H. Peters Trophy for their outright College Hockey America regular season championship, the teams fourth in six years and the 21st conference crown in the storied history of the BSU hockey program.
Bemidji State Lines
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Billberg 3F Kinne Walters Lehrke 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Jundt 3D Adams Hardwick G Dalton bold= starting line TOTAL
GA
3-3=6 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-1=2 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 4-8=12 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. (John S. Glas Fieldhouse) -- The Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team got a goal early and clamped down defensively to pull out 4-1 victory over University of Alabama-Huntsville, Friday evening, to advance to the College Hockey America Tournament championship game for the sixth time in program history. With their backs against he wall in the one-and-done tournament, the Beavers’ top line of Matt Francis, Matt Read and Tyler Scofield accounted for three goals and three assists to pace BSU offensive attack. From there, Matt Dalton posted his 16th win of the season after turning away 25 shots in 60 minutes of action, while BSU blocked 21 shots making it tough on the Charger attackers all night. The Beavers opened the scoring 4:40 into the game when Francis skated the puck into the zone and waited for last possible moment and threaded a pass from the goal line to the tape of Read who was on the back door for his 10th goal of the season. Bemidji State took the 1-0 lead into the first intermission owning a 15-8 advantage in shots on goal after a solid period. In addition to Dalton’s eight saves, the Beavers made it tough for UAH to get to its netminder blocking an additional nine shots. The Beavers built a 2-0 lead at 1:06 of the second period netting a 5-on-3 power-play marker just 19 seconds into the man advantage. After Matt Baxter was whistled for tripping with Brennan Barker in the penalty box, 2009 CHA Rookie of the Year and first-team selection Brad Hunt fired a shot from the point and Scofield corralled the rebound and flipped the puck to Francis who buried his 12th marker of the 2008-09. The Chargers cut the deficit in half just under six minutes into the second. Chris Fairbanks got behind the Bemidji State defensive pair and connected with Joe Federoff, who flipped the puck over the shoulder of Dalton. With a 2-1 lead to open the third period, Brandon Marino supplied BSU with a two-goal lead 2:22 into the stanza. Marino ripped an odd-angle shot from the near boards that caught Cameron Talbot by surprised and dribbled into the net. Chris McKelvie and Jamie MacQueen were credited with assists on the play. The Beavers would add a an insurance goal with 44-seconds to play when Read potted an empty-net goal form the far blue line for the first multi-goal effort of his career. Dalton and Francis were each credited as helpers on the play as Dalton tied Layne Sedevie (2003-07) for the Beaver’s Division I era record for career assists by a goaltender. A key to the Beavers’ success down the stretch has been its solid special teams play and tonight the team again won that battle. BSU converted one of its two power-play chances, while it held the Chargers scoreless on three man advantage opportunities. In addition to Dalton’s night between the pipes, Talbot stood in front of 29 shots, including 14 in the second period alone, but allowed three BSU goals and was tagged with the loss, he falls to 2-16-3 ion 2008-09.
1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Billberg 3F Kinne Walters Lehrke 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Jundt 3D Adams Hardwick bold= starting line TOTAL
3-3=6 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 3-5=8 pts
BEMIDJI, Minn. (John S. Glas Fieldhouse) -- The hallowed John S. Glas Fieldhouse has been the site of nearly 700 Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey games and countless championship contest during its 42-year history, but before all is said and done and Vance swings the Zamboni door closed one last time, this one may be remembered as one of the greatest. With the score locked at 2-2 through the full 60 minutes of regulation time, the Beavers and College Hockey America rival Robert Morris University opened a 20-minute sudden death overtime session with the 2009 CHA Tournament Championship, and more importantly a bid to the NCAA Tournament, on the line. The Beavers have a storied national championship tradition at all levels of collegiate hockey and yearned for a return trip to the big dance after punching their tickets in 2005 and 2006, while the Colonials were desperately searching for their first tournament berth. After 68:05 of edge-of-your-seat drama, it was BSU’s top scorer Matt Read that won the face off, charged the net and put a Ryan Adams rebound into the back of the net for a 3-2 overtime victory, Saturday in front of 1,962 at The Glas, to confirm the Beavers’ reservation for the national tournament field of 16. “First of all, I don’t think we could have dreamt of having a better game tonight. It could have gone either way – we were just fortunate to get that last bounce,” commented head coach Tom Serratore. “Being able to do this at home just makes it that much sweeter.” The Colonials were the first to light the scoreboard, netting an evenstrength marker at the 3:52 mark of the first period. Trapped in their own zone, Tyler Jundt lost his stick in the corner and despite diving to block the Ron Cramer shot, the RMU forward lifted the puck over the defenseman and past BSU goaltender Matt Dalton. Bemidji State got a power-play goal from Tyler Scofield to tie the score and ignite the BSU faithful with just 30-seconds remaining in the period. It was Read that found Scofield rushing the net and the senior playmaker threaded a his team-leading 18th goal of the season over the stick of Brooks Ostergard and under the cross bar. The goal came just 24-seconds into the Beavers’ second power-play opportunity of the evening and propelled the team into the dressing room with score knotted at one apiece. Read willed the Beavers to their first lead of the night, 2-1, 14:08 into the second period. After buzzing a shot past Ostergard and off the post, a Scofield rebound squirted to the left pipe and Read was there to bury it. But the lead was short lived. Just when Bemidji State seemed to have momentum rolling in its favor, the team was tagged for two penalties giving the Colonials a 4-on-3 advantage for 1:28. It took CHA scoring champion Chris Margott just 22-seconds to even the score at 2-2. From that point on, the goaltenders were pushed to center stage. Ultimately the score remained locked at 2-2 through the final 20 minutes of regulation setting the stage for the tremendous overtime finish. Read posted his second career multi-goal game en route to All-Tournament and Tournament Most Outstanding Player honors. He was joined on the All-Tournament team by teammates Scofield, Brad Hunt and Dalton.
2009-10
53
2008-09 game recaps
Robert Morris Bemidji State
2008-09 game recpas
Bemidji State (2) Notre Dame
5 1
Bemidji State (9) Cornell
March 28, 2009 Grand Rapids, Mich. - Van Andel Arena Attendance : 4,052
Scoring Summary
(12) Bemidji State 1 (4) Miami (Ohio) 4
March 29, 2009 Grand Rapids, Mich. - Van Andel Arena Attendance : 3,170
1
2
3
Final
Bemidji State (19-15-1) 2
1
2
Notre Dame (31-6-3)
0
1
0
4 1
1
2
3
Final
5
Bemidji State (20-15-1) 0
1
3
1
Cornell (22-10-4)
1
0
First Period 1:42 BSU 1-0 6x6 Chris McKelvie (3) (unassisted) 11:03 BSU 2-0 6x5 PP uTyler Scofield (19) (Hunt, Read)
Scoring Summary
April 9, 2009 Washington, D.C. - Vorizon Center Attendance : 18,427
0
Scoring Summary
1
2
3
Final
4
Bemidji State (20-16-1) 0
1
0
1
1
Miami (23-12-5)
3
1
4
0
First Period none
First Period none
Second Period 13:19 BSU 3-0 6x6 Ben Kinne (8) (Cramer, Walters) Third Period 0:49 BSU 4-0 5x6 SH Matt Read (14) (Scofield, Hardwick) 6:02 UND 4-1 6x6 Dan Kissel (6) (Guentzel, Blatchford) 16:33 BSU 5-1 6x6 EN Tyler Scofield (20) (unassisted)
Second Period 12:35 COR 0-1 6x6 Sean Collins (3) (Ross, Mugford) 14:25 BSU 1-1 6x6 Ryan Adams (1) (Scofield) Third Period 4:05 BSU 2-1 6x6 uTyler Scofield (21) (Read, Hardwick) 9:30 BSU 3-1 6x6 Matt Francis (13) (Kinne) 16:37 BSU 4-1 6x6 EN Tyler Scofield (22) (Read, McManamin)
Second Period 3:56 MIA 0-1 6x5 PP Tommy Wingels (9) (Tomassoni, Miele) 8:35 MIA 0-2 6x6 GW uAlden Hirschfeld (5) (Wingels, Camper) 9:46 BSU 1-2 6x5 PP Matt Read (15) (Francis, Scofield) 10:46 MIA 1-3 6x6 Bill Loupee (3) (Weber) Third Period 17:52 MIA 1-4 6x6 EN Tommy Wingels (10) (unassisted)
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal
Shots on Goal
BSU UND
1
2
3
Final
7 11
8 11
4 13
19 35
Penalties & Power Plays Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
4 5
8 10
1 0
1-for-5 0-or-4
.200 .000
Goaltending
3
Final
6 5
10 9
5 12
21 26
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (18-10-1)
11
11
12
34
60:00
1
UND
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Pearce (30-6-3) Empty net
5 0
7 0
2 0
14 0
59:43 00:17
4 1
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso McManamin 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
3-2=5 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-2=3 pts 1-0=1 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 5-6=11 pts
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (Van Andel Arena) -- There may not have been many who gave the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team a chance to be in the 2009 NCAA Tournament, let alone to compete with nationally-ranked Notre Dame in the Midwest Regional semifinals, but with a convincing 5-1 victory over the Fighting Irish Saturday night at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Mich, the Beavers proved that they belonged. Bemidji State caught a bounce, struck in the game’s opening moments, and would not look back, scooting out to a 4-0 lead before the Fighting Irish were able to break the seal on the BSU net. “I am proud of our players,” head coach Tom Serratore said. “This program has had a lot of success over the years, but a win like this is extremely gratifying for everyone affiliated with Beaver hockey.” The team’s excitement was undermined by the fact that the season is not over. “Obviously this is exciting,” commented Tyler Scofield, who posted his fourth multigoal contest of the year. “This was a big game and it was a big step, but we’ve got another team out there and we’ve got to start focusing on tomorrow. We’ll enjoy this while we can, but were not done. We’ve still got business here tomorrow night.” It took the underdog Beavers just 1:42 to light their half of the scoreboard. Notre Dame goaltender Jordan Pearce went behind the net to play the puck, misplayed it and stumbled as he attempted to get back in the net. BSU’s assistant captain Chris McKelvie was in the right place at the right time and pushed the puck across the goal line. The unassisted goal was his third of the season. The Beavers extended that lead to two nine minutes later. Notre Dame’s Ian Cole was sent to the box for hooking at the 9:48 mark to set up BSU’s first power-play of the tournament. Matt Read found Brad Hunt on the point for a shot. Hunt’s attempt was tipped in by Scofield for the Beavers’ second goal and would stand as Scofield’s team-leading fourth game-winning goal of 2008-09. The BSU lead swelled to 3-0 at the 13:19 mark of the second period when a Notre Dame defender deflected a Ben Kinne shot past Pearce. Shea Walters and Ryan Cramer, who made his first appearance since suffering a knee injury Feb. 19 at Niagara, were credited with assists on the play. Dalton was a wall for BSU, single-handedly keeping the Beavers in position to win. During the first 40 minutes of play alone, Dalton piled up 22 saves and held one of the elite scoring attacks in all of college hockey silent heading into the third. The first 1:58 of the third served as a fulcrum for the Beavers as they played a man short. Either they were going to stand strong and begin to put the clamps on the region’s top-seeded team or they were going to break and open the door for a Notre Dame comeback. Not only did the BSU penalty-kill unit do just as it has so often down the stretch by squashing the Notre Dame power-play attempt, but Read netted his second short-handed goal of the season on a rocket from the top of the right faceoff circle to put BSU up 4-0 just 49 seconds into the period. Notre Dame responded with a goal from Dan Kissel at the 6:04 mark of the period to cut the deficit to 4-1. As desperation set in, the Fighting Irish pulled Pearce with 3:47 to play. Scofield and the Beavers made them pay as he picked off a Notre Dame pass at the top of the Notre Dame offensive zone and buried an empty-net exclamation point from the red line to put the 5-1 win the books.
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
5 4
10 8
0 0
0-for-4 0-for-5
.000 .000
1
2
3
Final
12 12
6 10
7 15
25 37
Pen
Min
SHG
PPG/O
Pct.
2 4
4 8
0 0
1-for-4 1-for-2
.250 .500
BSU MIA
Goaltending
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (19-10-1)
5
8
12
25
60:00
1
COR
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Scrivens (22-10-4) Empty net
6 0
9 0
2 0
17 0
56:26 3:34
3 1
Bemidji State Lines 1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso McManamin 3D Hardwick Adams bold= starting line TOTAL
BSU
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Dalton (19-11-1) Empty net
12 0
7 0
14 0
33 0
59:38 0:22
3 1
MIA
1
2
3
Tot
Min
GA
Reichard (10-7-2)
12
5
7
24
60:00
1
Bemidji State Lines 3-3=6 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-1=1 pts 1-1=2 pts 4-6=10 pts
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (Van Andel Arena) -- With the score knotted at 1-1 after two periods, the Bemidji State University hockey team, along with Cornell University, took the ice in Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Mich., with 20 minutes on the clock to decide the fourth and final spot in the 2009 Men’s Frozen Four in Washington D.C. A three-goal final frame and a stout defensive performance vaulted the underdog Beavers into a 4-1 victory over the Big Red. They may not have garnered much attention heading into the 2009 Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Championship as the only qualifying team left out of the pairwise rankings, but there is no doubt the hockey world has taken notice. The Beavers punched their ticket to perform on collegiate hockey’s grandest stage---the Frozen Four. Bemidji State, the first 16-seed to ever reach the Frozen Four, joins overall top seed Boston University, University of Vermont, and Miami (Ohio) University as the final four teams left vying for a national championship. The Beavers escaped the first period of a back-and-forth tussle unscathed despite being whistled for three penalties in the frame. In addition to Matt Dalton’s six saves in the period, the Beavers blocked an additional seven shots to fight off the Big Red attack and skate to the break with the score deadlocked at 0-0. Cornell broke the scoreless tie at 12:35 of the second period. Sean Collins bounced the puck over Dalton’s right shoulder after the initial shot from the point was taken by defenseman Keir Ross. Tyler Mugford also recorded an assist on the play, and the Big Red took the early 1-0 lead. Bemidji State’s Ryan Adams made sure that lead didn’t last long, as he evened the score less than two minutes later with a seeing-eye shot that made its way through traffic and past CU goalie Ben Scrivens at 14:25 of the frame. Tyler Scofield was credited with the only assist on the play as Adams logged his first goal as a Beaver. The lamp-lighter seemed to spark the Beavers, and they had several good scoring chances during the next four minutes. With 2:21 to play, the Big Red’s Brendon Nash was sent to the box for interference, providing BSU with a man advantage for the bulk of the period. Just 1:07 into the power-play, Shea Walters was whistled for cross-checking to negate the advantage. The teams finished 40 minutes of play knotted at one goal apiece, which set up a 20-minute fight for the final spot in the 2009 Frozen Four. The Beavers struck first in the third, and it all began with Matt Read. Read found the speedy Scofield streaking up the far side of the ice with a cross-ice pass that met the senior at the blue line. He skated it in and snapped off a wrister that found the twine to give the Beavers a 2-1 advantage with 15:55 to play. Ben Kinne laid the foundation for a two-goal cushion after an extremely aggressive forecheck. Midway through the period, the puck was at the stick of a Cornell defender to the left of the goalie at the half-wall. Kinne sent a smooth touch pass to Matt Francis on the doorstep and he ricocheted the puck off the inside of Scrivens’ right leg and into the net with 10:30 left in the game. Scofield added an empty-net marker to cap the scoring. His second-straight two-goal performance was capped off with the final marker of the contest, 16:37.
2009-10
BSU MIA
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen BSU COR
Goaltending
BSU
54
2
Penalties & Power Plays
Pen BSU UND
BSU COR
1
1F Scofield Read Francis 2F MacQueen Winter Lehrke 3F Kinne Walters Cramer 4F Lowe McKelvie Marino 1D Hunt Bostock 2D Peluso Adams 3D Hardwick Jundt bold= starting line TOTAL
1-2=3 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 0-0=0 pts 1-2=3 pts
WASHINGTON, D.C. (Verizon Center) -- The 12th-ranked Bemidji State men’s ice hockey team’s improbable run to the 2009 Frozen Four ended with a 4-1 loss in the national semifinal to No. 4 Miami (Ohio) University April 9. “We got beat by a better team tonight,” coach Tom Serratore said. “They were strong, they were quick, and they reacted well. Every facet of their game was very good, and we couldn’t get on track.” Scoring chances were hard to come by early in the game as the two teams tried to settle into a rhythm, and nobody was able to crack either team’s defenses. An evenly played first period between the Midwest Regional Champion Beavers and the West Regional Champion Redhawks saw the two teams take 12 shots each with no goals to show for their efforts. Miami came into the game sporting a 20-1-2 record when scoring first this season, and the white and red squad took advantage of a power-play opportunity early in the second period when Tommy Wingels found the back of the cage. Andy Miele had the puck along the halfwall to the left of BSU goaltender Matt Dalton. He threw the puck up to the point to Matt Tomassoni, who passed it along to the top of the right faceoff circle to Wingels. He saw some daylight and rifled a slapshot past a screened Dalton on the right side to give the Redhawks the 1-0 lead. Alden Hirschfeld added a second marker 8:35 into the second when he tapped in a shot after receiving a pass from Wingels. Wingels carried the puck into the zone on the right of Dalton and went straight for the end line. Carter Camper, the team’s leading scorer, was also credited with an assist on the play. It took eight minutes for the Beavers to manage a shot attempt in the second, but after that initial shot it didn’t take long for the boys in the forest green sweaters to light the lamp. Bemidji State got a power-play opportunity after falling behind 2-0, and the top line of Matt Read, Matt Francis and Tyler Scofield hooked up one final time 9:46 into the second. Unfortunately for the Beavers, it took just a minute after the Read goal for Miami to respond. Will Weber had the puck at the top right of the zone, and he fired a shot that deflected wide off Dalton. Bill Loupee was there to clean up the rebound, and he put the puck off the side of Dalton and into the net. Two Redhawks entered the box later in the frame, but Bemidji State couldn’t capitalize the 3-1 margin would be the score heading into the third. Try as they may, the Beavers couldn’t find a way to break down the Miami defense throughout the entire third period. Time was winding down and the score was still 3-1, so Dalton was pulled for an extra attacker. The Redhawks took advantage when Wingels scored an unassisted empty net goal with 2:08 to play to complete the scoring. Miami ended the game with a 37-25 shot advantage, and both teams scored a single power-play goal. Dalton recorded 33 saves in 57:30 and fell to 19-11-1 on the season. Reichard moved to 10-7-2 after saving 24 shots and allowing one goal in 60 minutes of action.
Orlando Alamano Academic All-CHA Team
l
Emil Billberg l 12/9/08 - INCH National Player of the Week Runner-up l Academic All-CHA Team Cody Bostock Preseason All-CHA 12/29/08 - Ledyard National Bank All-Classic Team l Academic All-CHA Team l Second Team All-CHA l l
Ryan Cramer l Academic All-CHA Team Matt Dalton l 10/27/08 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week l 12/2/08 - INCH National Player of the Week Runner-up l 12/8/08 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week l 2/9/09 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week l 2/23/09 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week l 2/23/09 - INCH National Player of the Week l 3/6/09 - HCA National Player of the Month HM l Scond Team All-CHA l All-CHA Tournament Team l NCAA Midwest Regional All-Tournament Team Matt Francis Academic All-CHA Team l All-CHA Tournament Team l
Kyle Hardwick l Academic All-CHA Team Brad Hunt l 11/10/08 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week l 1/19/09 - CHA Rookie of the Week l 1/26/09 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week l 2/2/09 - CHA Rookie of the Week l 2/6/09 - HCA National Rookie of the Month HM l 2/9/09 - CHA Rookie of the Week l 3/9/09 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week l CHA All-Rookie Team l First Team All-CHA l CHA Rookie of the Year l INCH All-CHA Team l INCH CHA Freshman of the Year l All-CHA Tournament Team l NCAA Midwest Regional All-Tournament Team Ben Kinne CHA All-Rookie Team
l
Tyler Lehrke l Academic All-CHA Team Ian Lowe l Academic All-CHA Team Dan MacIntyre l Academic All-CHA Team Brandon Marino l 12/29/08 - Ledyard National Bank All-Classic Team l Academic All-CHA Team Chris McKelvie l Academic All-CHA Team Graham McManamin l 2/2/09 - CHA Defensive Player of the Week Chris Peluso l Academic All-CHA Team Matt Read l Preseason All-CHA l Academic All-CHA Team l First Team All-CHA l CHA All-Tournament Team l CHA Tournament Most Outstanding Player l 3/17/09 - INCH National Player of the Week Runner-up l NCAA Midwest Regional All-Tournament Team Tyler Scofield l Preseason All-CHA l 1/5/09 - CHA Offensive Player of the Week l 3/9/09 - CHA Offensive Player of the Week l 3/10/09 - INCH National Player of the Week Runner-up l Second Team All-CHA l NCAA Midwest Regional All-Tournament Team l NCAA Midwest Regional Most Outstanding Player Shea Walters l 10/13/2008 - CHA Rookie of the Week l 11/24/2008 - CHA Rookie of the Week
Forwards
First Line (6) Left Wing Center Right Wing Scofield Read Cramer Scofield Read Walters Scofield Read Tamane Scofield Read Lowe Scofield Read Francis Francis Read Lowe Total
GP 3 4 4 3 21 2 37
GS 2 1 2 3 12 2 22
PPG 1.33 1.75 1.50 1.33 4.04 3.50 3.08
Points 2-2=4 2-5=7 3-3=6 2-2=4 39-46=85 2-5=7 50-64=114
Record 0-3-0 1-3-0 3-1-0 3-0-0 11-9-1 2-0-0 20-16-1
Second Line (8) Left Wing Center Right Wing Lowe Winter Marino Kinne Winter Marino Kinne Walters Marino Kinne Marino Francis MacQueen Winter Marino MacQueen Winter Lehrke MacQueen Winter Findlay MacQueen Winter Billberg Total
GP 3 7 1 3 7 11 2 3 37
GS 1 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 5
PPG 1.33 1.00 1.00 0.67 1.00 0.81 0.00 0.00 0.81
Points 1-3=4 4-3=7 0-1=1 0-2=2 3-3=6 4-5=9 0-0=0 0-1=1 12-18=30
Record 0-3-0 3-4-0 1-0-0 3-0-0 1-6-0 8-2-1 1-1-0 3-0-1 20-16-1
Third Line (6) Left Wing Center Right Wing Kinne McKelvie Lehrke McKelvie Lehrke Cramer MacQueen Lehrke Cramer Cramer Walters MacQueen Kinne Walters Cramer Kinne Walters Lehrke Total
GP 3 8 1 2 18 5 37
GS 0 4 0 0 3 1 8
PPG 1.33 0.00 0.00 2.00 1.11 1.20 0.92
Points 1-3=4 0-0=0 0-0=0 2-2=4 8-12=20 2-4=6 13-21=34
Record 0-3-0 4-4-0 1-0-0 2-0-0 9-8-1 4-1-0 20-16-1
Fourth Line (14) Left Wing Center Right Wing MacQueen Walters Billberg MacQueen Lowe Findlay Billberg Lowe Findlay MacQueen Billberg Francis MacQueen Lowe Francis MacQueen Walters Francis Billberg McKelvie Findlay Billberg McKelvie Lowe Lowe McKelvie Findlay McKelvie Lehrke Findlay McKelvie Lehrke Lowe Billberg McKelvie Marino Findlay McKelvie Lowe Lowe McKelvie Marino Total
GP 3 4 1 1 1 1 3 2 2 1 2 3 1 12 37
GS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
PPG 0.33 0.50 0.00 2.00 0.00 3.00 1.50 0.50 0.00 0.00 1.00 0.67 0.00 1.08 0.84
Points 1-0=1 0-2=2 0-0=0 2-0=2 0-0=0 2-1=3 2-4=6 0-1=1 0-0=0 0-0=0 1-0=1 1-1=2 0-0=0 6-7=13 15-16=31
Record 0-3-0 2-2-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 3-0-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 3-0-0 1-0-0 9-3-1 18-16-1
First Line (4) Left Defense Right Defense Bostock Hunt Peluso McManamin McManamin MacIntyre Peluso Adams Total
GP 13 18 3 3 37
GS 11 4 1 2 19
PPG 1.07 0.86 0.33 0.67 0.87
Points 1-13=14 3-12=15 0-1=1 0-2=2 4-28=32
Record 7-8-1 11-7-0 1-2-0 1-2-0 20-16-1
Second Line (5) Left Defense Right Defense MacIntyre McManamin Bostock Hunt Peluso Adams Peluso McManamin Peluso Jundt Total
GP 2 24 5 4 2 37
GS 1 17 0 0 0 18
PPG 0.00 1.36 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.97
Points 0-0=0 12-22=34 0-0=0 0-1=1 0-1=1 12-24=36
Record 0-2-0 13-11-0 2-2-1 3-1-0 2-0-0 20-16-1
Third Line (8) Left Defense Right Defense Hardwick Adams Hardwick Jundt MacIntyre Hardwick Peluso Adams Peluso Jundt MacIntyre Jundt MacIntyre Adams Hardwick McManamin Total
GP 10 12 1 1 2 4 4 3 37
GS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PPG 0.40 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.11
Points 1-3=4 0-0=0 0-0=0 0-0=0 0-0=0 0-0=0 0-0=0 0-0=0 1-3=4
Record 8-2-0 6-6-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 1-3-0 2-0-1 20-16-1
2008-09 line-up summary
2008-09 Player Honors Ryan Adams l Academic All-CHA Team l NCAA Midwest Regional All-Tournament Team
Defensemen
Travis Winter l Academic All-CHA Team
2009-10
55
College Hockey America
Birth of a Conference
College ice hockey’s continuing development and expansion received another boost during the summer of 1999 with the formation of College Hockey America. The seven charter members of the CHA were the United States Air Force Academy (Colo.), University of Alabama-Huntsville, United States Military Academy (N.Y.), Bemidji State University (Minn.), University of Findlay (Ohio), Niagara University (N.Y.), and Wayne State University (Mich.). “Hockey at all levels is experiencing unprecedented growth and popularity,” said storied BSU head coach and former CHA Commissioner R.H. “Bob” Peters. “The advent of College Hockey America is a monumental and historic event evidencing this growth at the collegiate level. To quote the late Bob Johnson, legendary college, Olympic and National Hockey League coach, ‘It’s a great day for hockey’.”
Leadership
In its inaugural season, the CHA coaches brought a collective 95 years of coaching experience, 1,754 wins and 33 postseason appearances to the conference. R.H. “Bob” Peters, who accepted the role of CHA Commissioner after retiring from coaching, was the dean of CHA coaches with more than 740 wins. The CHA was fortunate to have the guidance and leadership of WCHA commissioner Bruce McLeod for its first two years. McLeod worked with the seven league coaches and was instrumental in establishing the conference in 1999.
Something Old, Something New
The CHA encompasses programs steeped in tradition, such as former small-college powers Alabama-Huntsville and Bemidji State, to up and coming programs like Niagara, to college hockey newcomer Robert Morris. Bemidji State and Alabama-Huntsville competed for the Division II national championship six times in the 1990’s with the Beavers winning four times and the Chargers winning twice, and the two teams have now carried that rivalry to Division I. Bemidji State, which began playing hockey in 1948, had won a total of 13 national championships at the small college level before making the jump to Division I. Bemidji State (.678) and Alabama-Huntsville (.677) have the two highest all-time winning percentages amongst the 58 teams which currently comprise Division I hockey. Niagara began its Division I hockey program in 1996 and posted a winning season each of its first four years, culminating in NCAA Tournament berths in 2000, 2004 and 2008. Robert Morris which enters its fifth season of college hockey competition, posted eight wins during its inaugural 2004-05 campaign and posted its first season of .500-or-better in 2007-08 going 15-15-4 overall and clinging to a race for the regular season championship into the final three weeks of the season..
Evolution of CHA
Three founding members of College Hockey America remain with the conference - Ala.-Huntsville, Bemidji State and Niagara - while four have since departed. Army departed CHA for the MAAC, now Atlantic Hockey, following the league’s inaugural 1999-2000 season. Findlay competed in CHA for five seasons before folding both its men’s and women’s ice hockey programs due to budgetary reasons in 2004. Air Force competed in CHA for seven seasons before departing the conference for Atlantic Hockey following the 2005-06 season. The 2007-08 campaign was Wayne State’s last as a member of the CHA as the institution folded its collegiate men’s
All-Time College Hockey America Standings Team Years Ala.-Huntsville 10 Niagara 10 uBEMIDJI STATE 10 Wayne State (Mich.) 8a wAir Force (1999-2006) 7 wFindlay (1999-2004) 5 Robert Morris 5 wArmy (1999-2000) 1 College Hockey America games only w- former CHA member a- Wayne State did not play a full CHA schedule until 2000-01
56
hockey program. Robert Morris has been the only new addition to CHA since the conference was founded. The Colonials joined CHA when the school added Division I ice hockey as a varsity intercollegiate sport for the 2004-05 campaign.
CHA Regular-Season Schedule
The departure of Air Force and Wayne State in the last three seasons has left College Hockey America with four members beginning with the 2008-09 campaign, forcing the league to play an unbalanced, 18-game conference slate for the league’s members. In prior years, CHA has played a four-game round robin regular season schedule, with two games home and two games away against each of the league’s other teams. This year, the round robin is intact - each CHA program will play the others home and away in two-game series - but each program will also play one additional two-game series against each of the other three CHA programs. Bemidji State will play home series versus Ala.-Huntsville and will pick up extra road series with both Niagara and Robert Morris to bring the season series with each team to six games.
Quick Facts
Affiliation:.............................NCAA Division I Founded:.............................................. 1999 Web Site:.www.collegehockeyamerica.com NCAA Tournament Record......................3-8
Administration
CHA Championship
In addition to a challenging non-conference schedule and its regular conference slate, College Hockey America will conduct a postseason championship tournament for the 11 consecutive year. This year’s tournament will take place March 12-13, 2010 at Niagara University’s Dwyer Arena In Lewiston, N.Y. The CHA Tournament champion will again receive an automatic bid to the 16-team NCAA Tournament. BSU has made the championship game in six of the last seven seasons and won the tournament crown in 2005, 2006 and 2009.
NCAA Tournament History
CHA programs have made eight trips to the NCAA Tournament, posting a record of 3-8, but none more impressive than Bemidji State’s 2009 run past Notre Dame, 5-1 and Cornell, 4-1, through the Midwest Regional and onto the Frozen Four before falling to Miami (Ohio), 4-1. Niagara earned an at-large bid to the 2000 NCAA Championship after the CHA’s inaugural season. Niagara stunned New Hampshire 4-1 in Minneapolis, Minn, then fell to eventual national champion North Dakota, 4-1. Wayne State fell to Colorado College, 4-2, in the first round of the 2003 Midwest Regional. Niagara made its second NCAA trip in 2004, falling in the first round, 5-2, to Boston College. Bemidji State was CHA’s first back-to-back participant in the NCAA Tournament (2005, 2006), and was defeated by the eventual national champion in each of its appearances. BSU took Denver to overtime before losing 4-3 in the semifinals of the 2005 Northeast Regional, and fell 4-0 to Wisconsin in the semifinals of the 2006 Midwest Regional. The 2007 CHA representative in the NCAA Tournament was Alabama-Huntsville. The Cinderella ride through the CHA Tournament for the No. 5 seed was ended when it faced Notre Dame in the Regional Semifinals. The Fighting Irish defeated the Chargers 3-2. Last season, Niagara was the league representative in the NCAA Tournament. The Purple Eagles fell to Michigan, 5-1, in the East Regional Semifinal.
Points 217 250 244 137 97 65 82 4
W 98 109 108 59 39 27 35 1
2009-10
L 87 57 61 78 83 62 47 9
T 17 26 22 19 11 9 12 0
Pct .527 .635 .623 .439 .335 .321 .436 .100
Season Titles 2 3 4 1 0 0 0 0
Playoff Titles 1 3 3 3 0 0 0 0
CHA interim commissioner Ed McLaughlin
assistant commissioner Chris Smith
Commissioner Ed McLaughlin Office................................... (716) 286-8600 FAX...................................... (716) 287-8609 Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2009 Niagara University, N.Y 14109 Assistant Commisioner Public Relations Chris Smith Office:.................................. (716) 286-8724 Cell: .................................... (517) 628-0833 FAX:..................................... (716) 286-8582 e-mail:.......................... csmith@niagara.edu Mailing Address P.O. Box 2009 Niagara University, N.Y 14109 Webmaster Nathan Looney e-mail:................. nathanlooney@gmail.com Supervisor of Officials Greg Shepherd Office:.................................. (651) 229-2507 FAX:.......................................651-451-9995
Alabama-Huntsville (12) Matt Baxter So. Courtice, Ontario Vince Bruni So. Toronto, Ontario Ryan Burkholder So. Newmarket, Ontario Andrew Coburn So. Mount Forest, Ontario Derek Conter Sr. Toronto, Ontario Chris Fairbanks So. Milford, Mich. Scott Kalinchuk Sr. Bozeman, Manitoba Joey Koudys So. Gimsby, Ontario Kevin Morrison** Jr. Mississauga, Ontario Josh Murray*** Sr. Terrace, British Columbia David Nicoletti** Jr. Toronto, Ontario Cameron Talbot So. Caledonia, Ontario Bemidji State (15) Ryan Adams So. Deloraine, Manitoba Orlando Alamano **** Sr. Fresno, Calif. Emil Billberg So. Stockholm, Sweden Cody Bostock *** Sr. Salmon Arm, British Columbia Ryan Cramer So. International Falls, Minn. Matthew Francis ** Sr. Surrey, British Columbia Kyle Hardwick ** Jr. Warroad, Minn. Tyler Lehrke ** Jr. Park Rapids, Minn. Ian Lowe So. Bradwardine, Manitoba Daniel MacIntyre So. Fort Frances, Ontario Brandon Marino *** Sr. Riverside, Calif. Chris McKelvie ** Jr. New Brighton, Minn. Chris Peluso ** Jr. Wadena, Minn. Matthew Read So. Ilderton, Ontario Travis Winter *** Sr. St. Cloud, Minn.
Final 2008-09 CHA Standings Team uBEMIDJI STATE %&$ Niagara Robert Morris Ala.-Huntsville
GP 18 18 18 18
CHA Only W L 12 5 9 5 5 8 3 11
T 1 4 5 4
Pts 25 22 15 10
GF 55 53 46 43
GA 38 44 57 58
Overall W L 20 16 16 14 10 19 5 20
T 1 6 7 5
GF 106 98 93 63
GA 97 92 121 99
% CHA Regular Season Champion & CHA Tournament Champion $ NCAA Tournament Participant - CHA Automatic Qualifier
2009 All-CHA Teams First-Team All-CHA
Player
Year Pos
Nathan Longpre* Chris Margott*# uMatt Read uBrad Hunt Denny Urban Juliano Pagliero*!
So. Sr. So. Fr. So. Sr.
School
Hometown
Forward Robert Morris Peterborough, Ontario Forward Robert Morris Thousand Oaks, Calif. Forward Bemidji State Ilderton, Ontario Defense Bemidji State Ridge Meadows, British Columbia Defense Robert Morris Pittsburgh, Pa. Defense Niagara Dalroy, Alberta
* Indicates unanimous selection ! Indicates 2008 All-CHA First Team selction # indicates 2008 All-CHA Second Team selection
Niagara (14) Travis Anderson **** Sr. Coon Rapids, Minn. Ryan Annesley ** Jr. Ajax, Ontario Adam Avramenko So. Strathmore, Alberta Jim Burichin ** Jr. Strongsville, Ohio Tyler Gotto Jr. Calgary, Alberta Bryan Haczyk So. Nutley, New Jersey Egor Mironov ** Jr. Toronto, Ontario Chris Moran ** Jr. Buffalo, N.Y. Juliano Pagliero Sr. Dalroy, Alberta Vince Rocco *** Sr. Woodbridge, Ontario David Ross So. Bowmanville, Ontario Armando Scarlato*** Sr. Toronto, Ontario Dan Sullivan *** Sr. Scarborough, Ontario Paul Zanette So. Nobleton, Ontario Robert Morris (9) Kyle Burton So. Calgary, Alberta Matt Krug Sr. Livonia, Mich. Chris Kushneriuk So. Ottawa, Ontario Brock Meadows So. White Rock, British Columbia Jake Obermeyer Sr. Chanhassen, Minn. Jim Patterson So. Kamloops, British Columbia Wes Russell Jr. Springfield, Ill. Denny Urban So. Pittsburgh, Pa. Tyler Webb ** Jr. Austin, Texas * Indicates number of previous CHA All-Academic honors
2009 All-CHA First Team: (left to right) Juliano Pagliero, Niagara; Matt Read, Bemidji State; Brad Hunt, Bemidji State; Nathan Longpre, Robert Morris; Chris Margott, Robert Morris; Denny Urban, Robert Morris; Ed McLaughlin, CHA Interim Commissioner.
Second-Team All-CHA Player Year Egor Mironov Jr. Vince Rocco! Sr. uTyler Scofield Sr. uCody Bostock Sr. Tyler Gotto# Jr. uMatt Dalton So.
Pos School Hometown Forward Niagara Toronto, Ontario Forward Niagara Woodbridge, Ontario Forward Bemidji State Prince George, British Columbia Defense Bemidji State Salmon Arm, British Columbia Defense Niagara Calgary, Alberta Goalie Bemidji State Clinton, Ontario
All-Rookie Team Player Year Pos School Hometown Dan Baco Fr. Forward Niagara Buffalo, N.Y. Cody Campbell Fr. Forward Alabama-Huntsville Maple Ridge, British Columbia uBen Kinne Fr. Forward Bemidji State St. Paul, Minn. James Lyle Fr. Defense Robert Morris Nepean, Ontario uBrad Hunt Fr. Goalie Bemidji State Ridge Meadows, British Columbia Brooks Ostergard Fr. Goalie Robert Morris Chagrin Falls, Ohio CHA Rookie of the Year: CHA Player of the Year: CHA Coach of the Year: CHA Student-Athlete of the Year:
uBrad Hunt, Bemidji State Ryan Cruthers, Robert Morris uTom Serratore, Bemidji State Juliano Pagliero, Niagara
2009-10
57
2008-09 CHA in review
Academic All-CHA Selections
2008-09 CHA Leaders
Scoring: All Games
1 Chris Margott Robert Morris SR F 2 Nathan Longpre Robert Morris SO F 3 Matt Read Bemidji State SO F 4 Tyler Scofield Bemidji State SR F 5 Brad Hunt Bemidji State FR D 6 Vince Rocco Niagara SR F Chris Moran Niagara JR F 8 Egor Mironov Niagara JR F 9 Denny Urban Robert Morris SO D 10 Matt Francis Bemidji State SR F 11 Matt Sweazey Ala-Huntsville SR F 12 Cody Campbell Ala-Huntsville FR F 13 Andrew Coburn Ala-Huntsville SO F Chris Kushneriuk Robert Morris SO F Brandon Marino Bemidji State SR F 16 Ted Cook Niagara SR F Jason Towsley Robert Morris SR F 18 Brian Dowd Niagara FR F Trevor Lewis Robert Morris FR F David Ross Niagara SO F 21 Brandon Roshko Ala-Huntsville JR D Tyler Gotto Niagara JR D Cody Bostock Bemidji State SR D 24 Dan Baco Niagara FR F Shea Walters Bemidji State FR F Ben Kinne Bemidji State FR F Scott Kobialko Robert Morris SO F
GP PPG Points 36 1.22 21-23-44 36 1.14 12-29-41 37 1.08 15-25-40 35 1.11 22-17-39 37 0.86 9-23-32 36 0.86 12-19-31 36 0.86 12-19-31 35 0.80 16-12-28 36 0.75 4-23-27 29 0.90 13-13-26 30 0.73 12-10-22 30 0.70 7-14-21 30 0.63 9-10-19 36 0.53 9-10-19 36 0.53 7-12-19 29 0.62 7-11-18 35 0.51 9- 9-18 32 0.53 6-11-17 34 0.50 7-10-17 34 0.50 6-11-17 29 0.55 1-15-16 36 0.44 3-13-16 37 0.43 3-13-16 32 0.47 4-11-15 34 0.44 4-11-15 37 0.41 8- 7-15 33 0.42 5- 9-14
Defenseman Scoring: All Games 1 Brad Hunt Bemidji State FR D 2 Denny Urban Robert Morris SO D 3 Brandon Roshko Ala-Huntsville JR D Tyler Gotto Niagara JR D Cody Bostock Bemidji State SR D 6 Chris Peluso Bemidji State JR D 7 Ryan Annesley Niagara JR D 8 James Lyle Robert Morris FR D 9 Scott Kalinchuk Ala-Huntsville SR D 10 Matt Krug Robert Morris SR D
GP PPG Points 37 0.86 9-23-32 36 0.75 4-23-27 29 0.55 1-15-16 36 0.44 3-13-16 37 0.43 3-13-16 35 0.37 0-13-13 34 0.35 2-10-12 33 0.33 3- 8-11 30 0.33 1- 9-10 29 0.31 4- 5- 9
Goals Against Average: All Games 1 Matt Dalton Bemidji State SO 2 Juliano Pagliero Niagara SR 3 Brooks Ostergard Robert Morris FR 4 Cameron Talbot Ala-Huntsville SO
Min 1861:03 1889:21 816:52 1319:57
GA GAA 68 2.19 75 2.38 35 2.57 65 2.95
Scoring Offense: All Games
1 Bemidji State 2 Niagara 3 Robert Morris 4 Ala-Huntsville
Games Goals G/GM 37 106 2.86 36 98 2.72 36 93 2.58 30 63 2.10
Scoring Defense: All Games 1 Niagara 2 Bemidji State 3 Ala-Huntsville 4 Robert Morris
Power Play: All Games 1 Bemidji State 2 Robert Morris 3 Niagara 4 Ala-Huntsville
Penalty Kill: All Games
1 Bemidji State 2 Robert Morris 3 Niagara 4 Ala-Huntsville
58
Games Goals G/GM 36 92 2.56 37 97 2.62 30 99 3.30 36 121 3.36
Totals SHA 40/195 1 36/195 8 30/199 2 23/164 3
Totals SHF 178/209 4 165/200 3 141/174 5 137/173 2
PCT 20.5 18.5 15.1 14.0
PCT 85.2 82.5 81.0 79.2
CHA Players of the Week
Scoring: CHA Games
1 Chris Margott Robert Morris SR F 2 Nathan Longpre Robert Morris SO F 3 Egor Mironov Niagara JR F Vince Rocco Niagara SR F Brad Hunt Bemidji State FR D 6 Chris Moran Niagara JR F 7 Matt Sweazey Ala-Huntsville SR F Denny Urban Robert Morris SO D 9 Tyler Scofield Bemidji State SR F 10 Matt Francis Bemidji State SR F Matt Read Bemidji State SO F 12 Andrew Coburn Ala-Huntsville SO F 13 Cody Campbell Ala-Huntsville FR F 14 Jason Towsley Robert Morris SR F Dan Baco Niagara FR F Ted Cook Niagara SR F Tom Train Ala-Huntsville JR F 18 David Ross Niagara SO F Cody Bostock Bemidji State SR D 20 Shea Walters Bemidji State FR F Brandon Marino Bemidji State SR F 22 Kevin Morrison Ala-Huntsville JR F Brian Dowd Niagara FR F Scott Kobialko Robert Morris SO F Brandon Roshko Ala-Huntsville JR D Ben Kinne Bemidji State FR F Chris Kushneriuk Robert Morris SO F
GP 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 16 16 18 18 18 17 17 18 18 18 18 16 17 16 16 17 17 18 18
PPG 1.22 1.17 1.06 1.06 1.06 1.00 0.94 0.94 1.00 0.94 0.83 0.78 0.72 0.65 0.65 0.61 0.61 0.56 0.56 0.56 0.53 0.50 0.50 0.47 0.47 0.44 0.44
Points 12-10-22 6-15-21 12- 7-19 8-11-19 4-15-19 4-14-18 10- 7-17 1-16-17 9- 7-16 8- 7-15 5-10-15 8- 6-14 5- 8-13 6- 5-11 2- 9-11 5- 6-11 2- 9-11 4- 6-10 2- 8-10 3- 6- 9 4- 5- 9 5- 3- 8 3- 5- 8 2- 6- 8 0- 8- 8 5- 3- 8 5- 3- 8
Defenseman Scoring: CHA Games 1 Brad Hunt Bemidji State FR D 2 Denny Urban Robert Morris SO D 3 Cody Bostock Bemidji State SR D 4 Brandon Roshko Ala-Huntsville JR D 5 Graham McManamin Bemidji State JR D Tyler Gotto Niagara JR D Scott Kalinchuk Alab-Huntsville SR D Chris Peluso Bemidji State JR D 9 Travis Anderson Niagara SR D 10 Tom Durnie Ala-Huntsville FR D James Lyle Robert Morris FR D
GP PPG Points 18 1.06 4-15-19 18 0.94 1-16-17 18 0.56 2- 8-10 17 0.47 0- 8- 8 14 0.50 3- 4- 7 18 0.39 2- 5- 7 18 0.39 0- 7- 7 18 0.39 0- 7- 7 18 0.28 0- 5- 5 13 0.31 0- 4- 4 17 0.24 2- 2- 4
Goals Against Average: CHA Games
1 Matt Dalton Bemidji State SO 2 Brooks Ostergard Robert Morris FR 3 Juliano Pagliero Niagara SR 4 Cameron Talbot Ala-Huntsville SO
Min 1018:38 587:30 965:30 853:30
Scoring Offense: CHA Games 1 Bemidji State 2 Niagara 3 Robert Morris 4 Alab-Huntsville
Games 18 18 18 18
Scoring Defense: CHA Games 1 Bemidji State 2 Niagara 3 Robert Morris 4 Alab-Huntsville
Power Play: CHA Games 1 Bemidji State 2 Niagara 3 Alab-Huntsville 4 Robert Morris
Penalty Kill: CHA Games 1 Bemidji State 2 Niagara 3 Robert Morris 4 Alab-Huntsville
2009-10
GA 33 23 38 41
GAA 1.94 2.35 2.36 2.88
Goals G/GM 55 3.06 53 2.94 46 2.56 43 2.39
Games 18 18 18 18
Goals G/GM 38 2.11 44 2.44 57 3.17 58 3.22
Totals 21/ 99 15/ 85 17/ 98 15/ 95
SHA PCT 0 21.2 1 17.6 1 17.3 5 15.8
Totals 81/ 94 62/ 74 83/104 83/105
SHF 3 1 2 1
PCT 86.2 83.8 79.8 79.0
Offense Oct. 13 Chris Moran Niagara Oct. 23 Robert Longpre Robert Morris Oct. 28 Sam Goodwin Niagara Nov. 3 Chris Margott Robert Morris Nov. 11 David Ross Niagara Nov. 17 Egor Mironov Niagara Nov. 24 Jason Towsley Robert Morris Dec. 8 Nathan Longpre Robert Morris Dec. 15 Cody Campbell Ala.-Huntsville Dec. 24 None Selected Jan. 13 Matt Sweazey Ala.-Huntsville Jan. 19 Ted Cook Niagara Jan. 21 Vince Rocco Niagara Jan. 26 Chris Kushneriuk Robert Morris Feb. 2 Vince Rocco Niagara Feb. 9 Egor Mironov Niagara Feb. 16 Andrew Coburn Ala.-Huntsville Chris Margott Robert Morris Feb. 23 Nathan Longpre Robert Morris Mar. 3 Vince Rocco Niagara Mar. 9 uTyler Scofield Bemidji State Defense Oct. 13 Cameron Talbot Ala.-Huntsville Oct. 23 Matt Krug Robert Morris Oct. 28 uMatt Dalton Bemidji State Nov. 3 Denny Urban Robert Morris Nov. 11 uBrad Hunt Bemidji State Nov. 17 Dan Sullivan Niagara Nov. 24 Cameron Talbot Ala.-Huntsville ec. 8 uMatt Dalton Bemidji State Dec. 15 Juliano Pagliero Niagara Dec. 24 None Selected Jan. 13 Denny Urban Robert Morris Jan. 19 Travis Anderson Niagara Jan. 21 Armando Scarlato Niagara Jan. 26 uBrad Hunt Bemidji State Feb. 2 uGraham McManamin Bemidji State Feb. 9 uMatt Dalton Bemidji State Feb. 16 Cameron Talbot Ala.-Huntsville Feb. 23 uMatt Dalton Bemidji State Mar. 3 Ryan Annesley Niagara Mar. 9 uBrad Hunt Bemidji State Rookie Oct. 13 uShea Walters Bemidji State Oct. 23 Brian Dowd Niagara Oct. 28 Trevor Lewis Robert Morris Nov. 3 Cody Campbell Ala.-Huntsville Nov. 11 Cody Campbell Ala.-Huntsville Nov. 17 Sam Goodwin Niagara Nov. 24 uShea Walters Bemidji State Dec. 8 Brian Dowd Niagara Dec. 15 Dan Baco Niagara Dec. 24 None Selected Jan. 13 Cody Campbell Ala.-Huntsville Jan. 19 Brad Hunt Bemidji State Jan. 21 Andrew Coburn Ala.-Huntsville Jan. 26 Trevor Lewis Robert Morris Feb. 2 Brad Hunt Bemidji State Feb. 9 Brad Hunt Bemidji State Feb. 16 Brooks Ostergard Robert Morris Feb. 23 Brooks Ostergard Robert Morris Mar. 3 uRyan Cramer Bemidji State Mar. 9 Dan Baco Niagara uDenotes BSU winner
GP
W-L-T
Conf.
W-L-T
Finish
GF
GA
Coach
Captains
1947-48
10
2-8-0
n/a
n/a
n/a
37
64
Jack Aldrich
E. Johnson
1948-49
15
9-6-0
n/a
n/a
n/a
73
49
Eric Hughes
J. Emkovik, D. Radniecki
1949-50
15
8-7-0
n/a
n/a
n/a
69
78
Eric Hughes
J. Whiting
1950-1959
program suspended / arena roof collapsed
1959-60
4
2-2-0
n/a
n/a
n/a
30
9
Vic Weber
R. McKechney, W. Bovay
1960-61
10
6-4-0
n/a
n/a
n/a
31
32
Vic Weber
R. McKechney
1961-62
12
8-4-0
n/a
n/a
n/a
57
24
Vic Weber
M. Sanderson, J. O’Neil
1962-63
12
6-5-1
n/a
n/a
n/a
66
43
Vic Weber
M. Sanderson
1963-64
12
8-3-1
n/a
n/a
n/a
67
28
Vic Weber
T. Saterdalen
1964-65
12
10-1-1
n/a
n/a
n/a
87
30
Wayne Peterson
B. Glaseman, J. Scaletta
1965-66
13
12-1-0
n/a
n/a
n/a
67
33
Vic Weber
J. Thompson
1966-67
19
13-5-1
ICHA
10-2-0
t-1st
96
59
R.H. “Bob” Peters
T. Burns
1967-68
24
16-8-0
ICHA
6-6-0
n/a
156
80
R.H. “Bob” Peters
T. Burns, R. Anderson
1968-69
25
23-2-0
ICHA
11-1-0
1st
259
62
R.H. “Bob” Peters
T. Burns, J. McElmury, B. Grand
1969-70
27
24-3-0
ICHA
10-2-0
1st
206
66
R.H. “Bob” Peters
J. McElmury, B. Grand, B. Dillon
1970-71
28
20-7-1
ICHA
10-1-1
1st
172
64
R.H. “Bob” Peters
J. McElmury, J. Boulianne, B. Falk
1971-72
26
13-12-1
ICHA
5-6-1
n/a
123
122
R.H. “Bob” Peters
D. Lemieux, L. Smith, G. Bock
1972-73
30
23-6-1
ICHA
8-4-0
t-1st
272
96
R.H. “Bob” Peters
L. Smith, S. Preston, J. Birrenkott
1973-74
31
20-10-1
ICHA
9-3-0
1st
179
122
R.H. “Bob” Peters
J. Birrenkott, J. Borden
1974-75
28
13-15-0
ICHA
2-10-0
n/a
138
125
R.H. “Bob” Peters
G. Chiodo, S. Curly, G. Ross
1975-76
31
22-9-0
ICHA
8-4-0
1st
179
116
R.H. “Bob” Peters
M. Eagles, M. Kristo, D. Boeke
1976-77
31
24-4-3
ICHA
9-3-2
1st
172
82
R.H. “Bob” Peters
S. Seide, J. Baumgartner, D. Melhus
1977-78
31
25-5-1
ICHA
11-3-0
1st
210
105
R.H. “Bob” Peters
D. Melhus, S. Seide, D. Mueller
1978-79
29
27-2-0
ICHA
9-0-0
1st
218
66
R.H. “Bob” Peters
M. Gibbons, M. Heaviland, S. Currie
1979-80
32
24-8-0
ICHA
5-2-0
n/a
171
107
R.H. “Bob” Peters
D. Baldwin, B. Carleton, G. Krawchuck
1980-81
31
24-7-0
NCHA
8-4-0
n/a
195
89
R.H. “Bob” Peters
T. Montebello, G. Tveit, J. Scanlan
1981-82
31
25-5-1
NCHA
16-3-1
1st
173
76
R.H. “Bob” Peters
K. Dade, J. Scanlan, M. Masterson
1982-83
37
30-6-1
NCHA
16-3-1
1st
199
97
Mike Gibbons
R. Anderson, K. Dade, T. Rood
1983-84
31
31-0-0
NCHA
18-0-0
1st
210
71
R.H. “Bob” Peters
D. Bradley, J. Otto, B. Fitzgerald
1984-85
35
27-6-2
NCHA
14-3-1
1st
205
114
R.H. “Bob” Peters
E. Gager, M. Liska, W. Jellison
1985-86
35
25-9-1
NCHA
12-6-0
t-1st
219
140
R.H. “Bob” Peters
M. Alexander, S. Lundeen, T. Lescarbeau
1986-87
35
22-12-1
NCHA
12-7-1
3rd
172
136
R.H. “Bob” Peters
T. Donaldson, D. Kimball, T. Serratore, T. Lescarbeau
1987-88
38
24-11-3
NCHA
15-6-3
2nd
197
123
R.H. “Bob” Peters
G. Biskup, T. Guyer, I. Resch
1988-89
36
19-13-4
NCHA
11-8-1
3rd
166
129
R.H. “Bob” Peters
D. Richards, J. Tyler
1989-90
28
15-11-2
NCHA
11-11-2
5th
130
104
R.H. “Bob” Peters
B. Harrison, K. Devescovi, B. Tookenay
1990-91
30
21-6-3
NCHA
17-4-3
t-1st
161
95
R.H. “Bob” Peters
B. Tookenay, S. Johnson, P. Cullen
1991-92
30
16-9-5
NCHA
9-8-3
4th
152
118
R.H. “Bob” Peters
P. Ferry, O.J. Kennett, B. Coleman
1992-93
31
24-7-0
NCHA
14-6-0
2nd
188
111
R.H. “Bob” Peters
J. Erb, D. Tollefson, G. Gustason, S. Taggert
1993-94
33
21-9-3
NCHA
12-6-2
3rd
145
109
R.H. “Bob” Peters
C. Morque, J. Hause, J. Mack
1994-95
33
24-7-2
NCHA
16-3-1
1st
176
96
R.H. “Bob” Peters
O. Belisle, K. Bjornson, C. McKechney
1995-96
29
16-9-4
NCHA
13-5-2
2nd
124
107
R.H. “Bob” Peters
B. Adlys, C Matatall, E. Monsrud
1996-97
34
25-7-2
NCHA
14-5-1
2nd
186
110
R.H. “Bob” Peters
J. Sobb, J. Logan, T. Edwards
1997-98
34
22-10-2
NCHA
14-6-0
3rd
168
110
R.H. “Bob” Peters
M. Donaghue, J. Logan, J. Klingfus
1998-99
30
17-13-0
NCHA
10-6-0
3rd
114
103
R.H. “Bob” Peters
C. Chartrand, G. Ambrose, M. Lafleur
1999-00
34
13-20-1
CHA
8-8-1
3rd/7
107
155
R.H. “Bob” Peters
C. Chartrand, D. Pelletier
2000-01
34
4-26-4
CHA
4-12-3
6th/6
77
133
R.H. “Bob” Peters
M. Phenow, T. Belisle
2001-02
35
12-18-5
CHA
8-7-4
2nd/6
116
146
Tom Serratore
M. Phenow, C. Simmons (A), Br. Methven (A)
2002-03
36
14-14-8
CHA
10-6-4
t-3rd/6
95
98
Tom Serratore
Br. Methven, J. Hanowski (A), A. Murray (A), J. McGill (A)
2003-04
36
20-13-3
CHA
16-3-1
1st/6
131
94
Tom Serratore
Br. Methven, J. Hanowski (A), A. Murray (A)
2004-05
37
23-13-1
CHA
16-4-0
1st/6
123
95
Tom Serratore
A. Murray, J-G Gervais (A), B. Cook (A)
2005-06
37
20-14-3
CHA
12-7-1
t-2nd/6
125
97
Tom Serratore
J-G Gervais, L. Erickson (A), D. Deterding (A), A. Martens (A)
2006-07
33
14-14-5
CHA
9-6-5
2nd/5
97
109
Tom Serratore
L. Erickson, D. Deterding (A), J. Bluhm (A)
2007-08
36
17-16-3
CHA
13-4-3
1st/5
102
82
Tom Serratore
D. Deterding, J. Bluhm (A), T. Winter (A)
2008-09
37
20-16-1
CHA
12-5-1
1st/4
106
97
Tom Serratore
T, Winter (C), C. Bostock (A), C. McKelvie (A)
season results
Year
Division I era
ICHA- International Collegiate Hockey Association NCHA- Northern Collegiate Hockey Association CHA- College Hockey America (NCAA Division I)
2009-10
59
Year-by-year offensive stats
YEAR
GP
G
A
PTS
G/Gm
+/-
PIM
PP
SH
GW
GT
SOG
1947-48
10
37
0
37
3.70
n/a
0
n/a
n/a
2
0
n/a
n/a
1948-49
15
73
53
126
4.87
n/a
10
n/a
n/a
9
0
n/a
n/a
15
69
38
107
4.60
n/a
32
n/a
n/a
8
0
n/a
n/a
1949-50 1951-59
PCT
program suspended / arena roof collapsed
1959-60
4
30
23
53
7.50
n/a
8
n/a
n/a
2
0
n/a
n/a
1960-61
10
31
20
51
3.10
n/a
28.5
n/a
n/a
6
0
n/a
n/a
1961-62
12
57
51
108
4.75
n/a
72
n/a
n/a
8
0
n/a
n/a
1962-63
12
66
65
131
5.50
n/a
102
n/a
n/a
6
0
n/a
n/a n/a
1963-64
12
67
63
130
5.58
n/a
96
n/a
n/a
8
1
n/a
1964-65
12
87
88
175
7.25
n/a
141
6
4
10
0
513
-
1965-66
13
67
53
120
5.15
n/a
165
7
2
12
0
471
-
1966-67
19
96
97
193
5.05
n/a
202
5
0
13
1
259
-
1967-68
24
156
157
313
6.50
n/a
261
23
7
16
0
475
-
1968-69
25
186
259
445
7.44
n/a
374
26
10
23
0
1,040
.179
1969-70
27
206
285
491
u7.63
n/a
328
35
7
24
0
1,179
.175 u.187
1970-71
28
172
231
403
6.14
n/a
368
15
11
20
0
922
1971-72
26
123
179
302
4.73
n/a
319
32
4
13
1
970
.127
1972-73
30
181
272
453
6.03
n/a
275
26
9
23
0
1,279
.142
1973-74
31
179
264
443
5.77
n/a
387
40
5
20
0
1,337
.134
1974-75
28
138
208
346
6.00
n/a
454
29
6
13
0
1,237
.112
1975-76
31
179
259
438
5.77
n/a
433
54
2
22
0
1,233
.145
1976-77
31
172
249
421
5.55
n/a
465
26
u16
24
1
1,357
.127
1977-78
31
210
315
525
6.77
n/a
457
54
8
25
1
1,239
.169
1978-79
29
218
u351
569
7.52
n/a
350
44
9
27
0
1,379
.158
1979-80
32
171
266
437
5.34
n/a
465
32
8
24
0
1,221
.140
1980-81
31
195
295
490
6.29
n/a
356
47
6
24
0
1,350
.144
1981-82
31
173
249
422
5.58
n/a
490
40
4
25
1
1,282
.135
1982-83
37
199
285
484
5.38
n/a
610
46
9
30
1
1,523
.131
1983-84
31
210
315
525
6.77
n/a
385
u73
9
u31
0
1,520
.138
1984-85
35
205
310
515
5.86
n/a
455
61
6
27
1
u1,530
.134
1985-86
35
u219
u351
u570
6.26
n/a
410
50
7
25
1
1,388
.158
1986-87
35
172
259
431
4.91
n/a
438
41
9
22
1
1,408
.122
1987-88
u38
197
304
501
5.18
n/a
519
56
9
24
2
1,497
.132
1988-89
36
166
254
420
4.61
n/a
534
43
7
19
3
1,256
.132
1989-90
28
130
212
342
4.64
n/a
469
37
2
15
0
1,078
.121
1990-91
30
161
258
419
5.37
n/a
500
37
4
21
3
1,034
.156
1991-92
30
152
270
422
5.07
n/a
695
55
8
16
0
1,176
.129
1992-93
31
188
323
511
6.06
n/a
735
58
8
24
0
1,367
.138
1993-94
33
145
247
392
4.39
n/a
u959
38
9
21
0
1,199
.121
1994-95
33
176
209
418
5.33
n/a
701
40
11
24
1
1,239
.142
1995-96
29
124
221
345
4.28
n/a
645
35
4
16
1
1,033
.120
1996-97
34
186
322
508
5.47
n/a
692
44
9
25
0
1,287
.145
1997-98
34
168
285
453
4.94
+337
788
35
11
22
2
1,360
.124
1998-99
30
114
185
299
3.80
+56
499
24
8
17
0
949
.120
1999-00
34
107
178
285
3.15
-138
694
30
4
13
0
898
.119
2000-01
34
77
117
194
2.26
-190
425
23
5
4
3
947
.081
2001-02
35
116
184
300
3.31
-148
492
35
5
12
4
1,052
.110
2002-03
36
95
155
250
2.64
-50
505
33
3
14
4
1,164
.082
Division I era
2003-04
36
131
210
341
3.64
+123
520
37
6
20
3
1,250
.105
2004-05
37
123
201
324
3.32
+77
611
40
7
23
0
1,265
.097
2005-06
37
125
208
333
3.38
+123
740
39
6
20
1
1,139
.110
2006-07
33
97
161
258
2.94
+8
593
31
7
14
u5
958
.101
2007-08
36
102
165
276
2.83
+49
514
35
3
17
1
1,088
.094
2008-09
37
106
173
279
2.86
+4
543
40
4
20
0
995
.106
D1 Totals All-Time
355
1,079
1,752
2,840
3.04
-142
5,637
342
49
157
21
10,756
.100
1,483
7,330
10,748
18,091
4.94
n/a
22,310
1,657
298
943
43
51,343
.142
u school record key: GP: Games Played / G: Goals Scored / A: Assists / P: Points Scored (goals + assists) / PIM: Penalty Minutes / PP=Power-Play Goals / SH: Short-Handed Goals / GW: Game-Winning Goals / GT: Game-Tying Goals / SOG: Shots on Goal / Pct: Shot Percentage stats prior to 1959-60 are based on available information and may be incomplete
60
2009-10
GP
Min
GAA
W
L
T
SO
EN
GA
GA/Gm
SV
SOG
PCT
10
600
6.400
2
8
0
0
0
64
6.40
87
151
.5762
1948-49
15
890
3.303
9
6
0
3
0
49
3.27
255
304
.8388
1949-50
15
900
5.200
8
7
0
1
0
78
5.20
281
359
.7827
1951-59
annual statistical leaders
YEAR 1947-48
program suspended / arena roof collapsed
1959-60
4
223
2.422
2
2
0
1
0
9
2.25
41
50
.8200
1960-61
10
602
3.189
6
4
0
0
0
32
3.20
198
234
.8609
1961-62
12
726
u1.983
8
4
0
2
0
24
u2.00
224
248
.9032
1962-63
12
730
3.534
6
5
1
1
0
43
3.58
257
300
.8567
1963-64
12
730
2.301
8
3
1
3
0
28
2.33
306
334
.9162
1964-65
12
720
2.500
10
1
1
0
2
30
2.50
249
279
.8925 u.9238
1965-66
13
790
2.506
12
1
0
0
0
33
2.54
400
433
1966-67
19
1,140
3.105
13
5
1
3
0
59
3.11
592
651
.9094
1967-68
24
1,443
3.326
16
8
0
3
0
80
3.33
690
770
.8961
1968-69
25
1,500
2.480
23
2
0
5
0
62
2.48
474
536
.8843
1969-70
27
1,635
2.422
24
3
0
2
0
66
2.44
639
705
.9064
1970-71
28
1,690
2.272
20
7
1
4
0
64
2.29
688
752
.9149
1971-72
26
1,575
4.648
13
12
1
1
0
122
4.69
908
1,030
.8816
1972-73
30
1,870
3.080
23
6
1
1
0
96
3.20
603
699
.8627
1973-74
31
1,865
3.925
20
10
1
2
1
122
3.94
830
952
.8718
1974-75
28
1,681
4.462
13
15
0
0
0
125
4.46
853
978
.8722
1975-76
31
1,862
3.738
22
9
0
0
0
116
3.74
895
1,011
.8853
1976-77
31
1,916
2.568
24
4
3
6
0
82
2.65
786
868
.9055
1977-78
31
1,880
3.351
25
5
1
1
0
105
3.39
768
873
.8797
1978-79
29
1,741
2.275
27
2
0
2
0
66
2.28
660
726
.9091
1979-80
32
1,921
3.342
24
8
0
2
0
107
3.34
896
1,003
.8933
1980-81
31
1,858
2.874
24
7
0
4
0
89
2.87
845
934
.9047
1981-82
31
1,865
2.445
25
5
1
4
1
76
2.45
816
893
.9148 .9042
1982-83
37
2,230
2.610
30
6
1
4
0
97
2.62
916
1,013
1983-84
31
1,860
2.290
u31
0
0
3
0
71
2.29
826
897
.9208
1984-85
35
2,142
3.193
27
6
2
0
3
114
3.26
957
1,071
.8936
1985-86
35
2,136
3.933
25
9
1
0
2
140
4.00
1,015
1,155
.8788
1986-87
35
2,115
3.858
22
12
1
2
3
136
3.89
1,076
1,212
.8878
1987-88
u38
u2,325
3.174
24
11
3
1
0
123
3.24
1,158
1,281
.9040
1988-89
36
2,187
3.539
19
13
4
3
0
129
3.58
u1,185
u1,314
.9018
1989-90
28
1,690
3.692
15
11
2
1
0
104
3.71
844
948
.8903
1990-91
30
1,806
3.156
21
6
3
2
1
95
3.17
784
879
.8919
1991-92
30
1,825
3.879
16
9
5
1
1
118
3.93
901
1,019
.8842
1992-93
31
1,870
3.561
24
7
0
2
0
111
3.58
779
890
.8753
1993-94
33
1,995
3.278
21
9
3
1
0
109
3.30
882
991
.8900
1994-95
33
1,998
2.883
24
7
2
0
0
96
2.91
859
955
.8995
1995-96
29
1,775
3.617
16
9
4
0
0
107
3.69
821
928
.8847
1996-97
34
2,051
3.218
25
7
2
2
1
110
3.24
865
975
.8872
1997-98
34
2,060
3.204
22
10
2
3
1
110
3.24
859
969
.8865
1998-99
30
1,807
3.420
17
13
0
1
3
103
3.43
767
870
.8816
Division I era 1999-2000
34
2,055
4.526
13
20
1
1
4
u155
4.56
1,055
1,210
.8719
2000-01
34
2,066
3.863
4
u26
4
0
3
133
3.91
1,113
1,246
.8933
2001-02
35
2,125
4.122
12
18
5
2
u5
146
4.17
959
1,105
.8679
2002-03
36
2,234
2.632
14
14
u8
4
2
98
2.72
921
1,019
.9038
2003-04
36
2,189
2.577
20
13
3
2
u5
94
2.61
823
917
.8975
2004-05
37
2,224
2.563
23
13
1
5
5
95
2.57
802
897
.8941
2005-06
37
2,243
2.595
20
14
3
2
1
97
2.62
1,044
1,141
.9150
2006-07
33
2,009
3.255
14
14
5
2
3
109
3.30
895
1,004
.8914
2007-08
36
2,178
2.260
17
16
3
u7
2
82
2.28
820
902
.9091
2008-09
37
2,236
2.602
20
16
1
2
4
97
2.62
962
1,059
.9084
D1 Totals All-Time
355
21,560
3.078
157
164
34
27
34
1,106
3.12
9,394
10,500
.8947
1,483
89,784
3.211
943
458
82
104
51
4,806
3.24
39,129
43,935
.8906
u school record key: GP: Games Played / Min: minutes played / GAA: Goals-Against Average / SO: Shutouts / EN: Empty Net Goals Allowed / GA: Goals Against / SOG: Shots on Goal / SV: Saves / Pct: Save Percentage stats prior to 1959-60 are based on available information and may be incomplete
2009-10
61
annual statistical leaders
Year
Goals
Assists
Points
Power-Play Goals
1947-48
3, John Whiting*
n/a
3, John Whiting*
n/a
1948-49
16, Richard Anderson
13, Richard Anderson
29, Richard Anderson
n/a
1949-50
23, Ronald “Red” Aase
8, Sheldon Fertig
27, Ronald “Red” Aase
n/a
1950-59
program suspended; arena roof collapsed
1959-60
8, Paul Lafond / So.
7, Paul Lafond / So.
15, Paul Lafond / So.
n/a
1960-61
8, Paul Lafond / Jr.
6, Paul Lafond / Jr.
14, Paul Lafond / Jr.
n/a
1961-62
13, Paul Lafond / Sr.
7, Jerry O’Neil / Jr.
13, Paul Lafond / Sr.
n/a
1962-63
13, Vic Chaput / Jr.
9, Vic Chaput / Jr. 9, Merv Sanderson / Jr.
22, Vic Chaput / Jr.
n/a
1963-64
16, Jim Thompson / Jr.
10, Jim Thompson / Jr.
26, Jim Thompson / Jr.
n/a
1964-65
21, Jim Thompson / Sr.
19, John Hopkins / Sr.
34, Jim Thompson / Sr.
2, Rich Budge / Jr.
1965-66
13, Rich Budge / Sr.
11, Rich Budge / Sr.
24, Rich Budge / Sr.
2, Jim Roddick / Fr.
1966-67
17, Terry Burns / So.
14, Ric Anderson / Jr.
29, Ric Anderson / Jr.
2, Ken Anderson / Fr.
1967-68
21, Terry Burns / Jr.
28, Bill Weller / So.
46, Bill Weller / So.
5, Terry Burns / Jr.
1968-69
21, Austin Wallestad / Jr.
38, Bryan Grand / Jr.
52, Bryan Grand / Jr.
6, Barry Dillon / Jr.
1969-70
41, Glen Beckett / So.
40, Bryan Grand / Sr.
55, Glen Beckett / So.
9, Glen Beckett / So.
1970-71
32, Denny Lemieux / Jr.
26, Jude Boulianne / Sr.
57, Denny Lemieux / Jr.
5, Denny Lemieux / Jr.
1971-72
18, Pat Badiuk / Jr.
17, Pat DeMarchi / Sr. 17, Glen Beckett / Sr.
32, Pat Badiuk / Jr.
6, Pat DeMarchi / Sr.
1972-73
32, Mark Eagles / Fr.
30, Lyle Kvarnlov / Fr.
55, Mark Eagles / Fr.
8, Mark Eagle / Fr.
1973-74
34, Mark Eagles / So.
36, Mark Eagles / So.
70, Mark Eagles / So.
10, Mark Eagles / So.
1974-75
19, Mark Kristo / Jr.
22, Mark Eagles / Jr.
37, Mark Kristo / Jr.
7, Mark Kristo / Jr.
1975-76
35, Mark Kristo / Sr.
44, Mark Eagles / Sr.
64, Mark Eagles / Sr.
16, Mark Kristo / Sr.
1976-77
24, Bill Schmitz / So.
31, John Murphy / So.
47, John Murphy / So.
4, Rod Heisler / So.
1977-78
28, Rod Heisler / Jr.
41, Brian Carleton / So.
57, Brian Carleton / So.
11, Rod Heisler / Jr.
1978-79
27, Rod Heisler / Sr. 27, John Murphy / Jr.
35, John Murphy / Sr.
62, John Murphy / Sr.
6, Rod Heisler / Sr.
1979-80
u 43, Dale Baldwin / Sr.
29, Brian Carleton / Sr.
71, Dale Baldwin / Sr.
9, Dale Baldwin / Sr.
1980-81
28, John Hansen / Jr.
29, Wade Froehlich / Jr.
44, John Hansen / Jr.
6, Mike Milless / Jr.
1981-82
23, Wendal Jellison / Fr.
33, Joel Otto / So.
52, Joel Otto / So.
9, Kurt Dade / Jr.
1982-83
33, Joel Otto / Jr.
38, Mike Alexander / Fr.
61, Joel Otto / Jr.
13, Joel Otto / Jr.
1983-84
35, Scott Monsrud / Sr.
43, Joel Otto / Sr.
75, Joel Otto / Sr.
14, Scott Monsrud / Sr.
1984-85
31, Mike Alexander / Jr.
32, Mike Alexander / Jr.
63, Mike Alexander / Jr.
10, two players
1985-86
35, Tim Lescarbeau / Sr.
u 58, Mike Alexander / Sr.
u 90, Mike Alexander / Sr.
10, Mike Alexander / Sr.
1986-87
26, Ian Resch / Jr.
41, Todd Lescarbeau / Sr.
66, Todd Lescarbeau / Sr.
7, Todd Lescarbeau / Sr.
1987-88
37, Dan Richards / Jr. 37, Jim Tyler / Jr.
54, Ian Resch / Sr.
72, Ian Resch / Sr.
14, Jim Tyler / Jr.
1988-89
29, Scott Johnson / So.
36, Dan Richards / Sr.
54, Dan Richards / Sr.
u 15, Scott Johnson / So.
1989-90
18, Scott Johnson / So.
28, Scott Johnson / Jr.
46, Scott Johnson / Jr.
11, Scott Johnson / Jr.
1990-91
24, Jamie Erb / So.
33, Scott Johnson / Sr.
56, Scott Johnson / Sr.
9, Scott Johnson / Sr.
1991-92
21, Jamie Erb / Jr.
39, O.J. Kennett / Sr.
56, O.J. Kennett / Sr.
10, two players
1992-93
24, Jamie Erb / Sr.
29, Jamie Erb / Sr.
53, Jamie Erb / Sr.
14, Jamie Erb / Sr.
1993-94
18, Jim Karner / Sr.
26, Jim Karner / Sr.
44, Jim Karner / Sr.
5, two players
1994-95
21, Craig Matatall / Jr.
40, Jude Boulianne / Sr.
51, Jude Boulianne / Sr.
6, three players
1995-96
20, Craig Matall / Sr.
30, Bernie Adlys / Sr.
47, Bernie Adlys / Sr.
8, Craig Matatall / Sr.
1996-97
21, Josh Klingfus / Jr.
36, Jeff Sobb / Sr.
54, Jeff Sobb / Sr.
6, Jeff Sobb / Sr.
1997-98
20, Aaron Novak / Sr.
27, Shane Kalbrener / Fr.
42, Shane Kalbrener / Fr.
5, Shane Kalbrener / Fr.
1998-99
18, Scot Dickson / Fr.
18, Shane Kalbrener / So.
30, Shane Kalbrener / So.
4, two players
Division I era 1999-00
15, Stefan Bjork / So.
21, Calvin Chartrand / Sr.
34, Stefan Bjork / So.
8, Stefan Bjork / So.
2000-01
10, Marty Goulet / So. 10, Clay Simmons / So.
12, Heikki Lofman / Fr.
18, Marty Goulet / So.
6, Clay Simmons / Jr.
2001-02
16, Marty Goulet / Jr.
23, Marty Goulet / Jr.
39, Marty Goulet / Jr.
6, three players
2002-03
15, Marty Goulet / Sr.
18, Andrew Murray / So.
29, Marty Goulet / Sr.
8, Marty Goulet / Sr.
2003-04
23, Brendan Cook / Jr.
21, Riley Riddell / Jr. 21, Ryan Huddy / So.
39, Brendan Cook / Jr.
10, Brendan Cook / Jr.
2004-05
20, Brendan Cook / Sr.
27, Luke Erickson / So.
40, Brendan Cook / Sr.
10, Brendan Cook / Sr.
2005-06
17, Ryan Miller / Jr.
20, Ryan Huddy / Sr.
35, Luke Erickson / Jr.
8, Luke Erickson / Jr.
2006-07
13, Luke Erickson / Sr.
18, Rob Sirianni / Sr.
29, Travis Winter / So. 29, Rob Sirianni / Sr.
8, Luke Erickson / Sr.
2007-08
14, Matt Pope / Sr.
18, Matt Read / Fr.
27, Matt Read / Fr.
6, Travis Winter / Jr. 6, Blaine Jarvis / Sr.
2008-09
22, Tyler Scofield / Sr.
25, Matt Read / So.
40, Matt Read / So.
9, Tyler Scofield / Sr.
u school record *= season data incomplete; based on available information
62
2009-10
Penalty Minutes
Goalie Saves
Save Percentage
Goals-Against Average
n/a
87, Dick Radniecki*
.731, Dick Radniecki*
4.00, Gordon Olson*
1948-49
4, George Stewart*
204, Dick Radniecki*
.887, Dick Radniecki*
2.94, Dick Radniecki*
1949-50
6, Ed Johnson
223, Dick Radniecki*
.864, Dick Radniecki*
4.20, Dick Radniecki*
1950-59
program suspended; arena roof collapsed
1959-60
n/a
39, Larry Ostry*
.813, Larry Ostry*
2.80, Larry Ostry*
1960-61
n/a
84, Bob Long / Fr.*
.816, Bob Long / Fr.*
2.69, Bob Sinclair / So.
1961-62
n/a
208, Bob Sinclair / Jr
.908, Bob Sinclair / Jr.
2.01, Bob Sinclair / Jr.
1962-63
22, Joe Scaletta / So. 22, Dave Brown / So.
160, Jerry Ryan / Fr.
.861, Bob Sinclair / Sr.
3.23, Bob Sinclair / Sr.
1963-64
26, Dave Brown / Jr.
195, Jerry Ryan / So.
.927, Jim Robberstad / Jr.
u 1.78, Jim Robberstad / Jr.
1964-65
25, Dave Brown / Sr.
137, Tom Bend / Fr.
.907, Tom Bend / Fr.
2.33, Tom Bend / Fr.
1965-66
28, Tom Leonard / Fr.
337, Tom Bend / So.
.931, Tom Bend / So.
2.25, Tom Bend / So.
1966-67
49, Bob Rieger
592, Tom Bend / Jr.
.909, Tom Bend / Jr.
3.11, Tom Bend / Jr.
1967-68
38, Ken Anderson / So.
603, Len Kleisinger / Jr.
.893, Len Kleisinger / Jr.
3.55, Len Kleisinger / Jr.
1968-69
71, Ken Anderson / Jr.
467, Blane Comstock / So.
.888, Blane Comstock / So.
2.39, Blane Comstock / So.
1969-70
46, Garry Bock / So.
612, Blane Comstock / Jr.
.907, Blane Comstock / Jr.
2.40, Blane Comstock / Jr.
1970-71
53, Denny Lemieux / Jr.
652, Blane Comstock / Sr.
.916, Blane Comstock / Sr.
2.25, Blane Comstock / Sr.
1971-72
54, Pat DeMarchi / Sr.
530, Chuck Scanlon / Fr.
.886, Chuck Scanlon / Fr.
4.39, Chuck Scanlon / Fr.
1972-73
48, Jim Borden / Jr.
597, Chuck Scanlon / So.
.861, Chuck Scanlon / So.
3.10, Chuck Scanlon / So.
1973-74
53, Don Boeke / So.
804, Chuck Scanlon / Jr.
.872, Chuck Scanlon / Jr.
3.94, Chuck Scanlon / Jr.
1974-75
73, Dan Boeke / Jr.
726, Chuck Scanlon / Sr.
.875, Chuck Scanlon / Sr.
4.48, Chuck Scanlon / Sr.
1975-76
73, Gary Burstad / Jr.
590, Jack Horner / So.
.889, Jack Horner / So.
3.69, Jack Horner / So.
1976-77
54, Dale Baldwin / Fr.
722, Jack Horner / Jr.
.906, Jack Horner / Jr.
2.61, Jack Horner / Jr.
1977-78
65, Mike Gibbons / Jr.
623, Jack Horner / Sr.
.874, Jack Horner / Sr.
3.60, Jack Horner / Sr.
1978-79
50, Mike Gibbons / Sr.
630, Dan Olson / So.
.905, Dan Olson / So.
2.41, Dan Olson / So.
1979-80
52, Dale Baldwin / Sr.
760, Jim Scanlan / So.
.900, Jim Scanlon / So.
3.26, Jim Scanlon / So.
1980-81
47, Jobn Hansen / Sr.
681, Jim Scanlan / Jr.
.902, Jim Scanlon / Jr.
3.01, Jim Scanlon / Jr.
1981-82
52, Joel Otto / So.
747, Jim Scanlan / Sr.
.915, Jim Scanlon / Sr.
2.40, Jim Scanlon / Sr.
1982-83
68, Joel Otto / Jr.
709, Mark Liska / So.
.901, Mark Liska / So.
2.68, Mark Liska / So.
1983-84
62, Drey Bradley / Sr.
507, Mark Liska / Jr.
u.938, Galen Nagle / Sr.
1.89, Galen Nagle / Sr.
1984-85
42, Tim Lescarbeau / Sr.
751, Mark Liska / Sr.
.899, Mark Liska / Sr.
2.91, Mark Liska / Sr.
1985-86
100, Mike Alexander / Sr.
786, Jim Martin / Sr.
.883, Jim Martin / Sr.
3.68, Jim Martin / Sr.
1986-87
64, Dave Jungwirth / Jr.
u 1,066, Steve O’Shea / So.
.892, Steve O’Shea / So.
3.71, Steve O’Shea / So.
1987-88
57, Terry Mattson / Sr.
879, Steve O’Shea / Jr.
.905, Steve O’Shea / Jr.
3.16, Steve O’Shea / Jr.
1988-89
84, Blaine Harrison / Jr.
891, Steve O’Shea / Sr.
.910, Steve O’Shea / Sr.
3.39, Steve O’Shea / Sr.
1989-90
42, Blaine Harrison / Sr.
681, Rob Stevens / Jr.
.886, Rob Stevens/ Jr.
3.87, Rob Stevens / Jr.
1990-91
54, Bill Coleman / Jr.
437, Todd Kreibich / So.
.897, Chad Perry / So.
3.05, Todd Kreibich / So.
1991-92
107, Chris Morque / So.
613, Todd Kreibich / Jr.
.895, Todd Kreibich / Jr.
3.46, Todd Kreibich / Jr.
1992-93
100, Craig Matatall / Fr.
410, Robin Cook / Fr.
.890, Todd Kreibich / Sr.
3.07, Todd Kreibich / Sr.
1993-94
u 112, Chris Morque / Sr.
581, Robin Cook / So.
.901, Robin Cook / So.
2.99, Robin Cook / So.
1994-95
71, Eric Fulton / So.
629, Robin Cook / Jr.
.901, Robin Cook / Jr.
2.80, Robin Cook / Jr.
1995-96
64, Jim Logan / So.
495, Robin Cook / Sr.
.886, Robin Cook / Sr.
3.52, Robin Cook / Sr.
1996-97
73, Eric Andersen / Fr.
449, Adam Pavlatos / Fr.
.894, Adam Pavlatos / Fr.
2.93, Adam Pavlatos / Fr.
1997-98
98, Travis Johnson / Fr.
725, Adam Pavlatos / So.
.892, Adam Pavlatos / So.
3.09, Adam Pavlatos / So.
1998-99
48, Travis Johnson / So.
664, Adam Pavlatos / Jr.
.888, Adam Pavlatos / Jr.
3.33, Adam Pavlatos / Jr.
Annual statistical leaders
Year 1947-48
Division I era 1999-00
68, Frank Udovich / So.
560, Bob Tallarico / Fr.
.881, Adam Pavlatos / Sr.
3.76, Adam Pavlatos / Sr.
2000-01
65, Marty Goulet / So.
755, Grady Hunt / Fr.
.902, Grady Hunt / Fr.
3.52, Grady Hunt / Fr.
2001-02
53, Frank Udovich / Sr.
768, Grady Hunt / So.
.878, Grady Hunt / So.
3.87, Grady Hunt / So.
2002-03
45, Bill Methven / Jr.
712, Grady Hunt / Jr.
.916, Grady Hunt / Jr.
2.36, Grady Hunt / Jr.
2003-04
48, Jean-Guy Gervais / So.
482, Grady Hunt / Sr.
.901, Grady Hunt / Sr.
2.47, Grady Hunt / Sr.
2004-05
65, Jean-Guy Gervais / Jr.
418, Layne Sedevie / So.
.916, Matt Climie / Fr.
1.80, Matt Climie / Fr.
2005-06
69, Cody Bostock / Fr.
538, Layne Sedevie / Jr.
.918, Layne Sedevie / Jr.
2.46, Layne Sedevie / Jr.
2006-07
50, Riley Weselowski / Jr.
733, Matt Climie / Jr.
.897, Matt Climie / Jr.
3.03, Matt Climie / Jr.
2007-08
51, David Deterding / Sr.
580, Matt Climie / Sr.
.913, Matt Climie / Sr.
2.16, Orlando Alamano / Jr.
2008-09
50, Matt Read / So.
794, Matt Dalton / So.
.924, Matt Dalton / So.
2.19, Matt Dalton / So.
u school record *= season data incomplete; based on available information min. 33% of team minutes played to qualify for save percentage and goals-against average categories
2009-10
63
career scoring leaders
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 22 22 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 33 35 36 37 38 38 40 40 42 42 42 42 46 46 48 48 48 48
Name Mike Alexander Mark Eagles Joel Otto Scott Johnson Rod Heisler Wendal Jellison Dan Richards Jamie Erb John Murphy Scott Currie Todd Lescarbeau Dale Baldwin Ian Resch Bryan Grand Brian Carleton Craig Matatall Jim Tyler Eric Gager O.J. Kennett Tim Lescarbeau Omer Belisle Denny Lemieux Bill Schmitz Bernie Adlys Kurt Dade Mark Kristo uLuke Erickson Bruce Falk • Calvin Chartrand Dan Tollefson uAndrew Murray Barry Dillon Jude Boulianne, Jr. Jeff Arf Wade Froehlich uTyler Scofield Jeff Sobb Duff Melhus Mike Fairchild Mark Lescarbeau Chris Morque Greg Biskup Brent Tookenay Terry Mattson Jason Mack Bill Weller Jim Logan Dan Boeke Paul Ferry Craig McKechney Josh Klingfus • played during BSU’s Division I era u entire career played during BSU’s Division I era
GP 136 116 122 132 121 134 132 108 122 122 109 119 119 59 111 113 122 131 80 101 123 88 118 116 110 107 125 100 130 117 128 93 119 122 121 129 125 110 116 125 120 110 131 93 121 76 122 102 120 125 126
Top 10 Goal-Scoring Leaders 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 t8 t8 10
64
Name Mark Eagles Rod Heisler Mike Alexander Scott Johnson Dale Baldwin Joel Otto Dan Richards Wendal Jellison Jamie Erb Jim Tyler
G 100 100 98 96 93 89 87 86 86 83
G 98 100 89 96 100 86 87 86 71 77 66 93 65 42 42 66 83 74 50 75 49 60 73 48 57 65 52 56 46 44 46 41 39 47 23 48 45 32 44 43 28 29 41 25 42 46 43 42 24 44 47
A 154 125 115 95 90 99 93 94 98 88 99 70 94 112 111 84 63 67 90 58 82 69 56 81 68 57 69 64 72 73 69 73 74 66 89 63 65 76 64 64 79 77 65 81 64 58 61 61 79 59 56
PTS 252 225 204 191 190 185 180 180 169 165 164 163 159 154 153 150 146 141 140 133 131 129 129 129 125 122 121 120 118 117 115 114 113 113 112 111 110 108 108 107 107 106 106 106 106 104 104 103 103 103 103
PTS/GM 1.85 1.94 1.67 1.44 1.57 1.38 1.36 1.75 1.39 1.50 1.50 1.37 1.34 2.61 1.38 1.32 1.20 1.08 1.75 1.32 1.07 1.47 1.09 1.11 1.14 1.14 0.97 1.19 0.91 1.04 0.89 1.23 0.95 0.93 0.93 0.86 0.88 0.98 0.93 0.86 0.89 0.96 0.80 1.14 0.87 1.37 0.85 1.01 0.86 0.82 0.82
YRS 1982-86 1972-76 1980-84 1987-91 1975-79 1981-85 1985-89 1989-93 1975-79 1975-79 1983-87 1976-80 1984-88 1967-70 1976-80 1992-96 1985-89 1981-85 1989-92 1983-86 1991-95 1968-72 1975-79 1992-96 1981-85 1971-75 2003-07 1967-71 1996-00 1989-93 2001-05 1966-70 1991-95 1975-79 1978-82 2005-09 1993-97 1974-78 1976-80 1983-87 1990-94 1984-88 1987-91 1985-88 1990-94 1967-70 1994-98 1973-77 1989-93 1991-95 1994-98
Top 10 Assist-Scoring Leaders YRS 1972-76 1975-79 1982-86 1987-91 1976-80 1980-84 1985-89 1981-85 1989-93 1985-89
1 2 3 4 5 t6 t6 8 9 t10 t10
Name Mike Alexander Mark Eagles Joel Otto Bryan Grand Brian Carleton Wendal Jellison Todd Lescarbeau John Murphy Scott Johnson Jamie Erb Ian Resch
2009-10
A 154 125 115 112 111 99 99 98 95 94 94
YRS 1982-86 1972-76 1980-84 1967-70 1976-80 1981-85 1983-87 1976-80 1987-91 1989-93 1984-88
Division I-Era Career Scoring Leaders Top 50 Scorers (all positions) Pts Name G-A 121 Luke Erickson 52-69 115 Andrew Murray 46-69 111 Tyler Scofield 48-63 102 Brendan Cook 55-47 101 Rob Siranni 48-53 100 Marty Goulet 47-53 90 Ryan Huddy 28-62 88 Riley Riddell 35-53 85 Jeff McGill 34-51 71 Matt Pope 33-38 67 Ryan Miller 30-37 67 uMatt Read 24-43 65 Blaine Jarvis 33-32 65 Travis Winter 28-37 63 Jean-Guy Gervais 33-30 56 Wade Chiodo 22-34 56 John Haider 19-37 55 Bryce Methven 16-39 54 Cody Bostock 15-39 52 Myles Kuharski 23-29 52 Peter Jonsson 7-45 51 Clay Simmons 25-26 51 Brandon Marino 15-36 48 Matt Francis 18-30 46 Jared Hanowski 13-33 40 Anders Olsson 7-33 40 Andrew Martens 11-29 39 Riley Weselowski 8-31 38 Jake Bluhm 15-23 37 Daryl Bat 16-21 35 Mark Phenow 6-29 33 Stefan Bjork 15-18 32 Bill Methven 15-17 32 Shane Holman 15-17 32 uBrad Hunt 9-23 31 Joey Moggach 6-25 29 Calvin Chartrand 8-21 29 Says Phrakonkham 8-21 29 uChris Peluso 1-28 25 Brad Johnson 11-14 24 Shane Kalbrener 9-15 24 Graham McManamin 6-18 23 Todd Knott 14-9 22 uTyler Lehrke 9-13 21 Rico Fatticci 6-15 21 Heikki Lofman 6-15 21 Travis Barnes 10-11 20 uIan Lowe 4-16
YRS 2003-07 2001-05 2005-09 2001-05 2003-07 1999-03 2002-06 2001-04 1999-03 2004-08 2003-07 2007-p 2004-08 2005-09 2002-06 2001-04 2001-05 2000-04 2005-09 2002-05 2002-05 1999-02 2005-09 2007-09 2000-04 2001-04 2002-06 2004-08 2004-08 1999-01 1999-02 1999-00 2000-04 2003-07 2008-p 2006-08 1999-00 1999-02 2006-p 1999-01 1999-01 2006-09 1999-02 2006-p 1999-01 2000-02 2000-04 2007-p
Scoring - Goaltenders 3 Layne Sedevie 3 Matt Dalton 2 Grady Hunt 1 Bob Tallarico 1 Dannie Morgan 1 Matt Climie
2003-07 2007-09 2000-04 1999-01 2000-04 2004-08
0-3=3 0-3=3 0-2=2 0-1=1 0-1=1 0-1=1
Top 10 Goal Scorers 55 Brendan Cook 52 Luke Erickson 48 Rob Sirianni 48 Tyler Scofield 47 Marty Goulet 46 Andrew Murray 35 Riley Riddell 34 Jeff McGill 33 Jean-Guy Gervais 33 Matt Pope 33 Blaine Jarvis
2001-05 2003-07 2003-07 2005-09 1999-03 2001-05 2001-04 1999-03 2002-06 2004-08 2004-08
Top 10 Assist Scorers 69 Andrew Murray 69 Luke Erickson 63 Tyler Scofield 62 Ryan Huddy 53 Rob Sirianni 53 Marty Goulet 53 Riley Riddell 51 Jeff McGill 47 Brendan Cook 45 Peter Jonsson
2001-05 2003-07 2005-09 2002-06 2003-07 1999-03 2001-04 1999-03 2001-05 2002-05
u active player
Points Scored
a c b
252 117 121 5
Mike Alexander Paul Ferry Luke Eirckson Jim Scanlon
Longest Scoring Streak
c
48 Bryan Grand 12 Andrew Murray
Most Goals
c a
100 100 55 33
Mark Eagles Rod Heisler Brendan Cook Jim McElmury
Most Assists
a c c b
154 93 69 69 5
Mike Alexander Paul Ferry Andrew Murray Luke Erickson Jim Scanlon
Most Power Play Goals
c a
35 Mike Alexander 22 Brendan Cook 14 Clay Simmons
Most Shorthanded Goals
c a
13 Dale Baldwin 9 Brendan Cook 3 Denny Schueller
Most Unassisted Goals
c a
18 Mark Eagles 6 Riley Riddell 7 Gary Sargent
Most Hat Tricks
c a
7 Mark Eagles 2 Brendan Cook 2 Gary Sargent
Most Penalty Minutes
a c b
345 283 220 60
Chris Morque Craig Matatall Jean-Guy Gervais Robin Cook
1982-86 1989-93 2003-07 1978-82 1968-70 2004-05 1972-76 1975-79 2001-05 1967-71 1982-86 1989-93 2001-05 2003-07 1978-82 1982-86 2001-05 1999-02 1976-80 2001-05 1968-69 1972-76 2001-04 1972-73 1972-76 2001-05 1972-73 1990-94 1992-96 2002-06 1992-96
Fewest Penalty Minutes a
2 several players 6 Jim Finks
Most Games Played
ac 143 John Haider c 143 Matt Pope b 106 Grady Hunt
1971-75 2001-05 2004-08 2000-04
Highest Save Percentage
.917 Tom Bend 1964-67 min. 1,500 minutes played in goal
PLAYERS Jude Boulianne Jr. Chris Morque Greg Biskup Terry Mattson Paul Ferry Drey Bradley Mike Gibbons Gary Gustason Greg Ambrose Pat Kinney Tony Montebello Troy Edwards Tom Shinabarger Mike Donahue Jim McElmury Jude Boulianne Sr. Kris Bjornson Pat Cullen Bruce Watkins Charlie Brown Joe Knudson Dave Mueller Todd Donaldson Hal Burton John Birrenkott Dave Jerome Dennis Gibbons Steve Curley uJohn Haider Shawn Pomplun uBryce Methven uCody Bostock Dennis Schueller uPeter Jonsson uClay Simmons Jim Borden Gary Tveit • Mark Phenow Gary Sargent Garry Ross Wayne Opsahl Dave Geatz Tim Rood Steve Lundeen uAnders Olsson uAndrew Martens uRiley Weselowski Joe Scaletta John Hause Neal Holmstrom • played during BSU’s Division I era u entire career played during BSU’s Division I era
1 2 3 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 10 10 13 13 15 16 16 18 19 20 20 22 22 24 25 26 26 28 29 30 30 32 33 33 35 36 36 36 39 39 41 42 43 43 45 45 47 48 48 50
Highest Save Percentage
GP 119 120 110 93 120 113 106 115 125 122 114 122 103 127 89 80 117 73 118 62 123 112 120 122 93 102 99 104 143 57 140 103 94 109 102 83 83 132 30 38 64 108 100 54 101 101 124 47 69 117
G 39 28 29 25 24 26 27 28 17 17 22 12 17 26 34 19 19 24 22 20 25 22 15 10 11 7 16 11 19 13 16 13 17 7 25 12 5 10 23 22 18 8 9 9 7 11 8 11 7 11
A 76 79 77 81 79 71 69 66 73 64 59 69 63 54 44 56 56 49 49 47 42 44 51 55 53 55 46 46 37 42 39 39 35 45 26 38 45 40 24 25 28 36 33 33 33 29 31 27 31 26
PTS 115 107 106 106 103 97 96 94 90 81 81 81 80 80 78 75 75 73 71 67 67 66 66 65 64 62 62 57 56 55 55 54 52 52 51 50 50 50 47 47 46 44 42 42 40 40 39 38 38 37
PTS/GM 0.97 0.89 0.96 1.14 0.86 0.86 0.91 0.82 0.72 0.66 0.71 0.66 0.78 0.63 0.88 0.94 0.64 1.00 0.60 1.08 0.54 0.59 0.55 0.53 0.69 0.61 0.63 0.55 0.39 0.96 0.39 0.39 0.55 0.48 0.50 0.60 0.60 0.38 1.57 1.24 0.72 0.41 0.42 0.78 0.40 0.40 0.32 0.81 0.55 0.32
career scoring leaders: defensemen
Individual Career Records
YRS 1991-95 1990-94 1984-88 1986-89 1989-93 1981-85 1975-79 1989-93 1995-99 1975-79 1977-81 1993-97 1986-89 1994-98 1967-71 1967-71 1991-95 1988-92 1985-89 1968-71 1979-82 1974-78 1983-87 1975-79 1970-74 1980-84 1982-85 1971-75 2001-05 1995-97 2000-04 2005-09 1967-71 2002-05 1999-02 1970-74 1978-82 1998-02 1972-73 1973-75 1987-90 1981-85 1979-83 1984-86 2001-04 2003-06 2004-08 1961-65 1990-94 1978-82
.931 Galen Nagle 1980-84 min. 1,000 minutes played in goal
Most Saves
3,065 Steve O’Shea
Most Shutouts
c
12 Matt Climie 9 Blane Comstock 9 Jim Scanlan
1985-89 2004-08 1967-71 1978-82
Most Goaltending Victories
c
70 Blane Comstock 45 Matt Climie
a= defensemen b= goaltender c= Division I era
1967-71 2004-08
Top 10 Goal-Scoring Defensemen 1 2 3 4 4 6 7 7 9 9 9
Name Jude Boulianne, Jr. Jim McElmury Greg Biskup Gary Gustason Chris Morque Mike Gibbons Drey Bradley Mike Donaghue Joe Knudson Terry Mattson uClay Simmons
G 39 34 29 28 28 27 26 26 25 25 25
YRS 1991-95 1967-71 1984-88 1989-93 1990-94 1975-79 1981-85 1994-98 1979-82 1986-89 1999-02
Top 10 Assist-Scoring Defensemen 1 t2 t2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Name Terry Mattson Chris Morque Paul Ferry Jude Boulianne Jr. Greg Ambrose Drey Bradley Mike Gibbons Gary Gustason Pat Kinney Tom Schinabarger
2009-10
A 81 79 79 74 73 71 69 66 64 63
YRS 1986-89 1990-94 1989-93 1991-95 1995-99 1981-85 1975-79 1989-93 1975-79 1986-89
65
career goaltending records
Save Percentage
Save Percentage
MIN SV 1 Tom Bend 2,168 1,066 2 uMatt Dalton 2,094 864 3 uMatt Climie 5,427 2,201 4 Jim Scanlan 4,807 2,211 5 Blane Comstock 4,878 1,818 6 Mark Liska 4,717 2,013 7 Dan Olson 2,350 893 8 Steve O’Shea 5,828 3,065 9 uLayne Sedevie 3,022 1,289 10 uGrady Hunt 6,002 2,717 11 Todd Kreibich 3,171 1,407 12 Robin Cook 4,823 2,115 13 • Adam Pavlatos 5,121 2,214 14 Jack Horner 4,712 2,062 15 Chad Perry 1,639 796 NCAA min. 1,500 minutes played
SOG 1,163 944 2,423 2,437 2,008 2,230 992 3,408 1,434 3,024 1,577 2,374 2,490 2,322 897
PCT .9166 .9153 .9084 .9073 .9054 .9027 .9002 .8994 .8989 .8985 .8922 .8909 .8892 .8880 .8874
YRS 1964-67 2007-09 2004-08 1978-82 1967-71 1981-85 1977-80 1985-89 2003-07 2000-04 1989-93 1992-96 1996-00 1974-78 1989-92
Goals Against Average MIN 1 uMatt Dalton 2,094 2 Blane Comstock 4,878 3 uMatt Climie 5,427 4 Dan Olson 2,350 5 Tom Bend 2,168 6 Mark Liska 4,717 7 Jim Scanlan 4,807 8 uLayne Sedevie 3,023 9 uGrady Hunt 6,002 10 Todd Kreibich 3,171 11 Robin Cook 4,823 12 • Adam Pavlatos 5,121 13 Jack Horner 4,712 14 Steve O’Shea 5,828 15 Jim Martin 2,276 NCAA min. 1,500 minutes played
GA 80 190 222 99 97 217 226 145 307 170 259 276 260 343 136
MIN SV SOG PCT YRS 1 Galen Nagle 1,089 498 535 .9308 1980-84 2 Tom Bend 2,168 1,066 1,163 .9166 1964-67 3 uMatt Dalton 2,094 864 944 .9153 2007-09 4 uMatt Climie 5,427 2,201 2,423 .9084 2004-08 5 Jim Scanlan 4,807 2,211 2,437 .9073 1978-82 6 Blane Comstock 4,878 1,818 2,008 .9054 1967-71 7 Mark Liska 4,717 2,013 2,230 .9027 1981-85 uOrlando Alamano 1,031 465 516 .9012 2004-09 8 9 Dan Olson 2,350 893 992 .9002 1977-80 10 Steve O’Shea 5,828 3,065 3,408 .8994 1985-89 11 uLayne Sedevie 3,022 1,289 1,434 .8989 2003-07 12 uGrady Hunt 6,002 2,717 3,024 .8985 2000-04 13 Len Kleisinger 1,218 603 675 .8933 1967-68 14 Todd Kreibich 3,171 1,407 1,577 .8922 1989-93 15 Robin Cook 4,823 2,115 2,374 .8909 1992-96 min. 1,000 minutes played
GAA 2.292 2.337 2.454 2.528 2.685 2.760 2.821 2.878 3.069 3.217 3.222 3.234 3.311 3.531 3.585
YRS 2007-09 1967-71 2004-08 1977-80 1964-67 1981-85 1978-82 2003-07 2000-04 1989-93 1992-96 1996-00 1974-78 1985-89 1982-86
MIN 1 Galen Nagle 1,089 2 uMatt Dalton 2,094 3 Blane Comstock 4,878 4 uMatt Climie 5,427 5 Dan Olson 2,350 6 Tom Bend 2,168 7 Rob Sinclair 1,176 8 Mark Liska 4,717 9 Jim Scanlan 4,807 10 uLayne Sedevie 3,023 11 uOrlando Alamano 1,031 11 Jerry Ryan 1,337 12 uGrady Hunt 6,002 13 uDannie Morgan 1,168 14 Todd Kreibich 3,171 min. 1,000 minutes played
GA 37 80 190 222 99 97 53 217 226 145 51 68 307 60 170
SV 498 864 1,818 2,201 893 1,066 384 2,013 2,211 1,289 465 526 2,717 473 1,407
Most Points 90 a 52 b 3
GAA 2.039 2.292 2.337 2.454 2.528 2.685 2.704 2.760 2.821 2.878 2.968 3.052 3.069 3.082 3.217
YRS 1980-84 2007-09 1967-71 2004-08 1977-80 1964-67 1960-63 1981-85 1978-82 2003-07 2004-09 1962-66 2000-04 2000-04 1989-93
43 a 23
58 a 40 b 3
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
W
T
Pct
Years
Blane Comstock Chuck Scanlon Jim Scanlan Mark Liska Jack Horner Robin Cook Steve O’Shea • Adam Pavlatos uMatt Climie uGrady Hunt
70 62 62 61 59 57 55 52 45 39
1 3 0 3 4 5 7 4 11 12
.849 .641 .765 .845 .763 .735 .609 .628 .587 .441
1967-71 1971-75 1978-82 1981-85 1974-78 1992-96 1985-89 1996-00 2004-08 2000-04
SHO
Years
12 9 9 6 5 5 5 4 4 3
2004-08 1967-71 1978-82 1974-78 1985-89 1996-00 2000-04 1981-85 1971-75
Shutouts Player 1 t2 t2 4 5 5 5 8 8 10
uMatt Climie Blane Comstock Jim Scanlan Jack Horner Steve O’Shea • Adam Pavlatos uGrady Hunt Mark Liska Chuck Scanlon five players
Player 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Steve O’Shea uGrady Hunt Chuck Scanlon • Adam Pavlatos Jim Scanlan uMatt Climie Robin Cook Jack Horner Mark Liska Blane Comstock
Most Power Play Goals 15 a 8
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
uGrady Hunt Steve O’Shea Chuck Scanlon uMatt Climie • Adam Pavlatos Robin Cook Jim Scanlan Mark Liska Jack Horner Blane Comstock
• played during BSU’s Division I era u entire career played during BSU’s Division I era
66
Mark Kristo Stefan Bjork
Most Shorthanded Goals 6 3
Dale Baldwin Denny Schueller
Most Unassisted Goals a
7 7
Mark Eagles Gary Sargent
Most Hat Tricks a
5 2
Glen Beckett Gary Sargent
Most Penalty Minutes 100 a 112 b 24
Craig Matatall Chris Morque Robin Cook
Sv%
Years
3,065 2,717 2,657 2,214 2,211 2,201 2,115 2,062 2,013 1,818
.8994 .8985 .8732 .9207 .9073 .9084 .8909 .8880 .9027 .9054
1985-89 2000-04 1971-75 1996-00 1978-82 2004-08 1992-96 1974-78 1981-85 1967-71
Saves
Years
6,002 5,828 5,811 5,427 5,107 4,823 4,807 4,717 4,714 4,680
2000-04 1985-89 1971-75 2004-08 1996-00 1992-96 1978-82 1981-85 1974-78 1967-71
0
1979-80 1972-73 1985-86 1983-84 2008-09 1974-75 1999-00 1979-80 1968-69 1973-74 1972-73 1969-70 1972-73 1992-93 1993-94 1993-94
several players
Most Games Played 38 b 31
891
several players Matt Dalton Galen Nagle Steve O’Shea
Most Shutouts
5 5 5
Blane Comstock Jack Horner Matt Climie
1987-88 2008-09 1983-84 1987-88 1968-69 1976-77 2007-08
Most Goaltending Victories
24
Blane Comstock
Game Most Points a b
8 5 1
Paul Lafond Charlie Brown several times
Most Goals
a a a a a
6 Glen Beckett 6 Denny Lemieux 3 Gary Sargent 3 Tony Montebello 3 Mike Donaghue 3 Clay Simmons 3 John Haider
Most Assists a b
7 5 1
Bryan Grand Charlie Brown several times
Most Saves
54
Steve O’Shea
a= defensemen b= goaltender
2009-10
1985-86 1983-84 2008-09
Fewest Penalty Minutes
Most Saves Sv
Minutes Played in Goal Player
Mike Alexander Drey Bradley Matt Dalton
Save Percentage
Saves
Player
Dale Baldwin Gary Sargent
Most Assists
.938
Victories in Goal
Mike Alexander Drey Bradley Matt Dalton
Most Goals
a
Goals Against Average
SV 864 1,818 2,201 893 1,066 2,013 2,211 1,289 2,717 1,407 2,115 2,214 2,062 3,065 1,043
Individual Season Records
1969-70
2/20/60 2/7/71
1/24/70 2/13/70 2/7/73 1/3/79 1/24/97 11/25/00 3/13/04 1/24/70 2/7/71
1/20/89
Scoring Leaders Name Mike Alexander Joel Otto Dale Baldwin Mark Eagles Todd Lescarbeau
G 32 32 43 34 30
A 58 43 28 36 40
Pts 90 75 71 70 70
Year 1985-86 1983-84 1979-80 1973-74 1985-86
Scoring Leaders - Defense Name Drey Bradley Jude Boulianne Gary Sargent Greg Biskup Mike Gibbons
G 12 11 23 9 10
A 40 40 24 36 26
Pts 52 51 47 45 36
Goal Scoring Leaders Name G Dale Baldwin 43 Glen Beckett 41 Dan Richards 37 Jim Tyler 37 Mark Kristo 35 Scott Monsrud 35 Tim Lescarbeau 35 Mark Eagles 34 Joel Otto 33 Mike Alexander 32 Denny Lemieux 32 Mark Eagles 32 Joel Otto 32 Mike Alexander 31 Todd Lescarbeau 30 all 30-goal seasons
A 28 14 29 24 20 19 30 36 28 58 25 23 43 32 40
Pts 71 55 66 61 55 54 65 70 61 90 57 55 75 63 70
Assist Scoring Leaders Name G Mike Alexander 32 Ian Resch 18 Bryan Grand 17 Mark Eagles 20 Joel Otto 32 Brian Carleton 16 Todd Lescarbeau 25 Bryan Grand 13 Drey Bradley 12 Todd Lescarbeau 30 Jude Boulianne Jr 11 all 40-assist seasons
A 58 54 53 44 43 41 41 40 40 40 40
Pts 90 72 70 64 75 57 66 53 52 70 51
Year 1983-84 1994-95 1972-73 1985-86 1977-78
Year 1979-80 1969-70 1987-88 1987-88 1975-76 1983-84 1985-86 1973-74 1982-83 1985-86 1970-71 1972-73 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86
Year 1985-86 1987-88 1968-69 1975-76 1983-84 1977-78 1986-87 1969-70 1983-84 1985-86 1994-95
Goaltending-Save Percentage
Name Save Pct. Year Galen Nagle .938 1983-84 Tom Bend .931 1965-66 Jim Robberstad .927 1963-64 Matt Dalton .9211 2008-09 Grady Hunt .9163 2002-03 Matt Climie .9158 2004-05 min. 33% of team minutes played
Goaltending-GAA
Name GAA Year Jim Robberstad 1.78 1963-64 Matt Climie 1.80 2004-05 Galen Nagle 1.89 1983-84 Bob Sinclair 2.09 1961-62 Matt Climie 2.16 2007-08 Matt Dalton 2.19 2008-09 min. 33% of team minutes played
Goaltending- Saves Name Steve O’Shea Steve O’Shea Steve O’Shea Chuck Scanlon Matt Dalton Jim Martin
Saves 1,066 891 879 804 794 786
Year 1986-87 1988-89 1987-88 1973-74 2008-09 1985-86
Games Most Games Played-Season Most Games Won-Season Most Home Games Won-Season Fewest Games Won-Season Most Games Lost-Season Fewest Games Lost-Season Most Games Tied-Season Most Consecutive Wins-Season Most Consecutive Wins Most Consecutive Home Wins Most Consecutive Losses Most Consecutive Winless Games Most Overtime Games, Season Most Consecutive Overtime Games, Season Most Overtime Wins, Season * American collegiate record // ^ NCAA Division I record
38 1987-88 (24-11-3) 31 1983-84 (31-0-0) 19 1983-84 (19-0-0) 2 1947-48 (2-8-0) 2 1959-60 (2-2-0) 26 2000-01 (4-26-4) 0 1983-84 (31-0-0) 8* 2002-03 (14-14-8) 31* 1983-84 (31-0-0) 42* Nov. 8, 1983 - Dec. 13, 1984 31 Dec. 15, 1981 - March 4, 1983 10 Oct. 14 - Nov. 24, 2000 18 Dec. 2, 2000 - Feb. 3, 2001 15^ 2002-03 5 Oct. 18 - Nov. 1, 2002 4 2002-03
Goal Scoring Most Goals-Period Most Goals-Game Most Goals Scored-Season Fewest Goals Scored-Season Most Goals Against-Game Most Goals Against-Season Fewest Goals Against-Season Most Power Play Goals-Season Most Shorthanded Goals-Season Most Shots on Goal-Period Most Shots on Goal-Game Most Shots on Goal-Season Fewest Shots on Goal-Game Fewest Shots on Goal-Season
9 17 221 77 15 155 64 77 18 28 85 1,530 12 898
vs. St. Frances; Feb. 23, 1979 vs. St. Frances; Feb. 23, 1979 1978-79 2001-02 Fort Frances Aces; Feb. 5, 1950 1999-00 1970-71 1983-84 1976-77 vs. Lake Forest 1994 vs. St. Frances; Feb. 24, 1978 1984-85 vs Niagara; Feb. 14, 2002 1999-00
16 26 352 161
vs. Augsburg; Dec. 14, 1996 vs. UW-Superior; Feb. 12, 1971 1985-86 2006-07
24 42 572 50
vs. Augsburg; Dec. 14, 1996 vs. UW-Superior; Feb. 12, 1971 1978-79 1960-61
22 38 366 124 174 959 1 122 2 275
vs. UW-Stevens Pt. 1993 vs. UW-Stevens Pt. 1993 1993-94 vs. UW-Stevens Pt. 1993 vs. UW-Stevens Pt. 1993 1993-94 vs. Winnipeg; Nov. 30, 1970 1972-73 vs. Winnipeg; Nov. 30, 1970 1972-73
25 54 1,185 0 6 603 2.259 7 13 30
vs. UW-Superior 1968 vs. UW-River Falls; Jan. 20, 1989 1988-89 at Minn.-Duluth (3rd), Feb. 25, 2005 vs. St. Cloud State; Feb. 14, 1969 1972-73 2007-08 2007-08 Mar. 1, 2003 (2nd) to Mar. 15, 2003 (3rd) 1978, 1983
Assist Scoring Most Assists-Period Most Assists-Game Most Assists-Season Fewest Assists-Season
Point Scoring Most Points-Period Most Points-Game Most Points-Season Fewest Points-Season
Penalties Most Penalties-Period Most Penalties-Game Most Penalties-Season Most Penalty Minutes-Period Most Penalty Minutes-Game Most Penalty Minutes-Season Fewest Penalties-Game Fewest Penalties-Season Fewest Penalty Minutes-Game Fewest Penalty Minutes-Season
Other Team Records Most Saves-Period Most Saves-Game Most Saves-Season Fewest Saves-Period Fewest Saves-Game Fewest Saves-Season Lowest GAA-Season Most Shutouts-Season Consecutive Periods Without Allowing a Goal Consecutive Periods With At Least One Goal
2009-10
67
team records
Single-Season Leaders
Beaver hat tricks
Date Player Opponent Scoring 2/1/1948 John Whiting International Falls 3 goals 1/9/1949 Wayne Stewart at Detroit Lakes 3 goals 1/9/1949 Bill Horn at Detroit Lakes 3 goals 1/12/1949 Ron Aase at Detroit Lakes 3 goals 1/12/1949 Dick Anderson at Detroit Lakes 3 goals 2/27/1949 John Whiting at Detroit Lakes 3 goals 2/17/1950 Ron Aase at Concordia (Minn.) 3 goals 2/19/1950 Sheldon Fertig Detroit Lakes 3 goals 2/28/1950 Ron Aase at Detroit Lakes 4 goals 2/28/1950 Billy Horn at Detroit Lakes 3 goals 2/11/1960 Ron McKeckney at Concordia (Minn.) 3 goals 2/11/1960 Paul Lafond at Concordia (Minn.) 3 goals a 2/20/1960 Paul Lafond Northland (Wis.) 4 goals a 2/20/1960 Errol Johnson Northland (Wis.) 3 goals 1/13/1962 Vic Chaput Concordia (Minn.) 3 goals 1/13/1962 Jerry Drewes Concordia (Minn.) 3 goals 1/29/1962 Paul Lafond Gustavus-Adolphus 4 goals 1/26/1963 Tom Lafond at St. Cloud State 3 goals ab 2/1/1963 Vic Chaput Moorhead State 4 goals 2/1/1963 Merv Sanderson Moorhead State 3 goals 2/11/1963 Vic Chaput at Manitoba 3 goals 1/13/1964 Rich Budge at St. John’s (Minn.) 3 goals 2/1/1964 Bob Patterson St. Cloud State 3 goals 2/7/1964 Jim Thompson at Moorhead State 3 goals 1/8/1965 Rich Budge at Concordia (Minn.) 3 goals 1/9/1965 Rich Budge at Moorhead State 3 goals 1/23/1965 Rich Budge at St. Cloud State 3 goals 1/23/1965 Jim Thompson at St. Cloud State 3 goals 2/5/1965 Jim Thompson Moorhead State 5 goals 2/5/1965 Rich Budge Moorhead State 3 goals 2/13/1965 Jim Thompson St. Cloud State 3 goals 1/29/1966 Jim Thompson at Lakehead 4 goals ac at Lakehead 4 goals 1/30/1966 Rich Budge 2/20/1966 Rich Budge at Concordia (Minn.) 4 goals 2/21/1966 Rich Budge vs St. Cloud State 3 goals 12/6/1968 Gary Hokanson vs Winnipeg 3-1=4 pts 1/10/1969 Austin Wallestad vs Manitoba 3-1=4 pts 1/14/1969 Austin Wallestada vs St. Cloud State 3-2=5 pts 1/15/1969 Barry Dillon vs St. Cloud State 3-2=5 pts 1/17/1969 Bruce Falk vs Warroad 4-0=4 pts 1/26/1969 Terry Burns at Lakehead 3-0=3 pts 2/1/1969 Charlie Brown vs Wis. St.-Superior 3-0=3 pts $3/7/1969 Austin Wallestad vs Salem State 4-0=4 pts 12/13/1969 Dennis Lemieux vs Winnipeg 3-0=3 pts 12/14/1969 Gary Bock vs Winnipeg 4-1=5 pts 12/20/1969 Glen Beckett vs Manitoba 4-0=4 pts 1/12/1970 Bill Weller vs Grand Rapids 4-1=5 pts 1a 1/28/1970 Glen Beckett vs Wis. St-Superior 6-0=6 pts 1/28/1970 Jim Humphrey vs Wis. St-Superior 3-0=3 pts 1/28/1970 Gary Bock vs Wis. St-Superior 3-3=6 pts 2/6/1970 Glen Beckett at North Dakota 3-0=3 pts 2/7/1970 Glen Beckett at North Dakota 3-0=3 pts 11/22/1970 Jim Humphrey vs Calgary 3-2=5 pts 11/29/1970 Dennis Lemieux at Manitoba 3-1=4 pts 12/12/1970 Bruce Falk at North Dakota 3-0=3 pts 2/7/1971 Randy Martin vs U, of Saskatchewan 4-0=4 pts 2/7,1971 Bruce Falk vs U. of Saskatchewan 3-0= 3 pts 2/7/1971 Dale Smedsmo vs U. of Saskatchewan 3-1=4 pts 11/21/1971 Pat Badiuk vs U. of Saskatchewan 4-0=4 pts 1/28/1972 Dale Smedsmo vs Wis. St-Superior 3-0=3 pts 1/29/1972 Gary Bock vs Wis. St-Superior 3-1=4 pts 11/10/1972 Nick Novaka vs U. of Winnipeg 3-1=4 pts 11/17/1972 Mark Eagles vs U. of Manitoba 3-1=4 pts 12/1/1972 Mark Eagles vs MN Jr. Stars 3-1=4 pts 12/16/1972 Lyle Kvarnlov at Concordia 3-1=4 pts 2/7/1973 •Gary Sargent vs St. Scholastica 3-1=4 pts 2/10,1973 Mark Eagles vs Concordia College 3-0=3 pts 3/1/1973 Nick Novak vs Boston State 3-0=3 pts 11/22/1973 Dan Boeke vs St. Scholastica 3-0=3 pts 12/19/1973 Mark Eagles vs Lake Superior St. 3-1=4 pts 1/18/1974 Dave Millington vs Lake Superior St. 3-1=4 pts 2/16/1974 Mark Eaglesa vs St. Scholastica 3-1=4 pts 2/22/1974 Joe Nathe vs Augsburg 3-1=4 pts 2/22/1974 Dave Milllington vs Augsburg 3-1=4 pts 2/23/1974 Mark Eagles vs Augsburg 3-1=4 pts 1/5/1975 Dan Boeke vs St. Mary’s 3-1=4 pts 2/1/1975 Glenn Chido vs Iowa State 3-2=5 pts 12/13/1975 Rod Heisler vs Bloomington Jr Stars 3-0=3 pts 12/13/1975 Mark Kristo vs Bloomington Jr Stars 3-2=5 pts 2/13/1976 Steve Letourneau vs Wis. River Falls 3-1=4 pts 2/14/1976 Steve Letourneau vs Wis. River Falls 3-0=3 pts 1/3/1977 Bill Schmitz vs St. Mary’s 3-0=3 pts 11/11/1977 Jeff Arf vs U. of Manitoba 3-0=3 pts 12/2/1977 Scott Currie at Lakehead 3-0=3 pts 12/11/1977 John Murphy vs Mankato 3-1=4 pts 12/14/1977 Bill Schmitz at Iowa State 3-0=3 pts 12/15/1977 John Murphy at Iowa State 4-2=6 pts 12/15/1977 Dale Baldwin at Iowa State 4-1=5 pts 1/2/1978 John Murphy vs Augsburg 3-0=3 pts 1/13/1978 Rod Heisler vs U. of Wis. Stout 3-1=4 pts 1/13/1978 Gary Krawchuk vs U. of Wis. Stout 3-0=3 pts 1/14/1978 Dale Baldwin vs U. of Wis. Stout 3-0=3 pts 2/4/1978 Brian Carleton vs UW-Superior 4-1=5 pts 2/16/1978 Scott Currie vs UW-Superior 3-0=3 pts
68
Date Player Opponent 2/17/1978 Steve Seide vs UW-Superior 2/24/1978 Rod Heisler vs St. Francis 1/3/1979 Tony Montbello vs UW-Eau Claire 1/12/1979 Dale Baldwin vs St. Thomas 1/12/1979 Bill Schmitz vs St. Thomas 1/12/1979 John Murphy vs St. Thomas 1/20/1979 Bill Schmitz vs U. of Winnipeg 2/2/1979 Rod Hiesler vs Estevan 2/17/1979 John Murphy vs St.Scholastica 2/23/1979 Jeff Arf vs St. Francis 2/23/1979 John Murphy vs St. Francis 1/26/1980 Dale Baldwin vs St. Scholastica 2/9/1980 Lee Hanson vs Concordia (Minn.) 2/11/1980 Alan Fournier vs Lake Head 3/1/1980 Dale Baldwin vs Wis. St-Superior 11/8/1980 Bill Parenteau vs Winnipeg 1/17/1981 Mark Masterson vs UW Stout 1/24/1981 Mark Masterson vs St. John’s 1/24/1981 John Hansen vs St. John’s 1/31/1981 John Hansen vs Mankato State 2/6/1981 Kurt Dade vs UW-River Falls 2/7/1981 Alan Fournier vs UW-River Falls 2/9/1981 John Hansen at Bethel 12/17/1981 Wendal Jellison vs Winnipeg 1/3/1982 Kurt Dade vs Alaska-Fairbanks 1/3/1981 Mark Masterson vs Alaska-Fairbanks 12/12/1982 Mark Lescarbeau vs Mankato State 1/2/1983 Scott Monsruda vs St. Thomas 1/2/1983 Wendal Jellison vs St. Thomas 1/3/1983 Joel Otto vs St. Thomas vs Wis. St-Superior 1/7/1983 Rob Kostiuka 1/28/1983 Eric Gagera vs St. Cloud State 2/12/1983 Wendal Jellison at Wis. St-Superior 2/12/1983 Eric Gager at Wis. St.-Superior 2/14/1983 Joel Otto vs St. Scholastica 11/29/1983 Scott Monsrud vs Concordia (Minn.) 12/10/1983 Joel Otto at St. Cloud State 12/30/1983 Joel Otto at St. Thomas a 12/28/1984 Scott Monsrud at Mankato State 3/10/1984 Joel Otto vs Alaska-Fairbanks 3/17/1984 Joel Otto vs Merrimack 1/11/1985 Eric Gager vs UW Eau Claire 2/5/1985 Mike Alexander vs Concordia (Minn.) 3/22/1985 Mike Alexander vs Plattsburgh St. 11/15/1985 Jim Tyler vs St. John’s (Minn.) 12/19/1985 Tim Lescarbeau vs Concordia (Minn.) 1/5/1986 Todd Lescarbeau vs Augsburg 1/6/1986 Tom Serratore vs Augsburg 2/18/1986 Tim Lescarbeau at Moorhead State 2/21/1986 Todd Lescarbeau at Wis.-Eau Claire 2/21/1986 Mike Alexander at Wis.-Eau Claire 3/8/1986 Mike Alexander vs Mankato 11/22/1986 Todd Lescarbeau at Concordia(Minn) 12/13/1986 Tim Guyer1a vs Bethel 1/3/1987 Dan Richards at Augsburg 2/13/1987 Ian Resch at St. Scholastica 2/20/1987 Todd Lescarbeau vs Wis.-Eau Claire 2/28/1987 Todd Lescarbeau at Mankato State 11/14/1987 Jim Tyler vs Wis.-Stevens Point 11/21/1987 Dan Richards vs St. Scholastica 11/22/1987 Jim Tyler vs St. Scholastica 11/24/1987 Jim Tyler vs Bethel 1/8/1988 Dan Richards vs St. Scholastica 2/5/1988 Jim Tyler vs Augsburg 2/20/1988 Dan Richards vs Wis.-Eau Claire 2/28/1988 Ian Resch vs Wis.-Stevens Point 3/11/1988 Scott Johnson vs St. Thomas 1/4/1989 Jim Tyler vs Hamline 2/16/1990 Jamie Erb vs Wis.-River Falls 11/11/1990 Sean Taggart vs Augsburg 11/11/1990 Brent Tookenay vs Augsburg 11/30/1990 Jamie Erb vs St. Scholastica 2/2/1991 •Paul Ferry vs St. Scholastica 2/3/1991 Scott Johnson vs St. Scholastica 11/9/1991 Jamie Erb vs Augsburg 12/19/1991 Jamie Erb vs St. Scholastica 12/19/1991 Dan Tollefson vs St. Scholastica 1/5/1992 Dan Tollefson vs St Mary’s 1/10/1992 Jamie Erb vs Wis.-Eau Claire 12/19/1992 Dan Tollefson vs Augsburg 2/13/1993 Jason Mack vs Lake Forest 12/18/1993 Jim Karner vs Mankato State 1/4/1994 Jim Karner vs St. John’s 1/8/1994 Jason Mack vs Wis.-River Falls 11/5/1994 Omer Belisle vs St Scholastica 1/28/1995 Omer Belisle vs St Scholastica 2/18/1995 Jeff Sobb vs St Scholastica 3/18/1995 Jeff Sobb vs Mercyhurst 11/18/1995 Craig Matatall vs Wis.-Superior 12/15/1995 Jeff Sobb vs Mankato State 1/12/1996 Eric Monsrud vs St. Norbert 12/14/1996 Vince Huerd vs Augsburg 1/24/1997 •Mike Donaghue vs St. Scholastica 2/15/1997 Josh Klingfus vs Wis.-Eau Claire
2009-10
Scoring 3-0=3 pts 4-0=4 pts 3-1=4 pts 4-0=4 pts 3-2=5 pts 4-2=6 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-4=7 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-2=5 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 4-0=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-2=5 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-2=5 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-2=5 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-2=5 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-2=5 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-3=6 pts 3-2=5 pts 3-4=7 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-3=6 pts 3-0=3 pts 3 goals 5 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 5 goals 3 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals 4 goals 3 goals 3 goals 3 goals
Date Player 11/1/1997 Aaron Novak 11/15/1997 Josh Klingfus 12/12/1997 Calvin Chartrand 1/4/1998 Aaron Novak 1/9/1998 Aaron Novak 1/17/1998 Shane Kalbrener 12/11/1998 Calvin Chartrand 1/15/1999 Scot Dickson 1/22/1999 Scot Dickson Division I era 11/25/2000 •Clay Simmons 12/6/2003 Brendan Cook 1/30/2004 Brendan Cook 2/27/2004 Ryan Huddy 3/13/2004 •John Haider 12/3/2005 Luke Erickson 2/10/2006 Ryan Miller 1/18/2008 Chris McKelviea 3/7/2009 Tyler Scofield
Opponent vs St. Scholastica vs Wis.-Superior vs Concordia College vs Lake Forest vs Wis.-Stevens Point at Wis.-Stout vs Minn.-Crookston at Wis.-Stevens Point at St. Scholastica
Scoring 3-1=4 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-1=4 pts 4-2=6 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-2=6 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts 3-0=3 pts
vs Wayne State (Mich.) 3-0=3 pts vs Wayne State (Mich.) 3-0=3 pts vs Findlay 3-0=3 pts at Air Force 3-1=4 pts vs Findlay 3-0=3 pts vs Niagara 4-1=5 pts at Western Michigan 3-0=3 pts at Colorado College 3-0=3 pts vs Robert Morris 3-1=4 pts
$= national playoff game •= defenseman = scored game’s first three goals a = natural hat trick b = three goals in 45-second span in first period; 4 goals in 10:28 c = “three goals in one period and three goals in 11:25” 1
205 all-time hat tricks 7 Division I-era hat tricks
Six-Goal Games Date 1/28/1970 2/13/1971
Player Opponent Glenn Beckett vs Wis. St.-Superior Dennis Lemieux vs Wis. St-Superior
Five-Goal Games Date 1/28/1970 2/13/1971 2/5/1965 2/13/1980 2/22/1986 11/21/1987 12/19/1991
Player Glenn Beckett Dennis Lemieux Jim Thompson Dale Baldwin Mike Alexander Dan Richards Jamie Erb
Opponent vs Wis. St.-Superior vs Wis. St-Superior Moorhead State at Wis. St-Superior at Eau Claire vs St. Scholastica vs St. Scholastica
Four-Goal Games
Date Player Opponent 2/28/1950 Ron Aase at Detroit Lakes 2/20/1960 Paul Lafonda Northland (Wis.) 1/29/1962 Paul Lafond Gustavus-Adolphus 2/1/1963 Vic Chaputab Moorhead State 1/29/1966 Jim Thompson at Lakehead ac 1/30/1966 Rich Budge at Lakehead 2/20/1966 Rich Budge at Concordia (Minn.) 1/17/1969 Bruce Falk vs Warroad $3/7/1969 Austin Wallestad vs Salem State 12/14/1969 Gary Bock vs Winnipeg 12/20/1969 Glen Beckett vs Manitoba 1/12/1970 Bill Weller vs Grand Rapids 1/28/1970 Glen Beckett1a vs Wis. St-Superior 2/7/1971 Randy Martin vs U, of Saskatchewan 11/21/1971 Pat Badiuk vs U. of Saskatchewan 12/15/1977 John Murphy at Iowa State 12/15/1977 Dale Baldwin at Iowa State 2/4/1978 Brian Carleton vs UW-Superior 2/24/1978 Rod Heisler vs St. Francis 1/12/1979 Dale Baldwin vs St. Thomas 1/12/1979 John Murphy vs St. Thomas 2/6/1981 Kurt Dade vs UW-River Falls 11/21/1987 Dan Richards vs St. Scholastica 12/19/1991 Jamie Erb vs St. Scholastica 1/5/1992 Dan Tollefson vs St Mary’s 1/10/1992 Jamie Erb vs Wis.-Eau Claire 12/19/1992 Dan Tollefson vs Augsburg 1/12/1996 Eric Monsrud vs St. Norbert 1/4/1998 Aaron Novak vs Lake Forest 1/9/1998 Aaron Novak vs Wis.-Stevens Point 1/17/1998 Shane Kalbrener at Wis.-Stout Division I era 12/3/2005 Luke Erickson vs Niagara
Scoring 6 goals 6 goals
Scoring 6 goals 6 goals 5 goals 5 goals 5 goals 5 goals 5 goals
Scoring 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4-0=4 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-1=5 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-1=5 pts 6-0=6 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-2=6 pts 4-1=5 pts 4-1=5 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-2=6 pts 4-0=4 pts 5 goals 5 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4 goals 4-2=6 pts 4-0=4 pts 4-2=6 pts 4-1=5 pts
date J26 F? F16 F? F? M8
opponent loc result Itasca JC % W Grand Rapids h T 2 2 ot Grand Rapids h L 1 12 Rainy River Legion h L 1 11 Rainy River Legion h L 5 15 Bemidji Independents h L 3 4
% records indicate only that Itasca won; no score available * 1947 season not included in official school records
1948 Jack
Aldrich 1 season 2-8-0 (.200) 1948
1949-50
8-7-0 Head Coach: Eric Hughes date opponent loc result D14 Crookston City a L 4 12 J8 Rainy River Legion h W 7 2 J11 Thief River Falls VFW a W 4 2 J22 Ft. Frances (Al’s Lunch) h W 7 3 J27 Itasca JC a L 3 5 J28 Itasca JC h L 0 3 J29 St. Cloud State h W 5 3 F5 Fort Frances Aces h L 2 15 F8 Fort Frances All Stars a L 1 9 F9 Rainy River Legion a L 2 3 F14 Itasca JC h W 7 1 F17 Concordia-M’head a W 6 0 F18 St. Cloud State a L 0 13 F19 Detroit Lakes Rangers h W 10 4 F28 Detroit Lakes Rangers a W 11 3 * BSU did not field a hockey team from 1951-59
2-8-0 1960-64, 1966 Vic
Weber
1948
2-8-0 Head Coach: Jack Aldrich date opponent loc result J18 St. Cloud State h L 2 12 J25 North Dakota State h L 3 9 J28 Grand Forks Legion a L 1 8 J31 North Dakota State h L 1 2 F1 International Falls h W 6 2 F7 International Falls a L 3 5 F8 UM-Duluth a L 3 4 Grand Forks Americans a L 5 8 F12 F15 UM-Duluth h L 4 9 F29 Brunswick Aces h W 9 4 1949-50 Eric
Hughes 2 seasons 17-13-0 (.567) 1949 1949-50
1949
6 seasons 42-19-2 (.683) 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1966
2-2-0 6-4-0 8-4-0 6-5-1 8-3-1 12-1-0
1961 9-6-0 8-7-0
9-6-0 Head Coach: Eric Hughes date opponent loc result Detroit Lakes Rangers h W 13 0 J9 J12 Detroit Lakes Rangers h W 10 0 J15 St. Cloud State a % 1 1 J16 Rainy River a L 11 3 J26 International l Falls a L 1 6 J29 UM-Duluth h L 3 10 F5 Concordia-M’head h W 7 1 F6 Rainy River h W 4 3 F9 UM-Duluth a L 2 7 F10 Augsburg a W 3 1 F13 Int’l Falls Yankees h L 2 6 F19 Concordia-M’head a W 6 2 F20 St. Cloud State h L 3 4 F23 Rainy River Legion h W 2 1 F26 Emo Dulms, Ontario h W 6 4 F27 Detroit Lakes Rangers h W 10 0 %- game called due to soft ice
6-4-0 Head Coach: Vic Weber date opponent J5 St. John’s (Minn.) J13 St. Cloud State J14 St. Cloud State J21 Augsburg J26 St. John’s (Minn.) F4 Concordia-M’head F10 St. Thomas (Minn.) F11 St. Cloud State F11 St. Cloud State F19 Northland (Wis.)
1962
loc result h W 3 1 h L 2 7 a L 1 7 a W 3 2 ot a L 1 4 h W 6 4 h W 3 2 h L 1 2 h W 4 1 h W 7 2
8-4-0 Head Coach: Vic Weber date opponent loc result J7 Northland (Wis.) h W 10 0 J13 Concordia-M’head h W 11 0 J19 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 4 1 J20 St. Thomas (Minn.) a L 0 4 J25 St. John’s (Minn.) a W 4 2 J27 St. Cloud State h L 3 4 J29 Gustavus Adolphus h W 9 1 F2 Augsburg h W 6 5 ot F6 St. Mary’s (Minn.) a W 5 2 F10 St. Cloud State h L 0 2 F12 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 4 1 F24 Manitoba a L 1 2
34 seasons 702-293-49 (.704) 1966-67 13-5-1 1967-68 u16-8-0 1968-69 u23-2-0 1969-70 u20-7-1 1970-71 u20-7-1 1971-72 13-12-1 1972-73 u23-6-1 1973-74 20-10-1 1974-75 13-15-0 1975-76 22-9-0 1976-77 24-4-3 1977-78 25-5-1 1978-79 u27-2-0 1979-80 u24-8-0 1980-81 24-7-0 1981-82 25-5-1 1982-83 sabbatical 1983-84 u31-0-0 1984-85 27-6-2 1985-86 u25-9-1 1986-87 22-12-1 1987-88 24-11-3 1988-89 19-13-4 1989-90 15-11-2 1990-91 21-6-3 1991-92 16-9-5 1992-93 u24-7-0 1993-94 u21-9-3 1994-95 u24-7-2 1995-96 16-9-4 1996-97 u25-7-2 1997-98 22-10-2 1998-99 17-13-0 1999-2000 13-20-1 2000-01 4-26-4 uNational Champions
1964
loc result a T 4 4 ot a W 8 2 h W 7 0 a L 2 6 a W 6 5 h W 6 0 h W 7 2 h L 3 4 a W 6 1 a W 6 2 h W 11 0 h L 1 2
1965 Wayne
Peterson 1 season 10-1-1 (.875) 1965
loc result a L 0 4 a W 12 1 h L 2 4 h W 16 0
Peters
6-5-1 Head Coach: Vic Weber date opponent loc result J14 Moorhead State a W 4 1 J19 St. John’s (Minn.) a L 3 4 J25 St. Cloud State a L 1 5 J26 St. Cloud State a W 4 1 J28 Gustavus Adolphus a W 9 3 F1 Moorhead State h W 13 0 F2 Moorhead State h W 12 1 F8 St. Cloud State h L 2 5 F9 St. Cloud State h T 2 2 ot F11 Manitoba a L 6 9 F15 Concordia-M’head h W 5 1 F21 Manitoba h L 5 11
1960
2-2-0 Head Coach: Vic Weber date opponent J29 St. Cloud State F11 Concordia-M’head F13 St. Cloud State F20 Northland (Wis.)
1966-2001 R.H. “Bob”
1963
8-3-1 Head Coach: Vic Weber date opponent J11 St. Cloud State J13 St. John’s (Minn.) J18 Moorhead State J20 Manitoba J27 St. Mary’s (Minn.) J31 St. Cloud State F1 St. Cloud State F5 St. John’s (Minn.) F7 Moorhead State F8 Moorhead State F15 Concordia-M’head F27 Manitoba
10-1-1
1965
10-1-1 Head Coach: Wayne Peterson date opponent loc result J8 Concordia-M’head a W 10 3 J9 Moorhead State a W 8 1 J13 Augsburg a W 3 1 J16 Winnipeg h W 7 2 J19 St. John’s (Minn.) a W 4 1 J22 St. Cloud State a L 3 4 J23 St. Cloud State a W 6 5 F5 Moorhead State h W 11 3 F6 Moorhead State h W 18 5 F11 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 6 2 F13 St. Cloud State h W 9 1 F20 Lakehead a T 2 2 ot
1966
12-1-0 Head Coach: Vic Weber date opponent J8 UW-Superior J14 St. Cloud State J15 St. Cloud State J22 St. Mary’s (Minn.) J29 Lakehead J30 Lakehead F4 St. Cloud State F5 St. Cloud State F11 Lakehead F12 Lakehead F14 St. Mary’s (Minn.) F16 UW-Superior F20 Concordia-M’head
loc result h W 5 1 a W 2 1 a W 5 4 a L 4 5 ot a W 5 1 a W 8 7 ot h W 5 1 h W 4 1 h W 5 4 h W 3 1 h W 5 4 ot a W 3 2 a W 13 1
all-time results
1947*
1966-67
13-5-1 / 10-2-0 ICHA • ICHA Co-Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result D3 + Lake Superior St. a W 3 1 D4 + Lake Superior St. a L 1 5 D6 Warroad Lakers a L 2 10 D8 Fort Frances a L 4 6 J6 St. Cloud State h W 5 1 J7 St. Cloud State h W 4 3 J13 + Lakehead h W 5 3 J14 + Lakehead h W 6 5 J17 Winnipeg a T 3 3 ot J20 + UW-Superior a W 5 2 J21 + UW-Superior a W 4 2 J27 St. Cloud State a W 7 0 J28 St. Cloud State a W 11 0 F3 + UW-Superior h W 13 1 F4 + UW-Superior h W 8 1 F11 + Lakehead a L 2 5 F12 + Lakehead a L 5 8 St. Mary’s (Minn.) a W 5 2 St. John’s (Minn.) a W 4 0
Left: Bemidji State’s inaugural intercollegiate men’s ice hockey team from 1948.
2009-10
69
All-time results
1967-68
16-8-0 / 6-6-0 ICHA • NAIA National Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N17 • Minn.-Nationals h L 5 6 N28 Fort Frances h W 4 3 D2 + Lakehead a L 0 2 D3 + Lakehead a L 1 3 D8 + UW-Superior h W 9 5 D9 + UW-Superior h W 10 1 D16 Denver a L 0 12 J5 St. Cloud State a W 9 2 J6 St. Cloud State a W 8 0 J12 + Lake Superior St. h L 0 2 J13 + Lake Superior St. h L 5 6 J20 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 9 3 J26 + Lakehead h W 6 2 J27 + Lakehead h W 8 4 F2 + Lake Superior St. a L 5 8 F3 + Lake Superior St. a L 5 6 F9 St. Cloud State h W 14 2 F10 St. Cloud State h W 19 1 F16 + UW-Superior a W 6 5 F17 + UW-Superior a W 3 2 M1 Univ. of Winnipeg h W 10 2 M2 Univ. of Winnipeg h W 4 0 M8 Boston State $ W 11 0 M9 Lake Superior St. $ W 5 4 ot +- ICHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (St. Paul, Minn.) • 1st game at John Glas Fieldhouse
1968-69
23-2-0 / 11-1-0 ICHA • NAIA National Champions • ICHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N22 Grand Rapids h W 11 2 N23 Grand Rapids h W 6 3 D6 Winnipeg h W 14 1 D7 Winnipeg h W 8 4 D18 + UW-Superior a W 5 4 ot D19 + UW-Superior a W 4 2 J10 Manitoba h W 11 2 J11 Manitoba h L 5 7 J14 St. Cloud State h W 9 0 J15 St. Cloud State h W 13 0 J17 Warroad Lakers h W 11 2 J25 + Lakehead a L 1 4 J26 + Lakehead a W 8 4 J31 + UW-Superior h W 8 0 F1 + UW-Superior h W 9 5 F7 + Lake Superior St. h W 6 4 F8 + Lake Superior St. h W 4 2 F14 St. Cloud State a W 5 1 F15 St. Cloud State a W 6 0 F21 + Lake Superior St. a W 4 3 F22 + Lake Superior St. a W 5 4 F28 + Lakehead h W 6 4 M1 + Lakehead h W 8 0 M7 Salem State $ W 14 2 M8 Lake Superior St. $ W 6 2 +- ICHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (Sault St. Marie, Mich.)
1969-70
24-3-0 / 10-2-0 ICHA • NAIA National Champions • ICHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N29 Winnipeg a W 9 1 N30 Winnipeg a W 8 2 D6 Saskatchewan h W 9 2 D7 Saskatchewan h W 5 1 D13 Winnipeg h W 15 1 D14 Winnipeg h W 10 2 D19 Manitoba h W 5 2 D20 Manitoba h W 7 1 J12 Grand Rapids h W 14 0 J16 + Lakehead a W 6 2 J17 + Lakehead a W 6 2 J23 + Lake Superior St. h W 5 4 J24 + Lake Superior St. h W 4 1 J27 + UW-Superior h W 16 1 J28 + UW-Superior h W 16 1 F1 Calgary h W 4 1 F2 Calgary h W 6 1 F6 North Dakota a L 4 7 F7 North Dakota a W 7 5 F13 + UW-Superior a W 9 1 F14 + UW-Superior a W 11 0 F21 + Lakehead h W 9 3 F22 + Lakehead h W 5 4 F27 + Lake Superior St. h L 3 4 F28 + Lake Superior St. h L 1 11 M6 Gustavus Adolphus $ W 5 2 M7 Lake Superior St. $ W 7 4 +- ICHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (Sault St. Marie, Mich)
1970-71
20-7-1 / 10-1-1 ICHA • NAIA National Champions • ICHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N22 Calgary h W 7 3 N23 Calgary h L 3 4 N29 Manitoba a W 7 4 N30 Winnipeg a W 7 1 D6 U.S. Nationals 1 L 3 4 D7 U.S. Nationals 1 L 2 8 D12 North Dakota a L 3 4 D14 Manitoba a W 4 1 D15 Manitoba a W 5 1 J5 Brandon h W 9 3 J10 Alberta h W 7 3 J11 Alberta h L 1 2 J15 + Lakehead h W 7 0 J16 + Lakehead h L 1 3 J19 North Dakota a L 2 3 ot J22 + Lake Superior St. a T 3 3 ot J23 + Lake Superior St. a W 4 3 J29 + UW-Superior a W 9 0 J30 + UW-Superior a W 10 0 F7 Saskatchewan h W 13 3 F12 + UW-Superior h W 16 1 F13 + UW-Superior h W 11 2 F19 + Lakehead a W 6 3 F20 + Lakehead a W 5 1 F27 + Lake Superior St. h W 5 1 F28 + Lake Superior St. h W 4 0 M5 Augsburg $ W 12 1 M6 Lakehead $ W 6 2 +- ICHA Conference game 1- Roseau, Minn. $- NAIA Championship (Bemidji, Minn.)
1968 NAIA National Champions Front row (L to R): Blane Comstock, Richard Anderson, Terry Burns, asst. coach Lorne Humphreys, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Buzz Oslon, Phil Dupuis, Len Kleisinger 2nd row (L to R): Doug Swenson, Dick Erikson, Austin Wallestad, Laurie Giles, Jim McElmury, George Ganyo, Dennis Schueller, Terry Bergstrom, George Manser, Gord Payne 3rd row (L to R): Bruce Falk, Bryan Grand, Ken Anderson, Barry Dillon, Dennis Sauter, Tim Gerber, Bill Weller, Not Pictured: Jim Humphrey
70
2009-10
1971-72
13-12-1 / 5-6-1 ICHA Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N12 Winnipeg h L 3 4 N13 Winnipeg h W 6 3 N21 Saskatchewan h W 8 4 N22 Saskatchewan h W 8 4 N29 Manitoba a W 6 2 D1 U.S. National Team 1 L 3 5 D3 U.S. National Team h L 1 10 D5 British Columbia h W 9 4 D17 Brandon a W 5 3 D21 Gustavus Adolphus 2 L 5 6 D22 Manitoba 2 L 3 4 ot J8 Gustavus Adolphus h L 4 7 J14 + Lakehead h T 3 3 ot J15 + Lakehead h W 6 4 J21 + Lake Superior St. a L 1 7 J22 + Lake Superior St. a L 3 6 J28 + UW-Superior h W 6 4 J29 + UW-Superior h W 7 5 F7 Manitoba h W 9 0 F11 + UW-Superior a W 6 5 F12 + UW-Superior a L 4 5 F18 + Lakehead a W 5 4 F19 + Lakehead a L 0 6 F23 Brandon h W 5 1 F25 + Lake Superior St. h L 2 9 F26 + Lake Superior St. h L 5 6 +- ICHA Conference game 1- International Falls, Minn. 2- Christmas Tournament (Columbia Hts., Minn.)
1972-73
23-6-1 / 8-4-0 ICHA • ICHA Co-Champions • NAIA National Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N10 Winnipeg h W 6 3 N11 Winnipeg h L 0 3 N17 Manitoba h W 10 6 N18 Manitoba h W 5 3 D1 Jr. North Stars h W 7 4 D2 Jr. North Stars h L 4 7 D8 + Lakehead h W 4 3 D9 + Lakehead h W 3 2 D16 Concordia a W 8 2 D29 Brandon 1 W 5 1 D30 Manitoba 1 W 10 3 J5 + Lakehead a W 10 3 J6 + Lakehead a W 7 1 J12 Brandon h W 5 0 J13 Brandon h T 4 4 ot J15 Manitoba h W 10 2 J19 + Lake Superior St. h W 4 2 J20 + Lake Superior St. h L 4 8 J26 + UW-Superior h W 6 1 J27 + UW-Superior h L 4 7 F3 St. Scholastica h W 7 2 F10 Concordia-M’head h W 12 3 F12 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 8 5 F16 + UW-Superior h W 8 1 F17 + UW-Superior h W 10 4 F23 + Lake Superior St. a L 1 4 F24 + Lake Superior St. a L 2 6 M1 Boston State $ W 8 1 M2 Gustavus Adolphus $ W 6 3 M3 Lakehead $ W 3 2 ot +- ICHA conference game 1- Manitoba Tourney $- NAIA Championship (Thunder Bay, Ontario)
1973-74
20-10-1 / 9-3-0 ICHA • NAIA National Runner-Up • ICHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N9 Winnipeg h W 7 4 N10 Winnipeg h W 5 3 N16 Manitoba h W 9 2 N17 Manitoba h W 7 4 N22 UM-Duluth 1 L 2 10 N23 RPI (NY) 1 L 4 5 N24 St. Scholastica 1 T 6 6 ot N30 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 9 3 D1 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 7 3 D7 Gustavus Adolphus h L 2 4 D8 Gustavus Adolphus h W 3 2 D18 Lake Superior State a L 1 6 D19 Lake Superior State a L 5 9 J4 + Lakehead a L 4 6 J5 + Lakehead a L 3 5 J11 + Lakehead h W 9 6 J12 + Lakehead h W 5 4 J18 Lake Superior State h W 7 4 J19 Lake Superior State h L 1 5 J25 + UW-Superior h L 2 5 J26 + UW-Superior h W 6 0 F3 + St. Scholastica a W 6 2 F4 + St. Scholastica a W 12 7 F8 + UW-Superior a W 9 3 F9 + UW-Superior a W 6 1 F15 + St. Scholastica h W 6 3 F16 + St. Scholastica h W 12 2 F22 Augsburg h W 14 0 F23 Augsburg h W 5 3 M5 Gustavus Adolphus $ W 4 2 M6 Lake Superior State $ L 1 4 +- ICHA Conference game 1- UM-Duluth Tourney (Duluth, Minn.) $- NAIA Championship (Bemidji, Minn.)
1974-75
13-15-0 / 2-10-0 ICHA Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N8 Winnepeg h W 6 3 N9 Winnepeg h W 5 4 N15 Manitoba h L 2 7 N16 Manitoba h L 4 7 N21 + Lakehead h W 4 3 N22 + Lakehead h W 7 6 N25 Mankato State a L 3 4 N26 Gustavus Adolphus a L 3 5 D8 Gustuvus Adophus h L 2 4 D13 St. Thomas (Minn.) h L 3 4 ot D14 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 7 6 ot D20 + Lakehead a L 3 5 D21 + Lakehead a L 4 5 ot J4 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 8 1 J5 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 15 1 J8 Concordia-M’head a W 6 3 Fargo-Moor. Sugar Kings h W 5 3 J9 J17 + St. Scholastica h L 5 6 J18 + St. Scholastica h L 5 6 J24 + UW-Superior a L 2 7 J25 + UW-Superior a L 2 5 J31 Iowa State h W 9 1 F1 Iowa State h W 12 5 F6 + UW-Superior h L 2 12 F7 + UW-Superior h W 4 3 F12 Concordia-M’head h W 9 2 F21 + St. Scholastica a L 1 2 F22 + St. Scholastica a L 0 7 +- ICHA Conference game
1969 NAIA National Champions Front row (L to R): Bryan Grand, Gary Hokanson, asst. coach Lorne Humphreys, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Jim Thompson, Terry Bergstrom, Terry Burns 2nd row (L to R): Bob Nyberg, Dennis Schueller, Jim McElmury, Rod Peterson, Vic Thordarson, Barrie Elycheson, Austin Wallestad, Henry Karner 3rd row (L to R): Bill Weller, Bruce Falk, Jude Boulianne, John Drzystck, Charlie Brown, Dennis Lemieux, Ken Anderson, Barry Dillon, Not Pictured: Jim Humphrey
1976-77
24-4-3 / 9-3-2 ICHA • NAIA National Third Place • ICHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N5 Winnipeg h W 7 0 N6 Winnipeg h W 5 3 N12 + Lakehead h L 3 4 N13 + Lakehead h W 2 0 N18 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 5 2 N19 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 5 4 N28 UW-River Falls a W 8 3 N29 UW-River Falls a W 7 5 D6 Concordia-M’head h W 4 2 D10 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 5 2 D11 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 6 2 D15 Iowa State a W 12 6 D16 Iowa State a W 14 2 J3 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 7 0 J7 UW-Stout h W 3 0 J8 UW-Stout h W 6 1 J14 + UW-Superior a T 4 4 J15 + UW-Superior a W 6 3 J21 Manitoba h T 3 3 J22 Manitoba h W 6 5 J28 + St. Scholastica h W 8 3 J29 + St. Scholastica h W 2 1 F4 + Lakehead a L 4 5 F5 + Lakehead a T 5 5 F11 + UW-Superior h W 6 1 F12 + UW-Superior h W 5 4 F17 + St. Scholastica a W 1 0 F18 + St. Scholastica a L 5 6 F23 St. Francis (Maine) $ W 11 0 F24 St. Scholastica $ L 2 5 F25 Augsburg $ W 5 2 +- ICHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (Superior, Wis.)
1977-78
25-5-1 / 11-3-0 ICHA • NAIA National Runner-Up • ICHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N4 Winnipeg h W 7 5 N5 Winnipeg h W 4 0 N11 Manitoba h T 5 5 ot N12 Manitoba h W 5 4 ot N19 Concordia-M’head a W 5 1 D2 + UW-Superior a L 1 8 D3 + Lakehead a W 9 4 D4 + St. Scholastica a L 2 5 D9 Mankato State h W 7 0 D10 Mankato State h W 10 5 D14 Iowa State a W 13 1 D15 Iowa State a W 16 2 J2 Augsburg h W 10 3 J3 Augsburg h W 4 3 J4 Manitoba h L 2 10 J11 Concordia-M’head h W 6 2 J13 UW-Stout h W 8 2 J14 UW-Stout h W 10 2 J20 + St. Scholastica a W 8 5 J21 + St. Scholastica a W 5 4 J27 + UW-Superior a W 6 2 J28 + UW-Superior a W 6 3 F3 + St. Scholastica h W 5 3 F4 + UW-Superior h W 7 4 F9 + St. Scholastica h L 2 3 ot F10 + St. Scholastica h W 7 4 F16 + UW-Superior h W 5 2 F17 + UW-Superior h W 9 5 F24 St. Francis (Maine) $ W 16 2 F25 St. Thomas (Minn.) $ W 7 1 F26 Augsburg $ L 3 4 +- ICHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (St. Paul, Minn.)
1978-79
ot ot ot
ot ot ot
27-2-0 • NAIA National Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N3 Saskatchewan h L 4 7 N4 Saskatchewan h W 4 2 N10 Brandon h W 8 2 N11 Brandon h W 6 3 N20 Augsburg a L 3 4 N21 Gustavus Adolphus a W 5 2 N29 UW-Superior a W 5 3 D2 Concordia-M’head a W 3 1 D5 Concordia-M’head h W 9 0 D14 UW-Superior h W 6 4 D16 Lakehead a W 3 2 D17 Lakehead a W 6 3 J3 UW-Eau Claire h W 17 0 J4 UW-Eau Claire h W 10 1 J12 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 14 2 J13 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 7 2 J19 Winnipeg h W 8 1 J20 Winnipeg h W 8 1 J24 St. Scholastica a W 7 1 J25 St. Scholastica a W 6 2 F2 Estevan a W 10 4 F3 Estevan a W 11 1 F7 St. Cloud State a W 8 2 F11 Lakehead h W 9 1 F16 St. Scholastica h W 5 2 F17 St. Scholastica h W 7 6 F23 St. Francis (Maine) $ W 17 1 F24 UW-River Falls $ W 7 5 F25 Concordia-M’head $ W 5 1 $- NAIA Championship (St. Paul, Minn.)
1970 NAIA National Champions Front row (L to R): Bob Thorne, Blane Comstock, Terry Burns, Bryan Grand, Barry Dillon, Ken Anderson, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Terry Delmonte, Jim Hannah 2nd row (L to R): Jude Boulianne, Dennis Schueller, Gary Bock, Jim McElmury, Charlie Brown, Barry Elycheson, Dale Smedsmo, Austin Bennett, Joe Zywiec 3rd row (L to R): Bill Weller, Jim Humphrey, Nick Novak, Glen Beckett, Dennis Lemieux, Pat Badiuk, Tom Molloy, Bruce Falk
1979-80
24-8-0 • NAIA National Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N2 Winnipeg h W 7 2 N3 Winnipeg h W 5 3 N9 Brandon a L 2 5 N10 Brandon a L 1 10 N20 Hamline a W 5 3 N21 St. Thomas (Minn.) a W 3 2 N30 Bethel (Minn.) h W 15 2 D1 Bethel (Minn.) h W 5 2 D4 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 10 0 D8 Concordia-M’head a W 5 4 D14 UW-Stout a W 9 3 D15 UW-Stout a W 7 1 D20 Gustavus Adolphus h W 3 2 ot D29 Roseau Leafs a W 6 4 J6 Warroad Lakers a L 1 4 J14 St. Cloud State h W 1 0 J18 Manitoba h L 2 5 J19 Manitoba h W 5 4 ot J26 St. Scholastica h W 6 5 J27 St. Scholastica h L 5 8 F1 Brandon h L 4 5 F2 Brandon h L 4 5 F3 UW-Superior h W 6 3 F6 Concordia h W 9 1 F9 Lakehead h W 8 2 F13 UW-Superior h W 7 4 F17 Augsburg h W 6 4 F22 St. Scholastica a W 3 1 F23 St. Scholastica a L 4 5 F29 St. Olaf $ W 5 2 M1 UW-Superior $ W 8 3 M2 Mich.-Dearborn $ W 4 3 $- NAIA Championship (St. Paul, Minn.)
1980-81
24-7-0 / 8-4-0 NCHA • NAIA National Third Place Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N7 Winnipeg h W 6 0 N8 Winnipeg h W 6 3 N14 Manitoba h L 5 6 N24 Augsburg a W 3 2 D5 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 6 5 D6 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 6 5 D10 + UW-Superior h W 9 3 D12 Winnipeg a W 3 1 D13 Winnipeg a L 1 3 D17 + St. Cloud State a L 2 4 D27 Warroad Lakers a W 8 5 J3 St. Olaf a W 9 3 J4 UW-River Falls a W 5 4 J7 St. John’s (Minn.) a W 10 0 J11 Warroad Lakers h W 3 0 J16 UW-Stout h W 15 1 J17 UW-Stout h W 11 4 J21 + UW-Superior a L 2 6 J24 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 12 2 J29 + Mankato State a L 4 5 J31 + Mankato State h W 4 3 F6 + UW-River Falls h W 10 2 F7 + UW-River Falls h W 9 0 F9 Bethel h W 8 1 F13 + St. Cloud State h L 3 5 F14 + St. Cloud State h W 6 2 F20 + UW-Eau Claire a W 6 3 F21 + UW-Eau Claire a W 3 2 M5 St. Mary’s $ W 5 1 M6 UW-Superior $ L 4 6 M7 Mich. Dearborn $ W 11 2 +- NCHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (River Falls, Wis.)
1981-82
25-5-1 / 16-3-1 NCHA • NAIA National Runner-Up • NCHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N13 + UW-River Falls h W 5 2 N14 + UW-River Falls h W 4 2 N15 Hamline h W 12 2 N23 St. Thomas (Minn.) a W 5 3 D1 Augsburg h L 3 4 D4 + UW-Superior a W 7 5 D5 + UW-Superior a T 1 1 D11 + UW-Eau Claire h W 3 1 D12 + UW-Eau Claire h L 3 4 D16 Winnipeg h W 8 1 D17 Winnipeg h W 8 4 J3 Alaska-Fairbanks h W 12 0 J8 + UW-Superior h W 8 3 J9 + UW-Superior h W 8 1 J15 + UW-River Falls a L 2 5 J16 + UW-River Falls a W 8 3 J22 + St. Cloud State h W 6 1 J23 + St. Cloud State h W 5 4 J25 Bethel h W 10 5 J29 + Mankato State a W 5 3 J30 + Mankato State a W 4 3 F5 + Mankato State h W 5 3 F6 + Mankato State h W 5 2 F12 + St. Cloud State a W 3 2 F13 + St. Cloud State a L 1 2 F16 St. Olaf h W 9 0 F19 + UW-Eau Claire a W 4 0 F20 + UW-Eau Claire a W 4 2 F26 Hamline $ W 6 2 F27 UW-River Falls $ W 7 0 F28 Augsburg $ L 3 6 +- NCHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (Superior, Wis.)
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1971 NAIA National Champions Front row (L to R): Dennis Lemieux, Bruce Falk, Jude Boulianne, Jim McElmury, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Blane Comstock, Ken Anderson, Jim Humphrey, Dennis Schueller, Charlie Brown 2nd row (L to R): John Birrenkott, Mike Prodahl, Tom Reise, Dale Smedsmo, Pat DeMarchi, Gary Bock, Scott Preston, Pat Badiuk, Dennis Lemieux 3rd row (L to R): Henry Karner, Nick Novack, Lynn Smith, Mike Kvarnlov, Lyle Dunbar, Joe Zywiec, Jim Hannah
2009-10
71
all-time results
1975-76
22-9-0 / 8-4-0 ICHA • NAIA National Fourth Place • ICHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N7 Winnipeg h L 2 4 N8 Winnipeg h L 4 5 N14 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 6 3 N15 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 3 2 ot N21 + Lakehead h L 0 1 N22 + Lakehead h W 10 5 N24 Augsburg a W 5 4 N25 Gustavus Adolphus a L 4 8 D6 Gustavus Adolphus h W 5 3 D12 Bloomington Jr. Stars h W 8 3 D13 Bloomington Jr. Stars h W 12 5 D18 + Lakehead a W 7 4 D19 + Lakehead a W 11 3 J5 Augsburg h W 6 3 J9 Iowa State h W 10 2 J10 Iowa State h W 7 3 J15 + St. Scholastica a L 5 7 J16 + St. Scholastica a L 0 5 J23 + UW-Superior h W 5 4 J24 + UW-Superior h W 7 4 F2 Manitoba h W 7 6 F6 + UW-Superior a L 3 4 F7 + UW-Superior a W 6 5 ot F13 UW-River Falls h W 8 2 F14 UW-River Falls h W 10 2 F20 + St. Scholastica h W 6 4 F21 + St. Scholastica h W 5 2 F24 Mankato State h W 6 2 F27 UW-Stout $ W 4 2 F28 UW-Superior $ L 3 4 F29 Gustavus Adolphus $ L 4 5 +- ICHA Conference game $- NAIA Championship (Superior, Wis.)
All-time results
1982-83 Mike
1983-84
Gibbons 1 season 30-6-1 1982-83
1982-83
30-6-1
30-6-1 / 16-3-1 NCHA • First Season at NCAA Division II Level • NCAA Division II National Runner-Up • NCHA Champions Head Coach: Mike Gibbons date opponent loc result N5 Winnipeg h W 6 0 N6 Winnipeg h W 6 2 N12 + UW-River Falls a L 4 7 N13 + UW-River Falls a L 1 3 N20 Concordia-M’head a W 4 1 N22 Augsburg a W 6 1 D3 + St. Cloud State a W 10 5 D4 + St. Cloud State a W 5 4 D7 Concordia-M’head h W 9 2 D11 + Mankato State h W 4 3 D12 + Mankato State h W 7 4 D15 Gustavus Adolphus a L 6 7 D30 St. Scholastica a W 5 2 J2 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 10 1 J3 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 4 3 J7 + UW-Superior h W 7 4 J8 + UW-Superior h W 6 2 J14 + UW-Eau Claire a W 6 0 J15 + UW-Eau Claire a L 1 4 J21 + UW-River Falls h W 4 1 J22 + UW-River Falls h W 7 4 J28 + St. Cloud State h W 6 0 J29 + St. Cloud State h W 3 1 F4 + Mankato State a T 4 4 ot F5 + Mankato State a W 7 2 F11 + UWSuperior a W 4 0 F12 + UW-Superior a W 13 5 F14 St. Scholastica h W 7 1 F18 + UW-Eau Claire h W 5 3 F19 + UW-Eau Claire h W 6 3 M1 St. Olaf 1 W 5 2 M3 St. Thomas (Minn.) 1 W 3 2 M5 Mankato State 1 W 5 3 M11 Gustavus Adolphus % W 6 3 M12 Gustavus Adolphus % L 2 3 M17 Babson (Mass.) $ W 3 1 M19 RIT, NY $ L 2 4 1- WIHA Tournament (Bemidji, Minn.) %- NCAA Playoff (Bemidji, Minn.) $- NCAA Championship (Lowell, Mass.)
31-0-0 / 18-0-0 NCHA • NCAA Division II National Champions • NCHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N8 Winnipeg h W 9 1 N20 Lake Forest a W 6 0 N21 Lake Forest a W 5 2 N29 Concordia-M’head h W 9 1 D3 Gustavus Adolphus h W 10 2 D6 + UW-Superior h W 9 3 D9 + St. Cloud State a W 4 2 D10 + St. Cloud State a W 9 3 D15 + UW-River Falls h W 5 3 D16 + UW-River Falls h W 5 4 D30 St. Thomas (Minn.) a W 7 3 J6 Augsburg h W 7 4 J7 Augsburg h W 4 1 J13 + UW-Eau Claire a W 8 5 J14 + UW-Eau Claire a W 11 1 J20 + St. Scholastica h W 5 3 J21 + St. Scholastica h W 7 1 J24 + UW-Superior h W 9 1 J27 + Mankato State a W 5 4 J28 + Mankato State a W 3 2 J31 Concordia-M’head a W 7 3 F3 + St. Cloud State h W 5 3 F4 + St. Cloud State h W 6 0 F10 + St. Scholastica a W 4 3 F11 + St. Scholastica a W 9 1 F17 + Mankato State h W 6 3 F18 + Mankato State h W 9 0 M10 Alaska-Fairbanks $ W 9 6 M11 Alaska-Fairbanks $ W 4 2 M17 Merrimack $ W 6 3 M18 Merrimack $ W 8 1 +- NCHA Conference game $- NCAA II Championship (Bemidji, Minn.)
31-0-0: Perfection
Bemidji State’s 1983-84 season saw the Beavers not only bring home their eighth national championship - and first at the Division II level - the program also set a still-standing collegiate hockey record for most victories in an unbeaten season with 31 (31-0-0). Those 31 wins helped BSU assemble a 42-game winning streak, also a collegiate hockey record. “Every so often in all athletCollege Hockey’s Unbeaten Teams ics there’s just a gathering of 1983-84 Bemidji State 31-0-0 1969-70 Cornell (N.Y.) 29-0-0 athletes who are just excel1995-96 Ala.-Huntsville 26-0-3 lent,” then-head coach R.H. 1955-56 Clarkson (N.Y.) 23-0-0 “Bob” Peters said of the 19831946-47 Colgate (N.Y.) 13-0-0 84 squad. “They’re excellent 1942-43 Colgate (N.Y.) 11-0-0 athletes and excellent people. Source: CCHA research There are other variables, too - experience, depth, injuries, leadership. All those things kind of came together for us, but it all begins with the gathering together of an outstanding group of athletes. It happens. Not often, though. “Personally speaking, I am very grateful for it. I feel very fortunate to know first-hand what goes into such a streak.” Bemidji State’s 1983-84 squad stands as one of six teams in college hockey history to post an undefeated season and one of only five to finish a season unbeaten and untied. Following is the exclusive list of those unbeaten clubs.
Perfection Turns 20 On Oct. 17, 2003, prior to Bemidji State’s home contest against Clarkson, the BSU athletics community celebrated the 20th anniversary of the perfect 1983-84 Division II National Championship team, honoring members of that team and retiring the #24 jersey worn by its captain, Joel Otto. Otto, the 1984 Division II Hobey Baker Award winner, a 1998 Olympian and 1989 Stanley Cup Champion with the Calgary Flames, became the first player in BSU history to have his jersey retired.
Left: Ryan Huddy, who wore Otto’s #24 before the number was retired; R.H. “Bob” Peters; Joel Otto; and BSU President Jon Quistgaard at the ceremony retiring Otto’s jersey on Oct. 17, 2003.
1973 NAIA National Champions Front Row (L to R): Chuck Scanlon, asst. coach Barry Dillon, John Dunbar, Lynn Smith, Nick Novak, John Birrenkott, Pat Badiuk, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Will Comstock 2nd row (L to R): Glenn Chiodo, Scott Preston, Gary Sargent, Pat Russell, Joe Nathe, Tom Waldhauser, Mark Kristo, Dave Millington, Jim Borden 3rd row (L to R): Dennis Fermoyle, Duff Melhus, Dan Boeke, Brian Mullaly, Dave Kvarnlov, Lyle Kvarnlov, Mark Eagles, Steve Curley, Steve Letourneau, Bob Thorne, Randy Kirk
72
2009-10
1979 NAIA National Champions Front row (L to R): John Murphy, Jeff Arf, Bill Schmitz, asst. coach Mark Kristo, Scott Currie, Tom Heaviland, Mike Gibbons, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Rod Heisler, Pat Kinney, Hal Burton 2nd row (L to R): Jim Scanlon, Gary Tveit, Dale Baldwin, Gary Krawchuk, Dev Anderson, Dan Olson, Tony Montebello, Brian Carleton, Mike Rose, Mike Fairchild, Richard Thompson 3rd row (L to R): manager Bryan Bouchard, manager Sandy Hafenbrak, Ron Bouchard, Alain Fournier, Wade Froehlich, Jim Carey, Pat Rice, Neal Holmstrom, Kevin Delaney, Micheal Milless, Mark Masterson, Joseph Knudson, manager Keith Pangman
27-6-2 / 14-3-1 NCHA • First Season at NCAA Division III Level • NCAA Division III National Runner-Up • NCHA Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N11 Lakehead a W 10 4 N17 St. John’s (Minn.) a W 4 2 N19 St. Mary’s (Minn.) a W 5 3 N20 Gustavus Adolphus a W 4 3 D4 + UW-Superior h W 8 7 D7 + St. Cloud State h W 8 1 D8 + St. Cloud State h W 4 1 D14 + UW-River Falls a W 4 3 D15 + UW-River Falls a W 5 3 D20 + UW-Superior a W 10 2 D31 Augsburg a W 6 4 J1 wAugsburg a L 2 9 J11 + UW-Eau Claire h W 7 2 J12 + UW-Eau Claire h W 7 1 J14 Hamline h W 4 1 J18 + St. Scholastica a L 3 6 J19 + St. Scholastica a W 6 2 J25 + Mankato State h W 7 2 J26 + Mankato State h W 7 6 F1 + St. Cloud State a L 5 6 ot F2 + St. Cloud State a L 5 7 F5 Concordia-M’head h W 12 2 F8 + St. Scholastica h W 7 2 F9 + St. Scholastica h W 8 3 F12 Concordia-M’head h W 12 1 F15 + Mankato State a W 4 2 F16 + Mankato State a T 2 2 ot M2 St. Scholastica 1 T 5 5 ot M3 St. Scholastica 1 W 5 1 M4 Gustavus Adolphus 1 W 4 2 M10 St. Thomas (Minn.) # W 4 1 M16 Mankato State # L 2 4 M17 Mankato State # W 9 2 M22 Plattsburgh State $ W 8 7 3ot M23 RIT (NY) $ L 1 5 wloss snaps BSU 42-game winning streak + NCHA conference game 1- WIHA Tournament (Bemidji, Minn.) #- NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals (Bemidji, Minn.) $- NCAA Div. III Championship (Schenectady, N.Y.)
1985-86
25-9-1 / 12-6-0 NCHA • NCAA Division III National Champions • NCHA Co-Champions • NCHA Tournament Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N15 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 8 5 N24 Hamline a W 4 3 N25 Bethel h W 4 3 D6 + St. Cloud State a W 6 4 D7 + St. Cloud State a L 4 6 D13 + UW-River Falls h W 11 1 D14 + uUW-River Falls h L 4 5 D19 Concordia-M’head h W 11 3 J5 Augsburg h W 8 6 J6 Augsburg h W 14 5 J10 + Mankato State a W 6 2 J11 + Mankato State a W 5 4 J16 + UW-Superior a W 6 2 J18 + UW-Superior h W 6 5 J24 + St. Scholastica h L 2 4 J25 + St. Scholastica h W 7 6 J31 + St. Cloud State h W 6 3 F1 + St. Cloud State h L 1 8 F4 Gustavus Adolphus h L 4 5 F7 + Mankato State h W 4 2 F8 + Mankato State h L 4 6 F10 St. Mary’s (Minn.) h W 9 2 F14 + St. Scholastica a L 3 5 F15 + St. Scholastica a W 12 4 F18 Concordia-M’head a W 11 4 F21 + UW-Eau Claire a W 10 3 F22 + UW-Eau Claire a W 9 3 M1 UW-River Falls 1 W 5 4 M2 UW-River Falls 1 T 3 3 M8 Mankato State 1 W 6 3 M9 Mankato State 1 L 4 6 M15 Elmira # W 5 2 M16 Elmira # L 3 5 M16 Elmira # * 3 0 M21 RIT (NY) $ W 5 4 M22 Plattsburgh State $ W 8 5 uloss snaps BSU 57-game home winning streak + NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament (Bemidji, Minn.) / *- mini #- NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals (Bemidji, Minn.) $- NCAA Div. III Championship (Bemidji, Minn.)
1986-87
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22-12-1 / 12-7-1 NCHA • NCAA Division III National Fourth Place • NCHA Tournament Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N14 + UW-Superior h L 5 10 N15 + UW-Superior h L 5 8 N22 Concordia-M’head a W 11 4 D5 + St. Cloud State h L 1 5 D6 + St. Cloud State h W 4 2 D9 Hamline h W 6 1 D11 Gustavus Adolphus a W 4 2 D13 Bethel h W 10 1 D18 + UW-River Falls a W 5 3 D19 + UW-River Falls a W 5 4 J2 Augsburg a L 3 6 J3 Augsburg a W 12 7 J9 + Mankato State a L 2 4 J10 + Mankato State a L 3 4 J16 + UW-Stevens Point h W 4 3 J17 + UW-Stevens Point h W 3 2 ot J23 + St. Scholastica h W 6 3 J24 + St. Scholastica h W 5 3 J30 + St. Cloud State a L 0 4 J31 + St. Cloud State a T 4 4 ot F6 + Mankato State h W 3 2 F7 + Mankato State h L 3 4 F13 + St. Scholastica a W 5 3 F14 + St. Scholastica a W 7 3 F17 Concordia-M’head h W 4 0 F20 + UW-Eau Claire h W 8 4 F21 + UW-Eau Claire h W 7 0 F28 Mankato State 1 W 5 3 M1 Mankato State 1 W 4 2 M7 St. Cloud State 2 L 4 6 M8 St. Cloud State 2 L 7 9 M14 Concordia-M’head # W 3 1 M15 Concordia-M’head # W 8 6 M20 Plattsburgh St. $ L 4 7 M21 St. Cloud State $ L 4 6 + NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament (Mankato, Minn.) 2- NCHA Championship (St. Cloud Minn.) #- NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals (Bemidji, Minn.) $- NCAA Div. III Semifinals (Plattsburgh, N.Y.)
1987-88
24-11-3 / 15-6-3 NCHA • NCAA Division III National Third Place Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N6 + Mankato State h W 5- 1 N7 + Mankato State h T 3 3 N13 + UW-Stevens Point h T 2 2 N14 + UW-Stevens Point h L 4 5 N21 + St. Scholastica a W 9 2 N22 + St. Scholastica a W 11 3 N24 Bethel a W 6 0 D04 + UW-River Falls h W 3 1 D05 + UW-River Falls h L 2 5 D11 + UW-Superior a W 5 3 D12 + UW-Superior a W 7 4 D18 Concordia-M’head a W 9 2 D19 Concordia-M’head a W 9 4 D21 Hamline a W 9 2 J2 + UW-Eau Claire a W 3 2 J3 + UW-Eau Claire a W 5 1 J8 + St. Scholastica h W 11 3 J9 + St. Scholastica h W 7 5 J15 + Mankato State a L 2 5 J16 + Mankato State a L 0 6 J22 + UW-Stevens Point h L 4 6 J23 + UW-Stevens Point h W 4 3 J29 + UW-Superior h W 4 1 J30 + UW-Superior h W 4 3 F5 Augsburg h W 11 4 F6 Augsburg h W 10 5 F12 + UW-River Falls a W 5 2 F13 + UW-River Falls a L 4 7 F19 + UW-Eau Claire h T 4 4 F20 + UW-Eau Claire h W 7 2 F27 UW-Stevens Point 1 L 0 4 F28 UW-Stevens Point 1 W 8 1 F28 UW-Stevens Point 1 * 1 0 M4 UW-River Falls 2 L 4 7 M5 UW-River Falls 2 L 0 2 M12 St. Thomas (Minn.) $ W 5 1 M13 St. Thomas (Minn.) $ W 3 1 M18 UW-River Falls $ L 4 6 M19 UW-River Falls $ L 3 5 + NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament (Bemidji, Minn.) / *- mini 2- NCHA Championship (River Falls, Wis.) #- NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals (Bemidji, Minn.) $- NCAA Div. III Semifinals (River Falls, Wis.)
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Bemidji State Coaching Records Victories 702 R.H. “Bob” Peters 140 uTom Serratore 42 Vic Weber 31 Mike Gibbons 17 Eric Hughes 10 Wayne Peterson 2 Jack Aldrich Winning Percentage .704 R.H. “Bob” Peters .683 Vic Weber .567 Eric Hughes .538 uTom Serratore min. 2 seasons coached
1966-01 2001-p 1959-66 1982-83 1948-50 1964-65 1948
1966-01 1959-’66 1948-’50 2001-p
Seasons Coached 34 R.H. “Bob” Peters 8 uTom Serratore 5 Vic Weber 2 Eric Hughes 1 Jack Aldrich 1 Wayne Peterson 1 Mike Gibbons
1966-2001 2001-p 1959-64, 65-66 1948-50 1947-48 1964-65 1982-83
Games Coached 1,044 R.H. “Bob” Peters 287 uTom Serratore 63 Vic Weber 37 Mike Gibbons 30 Eric Hughes 12 Wayne Peterson 10 Jack Aldrich
1966-2001 2001-p 1959-64, 65-66 1982-83 1948-50 1964-65 1948
Conference Victories 347* R.H. “Bob” Peters 96 uTom Serratore 16 Mike Gibbons
1966-01 2001-p 1982-83
Conference Winning Percentage .825 Mike Gibbons .672 uTom Serratore .645 R.H. “Bob” Peters
1982-83 2001-p 1966-01
Conference Game Coached 538 R.H. “Bob” Peters 157 uTom Serratore 19 Mike Gibbons
1966-01 2001-p 1982-82
* ICHA, NCHA & CHA
Coaching Debuts Jack Aldrich Jan. 18, 1948 vs St. Cloud State L, 2-12 Eric Hughes Jan. 9, 1949 vs Detroit Lakes Rangers W, 13-0 Vic Weber Jan. 29, 1960 vs St. Cloud State L, 0-4 Wayne Peterson Jan. 8, 1965 vs Concordia-Moorhead W, 10-3 R.H. “Bob” Peters Dec. 3, 1966 vs Lake Superior St. W, 3-1 Mike Gibbons Nov. 5, 1982 vs Winnipeg W, 6-0 uTom Serratore Oct. 12, 2001 vs MSU-Mankato W, 7-6
BSU began conference play in 1966
1980 NAIA National Champions
1984 NCAA Division II National Champions
Front row (L to R): Dick Thompson, Mike Rose, Mike Fairchild, Gary Tveit, Dale Baldwin, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Brian Carleton, Gary Krawchuk, Tony Montebello, Bill Parentau, Jim Scanlan 2nd row (L to R): Trainer Wally Sande, Mark Masterson, Mike Milless, Wade Frohleich, Neil Holmstom, Lee Hanson, Pat Rice, John Hanson, Alain Fournier, Joe Knudson, manager Lloyd Brown 3rd row (L to R): manager Sandy Hatenbrak, Robin Anderson, Tim Rood, Kurt Dade, Stuart Weston, Dan Deamon, Mike Smith, Matt Cranston, John Wilson, manager Jim Hickerson, manager Brian Bouchard
Front row (L to R): Mark Liska, Wendell Jellison, Scott Monsrud, Bob Fitzgerald, asst. coach Jeff Arf, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, asst. coach Robin Anderson, Joel Otto, Dave Jerome, Drey Bradley, Galen Nagle 2nd row (L to R): Jim Martin, Dave Geatz, Dennis Gibbons, MIke Alexander, Tim Lescarbeau, Scott Norland, Eric Gager, Mark Lescarbeu, Dan Pyle, Jim Roo, Rob Kostiuk, Del Gregory, trainer Shelia Graveline, trainer Roger Thomas 3rd row (L to R): Manager Scott Folkerds, Dan Kimball, Derrick Wagner, Keith Dahlen, Brett Gendreau, Russ Hampson, Todd Lescarbeau, Rob Carpentier, Todd Dahl, Pat Johnston, Dave Jungwirth, Steve Lundeen, Todd Donaldson, Tom Andrican
2009-10
73
all-time results
1984-85
All-time results
1988-89
19-13-4 / 11-8-1 NCHA • NCAA Division III National Third Place Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N4 + St. Scholastica a W 6 1 N5 + St. Scholastica a W 7 5 N11 UW-River Falls h W 3 1 N12 UW-River Falls h T 1 1 N26 + UW-Stevens Point h L 3 4 N27 + UW-Stevens Point h L 2 6 D2 + UW-Eau Claire a L 3 7 D3 + UW-Eau Claire a L 1 7 D9 + UW-Superior a L 3 6 D10 + UW-Superior a W 8 2 D16 + Mankato State h W 7 2 D17 + Mankato State h L 3 8 D21 Gustavus Adolphus h W 7 2 J2 Augsburg h W 6 0 J4 Hamline h W 16 1 J10 Bethel h W 8 0 J13 + St. Scholastica h W 9 4 J14 + St. Scholastica h W 10 0 J20 UW-River Falls a L 3 9 J21 UW-River Falls a L 3 4 J27 + UW-Superior h W 5 2 J28 + UW-Superior h W 3 2 F3 + UW-Stevens Point a L 2 7 F4 + UW-Stevens Point a W 4 2 F10 + UW-Eau Claire h L 2 6 F11 + UW-Eau Claire h W 6 1 F17 + Mankato State a W 6 1 F18 + Mankato State a T 2 2 F24 UW-Eau Claire 1 W 6 5 F25 UW-Eau Claire 1 T 4 4 M3 UW-Stevens Point 2 L 0 2 M4 UW-Stevens Point 2 T 2 2 M10 St. Mary’s (Minn.) # W 5 4 M11 St. Mary’s (Minn.) # W 7 2 M17 UW-Stevens Point $ L 0 2 M18 UW-Stevens Point $ L 3 6 + NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament (Eau Claire, Wis.) 2- NCHA Tournament (Stevens Point, Wis.) #- NCAA Div. III Quarterfinals (Bemidji, Minn.) $- NCAA Div. III Championship (Rochester, N.Y.)
1989-90
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15-11-2 / 11-11-2 NCHA Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N7 Augsburg h W 8 1 N10 + UW-Eau Claire a L 6 7 N11 + UW-Eau Claire a L 3 8 N17 + UW-Superior h W 6 5 N18 + UW-Superior h L 3 4 N20 Gustavas Adolphus a W 11 3 N24 + Mankato State h W 4 1 N25 + Mankato State h T 4 4 D1 + UW-Stevens Point a L 2 3 D2 + UW-Stevens Point a L 4 6 D8 + St. Scholastica h W 6 4 D9 + St. Scholastica h W 4 3 D15 + UW-River Falls a L 3 6 D16 + UW-River Falls a W 4 3 J5 + UW-Superior a W 6 3 J6 + UW-Superior a L 4 5 J10 St. Thomas (Minn.) h W 6 1 J19 + UW-Eau Claire h W 7 4 J20 + UW-Eau Claire h W 5 2 J23 Concordia a W 4 3 J26 + St. Scholastica a W 2 1 J27 + St. Scholastica a W 8 4 F2 + Mankato State a L 2 3 F3 + Mankato State a L 5 7 F9 + UW-Stevens Point h L 2 5 F10 + UW-Stevens Point h L 3 4 F16 + UW-River Falls h W 5 3 F17 + UW-River Falls h T 4 4 + NCHA conference game
1991-92
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1990-91
21-6-3 / 17-4-3 NCHA • NCHA Co-Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N2 + UW-Superior h W 9 3 N3 + UW-Superior h W 5 4 N9 + Mankato State a T 4 4 N10 + Mankato State a L 2 4 N17 + UW-Stevens Pt. a L 3 7 N18 + UW-Stevens Pt. a W 4 3 N20 Augsburg a W 11 2 N30 + St. Scholastica h W 10 5 D1 + St. Scholastica h W 4 2 D7 + UW-River Falls a W 7 1 D8 + UW-River Falls a T 3 3 ot D15 Concordia-M’head h W 9 2 D22 + UW-Eau Claire h W 9 2 D23 + UW-Eau Claire h W 5 1 J4 + UW-Stevens Point h W 3 2 J5 + UW-Stevens Point h W 4 3 J11 + UW-Superior a W 8 5 J12 + UW-Superior a W 7 3 J18 + Mankato State h L 2 4 J19 + Mankato State h T 5 5 ot J23 St. Thomas (Minn.) a W 3 1 J31 St. Mary’s (Minn.) a W 4 0 F2 + St. Scholastica a W 9 3 F3 + St. Scholastica a W 9 3 F8 + UW-River Falls h W 7 1 F9 + UW-River Falls h W 3 0 F15 + UW-Eau Claire a W 5 4 F16 + UW-Eau Claire a L 3 7 F22 UW-Stevens Point 1 L 1 7 F23 UW-Stevens Point 1 L 3 4 + NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament
16-9-5 / 9-8-3 NCHA Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N9 Augsburg h W 12 0 N10 St. Thomas (Minn.) h T 2 2 N15 + Mankato State a L 3 5 N16 + Mankato State a T 5 5 N23 + UW-Stevens Point h T 3 3 N24 + UW-Stevens Point h L 2 4 D6 + UW-Superior h L 5 7 D7 + UW-Superior h L 1 7 D13 + UW-River Falls a W 5 4 D14 + UW-River Falls a W 5 4 D19 St. Scholastica h W 16 2 D21 St. Scholastica a W 5 2 J3 Augsburg a W 4 3 J5 St. Mary’s (Minn.) a W 8 3 J10 + UW-Eau Claire h W 8 2 J11 + UW-Eau Claire h W 6 5 J17 + Mankato State h W 7 4 J18 + Mankato State h W 8 2 J24 + UW-Stevens Pt. a L 4 6 J25 + UW-Stevens Pt. a L 3 10 J28 Concordia-M’head h W 5 2 J31 + UW-Superior a L 2 7 F1 + UW-Superior a W 5 3 F7 + UW-River Falls h T 4 4 F8 + UW-River Falls h W 5 2 F11 Concordia-M’head a W 5 4 F14 + UW-Eau Claire a L 3 4 F15 + UW-Eau Claire a W 7 3 F21 UW-Stevens Point 1 T 3 3 F22 UW-Stevens Point 1 L 1 7 + NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament
1992-93
24-7-0 / 14-6-0 NCHA • NCAA Division II National Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N13 + UW-River Falls a W 6 5 N14 + UW-River Falls a L 4 6 N21 + UW-Superior h L 3 4 N22 + UW-Superior h W 7 4 D1 Concordia-M’head a W 7 3 D4 + UW-Stevens Point a L 3 6 D5 + UW-Stevens Point a L 2 6 D11 + UW-Eau Claire h W 7 3 D12 + UW-Eau Claire h W 4 1 D19 Augsburg a W 9 4 J2 St. John’s (Minn.) a W 6 3 J3 Concordia-M’head a W 9 1 J8 + Lake Forest a W 7 1 J9 + Lake Forest a W 6 3 J15 + UW-River Falls h W 5 2 J16 + UW-River Falls h W 9 3 J22 + UW-Superior a W 5 2 J23 + UW-Superior a W 7 2 J29 + UW-Stevens Point h W 8 4 J30 + UW-Stevens Point h L 5 10 F5 + UW-Eau Claire a W 11 4 F6 + UW-Eau Claire a W 5 3 F9 Augsburg h W 7 6 F12 + Lake Forest h L 4 5 ot F13 + Lake Forest h W 6 1 F26 UW-River Falls 1 W 7 3 F27 UW-River Falls 1 W 7 0 M5 UW-Stevens Point 1 L 6 8 M6 UW-Stevens Point 1 W 3 2 M19 Mercyhurst $ W 10 6 M20 Mercyhurst $ W 5 0 + NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament $- NCAA Div. II Championship (Bemidji, Minn.)
1993-94
21-9-3 / 12-6-2 NCHA • NCAA Division II National Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N5 + UW-Stevens Point a W 4 3 N6 + UW-Stevens Point a L 1 8 N12 + UW-Eau Claire h W 4 3 N13 + UW-Eau Claire h W 8 2 N20 + UW-Superior a T 4 4 N21 + UW-Superior a L 2 6 D3 + Lake Forest a W 4 3 D4 + Lake Forest a W 2 1 D10 + UW-Stevens Point h L 3 8 D11 + UW-Stevens Point h W 5 1 D17 Mankato State a W 5 3 D18 Mankato State a L 5 8 J4 St John’s (Minn.) h W 8 1 J7 + UW-River Falls a L 3 4 J8 + UWRiver Falls a W 6 3 J14 + UWEau Claire a W 4 3 J15 + UW-Eau Claire a T 3 3 J21 + UW-Superior h W 6 3 J22 + UW-Superior h L 2 4 J28 + Lake Forest h W 8 1 J29 + Lake Forest h W 6 2 F4 Mankato State h W 6 2 F5 Mankato State h W 4 3 F11 + UW-River Falls h L 4 8 F12 + UW-River Falls h W 5 1 F18 Lake Forest 1 W 6 2 F19 Lake Forest 1 W 4 1 F25 UW-Stevens Point 1 T 4 4 F26 UW-Stevens Point 1 W 4 1 M4 UW-Superior 1 W 4 0 M5 UW-Superior 1 L 6 7 M5 UW-Superior 1 * 0 1 M11 Ala.-Huntsville $ L 3 5 M12 Ala.-Huntsville $ W 2 1 M12 Ala.-Huntsville $ * 2 1 +- NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament / *- mini $- NCAA Div. II Championship (Huntsville, Ala.) Scoring Leaders Player G Jim Karner 18 Jason Mack 14 Omer Belisle 10 Chris Morque 8 Kris Bjornson 6 Bernie Adlys 11 Craig Matatall 10 Eric Monsrud 8 Tom Murphy 11 Craig McKechney 10 Goaltenders Player Robin Cook Mike Beaton • freshman
W 16 5
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A 26 22 22 22 20 14 14 16 12 13
P PIM PP SH GW 44 32 4 3 1 36 68 0 0 4 32 74 5 0 2 30 112 1 1 1 26 26 2 0 3 25 44 2 3 2 24 80 3 0 1 24 38 2 1 0 23 38 4 0 1 23 46 3 0 2
L 4 5
T GAA Sv Sv% 1 2.99 581 .901 2 3.80 301 .870
1986 NCAA Division III National Champions
1993 NCAA Division II National Champions
Front row (L to R): Steve O’Shea, Dave Jungwirth, Jeff Strandell, Steve Lundeen, asst. coach Scott Monsrud, Mike Alexander, heach coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Tim Lescarbeau, Todd Donaldson, Dan Kimball, Jim Martin 2nd row (L to R): Rob Kostiuk, Dan Richards, Tom Serratore, Ian Resch, Tim Guyer, Todd Lescarbeau, Todd Warner, Del Michie, Greg Biskup, Jade Gilbertson, Bruce Watkins, Mark Hunt, Scott Vatnsdal, Jim Roo, Russ Hampson 3rd row (L to R): Carol Johnson, Sheila Graveline, Kyle Freeman, Ron Smith, Tim Webb, Bob Bestul, Ross Campbell, Tom Shinabarger, Jim Tyler, Brad Seagull, Brett Berryman, Paul Cameron, Terry Mattson, Scott Phaneuf
Front row (L to R): R.J. Larson, Damon Foster, Sean Taggert, asst. coach Kevin Williamson, Gary Gustason, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Jamie Erb, asst. coach Gary Tveit, Dan Tollefson, Cory Chupka, Todd Kreibich 2nd row (L to R): Trainer Paul Matchan, Verko Ignjatovic, Jude Boulianne, Craig McKechney, Jason Mack, Tom Murphy, John Hause, Chris Morque, Chris Deleone, Jim Karner, Omer Belisle, Kris Bjornson, Robin Cook, manager Shane Venker 3rd row (L to R): Bernie Adlys, Malcolm Oldcorn, Craig Matatall, Eric Monsrud, Chad Koenen, Bayne Koen, Mike Peterson, Kelly Nichols, Scott Simpson, Brian Thul, Kelly Tkachuk, Kelly Currie, David Lyons
74
2009-10
24-7-2 / 16-3-1 NCHA • NCAA Division II National Champions • NCHA Champions • NCHA Tournament Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N4 + St. Scholastica h W 6 2 N5 + St. Scholastica h W 13 2 N9 Augsburg h L 3 4 N11 Concordia-M’head a L 3 5 N12 Concordia-M’head h W 4 1 N19 + UW-Superior a W 3 2 N20 + UW-Superior a W 5 4 D2 + UW-Eau Claire a W 6 2 D3 + UW-Eau Claire a W 6 5 D9 + Lake Forest h W 6 4 D10 + Lake Forest h W 6 3 D15 UM-Crookston h L 2 3 J6 + UW-Stevens Point a W 5 4 J7 + UW-Stevens Point a L 1 2 J10 St. John’s (Minn.) h T 5 5 J13 + St. Norbert h W 4 2 J14 + St. Norbert h T 4 4 J20 + UW-River Falls a W 4 3 J21 + UW-River Falls a W 8 5 J27 + St. Scholastica a W 13 4 J28 + St. Scholastica a W 15 2 F3 + UW-Superior h L 1 5 F4 + UW-Superior h L 2 3 F10 + UW-Eau Claire h W 2 1 F11 + UW-Eau Claire h W 5 3 F17 St. Scholastica 1 W 6 1 F18 St. Scholastica 1 W 13 1 F24 UW-River Falls 1 L 0 3 F25 UW-River Falls 1 W 5 2 F25 UW-River Falls 1 * 2 0 M3 UW-Stevens Point 1 W 6 1 M4 UW-Stevens Point 1 W 3 2 M17 Mercyhurst (Pa.) $ W 6 2 M18 Mercyhurst (Pa.) $ W 5 4 +- NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament / *- mini $- NCAA Div. II Championship (Erie, Pa.) Scoring Leaders Player Jude Boulianne Craig Matatall Omer Belisle Eric Fulton Bernie Adlys Craig McKechney Troy Edwards Eric Monsrud •Aaron Novak Ed Melville Goaltenders Player Robin Cook Mike Beaton Chris Medecine
G 11 21 18 17 16 14 3 15 9 7 W 20 4 0
A 40 29 28 27 24 19 22 9 13 14 L 5 2 0
P PIM PP 51 30 3 50 49 6 46 42 6 44 71 5 40 64 4 33 50 4 25 49 1 24 34 6 22 60 1 21 30 0
1995-96
ot
ot
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16-9-4 / 13-5-2 NCHA • NCAA Division II National Runner-Up Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N3 + St. Scholastica a W 4 3 N4 + St. Scholastica a W 4 1 N10 Mankato State a L 2 3 N11 Mankato State a T 3 3 N17 + UW-Superior h W 6 4 N18 + UW-Superior h W 4 3 N21 Augsburg a W 10 4 D1 + UW-Eau Claire h W 6 2 D2 + UW-Eau Claire h W 6 4 D8 + Lake Forest a W 3 2 D9 + Lake Forest a L 0 3 D15 Mankato State h W 7 3 D16 Mankato State h T 6 6 J5 + UW-Stevens Point h T 6 6 J6 + UW-Stevens Point h L 3 4 J12 + St. Norbert a W 7 5 J13 + St. Norbert a W 5 4 J19 + UW-River Falls h T 3 3 J20 + UW-River Falls h L 4 6 J26 + St. Scholastica h W 6 1 J27 + St. Scholastica h W 6 4 F2 + UW-Superior a W 5 3 F3 + UW-Superior a L 3 7 F9 + UW-Eau Claire a W 4 3 F10 + UW-Eau Claire a L 2 3 F23 UW-Superior 1 W 6 1 F24 UW-Superior 1 L 1 3 F24 UW-Superior 1 * 0 2 M8 Ala.-Huntsville $ L 1 7 M9 Ala.-Huntsville $ L 0 3 +- NCHA conference game 1- NCHA Tournament / *- mini $- NCAA Div. II Championship (Huntsville, Ala.)
Scoring Leaders Player Bernie Adlys Craig Matatall Jeff Sobb Eric Monsrud Jim Logan SH GW •Shawn Pomplun 0 2 •Marc Lafleur 1 0 Mike Donaghue 1 0 Josh Klingfus 1 2 Troy Edwards 1 3 0 3 Goaltenders 0 1 Player 3 5 Robin Cook 0 1 Mike Beaton 1 1 • freshman
1996-97
ot ot
ot ot ot ot
G 17 20 14 12 9 5 5 7 6 4
A 30 16 14 16 18 20 17 12 13 15
P PIM PP SH GW 47 48 6 1 1 36 54 8 1 4 28 37 2 1 1 28 53 6 0 2 27 64 1 1 1 25 24 3 0 1 22 26 2 0 0 19 22 0 0 1 19 35 1 0 2 19 54 3 0 1
W 9 7
L 6 3
T GAA Sv Sv% 3 3.52 495 .886 1 3.78 369 .883
T GAA Sv Sv% 1 2.80 629 .901 1 3.11 214 .892 0 3.00 16 .941
25-7-2 / 14-5-1 NCHA • NCAA Division II National Champions Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result N1 + St. Scholastica a W 7 3 N2 + St. Scholastica a W 7 5 N8 St. Mary’s a W 8 5 N9 Augsburg a !L 4 7 N15 + UW-Superior h T 5 5 ot N16 + UW-Superior h L 6 7 N22 + St. Norbert h L 2 5 N23 + St. Norbert h W 4 3 N29 Mankato State a T 4 4 ot N30 Mankato State a W 5 3 D6 + UW-Stevens Point a L 2 4 D7 + UW-Stevens Point a W 4 3 D14 Augsburg h W 13 5 D19 Mankato State h W 6 2 D20 Mankato State h L 2 3 J4 + Lake Forest a W 6 1 J5 + Lake Forest a W 9 3 J8 Concordia-M’head h W 10 2 J11 Bethel a W 5 1 J17 + UW-Stout h W 4 2 J18 + UW-Stout h W 7 4 J24 + St. Scholastica h W 9 0 J25 + St. Scholastica h W 6 2 J31 + UW-River Falls a L 1 4 F1 + UW-River Falls a W 3 0 F7 + UW-Superior a L 1 4 F8 + UW-Superior a W 6 4 F14 + UW-Eau Claire h W 7 2 F15 + UW-Eau Claire h W 8 3 F17 Concordia-M’head a W 6 3 F19 Bethel h W 6 3 M5 UM-Crookston a W 6 3 M14 Ala.-Huntsville $ W 3 2 M15 Ala.-Huntsville $ W 4 2 +- NCHA conference game $- NCAA Div. II Championship (Bemidji, Minn.) !- win forfeited by Augsburg
Scoring Leaders Player G Jeff Sobb 18 Josh Klingfus 21 Jerod Bina 15 •Calvin Chartrand 9 Marc Lafleur 15 Shawn Pomplun 8 Jim Logan 11 Bruce Matatall 11 Greg Ambrose 8 Mike Donaghue 8 Goaltenders Player •Adam Pavlatos Neil Cooper Patrick Fermoyle • freshman
W 13 12 0
A 36 17 20 23 15 22 17 16 19 18 L 4 3 0
P PIM PP SH GW 54 58 6 1 4 38 64 0 0 1 35 26 4 0 0 32 36 4 1 3 30 18 3 1 1 30 31 5 2 2 28 58 3 1 1 27 18 4 0 0 27 64 5 0 0 26 26 1 1 2 T 1 1 0
GAA Sv Sv% 2.93 449 .894 3.47 395 .882 3.75 20 .870
1997-98
22-10-2 / 14-6-0 NCHA • NCAA Division II National Runner-Up Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result O31 + St. Scholastica h W 12 0 N1 + St. Scholastica h W 8 1 N14 + UW-Superior a W 2 1 N15 + UW-Superior a W 6 2 N22 + St. Norbert a L 4 9 N23 + St. Norbert a L 3 6 D5 Air Force a L 3 6 D6 Air Force a L 3 5 D10 Augsburg h T 5 5 D12 Concordia-M’head h W 7 1 D13 St. John’s (Minn.) h W 4 3 D19 Augsburg a T 4 4 J3 + Lake Forest h L 4 7 J4 + Lake Forest h W 7 1 J9 + UW-Stevens Point h W 9 4 J10 + UW-Stevens Point h W 5 2 J16 + UW-Stout a W 5 3 J17 + UW-Stout a W 8 4 J20 Concordia-M’head a W 6 5 J23 + St. Scholastica a W 6 0 J24 + St. Scholastica a W 5 2 J30 + UW-River Falls h L 2 3 J31 + UW-River Falls h W 6 2 F6 + UW-Superior h L 2 7 F7 + UW-Superior h W 4 1 F10 Bethel h W 3 1 F13 + UW-Eau Claire a L 3 4 F14 + UW-Eau Claire a W 6 5 F17 Gustavus Adolphus a W 6 3 F18 Bethel a W 4 1 F28 UM-Crookston h W 7 1 M1 UM-Crookston a W 5 0 M13 Ala.-Huntsville $ L 2 6 M14 Ala.-Huntsville $ L 2 5 +- NCHA conference game $- NCAA Div. II Championship (Huntsville, Ala.) Scoring Leaders Player G •Shane Kalbrener 15 Aaron Novak 20 Josh Klingfus 13 Marc Lafleur 9 Dan Pelletier 14 Calvin Chartrand 16 Jim Logan 11 Greg Ambrose 3 Mike Donaghue 9 Bruce Matatall 11 Goaltenders Player Adam Pavlatos Neil Cooper Matt Anderson
W 19 2 1
ot ot
ot
ot
A 27 18 18 22 16 13 18 26 18 14
P PIM PP SH GW 42 26 5 2 0 38 30 4 0 3 31 44 2 0 1 31 26 1 2 0 30 46 4 1 3 29 40 3 2 1 29 82 3 0 1 29 52 0 0 0 27 31 2 1 2 25 39 2 1 3
L 7 3 0
T GAA Sv Sv% 2 3.09 725 .892 0 4.06 124 .855 0 0.00 9 1.000
• freshman
• freshman
1994 NCAA Division II National Champions
1995 NCAA Division II National Champions
Front Row (L to R): Damon Foster, Cory Chupka, Tom Murphy, asst. coach O.J.Kennett, Chris Morque, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Jason Mack, asst. coach Kevin Williamson, John Hause, Chris Deleone, Jim Karner 2nd row (L to R): Jon Beaton, Mike Beaton, Kelly Currie, Kelly Nichols, Chad Hoenen, Jude Boulianne, Kris Bjornson, Dave Stengrim, Craig McKechney, Omer Belisle, Craig Matatall, Eric Monsrud, Bernie Adlys, Robin Cook 3rd row (L to R): Manager Chad Myhrer, Mike Young, Tony Trimborn, Scott Simpson, Eric Fulton, Ryan Driedger, Troy Edwards, Thomas Erickson, Mark Hanson, Scott Elder, Richard Gibbs, Lee Kofstad, Ed Melville, Chris Justice Jeff Sobb
Front row (L to R): Chris Medicine, Eric Monsrud, Jude Boulianne, Craig McKechney, head coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Omer Belisle, asst. coach Kevin Williamson, Kris Bjornson, Craig Matatall, Bernie Adlys, Robin Cook 2nd Row (L to R): Jon Beaton, Drew Shandro, Aaron Novak, Ed Melville, Eric Fulton, Troy Edwards, Thomas Erickson, Richard Gibbs, Chris Justice, Malcom Oldcorn, Jeff Sobb, Mike Beaton 3rd row (L to R): Manager Jason Starm, Scott Wilson, Mike Donaghue, Aaron McCellan, Josh Klingfus, Jim Logan, Jeff Tykeson, Aaron Gunn, Mano Hiemen, Jud Molstad, Cale Osborn, manager Chad Myhrer
2009-10
75
all-time results
1994-95
All-time results
1998-99
17-13-0 / 10-6-0 NCHA Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date opponent loc result O30 + Lake Forest a W 2 1 O31 + Lake Forest a L 1 2 N6 Air Force h W 3 2 ot N7 Air Force h W 7 3 N13 + UW-Superior h W 3 1 N14 UW-Superior h L 3 5 N20 + St. Norbert h L 0 4 N21 + St. Norbert h W 4 1 N28 St. Thomas h W 5 4 N29 St. Thomas h L 3 4 ot D11 Minn.-Crookston 1 W 8 5 D12 Bentley 1 W 7 0 D18 Augsburg h W 3 1 J8 + UW-Stout h W 5 4 J9 + UW-Stout h W 6 3 J15 + UW-Stevens Point a L 3 5 J16 + UW-Stevens Point a W 6 4 J20 St. John’s a L 3 4 J22 + St. Scholastica a W 7 3 J23 + St. Scholastica h W 7 1 J29 + UW-River Falls a W 3 2 J30 + UW-River Falls a L 2 3 F2 Gustavus Adolphus h W 4 3 F5 + UW-Superior a L 2 4 F6 UW-Superior a L 4 7 F12 + UW-Eau Claire h L 3 4 F13 + UW-Eau Claire h W 3 2 F16 Mankato State a L 2 6 F18 Neb.-Omaha a L 2 8 F19 Neb.-Omaha a L 3 7 1 Radisson Inn Hockey Classic; USAFA, Colo. + NCHA conference game Scoring Leaders Player Shane Kalbrener •Scot Dickson Calvin Chartrand •Jacob Searles Dan Pelletier Greg Ambrose Marc Lafleur Jerod Bina •Mark Phenow •Grant Perrault
G 12 18 13 11 8 4 8 7 4 2
A 18 11 15 12 14 15 10 10 11 12
P PIM PP SH GW 30 32 1 2 2 29 14 2 2 3 28 44 3 2 4 23 18 3 0 1 22 18 4 1 2 19 42 1 0 0 18 28 4 1 1 17 42 1 0 0 15 28 1 0 1 14 6 0 0 1
Goaltenders Player Adam Pavlatos Matt Anderson
W L 16 10 1 3
T GAA Sv Sv% 0 3.33 664 .888 0 3.32 103 .866
• freshman
1999-2000
13-20-1 / 8-8-1 College Hockey America (3rd) • First Season at NCAA Division I Level Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date rank opponent loc result O15 - - ^^ Army h W 5 2 O16 - - ^^ Army h W 3 0 O23 - - St. Cloud State a L 1 6 O24 - - St. Cloud State a L 1 2 N5 - rv ^ Niagara h L 2 4 N6 - rv ^ Niagara h T 3 3 N12 - - Ferris State h L 0 8 N13 - - Ferris State h L 2 4 N19 - 15 ^ Niagara a L 2 5 N20 - 15 ^ Niagara a L 0 10 N22 - - ^ Findlay a W 6 2 N23 - - ^ Findlay a L 3 4 D3 - - ^ Ala.-Hunstville h L 4 6 D4 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h L 3 6 D10 - - Princeton h W 3 2 D11 - - Princeton h W 2 1 D19 - rv MSU-Mankato a L 3 7 D20 - rv MSU-Mankato a L 3 5 J7 - - UM-Duluth h L 2 5 J8 - - UM-Duluth a L 1 4 J14 - - ^ Air Force h W 5 3 J15 - - ^ Air Force h W 5 4 J21 - - ^ Findlay h W 7 3 J22 - - ^ Findlay h W 6 3 F4 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a W 5 4 F5 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 1 6 F18 - - Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 5 2 F19 - - Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 6 4 F26 - - ^^ Air Force a L 3 4 F27 - - Denver a L 1 7 M3 - 2 North Dakota a L 2 9 M4 - 2 North Dakota a L 3 6 M11 - - Ala.-Huntsville 1 L 4 10 M12 - - Air Force 1 W 5 4 ^ College Hockey America game ^^ four-point CHA game 1- CHA Tournament; Huntsville, Ala.
2000-01
ot
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“rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
“rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player Stefan Bjork • Daryl Bat Calvin Chartrand • Brad Johnson Scot Dickson Dan Pelletier • Clay Simmons • Jeff McGill • Marty Goulet • Mike Perpich Goaltenders Player Adam Pavlatos • Bob Tallarico Matt Anderson
G 15 13 8 9 8 9 7 5 6 4
A 18 16 21 10 11 9 11 10 8 9
W L 4 9 7 11 2 0
P PIM PP SH GW 33 47 8 0 0 29 34 3 0 3 29 26 2 0 1 19 27 4 0 4 19 31 3 1 1 18 43 3 1 1 18 36 3 0 1 15 10 1 0 0 14 47 1 0 0 13 36 0 0 0 T 1 0 0
GAA Sv Sv% 3.76 376 .881 4.98 560 .870 4.24 119 .881
• freshman
1997 NCAA Division II National Champions Front row (L to R): Adam Pavlatos, Mike Donaghue, Josh Klingfus, Jim Logan, asst. coach Bryan Grand, Jeff Sobb, Coach R.H. "Bob" Peters, Troy Edwards, asst. coach Kevin Williamson, Ed Melville, Aaron Gunn, Neil Cooper 2nd row (L to R): Manager Chad Myhrer, Chris Pace, Matt Anderson, Marc Lafleur, John Power, Bruce Matatall, Aaron McCellan, Jerod Bina, Kyle Young, Greg Ambrose, Aaron Novak, Scott Wilson, Shawn Pomplun, John Neuman, Matt Christy, Pat Fermoyle, Bryan Sathre 3rd row (L to R): Brad Collins, Jeff Nordaune, Dan Pelletier, Nick Meiers, Nathan Krohn, Travis Bolles, Derek Gabardi, Eric Anderson, Vince Huerd, Kelly Johnson, Mike Ruedebusch, Joel Wheelock, Ryan Salmon, Nate Agard, Calvin Chartrand
76
4-26-4 / 4-12-3 College Hockey America (6th) Head Coach: R.H. “Bob” Peters date rank opponent loc result O14 - 9 Minnesota h L 3 9 O20 - 9 St. Cloud State h L 1 3 O21 - 9 St. Cloud State a L 0 7 O27 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h L 4 5 O28 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h L 2 4 N10 - - Miami (Ohio) h L 2 4 N11 - - Miami (Ohio) h L 2 4 N17 - - ^ Findlay a L 1 9 N18 - - ^ Findlay a L 1 2 N24 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h L 4 5 ot N25 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 8 1 D2 - 10 Colorado College a L 1 2 D3 - - ^^ Air Force a L 0 3 D8 - - Minn.-Duluth a L 2 7 D9 - - Minn.-Duluth a L 3 5 D16 - - MSU-Mankato a L 2 6 D17 - - MSU-Mankato a L 1 2 D29 - - Lake Superior St. 1 L 2 4 D30 - rv Union (N.Y.) 1 T 2 2 ot J5 - - ^ Niagara a L 3 6 J6 - - ^ Niagara a L 1 3 J12 - - ^ Air Force h T 4 4 ot J13 - - ^ Air Force h L 4 5 ot J27 - 9 Minnesota a L 1 5 F2 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 2 3 F3 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 1 2 F9 - - ^ Niagara h W 6 2 F10 - - ^ Niagara h T 1 1 ot F16 - - ^ Findlay h L 0 2 F17 - - ^ Findlay h W 6 3 F23 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a W 2 1 F24 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a T 1 1 ot M2 - 3 North Dakota h L 1 5 M3 - 3 North Dakota h L 3 6 ^ College Hockey America game ^^ four-point CHA game 1- Mariucci Classic; Minneapolis, Minn.
2009-10
Scoring Leaders Player G A P PIM PP SH GW Marty Goulet 10 8 18 65 5 1 1 • Heikki Lofman 5 12 17 14 3 0 0 Jeff McGill 6 10 16 10 2 0 0 Clay Simmons 10 4 14 30 6 0 0 Shane Kalbrener 5 7 12 4 1 0 1 Bill Methven 6 5 11 22 0 0 1 Says Phrakonkham 1 10 11 16 0 0 0 • Miika Lindholm 6 3 9 6 2 0 0 Rico Fatticci 5 4 9 22 2 1 0 Todd Knott 5 4 9 16 0 2 0 Goaltenders Player • Grady Hunt • Dannie Morgan Bob Tallarico • freshman
W L 3 19 1 2 0 5
T 3 1 0
GAA Sv Sv% 3.52 755 .902 2.68 138 .920 5.58 220 .859
2001-present Tom
Serratore 8 seasons 120-102-28 (.536) 2001-02 12-18-5 2002-03 14-14-8 2003-04 20-13-3 2004-05 23-13-1 2005-06 20-14-3 2006-07 14-14-5 2007-08 17-16-3 2008-09 20-16-1
2001-02
12-18-5 / 8-7-4 College Hockey America (2nd) Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O12 - - MSU-Mankato h W 7 6 O13 - - MSU-Mankato h L 3 5 O19 - 2 Minnesota a L 2 7 O20 - 2 Minnesota a L 1 7 O26 - - Connecticut h W 9 0 O27 - - Connecticut h W 2 0 N2 - rv Union (N.Y.) a L 6 8 N3 - rv Union (N.Y.) a T 2 2 ot N9 - - ^ Findlay a W 9 4 N10 - - ^ Findlay a L 1 3 N16 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 7 3 N17 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h L 3 6 N30 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a W 2 1 D1 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a T 2 2 ot D7 - - Minn.-Duluth a L 1 5 D8 - - Minn.-Duluth a L 2 7 D14 - 1 St. Cloud State h L 2 4 D15 - 1 St. Cloud State a L 3 11 J11 - - ^ Findlay h W 5 3 J12 - - ^ Findlay h T 2 2 ot J18 - 1 Denver a L 2 6 J19 - - ^^ Air Force a W 4 2 J25 - - Ferris State a L 0 7 J26 - - Ferris State a W 7 5 F1 - - ^ Niagara h W 7 4 F2 - - ^ Niagara h W 3 2 F8 - - ^ Air Force h W 5 1 F9 - - ^ Air Force h T 2 2 ot F14 - - ^ Niagara a L 3 4 F15 - - ^ Niagara a L 1 3 F22 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h T 4 4 ot F23 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h L 0 5 M8 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 2 5 M9 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 3 5 M15 - - Ala.-Huntsville 1 L 2 5 ^ College Hockey America game ^^ four-point CHA game 1- CHA Tournament; Niagara University, N.Y. “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player G Marty Goulet 16 • Riley Riddell 14 • Andrew Murray 15 Jeff McGill 10 Jared Hanowski 8 • Wade Chiodo 7 Clay Simmons 8 Bryce Methven 7 Mark Phenow 2 Todd Knott 7
A 23 18 15 20 18 15 11 12 12 3
P PIM PP SH GW 39 44 6 1 2 32 18 2 1 2 30 22 6 0 2 30 24 2 0 2 26 8 2 0 0 22 22 2 0 1 19 30 5 0 1 19 40 6 0 0 14 20 1 0 0 10 16 0 2 1
Goaltenders Player W L Grady Hunt 11 13 Dannie Morgan 1 5 • Toby Palmiscno 0 0 • freshman
T GAA Sv Sv% 4 3.87 768 .878 1 4.53 191 .849 0 0.00 0 --
14-14-8 / 10-6-4 College Hockey America (t-3rd) • CHA Tournament Finalist Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O18 - - Sacred Heart h T 1 1 ot O19 - - Sacred Heart h T 2 2 ot O25 - - Union College h L 3 4 ot O26 - - Union College h T 5 5 ot N1 - - Minnesota State a T 1 1 ot N2 - - Minnesota State a L 1 3 N8 - - ^ Findlay a W 2 1 N9 - - ^ Findlay a T 2 2 ot N15 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 2 0 N16 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 2 1 ot N22 - rv Clarkson a W 2 1 N23 - rv Clarkson a L 4 5 D6 - - Minn.-Duluth a W 3 2 ot D7 - - Minn.-Duluth h L 0 12 D13 - - ^ Niagara a L 2 3 D14 - - ^ Niagara a T 3 3 ot D28 - 2 North Dakota 1 L 3 4 J16 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 2 3 ot J17 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 3 4 ot J24 - - ^ Air Force h W 4 2 J25 - - ^ Air Force h W 5 3 J31 - - ^ Findlay h W 5 1 F1 - - ^ Findlay h T 2 2 ot F7 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a L 2 4 F8 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a L 1 6 F14 - - Neb.-Omaha a L 2 5 F15 - - Neb.-Omaha a L 2 3 F21 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h L 3 6 F22 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 3 2 ot F28 - - ^ Niagara h T 2 2 ot M1 - - ^ Niagara h W 6 1 M7 - - ^ Air Force a W 5 0 M8 - - ^ Air Force a W 3 0 M14 - - Findlay 2 W 4 0 M15 - - Ala.-Huntsville 2 W 2 1 ot• M16 - - Wayne St. (Mich.) 2 L 2 3 ^ College Hockey America game 1- Subway Holiday Classic; Grand Forks, N.D. 2- CHA Tournament; Kearney, Neb. • NCAA-record 15th overtime game “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player G A P PIM PP SH GW Marty Goulet 15 14 29 28 8 0 2 Andrew Murray 9 18 27 39 4 1 1 Jeff McGill 13 12 25 18 6 0 2 Riley Riddell 8 14 22 12 1 0 0 Myles Kuharski 9 12 21 22 1 0 2 Anders Olsson 3 14 17 21 2 0 0 Brendan Cook 10 6 16 14 2 1 1 Wade Chiodo 6 9 15 18 4 0 0 Peter Jonsson 2 12 14 16 1 0 0 Bryce Methven 3 9 12 40 1 0 1 Goaltenders Player Grady Hunt Dannie Morgan • Kelly Shields • freshman
W L 13 10 1 1 0 3
T GAA Sv Sv% 5 2.36 712 .916 2 2.23 99 .900 1 4.35 110 .846
2003-04
20-13-3 / 16-3-1 College Hockey America (1st) • CHA Regular-Season Champion • CHA Tournament Finalist Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O17 - - Clarkson h L 2 4 O18 - - Clarkson h T 1 1 ot O24 - - Minnesota State h L 1 3 O25 - - Minnesota State h T 2 2 ot N7 - - ^ Findlay a W 5 3 N8 - - ^ Findlay a W 3 1 N14 - 14 Minnesota-Duluth h W 3 1 N15 - 14 Minnesota-Duluth a L 2 3 N22 - - Merrimack a W 3 2 N23 - - Merrimack a L 2 3 ot N25 - - Connecticut a L 3 4 N28 - - Connecticut a W 7 2 D5 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 3 2 D6 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 5 2 D11 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 5 7 D13 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a W 5 3 J2 - - ^ Air Force h W 3 1 J3 - - ^ Air Force 1 W 5 1 J9 rv - ^ Niagara a L 3 6 J10 rv - ^ Niagara a W 3 2 J23 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a W 6 2 J24 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a W 6 1 J30 - - ^ Findlay h W 4 0 J31 - - ^ Findlay h W 5 3 F6 - 5 Minnesota a L 1 2 F7 - 5 Minnesota a L 1 5 F13 - 9 St. Cloud State a L 2 5 F14 - 9 St. Cloud State a L 2 3 F20 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville h T 3 3 ot F21 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville h W 4 2 F27 - - ^ Air Force a W 7 4 F28 - - ^ Air Force a W 9 1 M5 rv - ^ Niagara h L 1 4 M6 rv - ^ Niagara h W 5 0 M13 rv - Findlay 2 W 6 2 M14 rv - Niagara 2 L 3 4 ot ^ College Hockey America game 1- Coleraine, Minn. 2- CHA Tournament; Kearney, Neb. “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player Brendan Cook Riley Riddell •Luke Erickson Ryan Huddy John Haider Andrew Murray Wade Chiodo Peter Jonsson Myles Kuharski •Rob Sirianni
2004-05
2005-06
23-13-1 / 16-4-0 College Hockey America (1st) • CHA Regular-Season Champion • CHA Tournament Champion • NCAA Northeast Regional Semifinalist Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O22 - - Ferris St. h W 5 2 O23 - - Ferris St. h L 2 7 N5 - - Minnesota St. a L 0 4 N6 - - Minnesota St. a L 0 4 N12 - - Bentley h W 9 2 N13 - - Bentley h W 5 0 N19 - - ^ Niagara a W 5 3 N20 - - ^ Niagara a W 2 1 ot N22 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a W 2 1 N23 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a L 4 6 D3 - - Lake Superior St. a L 4 5 ot D4 - - Lake Superior St. a W 3 1 D10 - - ^ Niagara h W 8 3 D11 - - ^ Niagara h L 2 6 D17 - - Western Michigan h L 3 4 ot D18 - - Western Michigan h W 4 2 J7 - - ^ Air Force h W 4 2 J8 - - ^ Air Force h W 4 3 ot J14 - - ^ Robert Morris h W 5 1 J15 - - ^ Robert Morris h W 4 3 ot J21 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a W 3 1 J22 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 1 5 J28 - 12 North Dakota a T 3 3 ot J29 - 12 North Dakota a L 1 3 F4 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 2 0 F5 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 5 2 F11 - - ^ Robert Morris a W 2 1 ot F12 - - ^ Robert Morris a W 3 0 F18 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h L 1 3 F19 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 3 2 F25 - - Minn.-Duluth a L 1 4 F26 - - Minn.-Duluth h L 2 5 M4 - - ^ Air Force a W 4 1 M5 - - ^ Air Force a W 4 1 M12 - - Air Force 1 W 6 0 M13 - - Ala.-Huntsville 1 W 3 0 M26 rv 1 Denver $ L 3 4 ot ^ College Hockey America game 1- CHA Tournament; Grand Rapids, Minn. $- NCAA NE Regional Semifinal; Amherst, Mass. “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
G 23 13 12 6 11 6 9 3 9 8
A 16 21 20 21 12 14 10 16 9 10
P PIM PP SH GW 39 4 10 5 7 34 26 4 0 1 32 29 5 0 2 27 10 1 0 0 23 32 4 0 1 20 41 1 0 1 19 22 2 1 1 19 24 2 0 0 18 46 2 0 2 18 12 1 0 0
Goaltenders Player W Grady Hunt 12 • Layne Sedevie 6 Dannie Morgan 2 • freshman
L 9 4 0
T GAA Sv Sv% 0 2.47 482 .901 3 2.70 296 .900 0 1.18 45 .938
Division I-Era Exhibition Games
In the program’s Division I era, the first opportunity for the Bemidji State faithful to get a look at the Beavers in game action has typically come in exhibition fashion. BSU has squared off against Canadian programs 12 times since its inaugural Division I season in 1999-2000, opening a season with a foreign exhibition tilt five times. BSU has posted a .625 record in its international exhibitions, going 7-4-1 record in its seven Division I-era games. Eight of BSU’s 12 international exhibitions have come against the University of Manitoba, with BSU leading the series 5-2-1. The Beavers tied the Bisons, 3-3, in the first meeting on Oct. 14, 2000, then defeated the Bisons twice during the 2002 season - a 4-2 win in a pre-season exhibition and a 10-4 blowout win in the first round at North Dakota’s Subway Holiday Classic. Manitoba won two meetings, 5-3 in 2004 and 5-2 in 2005, before dropping the most recent three contest to the Beavers. Of BSU’s four other international exhibitions, the Beavers are 1-2 against Regina, and earned a 7-1 victory in their only meeting versus Concordia-Montreal in 2003. Bemidji State has also hosted the U.S. National Under-18 Team on five occasions. BSU dropped a 2002 exhibition, 4-3, and has won four straight (6-2, 3-2) in 2007 and (3-1, 6-3) in 2009.
20-14-3 / 12-7-1 College Hockey America (t-2nd) • CHA Tournament Champion • NCAA Midwest Regional Semifinalist Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O7 - rv Minn.-Duluth a W 3 2 O8 - rv Minn.-Duluth a W 5 1 O14 rv - Minnesota St. h W 4 3 O15 rv - Minnesota St. h W 7 3 O28 15 - ^ Air Force a L 3 4 O29 15 - ^ Air Force a W 2 1 N11 rv - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a W 4 1 N12 rv - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) a W 3 1 N18 rv rv Ferris St. a L 1 6 N19 rv rv Ferris St. a W 4 3 D2 rv - ^ Niagara h L 3 4 D3 rv - ^ Niagara h W 8 1 D9 rv - Lake Superior St. h L 1 2 D10 rv - Lake Superior St. h T 2 2 ot D16 - 9 North Dakota h L 1 2 D17 - 9 North Dakota a L 1 5 D30 - 15 Clarkson 1 T 3 3 ot D31 - - Dartmouth 1 L 3 4 ot J6 - - ^ Robert Morris a W 2 0 J7 - - ^ Robert Morris a L 1 2 J13 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h T 3 3 ot J14 - - ^ Wayne St. (Mich.) h W 6 2 J20 - - ^ Air Force h W 5 2 J21 - - ^ Air Force h W 5 3 F3 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 1 2 F4 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a L 2 4 F10 - - Western Michigan a W 6 1 F11 - - Western Michigan a L 4 5 ot F17 - - ^ Robert Morris h W 5 2 F18 - - ^ Robert Morris h W 5 2 F24 - - ^ Niagara a L 5 6 ot F25 - - ^ Niagara a L 1 5 M3 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 3 1 M4 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 5 0 M11 - - Ala.-Huntsville (3) 2 W 4 3 ot M12 - - Niagara (1) 2 W 4 2 M25 rv 2 Wisconsin $ L 0 4 ^ College Hockey America game 1- Vermont Holiday Classic; Burlington, Vt. 2- CHA Tournament; Detroit, Mich. $- NCAA MW Regional Semifinal; Green Bay, Wis. “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player G Brendan Cook 20 Andrew Murray 16 Luke Erickson 11 Rob Sirianni 13 Ryan Huddy 9 Jean-Guy Gervais 14 John Haider 4 Peter Jonsson 2 •Matt Pope 7 Myles Kuharski 5 Goaltenders Player W • Matt Climie 12 Layne Sedevie 11 • Orlando Alamano 0 • freshman
A 20 22 27 12 15 8 16 17 7 8 L 5 8 0
P PIM PP SH GW 40 30 10 3 5 38 30 6 1 2 38 42 2 0 2 25 31 7 0 1 24 10 2 0 3 22 65 3 0 4 20 56 3 0 0 19 30 2 0 2 14 28 0 0 0 13 20 1 0 0 T 1 0 0
GAA Sv Sv% 1.80 382 .916 3.08 418 .886 4.19 2 .667
Scoring Leaders Player G Luke Erickson 16 Ryan Miller 17 Rob Sirianni 16 Ryan Huddy 8 • Tyler Scofield 6 Andrew Martens 5 Jean-Guy Gervais 12 Matt Pope 7 Jake Bluhm 8 Riley Weselowski 2 Goaltenders Player Layne Sedevie Matt Climie • freshman
W 12 8
A 19 12 13 20 19 19 10 14 12 18 L 7 7
P PIM PP SH GW 35 42 8 0 2 29 31 7 2 2 29 38 7 0 2 28 12 4 0 1 25 10 1 0 1 24 47 1 1 2 22 64 1 0 1 21 44 5 0 2 20 35 0 0 0 20 50 0 1 0 T 1 2
GAA Sv Sv% 2.46 538 .918 2.70 554 .913
Exhibition Results Date Opponent 10/14/00 Manitoba 10/5/01 Regina 1/6/02 U.S. National Under-18 Team 10/4/02 Manitoba 12/27/02 Manitoba 10/10/03 Concordia-Montreal 10/24/04 Manitoba 10/1/05 Manitoba 10/20/06 Regina 10/21/06 Regina 3/2/07 U.S. National Under-18 Team 3/3/07 U.S. National Under-18 Team 11/20/07 Manitoba 10/31/08 Manitoba 11/1/08 Manitoba 2/27/09 U.S. National Under-18 Team 2/28/09 U.S. National Under-18 Team 1- Grand Forks, N.D.; 2- Thief River Falls, Minn.
2009-10
Loc Result h T 3 h L 1 h L 3 h W 4 1 W 10 h W 7 2 L 3 h L 2 h W 2 h L 2 h W 6 h W 3 h W 5 h W 7 h W 4 h W 3 h W 6
3 2 4 2 4 1 5 5 0 5 2 2 1 0 2 1 3
ot ot
77
all-time results
2002-03
All-time results
2006-07
14-14-5 / 9-6-5 College Hockey America (2nd) • CHA Tournament Semifinalist Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O13 - 7 Maine a L 1 7 O14 - 7 Maine a L 3 6 O27 - - ^ Niagara a L 2 6 O28 - - ^ Niagara a T 2 2 ot N3 - - MInnesota State a W 4 3 N4 - - Minnesota State a W 3 1 N10 - - ^ Robert Morris h L 2 3 N11 - - ^ Robert Morris h W 3 0 N17 - - ^ Niagara h T 2 2 ot N18 - - ^ Niagara h T 3 3 ot D1 - - ^ Wayne State a W 1 0 D2 - - ^ Wayne State a W 4 2 D8 - - Minn. Duluth h W 5 2 D9 - - Minn. Dultuh a W 6 5 ot D15 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 3 2 D16 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 4 2 D29 - 8 Colorado College a W 3 2 D30 - 8 Colorado College a L 3 5 J5 - - ^ Wayne State h W 3 2 J6 - - ^ Wayne State h W 7 5 J12 - - Michigan Tech a L 1 4 J13 - - Michign Tech a L 2 3 J19 - rv North Dakota h L 2 3 J20 - rv North Dakota a L 3 6 F2 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a T 5 5 ot F3 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a W 3 1 F19 - - ^ Robert Morris a L 2 4 F10 - - ^ Robert Morris a L 1 4 F16 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 4 3 F17 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h L 3 4 F23 - - ^ Wayne State a L 1 3 F24 - - ^ Wayne State a T 1 1 ot M10 - - Robert Morris 1 L 5 7 ^ College Hockey America game 1- CHA Tournament; Des Moines, Iowa “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player G A P PIM Travis Winter 12 17 29 14 Rob Sirianni 11 18 29 47 Blaine Jarvis 10 14 24 26 Tyler Scofield 7 14 21 33 • Joey Moggach 4 16 20 26 Luke Erickson 13 3 16 12 Ryan Miller 5 10 15 49 Matt Pope 5 8 13 14 Shane Holman 7 4 11 28 Cody Bostock 3 8 11 36 Goaltenders Player W L Matt Climie 11 10 Orlando Alamano 3 2 Layne Sedevie 0 2 • freshman
PP SH GW 6 2 0 3 0 2 5 1 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 8 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 2 2 0 0
T GAA Sv Sv% 5 3.03 733 .897 0 2.69 125 .912 0 9.19 37 .787
2007-08
17-16-3 / 13-4-3 College Hockey America (1st) • CHA Regular-Season Champion • CHA Tournament Finalist Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O12 - - Army h W 2 1 O13 - - Army h W 3 0 O19 - - Merrimack h L 2 3 O20 - - Merrimack h L 1 2 O26 - - St. Cloud State a L 1 2 O27 - - St. Cloud State a L 1 6 N2 - rv ^ Niagara h L 2 3 N3 - rv ^ Niagara h W 3 0 N9 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a W 2 0 N10 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a T 3 3 ot N16 - - ^ Wayne State a W 3 1 N17 - - ^ Wayne State a L 2 5 N30 - rv ^ Niagara a W 5 1 D1 - rv ^ Niagara a T 2 2 ot D7 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 4 1 D8 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville h W 2 0 D14 rv rv Minnesota State h L 3 4 D15 rv rv Minnesota State h L 0 1 J4 - rv Minnesota Duluth a L 3 5 J5 - rv Minnesota Duluth h W 2 0 J11 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a W 4 0 J12 - - ^ Ala.-Huntsville a W 7 1 J18 - 3 Colorado College a L 4 5 J19 - 4 Denver a L 2 4 J25 - - ^ Robert Morris h T 2 2 ot J26 - - ^ Robert Morris h W 4 0 F1 - - ^ Wayne State h L 2 3 F2 - - ^ Wayne State h W 4 3 ot F15 - - ^ Robert Morris a L 1 4 F16 - - ^ Robert Morris a W 7 2 F23 - 2 North Dakota a L 1 5 F24 - 2 North Dakota a L 0 1 F29 - - ^ Wayne State h W 7 5 M1 - - ^ Wayne State h W 5 3 M15 - - Wayne State 1 W 4 1 M16 - - Niagara 1 L 2 3 ^ College Hockey America game 1- CHA Tournament; Niagara Falls, N.Y. “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player G • Matt Read 9 Tyler Scofield 13 Travis Winter 9 Matt Pope 14 Blaine Jarvis 13 Cody Bostock 7 Brandon Marino 3 Matt Francis 5 Graham McManamin 3 Joey Moggach 2 Goaltenders Player W Matt Climie 14 Orlando Alamano 2 • Matt Dalton 1 • freshman
A 18 13 15 9 8 12 14 10 11 9 L 8 5 3
P PIM PP SH GW 27 37 4 1 1 26 23 5 0 1 24 22 6 0 3 23 40 5 1 2 21 18 6 0 1 19 36 4 0 4 17 18 1 0 0 15 22 0 0 2 14 48 1 0 0 11 22 1 0 0 T 3 0 0
GAA 2.16 1.99 3.09
Sv Sv% 580 .913 170 .929 70 .854
2007-08
20-16-1 / 12-5-1 College Hockey America (1st) • CHA Regular-Season Champion • CHA Tournament Champion • Midwest Regional Champion • Frozen Four Head Coach: Tom Serratore date rank opponent loc result O10 - rv Minnesota State a L 2 5 O11 - rv Minnesota State a L 2 4 O17 - rv Air Force a L 2 6 O18 - rv Air Force a L 0 6 O24 - rv St. Cloud State h W 4 2 O25 - rv St. Cloud State h L 3 5 N7 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville a L 2 4 N8 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville a W 2 1 ot N21 - - ^Niagara a L 1 3 N22 - - ^Niagara a W 3 1 N28 - - Michigan Tech h W 3 0 N29 - - Michigan Tech h W 2 1 D5 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville h W 3 1 D6 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville h W 4 2 D28 - - U Mass 1 W 4 2 D29 - rv Dartmouth 1 L 2 4 J2 - rv North Dakota h L 3 4 J3 - rv North Dakota a L 3 4 ot J16 - - Minnesota Duluth a L 2 3 J17 - - Minnesota Duluth a L 2 4 J23 - - ^Niagara h L 3 4 J24 - - ^Niagara h W 3 1 J30 - - ^Robert Morris a W 5 3 J31 - - ^Robert Morris a W 5 1 F6 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville h W 2 0 F7 - - ^Ala.-Huntsville h W 4 2 F14 - - ^Robert Morris a L 0 3 F15 - - ^Robert Morris a T 3 3 ot F19 - - ^Niagara a W 3 1 F20 - - ^Niagara a W 4 1 M6 - - ^Robert Morris h L 2 3 M7 - - ^Robert Morris h W 6 4 M13 - - Ala.-Huntsville 2 W 4 1 M14 - - Robert Morris 2 W 3 2 ot M28 - 2 Notre Dame 3 W 5 1 M29 - 9 Cornell 3 W 4 1 A9 12 4 Miami (Ohio) 4 L 1 4 ^ College Hockey America game 1-Ledyard National Bank Classic; Hanover, N.H. 2-CHA Tournament; Bemidji, Minn. 3-NCAA Midwest Regional; Grand Rapids, Mich. 4-Frozen Four; Washington, D.C. “rank” reflects USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Coaches Poll
Scoring Leaders Player G A P PIM PP SH GW Matt Read 15 25 40 50 2 2 2 Tyler Scofield 22 17 39 46 9 1 5 • Brad Hunt 9 23 32 24 7 0 1 Matt Francis 13 13 26 22 5 0 3 Brandon Marino 7 12 19 37 4 0 3 Cody Bostock 3 13 16 46 3 0 0 • Ben Kinne 8 7 15 14 0 1 0 • Shea Walters 4 11 15 10 1 0 1 Chris Peluso 0 13 13 34 0 0 0 Ian Lowe 2 8 10 18 1 0 0 Goaltenders Player W L Matt Dalton 19 11 Orlando Alamano 1 5 • freshman
T GAA Sv Sv% 1 2.19 794 .921 0 4.21 168 .870
2010 College Hockey America Championship Semifinals: March 12, 2010; 2 p.m. 7 p.m. (EST) Championship: March 13, 2010; 7 p.m. Dwyer Arena; Lewiston, N.Y.
Tournament Site Location: Arena Address Constructed Capacity Tickets
Lewiston, N.Y. Dwyer Arena University Dr. Lewiston, NY 14106 1996 2,100 (716) 286-8622
Tournament History Year Championship Game (seed) 2000 (1) Niagara 3, (2) Ala.-Huntsville 2 2001 (3) Wayne State (Mich.) 4, (1) Ala.-Huntsville 1 2002 (1) Wayne State (Mich.) 5, (3) Ala.-Huntsville 4 (OT) 2003 (3) Wayne State (Mich.) 3, (4) Bemidji State 2 2004 (2) Niagara 4, (1) Bemidji State 3 (OT) 2005 (1) Bemidji State 3, (2) Ala.-Huntsville 0 2006 (2) Bemidji State 4, (1) Niagara 2 2007 (5) Ala.-Huntsville 5, (3) Robert Morris 4 (OT) 2008 (1) Bemidji State 2, (2) Niagara 3 2009 (1) Bemidji State 3, (3) Robert Morris 2 (OT) Tournament Most Valuable Player Year MVP 2000 Kyle McMartin; Sr, F; Niagara 2001 David Guererra; So, G; Wayne State (Mich.) 2002 David Guererra; Jr, G; Wayne State (Mich.) 2003 Joe Tallari; Jr, F; Niagara 2004 co-Barret Ehgoetz; Jr, F; Niagara co-Jared Ross; Jr, F; Ala.-Huntsville 2005 Andrew Murray; Sr, F; Bemidji State 2006 Jean-Guy Gervais; Sr, F; Bemidji State 2007 David Nimmo; Sr, F; Ala-Huntsville 2008 Ted Cook; Sr., F, Niagara 2009 Matt Read; So., F; Bemidji State
2010 NCAA Men’s Regionals East Regional: March 26-27, 2010 Times Union Center; Albany, N.Y. West Regional: March 26-27, 2010 Xcel Energy Center; St. Paul, Minn. Northeast Regional: March 27-28, 2010 DCU Center; Worcester, Mass. Midwest Regional: March 27-28, 2010 Allen County War Memorial Coliseum; Fort Wayne, Ind.
2010 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four Semifinals: April 8, 2010; TBA Championship: April 10, 2010; TBA Ford Field; Detroit, Mich.
78
2009-10
4 / 1971 NAIA National Champions
7 / 1980 NAIA National Champions
ST. PAUL, Minn. - The 1967-68 Beaver hockey team posted a 16-8-0 record en route to the first ever NAIA national tournament crown, defeating Boston State in the semifinal and Lake Superior State in the finals to win the title... By scoring the gamewinning goal in the extra period vs. the Lakers, Terry Bergstrom would start a four-year championship run for the Beavers... Terry Burns and Ric Anderson captained the 1967-68 team while Bryan Grand, the tournament’s Most Valuable Player, along with Burns, Barry Dillon, Jim McElmury and Terry Bergstrom garnered NAIA AllTournament honors... Gustavus Adolphus downed Boston, 7-6, in the consolation game.
BEMIDJI, Minn. - Bemidji State claimed its fourth NAIA national title before its home fans at the recently dedicated John S. Glas Fieldhouse with a 6-2 victory over Lakehead University... The Beavers cruised to a 12-1 semifinal win over Augsburg while Lakehead slipped past Gustavus Adolphus 6-5 to reach the finals... Bruce Falk, Dennis Lemieux, Blane Comstock, and U.S. Olympians Charlie Brown and Jim McElmury earned AllTournament honors... Augsburg defeated Gustavus Adolphus 8-6 in the third-place game.
ST. PAUL, Minn. - Bemidji State won its seventh and final NAIA national title with a 4-3 victory over MichiganDearborn in the first meeting between the schools... The Beavers beat St. Olaf and Wis.-Superior to reach the title game while Mich.-Dearborn defeated Augsburg and Wis.River Falls... Jim Scanlan, Irwin Frizzell, Gary Krawchuck and Dale Baldwin were named to the All-Tournament Team... Wis.Superior downed Wis.-River Falls for third place.
Mar. 8 Mar. 8 Mar. 9
semis semis finals
BSU 11, Boston State 0 Lake Superior St. 7, Gustavus 2 BSU 5, Lk. Superior St. 4 (OT)
2 / 1969 NAIA National Champions SAULT ST. MARIE, Mich. - Defending NAIA National Champion Bemidji State joined three of the other 23 NAIA hockey teams for the second annual NAIA hockey championship... In the semifinal games, Bemidji State wiped out Salem State to set up a rematch with Lake Superior State, matching programs which were slowly emerging as college hockey dynasties... Blane Comstock, Austin Wallestad, Terry Burns, and NHL draft picks Charlie Brown and Jim McElmury earned All-Tournament honors... Bryan Grand was named MVP... Gustavus Adolphus downed Salem State 6-3 in the consolation game. Mar. 7 Mar. 7 Mar. 8
semis semis finals
BSU 14, Salem State 2 Lake Superior St. 6, Gustavus 2 BSU 6, Lake Superior St. 2
3 / 1970 NAIA National Champions SAULT ST. MARIE, Mich. - Bemidji State and Lake Superior State waged a third consecutive battle for the NAIA title, and again the Beavers outlasted the Lakers to claim a third consecutive national crown... BSU skated past Gustavus Adolphus and Lake Superior crushed Alaska Methodist in the semifinals... Blane Comstock earned MVP accolades and Bryan Grand, Jim McElmury, Charlie Brown and Dennis Lemieux were named All-Tournament. Gustavus took third with an 11-3 win over Alaska. Mar. 6 Mar. 6 Mar. 7
semis semis finals
Lk. Superior St. 22, Ak Methodist 3 BSU 5, Gustavus 2 BSU 7, Lake Superior St. 4
Mar. 5 Mar. 5 Mar. 6
semis semis finals
BSU 12, Augsburg 1 Lakehead 6, Gustavus 5 BSU 6, Lakehead 2
5 / 1973 NAIA National Champions THUNDER BAY, Ontario - Bemidji State embarked on an international quest for its fifth NAIA national championship, this time defeating Lakehead 3-2 in overtime... The Beavers upended Boston State 8-1 and Gustavus Adolphus 6-3 to reach the finals... AllTournament Team unavailable... Boston State beat Augsburg, 4-3, in the fifth-place game and Lake Superior State took third place with an 11-3 win over Gustavus Adolphus.
Mar. 1 Mar. 1 Mar. 2 Mar. 2 Mar. 3
quarters quarters semis semis finals
BSU 8, Boston 1 Lakehead 8, Augsburg 1 BSU 6, Gustavus 3 Lakehead 8, Lk. Superior St. 4 BSU 3, Lakehead 2 (OT)
6 / 1979 NAIA National Champions ST. PAUL, Minn. - After three consecutive national semifinal appearances without a title, Bemidji State emerged as NAIA Champion, capturing the school’s sixth crown with a 5-1 victory over Concordia-Moorhead... The Beavers polished off St. Francis (Maine), 17-1, and WisconsinRiver Falls, 7-5, to reach the title game... Rod Heisler was named MVP, while Mike Gibbons, Pat Kinney and John Murphy earned All-Tournament Team honors... St. Scholastica captured third with a 4-2 win over River Falls. Feb. 23 Feb. 23 Feb. 23 Feb. 23 Feb. 24 Feb. 24 Feb. 25
quarters quarters quarters quarters semis semis finals
BSU 17, St. Francis (Maine) 1 St. Scholastica 6, UW-Superior 4 UW-River Falls 3, Gustavus 2 (OT) Concordia (M’head) 5, Augsburg 3 Concordia 6, St. Scholastica 3 BSU 7, UW-River Falls 5 BSU 5, Concordia 1
2009-10
Feb. 29 Feb. 29 Feb. 29 Feb. 29 Mar. 1 Mar. 1 Mar. 2
quarters quarters quarters quarters semis semis finals
BSU 5, St. Olaf 2 UW-Superior 13, St. Thomas 8 UW-River Falls 5, C’cdia (M’head) 4 Mich.-Dearborn 6, Augsburg 3 BSU 8, UW-Superior 3 Mich-Dearborn 5, UW-River Falls 4 BSU 4, Mich.-Dearborn 3
8 / 1984 Div. II National Champs BEMIDJI, Minn. - Bemidji State won its first NCAA Division II national title in style by posting college hockey’s finest unbeaten record at 31-0 after a sweep of Merrimack... The Beavers defeated AlaskaFairbanks in a two-game total series first round... Joel Otto, Drey Bradley, Eric Gager, Galen Nagle and Dave Jerome earned All-Tournament honors... Otto, the 1984 NCAA II Hobey Baker winner, joined Drey Bradley at the NCHA All-Star Game the week following the title series. Mar. 10 Mar. 10 Mar. 11 Mar. 11 Mar. 17 Mar. 18
semis semis semis semis finals finals
BSU 9, Ak-Fairbanks 6 Merrimack (N.Y.) 4, New Hampshire 3 BSU 4, Ak.-Fairbanks 1 Merrimack 5, New Hampshire Coll.4 BSU 6, Merrimack 3 BSU 8, Merrimack 1
9 / 1986 Div. III National Champs BEMIDJI, Minn. - Bemidji State captured its only NCAA Division III national title with a victory over Plattsburgh State... The Beavers picked up a first-round playoff win over Elmira in a best-of-three and earned an overtime victory in the semifinals over Rochester Institute of Technology (N.Y.) as BSU scored a lastsecond goal to force overtime... Plattsburgh State defeated Babson and Mankato State to advance... Mike Alexander, Bucky Lescarbeau, Todd Lescarbeau and Jim Martin earned All-Tournament honors. Mar. 14 Mar. 14 Mar. 14 Mar. 14 Mar. 15 Mar. 15 Mar. 15 Mar. 15 Mar. 21 Mar. 21 Mar. 22
quarters quarters quarters quarters quarters quarters quarters quarters semis semis finals
Mankato St. 6, St. Thomas 5 Plattsburgh St. 7, Babson 5 BSU 4, Elmira 2 RIT 4, Union 1 Mankato St. 1 (2-0), St. Thomas 6 Plattsburg St. 5 (3-1), Babson 8 BSU 3 (3-0), Elmira 5 RIT 8, Union 7 Plattsburgh St. 7, Mankato St. 5 BSU 5, RIT 4 (OT) BSU 8, Plattsburgh St. 5
79
national playoff history
1 / 1968 NAIA National Champions
national playoff history
10 / 1992-93 Division II National Champions
12 / 1994-95 Division II National Champions
BEMIDJI, Minn. - Bemidji State welcomed the NCAA Division II championship back with a title series victory over Mercyhurst at John S. Glas Fieldhouse... The NCAA had discontinued the Division II event from 1985 to 1992, but the Beavers, who won the last NCAA II national crown in 1984, returned to championship form for the 1993 series... It was the first meeting between BSU and Mercyhurst.
ERIE, Pa. - Bemidji State took to the road for its 12th national championship, and third consecutive Division II title, edging Mercyhurst 5-4 in game two of the title series after a 6-2 win the previous night in Erie, Pa... The Lakers entered the championship with a perfect home record at 13-0 and a 23-1-2 record overall, but Bemidji State rallied to take the title on the Lakers’ home ice.
Mar. 19 Mar. 20
finals finals
BSU 10, Mercyhurst 6 BSU 5, Mercyhurst 0
Mar. 17 Mar. 18
finals finals
BSU 6, Mercyhurst 2 BSU 5, Mercyhurst 4
11 / 1993-94 Division II National Champions
13 / 1996-97 Division II National Champions
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - Bemidji State won its eleventh national title after shocking Alabama-Huntsville on its home ice with a comeback victory in the first meeting between the schools... The Chargers, who entered the series ranked No. 1 in the NCAA Division II poll, took the first game 5-3, but the Beavers battled back to take game two by a 2-1 count, followed by a sudden death mini-game victory to secure the title.
BEMIDJI, Minn. - Rivals Bemidji State and Ala.-Huntsville met for the third time in the title series. The Beavers completed a sweep to give BSU its 13th national title and fourth in the ‘90s...The BSU-Ala.-Huntsville series during their Division II rivalry ended at 3-3, including a meeting in the 1998 finals won by the Chargers.
Mar. 11 Mar. 12
finals finals
Ala.-Huntsville 5, BSU 3 BSU 2 (2-1), Ala.-Huntsville 1 (OT)
Mar. 14 Mar. 15
finals finals
BSU 3, Ala.-Huntsville 2 BSU 4, Ala.-Huntsville 2
Non-Championship Playoff History 1974 NAIA Championship (2nd) Bemidji, Minn. Quarterfinals Semifinals Third Place Championship
Gustavus Adolphus 10, Wis.-Superior 2 Lake Superior St. 7, Concordia (Moorhead) 1 Lake Superior St., St. Thomas (Minn.) 2 Bemidji St. 4, Gustavus Adolphus 2 Gustavus Adolphus 6, St. Thomas 5 Lake Superior St. 4, Bemidji St. 1
1976 NAIA Championship (4th) Superior, Wis. Quarterfinals Semifinals Third Place Championship
Gustavus Adolphus 22, Portland-Gorham (Maine) 1 St. Scholastica (Minn.) 5, Augsburg 3 Bemidji St. 4, Wis.-Stout 2 Wis.-Superior 10, Wis.-River Falls 3 St. Scholastica 6, Gustavus Adolphus 5 (ot) Wis.-Superior 4, Bemidji St. 3 Gustavus Adolphus 5, Bemidji St. 4 Wis.-Superior 8, St. Scholastica 5
1977 NAIA Championship (3rd) Superior, Wis. Quarterfinals Semifinals Third Place Championship
Gustavus Adolphus (Minn.) 10, Ferris St. (Mich.) 3 Augsburg (Minn.) 4, Wis.-Superior 3 (ot) St. Scholastica (Minn.) 6, Wis.-River Falls 4 Bemidji St. 11, St. Francis (Maine) 0 St. Scholastica 4, Bemidji St. 2 Gustavus Adolphus 5, Augsburg 2 Bemidji St. 5, Augsburg 2 St. Scholastica 7, Gustavus Adolphus 2
1978 NAIA Championship (2nd) St. Paul, Minn. Quarterfinals Semifinals Third Place Championship
Bemidji St. 16, St. Francis (Maine) 2 Augsburg 6, Ferris St. (Mich.) 4 Wis.-River Falls 3, St. Scholastica 2 St. Thomas (Minn.) 6, Gustavus Adolphus 5 (ot) Augsburg 10, Wis.-River Falls 2 Bemidji St. 7, St. Thomas 1 St. Thomas 7, Wis.-River Falls 6 Augsburg 4, Bemidji St. 3
1981 NAIA Championship (3rd) River Falls, Wis. Quarterfinals Wis.-Superior 7, St. Thomas (Minn.) 6 Bemidji St. 5, St. Mary’s (Minn.) 1 Augsburg 9, Wis.-River Falls 2 Mich.-Dearborn 6, St. Olaf (Minn.) 4 Semifinals Wis.-Superior 6, Bemidji St. 4 Augsburg 7, Mich.-Dearborn 4 Third Place Bemidji St. 11, Mich.-Dearborn 2 Championship Augsburg 8, Wis.-Superior 3
80
1982 NAIA Championship (2nd) Superior, Wis. Quarterfinals Semifinals Third Place Championship
Wis.-River Falls 5, Bethel (Minn.) 4 Bemidji St. 6, Hamline (Minn.) 2 Mich.-Dearborn 11, Wis.-Superior 7 Augsburg 7, Wis.-Eau Claire 6 Bemidji St. 7, Wis.-River Falls 0 Augsburg 5, Mich.-Dearborn 4 Mich.-Dearborn 4, Wis.-River Falls 3 Augsburg 6, Bemidji St. 3
1983 NCAA Div. II Championship (2nd) Lowell, Mass. First Round (two-game total series at campus sites) Babson def. Norwich (VT) 3-1, 3-1 Mass.-Lowell def. Oswego St. (N.Y.) 10-2, 5-3 Bemidji St. def. Gustavus Adolphus 6-3, 2-3 RIT (N.Y.) def. Mankato St. (Minn.) 6-1, 3-6 Semifinals Bemidji St. 3, Babson 1 RIT (N.Y.) 4, Mass.-Lowell 3 Third Place Mass.-Lowell 5, Babson 3 Championship RIT (N.Y.) 4, Bemidji St. 2
1985 NCAA Div. III Championship (2nd)
Schenectady, N.Y. First Round (two-game series, campus sites) Union (N.Y.) def. Babson (Mass.) 5-1, 1-3 RIT (N.Y.) def. St. Thomas (Minn.) 5-4, 5-2 Plattsburgh St. (N.Y.) def. Salem St. (Mass.) 6-1, 4-2 Bemidji St. def. Mankato St. 2-4, 9-2 Semifinals RIT 3, Union 2 Bemidji St. 8, Plattsburgh St. 7 (3ot) Third Place Union 9, Plattsburgh St. 6 Championship RIT 5, Bemidji St. 1
1987 NCAA Div. III Championship (3rd)
Plattsburgh, N.Y. First Round (best of three at campus sites) Plattsburgh St. (N.Y.) def. Norwich (VT) 6-2, 3-4, 2-1 Bemidji St. def. Concordia (Minn.) 3-1, 8-6 Oswego St. (N.Y.) def. Babson (Mass.) 3-2, 1-2, 1-0 St. Cloud St. def. Salem St. (Mass.) 4-8, 3-2, 2-1 Semifinals Plattsburgh St. 7, Bemidji St. 4 Oswego St. 5, St. Cloud St. 2 Third Place St. Cloud St. 6, Bemidji St. 4 Championship Plattsburgh St. 8, Oswego St. 3
1988 NCAA Div. III Championship (semis) Elmira, N.Y. First Round (best of three at campus sites) Elmira (N.Y.) def. Oswego St. (N.Y.) 6-3 Elmira (N.Y.) def. Oswego St. (N.Y.) 10-2 Babson (Mass.) def. Plattsburgh St. (N.Y.) 5-3 Plattsburgh St. (N.Y.) def. Babson (Mass.) 3-2 Babson (Mass.) def. Plattsburgh St. (N.Y.) 1-0 Wis.-River Falls def. Wis.-Stevens Point 6-5 Wis.-River Falls def. Wis.-Stevens Point 9-5 Bemidji St. def. St. Thomas (Minn.) 5-1 Bemidji St. def. St. Thomas (Minn.) 3-1 Semifinals (best of three) Babson def. Elmira 4-3 Elmira def. Babson 9-1 Elmira def. Babson 2-1 Wis.-River Falls def. Bemidji St. 6-4 Wis.-River Falls def. Bemidji St. 5-3 Championship Wis.-River Falls def. Elmira 7-1 Elmira def. Wis.-River Falls 5-3 Wis.-River Falls def. Elmira 3-0
1989 NCAA Div. III Championship (semis) Rochester, N.Y. First Round (best of three at campus sites) Oswego St. (N.Y.) def. RIT (N.Y.) 7-5 RIT (N.Y.) def. Oswego St. (N.Y.) 4-2 RIT (N.Y.) def. Oswego St. (N.Y.) 5-1 Babson (Mass.) tied Union (N.Y.) 1-1 Babson (Mass.) def. Union (N.Y.) 3-2 Wis.-Stevens Point def. Wis.-Eau Claire 5-2 Wis.-Stevens Point def. Wis.-Eau Claire 5-3 Bemidji St. def. St. Mary’s (Minn.) 5-4 Bemidji St. def. St. Mary’s (Minn.) 7-2 Semifinals (best of three) RIT def. Babson 6-2 RIT def. Babson 7-5 Wis.-Stevens Point def. Bemidji St. 11-0 Wis.-Stevens Point def. Bemidji St. 6-3 Championship Wis.-Stevens Point tied RIT (N.Y.) 3-3 Wis.-Stevens Point def. RIT (N.Y.) 3-2
1996 NCAA Div. II Championship (2nd) Huntsville, Ala. Championship Ala.-Huntsville def. Bemidji St. 7-1 Ala.-Huntsville def. Bemidji St. 3-0
1998 NCAA Div. II Championship (2nd) Huntsville, Ala. Championship Ala.-Huntsville def. Bemidji St. 6-2 Ala.-Huntsville def. Bemidji St. 5-2
2009-10
Scoring Summary
#1 Denver 4, Bemidji State 3 (OT) AMHERST, Mass. - Bemidji State nearly became the first No. 4 seed in an NCAA Tournament regional to topple the region’s No. 1 seed in the first round, falling to eventual national champion Denver, 4-3 in overtime. Kevin Ulanski scored the gamewinner for the Pioneers 2:36 into the extra period. Brett Skinner fired a puck on goal, and it deflected off of Ulanski’s leg and past BSU goaltender Matt Climie to propel the Pioneers into the regional final. Bemidji State came out strong, and despite being out-shot 18-6, held two one-goal leads in the first period. Brendan Cook became the first 40-point scorer in BSU’s Division I era and drew the Beavers even just 2:17 into the third period. The goal was his 10th power-play goal of the season, tying his own BSU Division I-era single-season record. Climie saved a career-high 45 shots for BSU. He set a career high for saves in a period with 16 in the first, then turned aside 14 shots in the second, 11 in the third and four in overtime. His 45 saves tied BSU’s single-game season high, but he saw a streak of 15 consecutive appearances allowing three goals or less come to an end. He took the loss and ends his freshman season at 12-5-1. NOTES: No. 1 seeds remained undefeated in the NCAA Tournament since the field expanded to 16 teams in 2003... BSU falls to 0-1 all-time in the NCAA Tournament... CHA programs fall to 1-4 all-time in the NCAA Tournament... BSU and Denver played the 61st overtime game in NCAA Tournament history... Shane Holman scored BSU’s first NCAA Tournament goal at 1:40 of the first period... John Haider’s assist on Holman’s goal gives him an eight-game post-season scoring streak (seven games in the CHA Tournament and one game in the NCAA Tournament)... Denver’s goal at 5:35 of the first period snapped Matt Climie’s streak of consecutive scoreless minutes in goal at 177:41.
Bemidji State #1 Denver
1 2 2
2 0 1
3 1 0
OT 0 1
-
F 3 4
1st Period: 1:40 BSU Shane Holman (2) (John Haider/16) 5:35 DU Andrew Thomas (2) (Gabe Gauthier/27, Kevin Ulanksi/18) 11:14 BSU Jean-Guy Gervais (14) (unassisted) 12:18 DU Tom May (2) (Matt Laatsch/10, Ryan Dingle/12) Penalties: 6:39 BSU Nathan Schwartzbauer (2-Tripping; DU 0x1); 8:45 BSU Luke Erickson (2-Tripping; DU 0x2). 2nd Period: 1:02 DU Kevin Ulanksi (10) (Gabe Gauthier/28, Jeff Drummond/19) Penalties: 1:31 DU J.D. Corbin (2-Ob.-Hooking; BSU 0x1); 4:30 BSU Niko Suoraniemi (2-Ob.-Holding); 4:30 DU Gabe Gauthier (2-Diving); 7:59 BSU Blaine Jarvis (2-Ob.-Hooking; DU 0x3); 9:02 DU J.D. Corbin (2-Interference; BSU 0x2); 17:12 DU Brett Skinner (2-Holding; BSU 0x3). 3rd Period: 2:17 Brendan Cook (20) (Peter Jonsson/17) PPG Penalties: 1:35 DU Jeff Drummond (2-Check from Behind; BSU 1x4); 5:05 BSU David Deterding (2-Holding the Stick; DU 0x4); 11:56 BSU Andrew Martens (2-Ob.Interference; DU 0x5); 14:52 DU J.D. Corbin (2-Interference; BSU 1x5). Overtime: 3:26 GW-DU Kevin Ulanski (11) (Brett Skinner/31) Penalties: none. Shots on Goal: BSU (6-15-3-1) = 25; DU (18-15-11-5) = 49. Time outs: none Penalties: BSU (2-4, 2-4, 2-4, 0-0) = 6-12; DU (0-0, 4-8, 2-4, 0-0) = 6-12. Power Plays: BSU (0-0, 0-3, 1-2, 0-0) = 1-5; DU (0-2, 0-1, 0-2, 0-0) = 0-5. Goalies: BSU Matt Climie (L, 12-5-1; 63:26; 16-14-11-4=45 saves; 4 GA) DU Glenn Fisher (W, 14-5-1; 63:26; 4-15-2-1=22 saves; 3 GA).
Bemidji State’s 2005 NCAA Regional Semifinalists
Front (L to R): Lou Garritan; Myles Kuharski; Jean-Guy Gervais; ass’t coach Ted Belisle; head coach Tom Serratore; Andrew Murray; ass’t coach Bert Gilling; graduate ass’t coach Scott Spencer; Brendan Cook; John Haider; Peter Jonsson Middle (L to R): Matt Climie; Garrett Roth; Rob Sirianni; Chris Nathe; Ryan Miller; Carl Buchberger; Phil Ronnebaum; Bill Crews; Ryan Huddy; Shane Holman; Luke Erickson; Orlando Alamano; Layne Sedevie Back (L to R): Brendan McIntyre; Blaine Jarvis; David Deterding; Andrew Martens; Nathan Schwartzbauer; Matt Pope; Jake Bluhm; Riley Weselowski; Nikko Suoraniem; Mike Hendricks
2009-10
81
2005 NCAA Tournament
NCAA Tournament Northeast Regional
2006 ncaa tournament
NCAA Tournament Midwest Regional
Scoring Summary
#2 Wisconsin 4, Bemidji State 0 GREEN BAY, Wis. - For the second consecutive season, Bemidji State was knocked out of the NCAA Tournament by the eventual national champion as Wisconsin’s Joe Pavelski recorded a hat trick to help propel the Badgers to a 4-0 victory in the semifinals of the 2006 NCAA Tournament Midwest Regional. The Beavers had a five-minute power play following a major penalty and subsequent game misconduct for checking from behind to Wisconsin forward Ryan MacMurchy at 11:13 of the first. BSU did not garner a shot, and the Badgers successfully killed the penalty when Jean-Guy Gervais was called for tripping at 15:31. The major expired at 16:13, and with six seconds remaining in the ensuing power play Wisconsin forward Joe Pavelski scored his 21st goal of the season to give the Badgers a 1-0 lead. The Badgers pushed their lead to 2-0 just 26 seconds into the second period. Pavelski won a draw with Gervais at the right dot, picked up the puck and beat BSU goaltender Layne Sedevie, unassisted, for his second marker of the night. Wisconsin extended its lead to 3-0 in the final minutes of the second. Adam Burish picked up a loose puck behind the goal line and fed linemate Jake Dowell below the left circle, and Dowell slid a shot between Sedevie’s skates. The assist was the second of the night for Burish, and the two-goal outburst capped a dominant period for the Badgers, who out-shot BSU 23-4 in the frame. The 3-0 lead for Wisconsin held until late in the third period, until Pavelski completed his hat trick at 6:39 of the third on a power-play opportunity to wrap up the game’s scoring. Gervais picked up his second penalty of the night for high sticking-contact to the head at 5:05, and Pavelski’s third marker came 1:33 later. The 4-0 shutout snapped BSU’s Division I-era record streak of 69 consecutive games with a goal scored dating back to Nov. 12, 2004. The shutout is also just the third in NCAA Tournament play for BSU.
Bemidji State #2 Wisconsin
1 0 1
2 0 2
3 0 1
-
F 0 4
1st Period: 17:07 PPG UW #8 Joe Pavelski (21) (#24 Andrew Joudrey/9, #16 Adam Burish/20). Penalties: 4:02 BSU #14 Tyler Scofield (2-Tripping) UW 0x1; 11:13 UW #19 Ryan MacMurchy (5-Checking from Behind; served by #22 Ben Street) BSU 0x1; 11:13 UW #19 Ryan MacMurchy (10-Game Misconduct); 15:31 BSU #28 Jean-Guy Gervais (2-Obstruction-Interference) UW 1x2. 2nd Period: 0:26 UW #8 Joe Pavelski (22) (unassisted); 17:30 UW #11 Jake Dowell (5) (#16 Adam Burish/21); Penalties: 8:50 BSU #25 David Deterding (2-High Sticking/Contact to the Head) UW 1x3; 10:18 UW #5 Jeff Likens (2-Tripping) BSU 0x2; 13:05 UW #27 Ross Carlson (2-Slashing) BSU 0x3; 19:23 BSU #27 Ryan Miller (2-High Sticking/Contact to the Head) UW 1x4; 3rd Period: 6:38 UW #8 Joe Pavelski (23) (#14 Tom Gilbert/19). Penalties: 0:30 BSU #2 Nathan Schwartzbauer (2-Obstruction-Hooking) UW 1x5; 3:56 UW #6 Josh Engel (2-High Sticking/Contact to the Head) BSU 0x4; 5:05 BSU #28 Jean-Guy Gervais (2-High Sticking/Contact to the Head) UW 2x6; 7:49 BSU #25 David Deterding (2-Holding) UW 2x7; 16:38 BSU #1 Layne Sedevie (2-High Sticking/Contact to the Head) UW 2x8. Shots on Goal BSU (2-4-9) = 15; UW (9-23-13) = 45. Time outs: none. Penalties: BSU (2-4 / 2-4 / 4-8) = 8-16; UW (2-15 / 2-4 / 1-2) = 5-21. Power Plays: BSU (0x1 / 0x2 / 0x1) = 0x4; UW (1x2 / 0x1 / 1x5) = 2x8. Goalies: BSU Layne Sedevie (L, 12-7-1; 60:00; 8-21-12 = 41 saves; 4 GA); UW Brian Elliott (W, 24-5-3; 60:00; 2-4-9 = 15 saves; 0 GA; SHO).
Bemidji State’s 2006 NCAA Regional Semifinalists
Front (L to R): Layne Sedevie; Rob Sirianni; Lou Garritan; Andrew Martens (A); Graduate Ass’t Coach David Short; Assistant Coach Bert Gilling; Jean-Guy Gervais (C); Head Coach Tom Serratore; Assistant Coach Ted Belisle; Luke Erickson (A); David Deterding (A); Ryan Huddy; Matt Climie. Middle (L to R): Orlando Alamano; Brendan McIntyre; Ryan Miller; Niko Suoraniemi; equipment manager Phil Ronnebaum; trainer Billy Crews; Riley Weselowski; Shane Holman; Tyler Scofield; Mark Soares. Back (L to R): Jake Bluhm; Juha Keinanen; Blaine Jarvis; Matt Pope; Anssi Tieranta; Nathan Schwartzbauer; Travis Winter; Matt Allen; Cody Bostock; Brandon Marino.
82
2009-10
Scoring Summary
Bemidji State 5, #2 Notre Dame 1 GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. -- There may not have been many who gave Bemidji State men’s ice hockey team a chance to be in the 2009 NCAA Tournament, let alone to compete with a nationallyranked Notre Dame team in the Midwest Regional semifinals, but with a convincing 5-1 victory over the Fighting Irish at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Mich, the Beavers proved that they belonged. BSU caught a bounce, struck in the game’s opening moments, and would not look back, scooting out to a 4-0 lead before the Fighting Irish were able to break the seal on the BSU net. The Beavers added an empty-net marker in the game’s final minutes to solidify their place in Sunday’s regional final. It took the underdog Beavers just 1:42 to light their half of the scoreboard. Notre Dame goaltender Jordan Pearce went behind the net, misplayed the puck and stumbled as he attempted to get back in goal. BSU’s Chris McKelvie was in the right place at the right time and pushed the puck across the goal line. The unassisted goal was his third of the season and just a sign of things to come. The Beavers extended their lead nine minutes later. Notre Dame’s Ian Cole was sent to the box for hooking at the 9:48 mark to set up BSU’s first power-play of the tournament. Matt Read found Brad Hunt on the point for a shot. Hunt’s attempt was tipped in by Tyler Scofield for the Beavers’ second goal, which would stand as the senior’s team-leading fourth game-winning goal of 2008-09. The BSU lead swelled to 3-0 at the 13:19 mark of the second period when a Notre Dame defender deflected a Ben Kinne shot past Pearce. A man short for the first 1:58 of the third, the opening moments served as a fulcrum for the Beavers. Not only did the BSU penalty-kill squash the Notre Dame power-play attempt, but Read netted his third short-handed goal of the season to put BSU up 4-0 just 49 seconds into the period. Notre Dame responded with a goal to cut the deficit to 4-1, but it was too little to late and the Beavers would go on to caim their first NCAA Division I Tournament victory.
Bemidji State #2 Notre Dame
1 2 0
2 1 0
3 2 1
F 5 1
1st Period: 1:42 BSU #23 Chris McKelvie (3) (unassisted); 11:03 PPG BSU #13 Tyler Scofield (19) (#28 Brad Hunt, #19 Matt Read). Penalties: 4:52 BSU #9 Chris Peluso (2-Slashing) UND 0x1; UND #28 Ian Cole (2-Hooking) BSU 1x1. 2nd Period: 13:19 BSU #20 Ben Kinne (8) (#15 Ryan Cramer, #11 Shea Walters). Penalties: 6:19 BSU Ryan Adams (2-Hooking) UND 0x2; 17:58 UND #17 Billy Maday (2-Interference) BSU 1x2; 19:58 BSU Cody Bostock (2-Holding) UND 0x3. 3rd Period: 0:49 SH BSU #19 Matt Read (14) (#13 Tyler Scofield, #27 Kyle Hardwick); 6:02 UND #16 Dan Kissel (6) (#27 Ryan Guentzel, #3 Brett Blatchford); 16:33 EN BSU #13 Tyler Scofield (20) (unassisted). Penalties: 7:20 BSU #17 Matt Francis (2-Holding) UND 0x4; 9:41 UND #9 Ryan Thang (2-Interference) BSU 1x3; 13:49 UND #2 Kyle Lawson (2-Hooking) BSU 1x4; 19:18 UND #5 Teddy Ruth (2-Slashing) BSU 1x5. Shots on Goal BSU (7-8-4) = 19; UND (11-11-13) = 35. Time outs: none. Penalties: BSU (1-2 / 2-4 / 1-2) = 4-8; UND (1-2 / 1-2 / 3-6) = 5-10. Power Plays: BSU (1x1 / 0x1 / 0x3) = 1x5; UND (0x1 / 0x2 / 0x1) = 0x4. Goalies: BSU Matt Dalton (W, 18-10-1; 60:00; 11-11-12 = 34 saves; 1 GA); UND Jordan Pearce (L, 30-6-3; 59:43; 5-7-2 = 14 saves; 4 GA).
Bemidji State’s 2009 NCAA Regional Champions
Front (L to R): Orlando Alamano; Tyler Scofield; Tyler Lehrke; Assistant Coach Ted Belisle; Assistant Coach Bert Gilling; Chris McKelvie (A); Travis Winter (C); Cody Bostock (A); Head Coach Tom Serratore; Graduate Assistant Coach Ryan Marvin; Matt Francis; Brandon Marino; Matt Dalton. Middle (L to R): Ian Lowe; Kyle Hardwick; Ryan Adams; Dan MacIntyre; equipment manager Justin Enfield; athletic trainer Bill Crews; student manager; Ryan Cramer; Graham McManamin; Chris Peluso; Matt Read. Back (L to R): Brad Hunt; Ben Kinne; Emil Billberg; Tyler Jundt; Matt Carlson; Jamie MacQueen; Shea Walters; Dan Bakala; Darcy Findlay; Brent Tamane.
2009-10
83
2009 NCAA Tournament
NCAA Tournament Midwest Regional
2009 ncaa tournament
NCAA Tournament Midwest Regional
Scoring Summary
Bemidji State 4, #9 Cornell 1 GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. -- With the score knotted at 1-1 after two periods, Bemidji State and No. 9 Cornell, took the ice in Van Andel Arena, with 20 minutes to decide the fourth and final spot in the 2009 Men’s Frozen Four in Washington D.C. A three goal final frame and a stout defensive performance vaulted the underdog Beavers into a 4-1 victory over the Big Red. They may not have garnered much attention heading into the 2009 Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Championship as the only qualifying team left out of the pairwise rankings, but there is no doubt the hockey world took notice. The Beavers punched their ticket to perform on college hockey’s grandest stage. Bemidji State, the first 16-seed to ever reach the Frozen Four, joined Boston University, University of Vermont, and Miami (Ohio) University as the final four teams left vying for a national championship. The Beavers escaped the first period of a back-and-forth tussle unscathed despite being whistled for three penalties. In addition to Matt Dalton’s six saves in the period, the Beavers blocked an additional seven shots to fight off the Big Red attack and skate to the break with the score locked at 0-0. Cornell broke the scoreless tie at 12:35 of the second period. Sean Collins bounced the puck over Dalton’s right shoulder after the initial shot from the point was taken by defenseman Keir Ross. BSU’s Ryan Adams evened the score less than two minutes later with a seeing-eye shot that made its way through traffic and past CU goalie (14:25). Tyler Scofield was credited with the only assist on the play as Adams logged his first goal as a Beaver. The Beavers struck first in the third, and it all began with Matt Read. He snapped off a wrister that found the twine to give the Beavers a 2-1 advantage with 15:55 to play. Junior defenseman Kyle Hardwick (Warroad, Minn.) began the play with a pass to Read and was credited for his first point of the season. Matt Francis gave the Beavers a two-goal cushion when he banked the puck off the inside of Scrivens’ right leg into the back of the net with 10:30 left in the game. The final few minutes of the win were nearly identical to the 5-1 victoty over Notre Dame the night before. In both cases, the trailing team pulled i t s n e t m i n d e r, a n d b o t h t i m e s S c o f i e l d p o s t e d a n e m p t y - n e t g o a l . His second-straight two-goal performance was capped off with the final marker of the contest, 16:37 in. Scofield put together two of the greatest games of his career in the Midwest Regional, and for his efforts he was named MVP of the tournament regional. He recorded two goals and one assist in both wins, giving him four goals and two assists for an unreal six points in the two tournament wins. He also scored both gamewinners. Read, Scofield, Dalton, Adams and Brad Hunt were named to the six-man All-Region tournament team. Joining the plethora of Beavers on the team was Cornell forward Evan Barlow.
Bemidji State #9 Cornell
1 0 0
2 1 1
3 3 0
F 4 1
1st Period: none. Penalties: 1:36 BSU #15 Ryan Cramer (2-Kneeing) COR 0x1; 4:48 COR #12 Sean Collins (2-Cross-Checking) BSU 0x1; 9:00 BSU #29 Brad Hunt (2-Holding) COR 0x2; 12:33 BSU #22 Ian Lowe (2-Checking from Behind) COR 0x3; 17:17 COR #18 Michael Kennedy (2-Tripping) BMJ 0x2. 2nd Period: 12:35 COR #12 Sean Collins (3) (#4 Keir Ross, #21Tyler Mugford); 14:25 BSU #3 Ryan Adams (1) (#13 Tyler Scofield). Penalties: 3:31 COR #5 Justin Krueger (2-Interference) BMJ 0x3; 4:31 BSU #17 Matt Francis (2-Cross-Checking) COR 0x4; 17:39 COR #24 Brendon Nash (2-Interference) BMJ 0x4; 18:46 #11 Shea Walters (2-Cross-Checking) COR 0x5. 3rd Period: 4:05 BSU #13 Tyler Scofield (21) (#19 Matt Read, #27Kyle Hardwick); 9:30 BSU #17 Matt Francis (13) (#20 Ben Kinne); 16:37 BSU EN #13 Tyler Scofield (22) (#19 Matt Read, #5 Graham McManamin). Penalties: none. Shots on Goal BSU (6-10-5) = 21; COR (5-9-12) = 26. Time outs: none. Penalties: BSU (3-6 / 2-4 / 0-0) = 5-10; COR (2-4 / 2-4 / 0-0) = 4-8. Power Plays: BSU (0x2 / 0x2 / 0x0) = 0x4; COR (0x3 / 0x2 / 0x0) = 0x5. Goalies: BSU Matt Dalton (W, 19-10-1; 60:00; 5-8-12 = 25 saves; 1 GA); COR Ben Scrivens (L, 22-10-4; 56:26; 6-9-2 = 17 saves; 3 GA).
Bemidji State’s 2009 NCAA Regional Champions
Front (L to R): Darcy Findlay; Dan Bakala; Travis Winter; Ian Lowe; Tyler Lehrke; Matt Dalton; Orlando Alamano; Tyler Scofield; Brandon Marino; Shea Walters. Middle (L to R): Head coach Tom Serratore; atheltic trainer Bill Crews; Brent Tamane; Graham McManamin; Matt Read; Ryan Cramer; Ben Kinne; Chris McKelvie; Jamie MacQueen; assistant coach Ted Belisle. Back (L to R): Equipment manager Justin Enfield; Tyler Jundt; Dan MacIntyre; Ryan Adams; Chris Peluso; Cody Bostock; Brad Hunt; Emil Billberg; Matt Francis; assistant coach Bert Gilling; Kyle Hardwick; graduate assistant coach Ryan Marvin.
84
2009-10
Scoring Summary
#12 Bemidji State 1, #4 Miami (Ohio) 4 WASHINGTON, D.C. (Verizon Center) -- The 12th-ranked Bemidji State men’s ice hockey team’s improbable run to the 2009 Frozen Four ended with a 4-1 loss in the national semifinal to No. 4 Miami (Ohio) University April 9. “We got beat by a better team tonight,” coach Tom Serratore said. “They were strong, they were quick, and they reacted well. Every facet of their game was very good, and we couldn’t get on track.” Scoring chances were hard to come by early in the game as the two teams tried to settle into a rhythm, and nobody was able to crack either team’s defenses. An evenly played first period between the Midwest Regional Champion Beavers and the West Regional Champion Redhawks saw the two teams take 12 shots each with no goals to show for their efforts. Miami came into the game sporting a 201-2 record when scoring first this season, and the white and red squad took advantage of a powerplay opportunity early in the second period when Tommy Wingels found the back of the cage. Andy Miele had the puck along the halfwall to the left of BSU goaltender Matt Dalton. He threw the puck up to the point to Matt Tomassoni, who passed it along to the top of the right faceoff circle to Wingels. He saw some daylight and rifled a slapshot past a screened Dalton on the right side to give the Redhawks the 1-0 lead. Alden Hirschfeld added a second marker 8:35 into the second when he tapped in a shot after receiving a pass from Wingels. Wingels carried the puck into the zone on the right of Dalton and went straight for the end line. Carter Camper, the team’s leading scorer, was also credited with an assist on the play. It took eight minutes for the Beavers to manage a shot attempt in the second, but after that initial shot it didn’t take long for the boys in the forest green sweaters to light the lamp. Bemidji State got a power-play opportunity after falling behind 2-0, and the top line of Matt Read, Matt Francis and Tyler Scofield hooked up one final time 9:46 into the second. Unfortunately for the Beavers, it took just a minute after the Read goal for Miami to respond. Will Weber had the puck at the top right of the zone, and he fired a shot that deflected wide off Dalton. Bill Loupee was there to clean up the rebound, and he put the puck off the side of Dalton and into the net. Two Redhawks entered the box later in the frame, but Bemidji State couldn’t capitalize the 3-1 margin would be the score heading into the third. Try as they may, the Beavers couldn’t find a way to break down the Miami defense throughout the entire third period. Time was winding down and the score was still 3-1, so Dalton was pulled for an extra attacker. The Redhawks took advantage when Wingels scored an unassisted empty net goal with 2:08 to play to complete the scoring.
#12 Bemidji State #4 Miami (Ohio)
1 0 0
2 1 3
3 0 1
F 1 4
1st Period: none. Penalties: 8:06 MIA #14 Vincent LoVerde (2-Holding the Stick) BMJ 0x1; BSU #28 Brad Hunt (2-Interference) MIA 0x1. 2nd Period: 3:56 MIA PP #9 Tommy Wingels (9) (#27 Matt Tomassoni, #17 Andy Miele); 8:35 MIA #23 Alden Hirschfeld (5) (#9 Tommy Wingels, #11 Carter Camper); 9:46 BSU PP #19 Matt Read (15) (#17 Matt Francis, #13 Tyler Scofield); 10:46 MIA #28 Bill Loupee (3) (#4 Will Weber). Penalties: 2:22 BSU #11 Ian Lowe (2-Hitting from Behind) MIA 1x2; 9:26 MIA #17 Andy Miele (2-Hooking) BSU 1x2; 12:01 MIA #9 Tommy Wingels (2-Hooking) BSU 1x3; 13:52 MIA #4 Will Weber (2-Hitting from Behind) BSU 1x4. 3rd Period: 17:52 MIA EN #9 Tommy Wingels (10) (unassisted). Penalties: none. Shots on Goal BSU (12-6-7) = 25; MIA (12-10-15) = 37. Time outs: none. Penalties: BSU (1-2 / 1-2 / 0-0) = 2-4; MIA (1-2 / 3-6 / 0-0) = 4-8. Power Plays: BSU (0x1 / 1x3 / 0x0) = 1x4; UND (0x1 / 1x1 / 0x0) = 1x2. Goalies: BSU Matt Dalton (L, 19-11-1; 59:38; 12-7-14 = 33 saves; 3 GA); MAI Cody Reichard (W, 10-7-2; 60:00; 12-5-7 = 24 saves; 1 GA).
Bemidji State’s 2009 Forzen Four Team The Bemidji State men’s ice hockey team salutes the Bemidji State section of the sold out Verizon Center in Washington D. C. April 9, 2009 following a hard-fought loss to Miami (Ohio).
2009-10
85
2009 Frozen FOur
NCAA Frozen Four
the John S. Glas Fieldhouse
True Home-Ice Advantage
Since its debut as Bemidji State’s home arena for the 1967-68 season, the Beavers have built one of college hockey’s strongest home-ice advantages at John Glas Fieldhouse. In 671 games played over 42 full seasons at the Glas, BSU has posted a remarkable 490-142-41 record on its home ice (.761). In addition, BSU has posted 55 shutouts at the Glas and all-time has out-scored its opposition by an average of nearly three goals per game. BSU went 3-3-0 in its first six games played at the Glas, but from there won 13 in a row and 32 of the next 33 games played in its new facility. The run set the tone for home-ice dominance which would become a storied part the BSU tradition. In 2003-04, BSU set two school scoring records on its home ice. BSU’s 42 goals scored at the Glas were its fewest ever, but the Beavers also set a record for fewest goals allowed at home, with opponents lighting the lamps just 28 times in 14 games. • The Beavers set a school record with five ties at the Glas in 2002-03.
The 2009-10 campaign marks the 43rd and final season of competition in Bemidji State University’s John S. Glas Fieldhouse, a storied and revered barn which has established its legacy as one of the iconic arenas in all of college hockey. The home of BSU men’s ice hockey since 1967 and BSU women’s ice hockey since 1998, “The Glas” debuted as the Fieldhouse Expansion to the BSU Physical Education Complex when the Beavers played host to the Minnesota Nationals on Nov. 17, 1967. Final plans for the $970,000 Fieldhouse expansion were laid in the mid-1960s under the direction of then-BSU President Dr. Harry Bangsberg and athletics director Dr. Vic Weber. The Minnesota legislature granted authority to built the expansion in 1965, and the fieldhouse expansion was dedicated on Feb. 10, 1968. In the 42 seasons since, the Bemidji State men’s hockey program has established one of the true home-ice advantages in all of college hockey and has been simply dominant in the building. The Beavers have posted a 490-142-41 record in 671 games played at John Glas Fieldhouse, and have had a losing home-ice record just once during the life of the arena. Eleven times in its history BSU has assembled unbeaten streaks of 10 or more games in the building, while averaging nearly 5.6 goals per game. In total, BSU has out-scored its opposition by more than 1,700 goals at “The Glas.” Bemidji State posted an 8-3-3 record on its home ice in 2004, and set a school single-season record for fewest goals allowed in a season at home by surrendering just 28 in 14 games. That season helped kick-start a four-year stretch which has seen BSU post a 47-20-8 record on its home ice with 11 shutouts, including a school-record five in 2007-08, and outscore its opposition by a combined margin of 262-169. BSU’s 10 victories at the Glas in 2005-06, coupled with a 12-win season in 2004-05, gave BSU back-to-back 10-win seasons on its home ice for the first time as a Division I program. It marked the program’s first such streak since a four-year streak of seasons with 10 or more home wins from 1996-2000. In addition to its role as BSU’s home facility for both men’s and women’s ice hockey, the Glas Fieldhouse also plays a prominent role in a variety of events for the BSU and Bemidji area communities. High school contests and area youth figure skating shows occur while the ice is in place, while when the ice is removed the building plays host to events varying from the annual Jaycees Home, Sport and Travel Show to BSU’s commencement ceremonies.
Championship Tradition Only adding to Bemidji State’s already-stellar winning tradition at John Glas Fieldhouse are the five national championships BSU has won on its home ice. The Beavers have competed for a national title six times at The Glas, bringing home an NAIA Championship in 1971 and four NCAA Division II Championships in 1984, 1986, 1993 and 1997. In 2009, BSU wrote a new chapter winning the College Hockey America tournament it hosted, clinching an automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament to kickstart its historic run to the Frozen Four. In total, BSU has posted a 17-2-0 record on its home ice in postseason play.
John S. Glas From the time of its completion until Oct. 1, 1975, BSU’s hockey facility held the name of BSU Fieldhouse. But it was renamed in honor of the retiring John S. Glas (right), the acting president of Bemidji State University at the time of the arena’s completion. Glas arrived in Bemidji in 1939 to serve as business manager under thenBSU President Charles R. Sattgast and would remain with BSU for 36 years. When Glas arrived, the campus consisted of just two buildings - Deputy and Sanford Halls - which served as the educational environment for the institution’s 340 students.
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In 1957, Glas was appointed Assistant to the President, and in 1968 he was elevated to Vice President for Administrative Affairs and later earned the title Vice President Emeritus. The decision to rename the Fieldhouse was recommended by the Men’s Physical Education Department. The Long Range Planning Committee endorsed the change, and President Dr. R.D. Decker submitted a request to the State University Board that it officially name the fieldhouse for Glas, “in recognition of his long and dedicated service to Bemidji State University.”
2009-10
• BSU’s 68 goals scored at home in 2004-05 were a Division I-era record and most for the program since 1997-98. • BSU went 10-3-2 at the Glas in 2006, giving it back-to-back 10-win seasons on its home ice for the first time since the program moved to Division I in 1999. • BSU has posted 15 shutouts at The Glas since the start of the 2001 season, matching its total in the previous 19 seasons combined (15).
All-Time Record at the Glas home SHO GF GA 1967-68 10-3-0 1 103 37 1968-69 14-1-0 4 129 35 1969-70 15-2-0 1 134 40 1970-71 11-4-0a 2 104 36 1971-72 9-5-1 1 83 64 1972-73 15-4-1 1 121 70 1973-74 16-4-0a 2 121 63 1974-75 12-7-0 0 114 84 1975-76 17-3-0 0 u136 66 1976-77 16-1-1 4 88 37 1977-78 15-2-1 2 113 62 1978-79 14-1-0 2 122 34 1979-80 14-4-0 2 108 57 1980-81 15-2-0 3 127 47 1981-82 15-2-0 2 115 38 a 1982-83 u20-1-0 2 118 47 a 1983-84 19-0-0 2 132 42 1984-85 13-2-1 0 107 46 a 1985-86 14-6-0 0 124 85 1986-87 11-4-0 2 74 48 1987-88 10-3-3 0 85 53 1988-89 11-4-1 3 91 40 1989-90 9-3-2 0 66 46 1990-91 11-1-1 1 75 34 1991-92 8-3-3 1 84 46 a 1992-93 10-3-0 1 80 49 1993-94 10-3-0 0 69 39 1994-95 8-4-2 0 63 42 1995-96 7-2-3 0 63 46 a 1996-97 13-3-1 1 102 52 1997-98 11-3-1 1 85 39 1998-99 11-4-0 0 59 42 1999-00 10-6-1 1 63 60 2000-01 3-11-2 0 51 63 2001-02 8-4-3 2 61 47 2002-03 7-3-5 0 45 44 2003-04 8-3-3 2 42 u28 2004-05 12-5-0 2 68 47 2005-06 10-3-2 1 63 32 2006-07 7-3-2 1 41 31 2007-08 10-6-1 u5 48 31 a 2008-09 11-4-0 2 49 32 TOTAL 490-142-41 55 3,726 1,981 per-game scoring 5.55 2.92 a= includes playoff games
The john s. glas fieldhouse
National Playoffs at The Glas
Bemidji State has won more than a third of its 13 national championships on its home ice, bringing home the title five times in six championship series at John Glas Fieldhouse. BSU won national titles in front of the home-crowd faithful in 1971, ‘84, ‘86, ‘93 and ‘97. BSU’s only failed opportunity to win a national title on its home ice came in 1974, when Lake Superior State celebrated an NAIA Championship victory after a 4-1 win over the host Beavers. In all, BSU is 14-2-0 with one mini-game win in national playoff action at the Glas. 1971 NAIA Championship Mar. 5 semis BSU 12, Augsburg 1 Mar. 6 finals BSU 6, Lakehead 2 • 4th NAIA title; 4th national title overall 1974 NAIA Championship Mar. 5 semis BSU 4, Gustavus 2 Mar. 6 finals Lake Superior St. 4, BSU 1 1984 NCAA Division II Championship Mar. 10 1st rd BSU 9, Ak-Fairbanks 6 Mar. 11 1st rd BSU 4, Ak-Fairbanks 1 Mar. 17 finals BSU 6, Merrimack 3 Mar. 18 finals BSU 8, Merrimack 1 • 1st Div. II title; 8th national title overall 1986 NCAA Division III Championship Mar. 14 1st rd BSU 4, Elmira 2 Mar. 15 1st rd Elmira 3, BSU 5 mini BSU 3, Elmira 0 Mar. 21 semis BSU 5, RIT 4 (OT) Mar. 22 finals BSU 8, Plattsburgh St. 5 • 1st Div. III title; 9th national title overall 1993 NCAA Division II Championship Mar. 19 finals BSU 10, Mercyhurst 6 Mar. 20 finals BSU 5, Mercyhurst 0 • 2nd Div. II title; 10th national title overall
Tradition Never Graduates Each locker in the Bemidji State locker room is adorned with a plaque listing by jersey number the players from BSU hockey’s illustrious history who have won All-America honors, represented their country on the U.S. National or U.S. Olympic hockey teams or gone on to play in the National Hockey League. The plaques serve as a constant reminder of the responsibility each member of the Bemidji State program takes upon himself each time he puts on a Beaver hockey sweater - to be mindful of the history of one of college hockey’s elite programs, and to recognize the honor of continuing the legacy established by those former players. After all, while hockey players may come and go, tradition never graduates.
1997 NCAA Division II Championship Mar. 14 finals BSU 3, UA-Huntsville 2 Mar. 15 finals BSU 4, UA-Huntsville 2 • 5th Div. II title; 13th national title overall
John S. Glas Fieldhouse Notables Constructed Capacity Rink Dimensions: Largest Crowd: National Championships Won at Fieldhouse First Goal Scored First Win Games Played at Fieldhouse Home Record Best Season at Fieldhouse Most Home-Ice Wins Fewest Home-Ice Wins Most Home-Ice Losses Most Home-Ice Ties Longest Winning Streak at Fieldhouse
1967 2,399 200x85 3,132 3/14/84, Div. II National Championship vs Merrimack Five Dennis Sauter vs Minn. Nationals (11/17/67) def. Fort Frances, 4-3 (11/28/67) 671 490-142-41 (.761) 19-0-0 (1983-84) 20, 1982-83 (20-1-0) 3, 2000-01 (3-11-2) 11, 2000-01 (3-11-2) 5, 2002-03 (7-3-5) 54; Dec. 16, 1981 - Jan. 26, 1985
John S. Glas Fieldhouse Unbeaten Streaks In addition to BSU’s dominating overall record at the John Glas Fieldhouse, BSU has put together 10 different unbeaten streaks of 10 or more games in its current home, including a collegiate-record 54-game winning streak from Dec. 16, 1981 to Jan. 26, 1985. Those streaks: Dates Record 54 Dec. 16, 1981 - Jan. 26, 1985 54-0-0 23 Jan. 14, 1969 - Feb. 22, 1970 23-0-0 23 Nov. 13, 1976 - Jan. 3, 1978 21-0-2 21 Nov. 4, 1978 - Jan. 14, 1980 21-0-0 17 Nov. 22, 1975 - Nov. 6, 1976 17-0-0 13 Jan. 8, 1997 - Dec. 13, 1998 12-0-1
2009-10
12 11 11 10
Dates Record Jan. 20, 1968 - Jan. 10, 1969 12-0-0 Feb. 3, 1973 - Dec. 1, 1973 11-0-0 Dec. 8, 1972 - Jan. 19, 1973 10-0-1 Dec. 5, 1980 - Feb. 9, 1981 10-0-0
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strength and conditioning
Strength and conditioning is a key component to the success of any athletic program and that is no different at Bemidji State University. Beaver Hockey players make a year-round commitment to physically preparing for the rigors of an NCAA Division I hockey season. The goal of BSU’s program is to increase the overall athletic performance of each student-athlete, prevent injuries and help the athlete reach their full potential. The Bemidji State men’s hockey training program is a complex mix of science, nutrition, technology and unique movements. Bemidji State assistant hockey coach Bert Gilling draws on his background in anatomy and physiology to oversee the Beaver Hockey strength and conditioning and tailor specific programs to enhance each student-athlete’s performance. The Bemidji State athletic weight room is a 35,000-square foot facility that houses nearly 20,000 pounds of free weights and several hockey specific items. Overall, the room is home to five squat racks, five Olympic lift power platforms, dumbbells ranging from five to 130 pounds, two custom-made skating slide boards, a pair of Russian plyometric boxes and numerous other free weight stations. In addition to the traditional free-weight training, Gilling has implemented several unique exercises and stations into the training program. Beaver Hockey players routinely incorporate different movements using chains, sandbags, industrial tires and plyometric boxes to give the student-athlete a well-rounded workout that will help condition their cardiovascular system, increase strength and stabilize joints. During the team’s dry land training, the BSU Hockey training program is modified to take full advantage of the incomparable setting of the university in the pines of Northern Minnesota. The team sets aside time each week for ‘Adventure Training’ where athletes work together in team building exercises as well as using the landscape to create an unparalleled training experience. Venues for these sessions have included Lake Bemidji, the City of Bemidji’s picturesque parks and even a local ski hill.
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strength and conditioning
Bemidji State Strenghth and Conditioning Clubs Category
Big Mac Trifecta
Hat Trick
Bench Press
The Deuce
8 Mile
Green Lightning
1st
Chris McKelvie
Chris McKelvie
Chris Peluso
Tyler Lehrke
Brad Hunt
Ian Lowe
2nd
Ryan Adams
Matt Read
Jake Areshenko & Darcy Findlay
Darcy Findlay
Dan Bakala
Ryan Adams
Legends
Andrew Martens 219
Ian Lowe 10:39 seconds
Bill Methven 325 lbs
Riley Weselowski 515 lbs
Chris McKelvie 50:34
Matt Pope 10.96
Coaches Choice:
2003 - Andrew Murray; 2004 - Brendan Cook; 2005 - Jake Bluhm; 2006 - Chris McKelvie; 2007 - Matt Francis; 2008 - Ian Lowe; 2009 - Shea Walters.
Elite Battalion:
Chris McKelvie
2009-10
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bemidji regional events center
On, April 3, 2009, representatives of Bemidji State University and dignitaries from the City of Bemidji and the state of Minnesota gathered on the south shore of scenic Lake Bemidji to break ground for the $90 million Bemidji Regional Events Center development project. The celebration was the culmination of years of legwork and deliberation from numerous people throughout the region. The ceremonial ground breaking not only signified the beginning of one of the greatest building projects in Bemidji history, it also signaled the future of Bemidji State University hockey. With the impending demise of College Hockey America, the conference home to the BSU men’s ice hockey program, the Bemidji Regional Events Center was the first step towards securing league membership and ensuring one of the most tradition-rich programs in collegiate hockey will live on. Scheduled to be completed in the fall of 2010, the Bemidji State men’s and women’s hockey programs will vacate the John S. Glas Fieldhouse, BSU’s home venue for the last 43 years, to
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move into the $60 million Bemidji Regional Event Center arena for the 2010-11 season. The $5 million, 20-year lease secures the Beavers’ new home through 2031. Within the 193,000 square-foot facility featuring a 4,707seat arena with 25 private luxury suites and first-class club room area, is the 32,300-square foot “Home of the Beavers.” Incorporated into this hockey-specific area are: BSU hockey coaching and support staff offices and meeting rooms, athletic training room facilities, state-of-the-art locker rooms and team rooms, and weight room and training facility for exclusive use by the Bemidji State men’s and women’s ice hockey teams. In addition to hockey, the Bemidji Regional Events Center will be the site of numerous community events and trade shows. The versatile facility has been designed to house everything from small business meetings; to large banquets or public speeches with room for visitors to browse up to 160 booths; or exciting live entertainment with a number of different seating options to host events such as martial arts, wrestling or concerts.
}in all, 12,000 cubic yards of concrete will be used in the project (site and building) }240 tons of rebar will be placed within the concrete }end-to-end, the bricks used in the project would stretch nearly 25 miles }1,600 tons or 3.2 million pounds of steel will be used in the project }the hockey arena capacity is estimated at 4,707 }the ice sheet will measure 200’ x 85’
Bemidji regional events center
Bemidji Regional Events Center Fun Facts
Construction underway
Progress on the south shore of beautiful Lake Bemidji and the Bemidji Regional Events Center since the ground breaking April 3, 2009 has been significant. After several weeks of site survey and preparation, cement work began for building footings and ground-level flooring in May. In early June, steel was delivered to the building site and the beginnings of walls became visible from the Bemidji State University campus across the lake due to the placement of the vertical beams standing in excess of 80 feet. By the beginning of September brickwork began on the exterior of the Bemidji State hockey operations area and super trusses were set in place. Each day progress on the 2010-11 home of the Beavers is evident. To check on the progress for yourself on the live Web cam or to see building plans, time lines or other Bemidji Regional Events Center information, visit http:// bemidjievents.com/.
}it would take 742,533,408 official hockey pucks to fill the arena portion of the building }25 private luxury suites will ring the arena }26 points of sale for concessions are located within the concourse }in all, 70 women’s rest room stalls will be located in the building }the two 267-foot steel super trusses that line the length of the arena each weigh 200 tons }14,000 bolts were used to assemble the steel super trusses }there will be 32,300 square feet of hockey-specific space in the facility including, state-of-the-art locker rooms, office space, training room, weight room, academic area and the arena }200-250 full and part-time jobs will be created to complete the project
photo courtesy of Monte Draper-Bemidji
2009-10
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past beaver hockey homes
Previous BSU Rinks The Bemidji State hockey team, referred to at times as the “Hard Luck Boys” in its early days, tried out several hockey rinks before finding a home in 1967 at the John S. Glas Fieldhouse.
1947-50 / Bemidji Sports Arena Not originally intended to be a hockey facility, the Bemidji Sports Arena was plagued with a number of problems from the start... Poor sight lines and seating along with an undersized ice surface were only a few of the arena’s more-obvious drawbacks... At 2:20 p.m., January 4, 1949, the arena’s roof collapsed due to structural failure... Several children were skating directly under the caved-in section of the roof, but miraculously escaped the falling beams and timbers. The team continued to use the facility for another season, but after an attempt at Lake Bemidji for a home venue, the Beaver program would cease for a nine-year period... The first BSU game played at the Bemidji Sports Arena is believed to be a 12-1 loss to the Grand Rapids Raiders on Feb. 16, 1947. BSU posted a 14-10-0 (.583) record at the Bemidji Sports Arena.
1959-60 / 17th Street Rink Located at the Bemidji High School athletic field, the Beavers found a new outdoor home rink... The new facility was underwritten with a $1,000 donation from the Beaver Union Board... However, the site would be temporary; after just two games the site was moved to the college campus... 200 fans were on hand to witness the return of Beaver hockey at Bemidji State Feb. 13, 1960 after a nineyear absence... The Beavers fell to St. Cloud State 4-2 in their return engagement... Referee Dick Kroll was injured at 3:21 of the third period, bringing a halt to the opening game of the season.... BSU posted a 1-1-0 record in two games at the 17th Street Rink.
1960-67 / College Rink Often referred to as the 19th Street Rink, the facility was located just south of the physical education building and gymnasium... The Beavers played seven seasons here before moving to the John S. Glas Fieldhouse. The first game played at the College Rink took place Jan. 5, 1961 when the Beavers defeated St. John’s 3-1 under balmy temperatures and on melting ice... The Beavers would close out their last game at the College Rink Feb. 4, 1967 with an 8-1 win over Wisconsin-Superior... Bemidji State won its final 17 games played at the College Rink before moving into the newly-constructed John S. Glas Fieldhouse for the 1967-68 season.... BSU posted a 35-8-1 (.807) record at College Rink.
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western collegiate hockey association
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Spanning six decades and marking its 58th season of men’s competition, the Western Collegiate Hockey Association continues to be defined by its history, its tradition and its continuing success. From it’s founding days in 1951 as the Midwest Collegiate Hockey League (MCHL), on to the Western Intercollegiate Hockey League (WIHL) in 1958, and finally to the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) in 1959, this prestigious athletic conference has developed and maintained a tradition of excellence that truly is second to none. No Division 1 collegiate conference – in any sport – can top the impressive list of national scale accomplishments of the WCHA and its member teams. Since 1951, teams representing the men’s WCHA have earned a record 36 NCAA (national) championships, finished as the national runner-up another 27 times, and qualified for a berth in collegiate hockey’s national championship round – the NCAA Men’s Frozen Four – in 53 of 57 seasons overall. In addition to its unmatched team successes in national championship tournament play over the years, the WCHA also owns an enviable reputation for producing outstanding coaches and student-athletes, with hundreds of its alumni tracking successes in both international and professional competition. On top of the more than 230 men’s and women’s league alumni who have Olympic experience, conference-member teams and players have also received additional international exposure on a regular basis since 1951. The men’s WCHA has hosted touring teams from the USSR, Canada, Sweden, Czechoslovakia, Latvia, Germany, Italy, Finland, Norway, Switzerland, England and France and has also sent WCHA All-Star Teams to Europe in both 1998 (Switzerland) and 2000 (Norway). Just a few of the more than 400 past and present National Hockey Leaguer’s who have roots in the men’s WCHA include the likes of legendary goaltenders Tony Esposito, Eddie Mio Glenn ‘Chico’ Resch and Mike Richter, defensemen Keith Magnuson, Lou Nanne and Curt Giles, and forwards Lou Angotti, Bill Masterton, Bill ‘Red’ Hay, Red Berenson, Glenn Anderson, Mark Johnson and Brett Hull. The current crop of WCHA stars playing in the NHL include the likes of Zach Parise, Mark Parrish, Jordan Leopold, Jason Blake, Tyler Arnason, Mark Stuart, Thomas Vanek, Andy Sutton, Bret Hedican, Matt Carle, Joe Pavelski, Jonathan Toews and Tom Gilbert. In the most recent season of 2008-09 alone, a total of 96 WCHA alums earned playing time in the NHL. In terms of national attendance a year ago, the 2009 Red Baron WCHA Final Five (men’s playoff championship) drew a total of 82,065 to the Xcel Energy Center, outdrawing the Big 10 Men’s Basketball Tournament by nearly 14,000 fans. In terms of exposure, more than 200 WCHA men’s games were televised in 2008-09, including all five games live from the 2009 Red Baron™ WCHA Final Five by Fox Sports North. All four NCAA regionals, and all three games at the 2009 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four in Denver were also televised live. In addition, This Week in the WCHA, the league’s weekly men’s radio show, marked it’s 13th season in 2008-09. A quick look at the 2009-10 campaign will show the league is involved in several showcase events. Denver’s 60th Anniver-
Bemidji State University Director of Athletics, Dr. Rick Goeb addresses the media regarding the WCHA’s announcement to accept BSU’s application for membership with legendary head coach R.H. “Bob” Peters and current BSU head coach Tom Serratore by his side.
sary weekend celebration on Oct. 9-10, the opening of the MacNaughton Cup race on Oct. 16-17, Wisconsin hosting Michigan outdoors in the Camp Randall Hockey Classic on Feb. 6, the 2010 Red Baron WCHA Final Five set for March 18-20 at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota hosting the 2010 NCAA West Regional at Xcel Energy Center on March 26-27 and the 2010 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four at Ford Field in Detroit April 8-10. Under the leadership and guidance of Commissioner Bruce M. McLeod and Associate Commissioner Sara R. Martin, June 26, 2009, the association voted to approve the membership of Bemidji State University and University of Nebraska Omaha into its men’s ice hockey conference for the 2010-11 campaign. The expansion will bring its membership to 12 teams. “I am extremely pleased to announce that the Western Collegiate Hockey Association is expanding to twelve teams,” said McLeod. “With the addition of Bemidji State University and the University of Nebraska Omaha, the WCHA solidifies and positions itself to maintain and expand upon the excellence that is the WCHA. “This is certainly a defining moment for the WCHA and we are proud to add Bemidji State and Nebraska Omaha to our already strong organization. McLeod went on to say tht he believes it was a win-win circumstance for the WCHA, its new members and collegiate hockey in general. For Bemidji State, full membership in the WCHA solidifies what already has historically been a close relationship between the Beavers and the association. Since elevating its program to NCAA Division I status in 1999, Bemidji State has played 85 non-conference games against members of the WCHA, more than any other program in the nation. In addition, Bemidji State’s historical rivalries with association members St. Cloud State and Minnesota State date back several decades to a time when all three competed in the small-college Northern Collegiate Hockey Association. Bemidji State’s men’s ice hockey program is a member of the four-team College Hockey America, where it has made its home since the league was founded in 1999-2000. College Hockey America dropped to four members for the 2008-09 season and will disband following the 2009-10 season, when Niagara University and Robert Morris University will depart for Atlantic Hockey. The Bemidji State women’s ice hockey program has been a member of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association wom-
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Coach R.H. “Bob” Peters
Year-by-Year Record Year
School
Record
1964-65 North Dakota
25-8-0
1965-66 North Dakota
17-12-1
1966-67
Bemidji State
13-5-1
1967-68
Bemidji State
16-8-0
1968-69
Bemidji State
23-2-0
1969-70
Bemidji State
24-3-0
1970-71
Bemidji State
20-7-1
1971-72
Bemidji State
13-12-1
1972-73
Bemidji State
23-6-1
1973-74
Bemidji State
20-10-1
1974-75
Bemidji State
13-15-0
1975-76
Bemidji State
22-9-0
1976-77
Bemidji State
24-4-3
1977-78
Bemidji State
25-5-1
1978-79
Bemidji State
27-2-0
1979-80
Bemidji State
24-8-0
1980-81
Bemidji State
24-7-0
1981-82
Bemidji State
1982-83
25-5-1 sabbatical*
1983-84
Bemidji State
31-0-0
1984-85
Bemidji State
27-6-2
1985-86
Bemidji State
25-9-1
1986-87
Bemidji State
22-12-1
1987-88
Bemidji State
24-11-3
1988-89
Bemidji State
19-3-4
1989-90
Bemidji State
15-11-2
1990-91
Bemidji State
21-6-3
1991-92
Bemidji State
16-9-5
1992-93
Bemidji State
24-7-0
1993-94
Bemidji State
21-9-3
1994-95
Bemidji State
24-7-2
1995-96
Bemidji State
16-9-4
1996-97
Bemidji State
25-7-2
1997-98
Bemidji State
22-10-2
1998-99
Bemidji State
17-13-0
1999-00
Bemidji State
13-20-1
2000-01
Bemidji State
at Bemidji State
702-293-49
Career Totals
744-313-50
While the early building blocks were already in place, it was not until R.H. “Bob” Peters took the reigns as the program’s fifth head coach in 1966 that Bemidji State University hockey began to take shape as a recognizable masterpiece. Although Peters himself would not claim to be an artist, he constructed a dynasty in Bemidji, Minn. which remains unparalleled in the world of collegiate athletics. Peters entered the college hockey head coaching ranks in 1964 as bench boss at the University of North Dakota. During his initial campaign, Peters, the eventual Western Collegiate Hockey Association Coach of the Year, led the Fighting Sioux to a WCHA title and a third-place finish at the NCAA Championships. He coached in Grand Forks for two seasons, leading the Sioux to a 42-20-1 mark before making a career decision that would change the face of collegiate hockey. Peters left the Division I powerhouse in 1966 and took over a small-college program in the early stages of its existence - at Bemidji State University. Within two seasons Peters led BSU to its first national championship and set the foundation for what would become one of the most dominant programs in college hockey. Thirty-five years later, Peters retired from coaching with one of the most impressive lists of achievements in the history of collegiate sports - 744 victories as a head coach, 702 coming at Bemidji State alone to make Peters the first coach to win 700 or more games at a single school, 13 small-college national championships, and still-standing national collegiate records for most wins in an unbeaten season (31-0-0 in 1983-’84) and longest unbeaten streak (43 games from Nov. 8, 1983 to Jan. 1, 1985). Today, only one coach in the sport - Michigan State’s Ron Mason - has won more games at the collegiate level. Peters, the only coach to lead a team to a national championship game in three divisions of college hockey and the only coach to reach the Final Four in all four divisions (Division I, III, III and NAIA), developed five NHL players and numerous Olympians and All-Americans. A 1960 graduate of the University of North Dakota, Peters spent his collegiate days at goaltender for the Fighting Sioux. He coached at the high school level for one season before rejoining the UND staff as an assistant coach. Retired from coaching, Peters remains heavily involved in the sport of college hockey. From April of 2001 to July of 2008 Peters was the commissioner of College
Hockey America conference. College Hockey America is the third conference Peters was involved with as a founding memb e r, a n d w i t h more than four decades of experience in college hockey Peters’ leadership was invaluable as the CHA evolved. The original concept for the CHA began with Air Force head coach Frank Serratore and then-BSU head coach Peters at the 1998 hockey meetings in Florida. The conference sprang forth the following year with a full league schedule in the 1999-2000 season. Then in the fall of 2001, under the guidance of Peters, the CHA gained an automatic bid for its tournament champion in the 2003 NCAA Tournament. In addition to appointing Peters CHA Commissioner, in 2001 the athletic directors of the league’s member institutions approved the recommendation by the coaches to name the regular-season championship trophy in honor of Peters as the R.H. “Bob” Peters Cup—an appropriate honor capping an illustrious coaching career. Peters’ influence on college hockey also has stretched outside the arena. He has proven his administrative skills at Bemidji State by serving as athletic director and head hockey coach, and he lent service to several committees. Under Peters’ guidance, BSU hockey progressed from NAIA to NCAA Division III to NCAA Division II, and in 1999, BSU elevated its hockey program to Division I. He served on championship committees for the NAIA and NCAA for over 20 years, and in 2001 was named a Hobey Baker Legend of Hockey. Peters continues to provide support to the Bemidji State athletic department. He announced his retirement from the BSU faculty in 2003 but remains with the University in an outreach role with the BSU Foundation.
4-26-4
*Mike Gibbons coached during sabbatical
Coach of the Year Honors WCHA Coach of the Year
1964-65
NAIA Coach of the Year
1973-74
NAIA Coach of the Year
1979-80
NCHA Coach of the Year
1981-82
NCHA Coach of the Year
1983-84
NCAA II-West Coach of the Year
1983-84
AHCA Ed Jeremiah Award
1983-84
NCHA Coach of the Year
1984-85
NCAA III Coach of the Year
1985-86
NCHA Coach of the Year
1985-86
NCHA Coach of the Year
1990-91
AHCA John MacInnes Award
1994-95
94
R.H. Peters is carried off the ice by the Bemidji State team following his final game as head coach of the Beavers on March 3, 2001.
2009-10
National Playoff Record
• April, 1966- R.H. “Bob” Peters becomes the fifth Beaver hockey head coach after a two-year stint as head coach for the University of North Dakota. • March 9, 1968- Bemidji State captures the school’s first national championship in any sport, winning the first-ever NAIA National Tournament with a 5-4 overtime victory over Lake Superior State. Over the next 12 seasons, the Beavers would capture six more NAIA national crowns. • March 10, 1968- The first Bemidji State All-Americans are named--Terry Bergstrom, Terry Burns, Barry Dillon, Bryan Grand and Jim McElmury. The Beavers would produce over 80 All-America selections through the years. • Winter, 1970- Jim McElmury, Charlie Brown and Bryan Grand help the U.S. National Team to the World B Championship while still remaining active members of the BSU roster. • Winter, 1972- Jim McElmury and Charlie Brown help carry the USA to the silver medal at the Olympics in Saporo, Japan. • March 3, 1973- Bemidji State wins its fifth NAIA national title with a 3-2 overtime win at Lakehead. • Feb. 25, 1979- BSU wins its sixth NAIA championship with a 5-1 win over Concordia-Moorhead. • March 2, 1980- Bemidji State wins its seventh NAIA national title with a 4-3 win over Michigan-Dearborn. • Nov. 8, 1983- Bemidji State begins 31-0 season march with a 9-1 win over Winnipeg. The Beavers would capture the school’s first NCAA Division II national title with an 8-1 win over Merrimack March 18. BSU would continue its win streak to an NCAA-record 43 straight games. • March 21, 1986- Bemidji State picks up a game-tying goal at 19:56 of the third period versus RIT, and moves on for the 5-4 overtime win en route to its first NCAA Division III national championship. The Beavers beat Plattsburgh State 8-5 to cap the tournament run, winning the school’s ninth title. • March 19, 1993- Bemidji State welcomes back the NCAA II National Championship series with a two-game sweep of Mercyhurst to win the school’s 10th national title. In addition to the 1993 national title, the Beavers would win NCAA Division II crowns in 1994, ‘95 and ‘97 to bring the total to 13 national titles in the program’s 42-year history. • May 26, 1998- Bemidji State announces that it will move the men’s hockey program to NCAA Division I status beginning with the 1998-99 season.
At North Dakota... Year 1965
W-L Finish Division 1-1 3rd NCAA I
At Bemidji State... Year W-L Finish Division 1968 2-0 1st NAIA 1969 2-0 1st NAIA 1970 2-0 1st NAIA 1971 2-0* 1st NAIA 1973 4-0 1st NAIA 1974 1-1 2nd NAIA 1976 1-2 4th NAIA 1977 2-1 3rd NAIA 1978 2-1 2nd NAIA 1979 3-0 1st NAIA 1980 3-0 1st NAIA 1981 2-1 3rd NAIA 1982 2-1 2nd NAIA 1983 2-2 2nd NCAA II 1984 4-0* 1st NCAA II 1985 2-2 2nd NCAA III 1986 3-1 1st NCAA III 1987 2-2 4th NCAA III 1988 2-2 3rd NCAA III 1989 2-2 3rd NCAA III 1993 2-0* 1st NCAA II 1994 1-1 1st NCAA II 1995 2-0 1st NCAA II 1996 0-2 2nd NCAA II 1997 2-0* 1st NCAA II 1998 0-2 2nd NCAA II TOTALS 53-24-0 (.688) *played at John S. Glas Fieldhouse 27 National Semifinal Appearances 13-time National Champions NCAA Div. II 1984, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997 NCAA Div. III 1986 NAIA 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1973, 1979, 1980 Seven-Time National Runners-Up NCAA Div. II 1983, 1996, 1998 NCAA Div. III 1985 NAIA 1974, 1978, 1982
• Feb. 9, 2001- Peters leads Bemidji State to a 6-2 win over Niagara, his 700th victory as BSU’s head coach. Peters was the first college hockey coach to lead one school to 700 victories.
Bob Peters Coaching Milestones Win 1 100 200 300 400 500 600
Date Nov. 20, 1964 Dec. 14, 1969 Jan. 4, 1975 Feb. 11, 1979 Feb. 3, 1984 Jan. 30, 1988 Feb. 27, 1993
Result 13-1 10-2 8-1 9-1 5-3 4-3 OT 7-0
Opponent Brandon Wheat Kings Winnipeg St. Mary’s, Minn. Lakehead St. Cloud State UW-Superior UW-River Falls
a h h h h h h
College Hockey Career Coaching Records By Victories name team(s) 1 Ron Mason Lake Superior, Bowling Green, Michigan St. 2 *Jerry York Clarkson, Bowling Green, Boston College 3 *Jack Parker Boston University 4 uR.H. “Bob” Peters North Dakota, Bemidji State 5 *Rick Comley Lake Superior St., N. Michigan, Michigan St. 6 Len Ceglarski Clarkson, Boston College 7 Jeff Sauer Colorado College, Wisconsin 8 *Red Berenson Michigan 9 John MacInnes Michigan Tech 10 Jack Riley Army Through 2008-09 season; research courtesy of the NCAA
tenure 1966-2002 1972-p 1973-p 1964-2001 1973-p 1958-’92 1971-2002 1985-p 1957-82 1951-86
wins 924 803 778 744 739 689 655 644 555 542
By Winning Percentage name team(s) 1 *John Rolli Mass.-Dartmouth 2 Alfred Winsor, Jr. Harvard 3 *Tim Coghlin St. Norbert 4 Ned Harkness Resselaer, Cornell, Union (N.Y.) 5 *Bob Emery Plattsburg State 6 *Bill Beaney New Engalnd College, Middlebury 7 Bill Harrison Clarkson 8 Ron Mason Lake Superior, Bowling Green, Michigan St. 9 uR.H. “Bob” Peters North Dakota, Bemidji State 10 *Steve Freeman Wis.-River Falls
2009-10
tenure 1985-p 1906-17, 1922 1994-p 1950-63, 1976-77 1990-p 1978-84, 1987-p 1947-57 1966-2002 1964-2001 1997-p
Pct. .781 .761 .737 .740 .737 .709 .698 .696 .695 .692
95
Coach R.H. “Bob” Peters
Memorable Moments in the Bob Peters Era
All-America Honorees
NAIA All-America Dale Baldwin Mark Eagles Mike Gibbons John Hansen Brian Hartman Rod Heisler Jack Horner Joe Knudson Tony Montebello John Murphy Joel Otto Chuck Scanlon Jim Scanlan Source: NAIAsports.org
1980 1974-75-76 1979 1981 1982 1979 1977 1982 1981 1977-79 1982 1974 1981-82
AHCA Titan All-America
The American Hockey Coaches Association’s All-America team in the college division was founded for the 1969-70 season. The AHCA named an East Division and West Division All-America team from 196970 until 1985-86, named a First and Second Team for both the East and West in 1986-87, reverted to one team in 1987-88, then named a First and Second Team each year from 1988-89 forward. College Division First Team - West Bernie Adlys F Mike Alexander F Omer Belisle F Greg Biskup D Jude Boulianne D Drey Bradley D Pat Cullen D Dennis Gibbons D Scott Johnson D Todd Lescarbeau F Mark Liska G Chris Morque G Steve O’Shea G Joel Otto F Shawn Pomplun D Ian Resch F Jeff Sobb F Second Team - West Robin Cook Mike Donaghue Troy Edwards Jamie Erb Paul Ferry Gary Gustason James Karner Brad “O.J.” Kennett Terry Mattson Aaron Novak Dan Richards Tom Shinabarger
G D D F D D F F D F D D
Pre-Season All-USCHO.com Matt Climie
G
All-USCHO.com Andrew Murray
C
1996 1985-86 1995 1986 1995 1983-84 1991 1985 1991 1987 1983-84-85 1994 1988-89 1983-84 1997 1988 1997
1995 1998 1996 1993 1992 1993 1994 1992 1987 1998 1989 1989
HM, 2005
55 Players... 81 All-America Awards... A Storied Chapter in BSU Hockey History Over the past four decades, as the Bemidji State men’s ice hockey program has assembled one of the finest hockey traditions in the nation, the Beavers have more than made their mark on various All-America teams. Since 1968, 55 Bemidji State skaters have earned a total of 81 All-America certificates at all levels of collegiate hockey, from NAIA to NCAA Division I.
1968 #4 Terry
1968 #9 Terry
1968 #12 Barry
1968-69-70 #10 Bryan
1968-69-70-71 #20 Jim
1969 #14 Austin
1970 #16 Glen
1970-71 #4 Charlie
1970-71 #1 Blane
1971 #15 Bruce
1971 #8 Denny
1973 #5 Gary
1973-74 #30 Chuck
1973-74-75-76 #17 Mark
1977-78 #30 Jack
1977, 1979 #11 John
1978-79 #16 Rod
1978-79 #5 Mike
1980 #24 Dale
1981 #5 Tony
1981 #18 John
1981-82 #1 Jim
1982 #12 Brian
1982 #22 Joe
1982-83-84 #24 Joel
1983-84 #21 Drey
1983-84-85 #1 Mark
1984 #27 Scott
1985 #5 Dennis
1985 #19 Eric
1985-86 #22 Mike
1986-87 #11 Greg
1987-88 #21 Ian
1987 #29 Todd
1988-89 #1 Steve
1989 #8 Dan
Bergstrom
Beckett
Brown
Scanlon
Baldwin
Eagles
Montebello
Dillon
Comstock
Horner
Hansen
Grand
Falk
Murphy
Scanlan
McElmury
Lemieux
Heisler
Hartman
Wallestad
Sargent
Gibbons
Knudson
3rd Team 2005
Otto
Bradley
Alexander
96
Burns
Biskup
2009-10
Liska
Resch
Monsrud
Lescarbeau
Gibbons
O’Shea
Gager
Richards
1991 #21 Scott
1991 #3 Pat
1992 #4 Paul
1992 #33 O.J.
1993 #9 Gary
1993 #14 Jamie
1994 #29 Jim
1994 #15 Chris
1995 #19 Omer
1995 #33 Robin
1995 #18 Jude
1996 #6 Bernie
1996-97 #27 Troy
1997 #7 Shawn
1997 #10 Jeff
Shinabarger
Morque
Johnson
Belisle
Cullen
Ferry
Cook
Boulianne
1997-98 #7 Mike
Donaghue Remembering Galen Nagle
Kennett
1998 #9 Aaron
Novak
Bemidji State University and the Galen Nagle Memorial Fund Committee have established a memorial scholarship fund in honor of the former Beaver hockey standout, designed to support the Bemidji State hockey program. Galen W. Nagle was a goaltender for the Beaver hockey team from 1980-’84, and served as a coach and teacher in the state of Minnesota for several years before losing his life to cancer Oct. 18, 1996 at the age of 34. “Galen exemplified Beaver hockey,” said former Bemidji State coach R.H. “Bob” Peters. “Hard work, dedication and loyalty were inherent to his character, and through his efforts, he became a vital part of our team.” Nagle and the 1984 Beaver hockey team made college hockey history with a perfect 31-0-0 season en route to the school’s first NCAA Division II National Championship. An All-Tournament selection from the 1984 Division II Championship, Nagle completed his Bemidji State hockey goaltending career with an 8-1 victory in the title game. Initially a walk-on at Bemidji State, Nagle’s determination and willingness to give forged a special bond with teammates and coaches. He never lost a game in goal for Bemidji State, posting a 22-0-0 career record with three shutouts. He allowed just 37 goals in his career, leaving Bemidji State as the program’s all-time leader in save percentage (.9308) and goals-against average (2.039) - career records which still stand today for players with at least 1,000 minutes in goal. “Galen considered it a privilege and an honor to be a part of the team, and conversely, we valued his contribution to the team,” Peters said. “He has had a lasting impact on the lives of the people he touched, and we will always remember him.” A 1984 graduate of Bemidji State, Nagle taught industrial arts at Scottt Highlands Middle School in Apple Valley for several years and coached in hockey programs at Rosemount, Academy Holy Angels, Richfield, Bloomington, Wayzata and Thief River Falls. He also served as the chief goalie instructor for Coach Peters’ Bemidji International Hockey Camp at BSU. Nagle was born to Richard and Marlys June 18, 1962 in Baudette, Minn. He and his family moved to Bemidji in 1979, and he graduated from Bemidji High School in 1980. An annual golf tournament was inaugurated in his honor Aug. 7, 1998.
Gustason
Adlys
Edwards
Erb
Pomplun
Karner
Sobb
2005 #17 Andrew
Murray Joel Otto: 1984 Hobey Baker Award
A 1984 graduate of Bemidji State, Joel Otto spent four seasons making his mark in the Beavers hockey program under coach R.H. “Bob” Peters. The three-time AllAmerica selection helped the 1984 BSU squad make history en route to the school’s first NCAA Division II national championship and only the second perfect season in NCAA hockey history at 31-0-0. BSU set a college hockey record for most wins in an undefeated season and remain one of just five unbeaten, untied teams in the history of the sport. The perfect season helped BSU build a 42-game winning streak, another still-standing collegiate record. Otto captained BSU’s 1983-84 national champions, scoring 32-43=75 points and leading the team in assists, scoring and short-handed goals (4). Otto earned Division II All-America honors for his efforts. In addition, Otto was the 1984 recipient of college hockey’s most prestigious honor, the Hobey Baker Memorial Award (Division II). Otto departed Bemidji State in 1984 and went on to a lengthy career in the NHL. He played 14 seasons for the Calgary Flames (1984-’95) and Philadelphia Flyers (1995-’98), finishing his career with 195-313=508 points in 943 games played. Otto exemplified sportsmanship, perseverance and dedication. His playing style earned a host of accolades in the NHL, including nominations for the Frank J. Selke Trophy, awarded to the best defensive forward, and the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy, awarded to the league’s top player representing dedication and sportsmanship. Drafted by Calgary in 1984, Otto’s game-winning goal in Game Seven of the 1989 Smythe Division Finals served as the impetus for the Flames’ Stanley Cup Championship run later that year. In 2005, Otto was named one of the 25 greatest players in the history of the Calgary franchise. Otto would later earn another memorable title. In1996, he helped drive Team USA to the World Cup of Hockey championship as an alternate captain. On Oct. 17, 2003, Otto became the first player in Bemidji State history to have his jersey number retired.
2009-10
97
All-America Honorees
1989 #25 Tom
Beaver Hockey Alumni
A Aarnes, Rick Aase, Ronald Abood, Walter Adams, Mike uAdams, Ryan Adlys, Bernie Agard, Nate Alexander, Mike Allen, Matt Ambrose, Greg Ameluxen, Phil Anders, Dean Andersen, Eric Anderson, Dennis Anderson, Devv Anderson, Jon Anderson, Ken Anderson, Ric Anderson, Richard Anderson, Robin Andersson, Stefan Andrican, Tom Anoia, Carmine Arendt, Mike uAreshenko, Jake Arf, Dick Arf, Jeff Arthur, Rob
C Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 67-68 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cedar Falls, Iowa 47-50 W 28 33 7 40 2 0 0 2 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. 66-67 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hirsch, Sask. 67-68 D 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Hibbing, Minn. 08-P D 24 1 2 3 8 0 0 0 0 Deloraine, Manitoba 92-96 C 125 49 80 129 225 14 5 6 0 Waterloo, Ontario 96-97 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Stillwater, Minn. 82-86 C 136 98 154 252 160 35 11 13 0 Apple Valley, Minn. 05-07 F 45 4 8 12 48 2 0 1 1 New Westminster, B.C. 95-99 D 125 17 73 90 204 6 0 1 1 Edmonton, Alberta 59-60 D 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 70-72 D 12 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 96-98 D 61 6 20 26 160 2 0 0 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 60-61 W 9 3 2 5 0 0 0 1 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 77-79 RW 51 10 7 17 6 2 2 3 0 Seattle, Wash. 74-75 F 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Bloomington, Minn. 66-70 W 92 45 49 94 195 7 1 2 0 Estevan, Sask. 66-68 C 41 27 22 49 4 3 0 2 0 Roseau, Minn. 47-49 RW 18 18 13 31 2 0 0 0 0 Eagan, Minn. 79-83 W 83 19 39 58 46 6 0 3 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 00-01 D 28 0 4 4 10 0 0 0 0 Savedalen, Sweden 83-85 D 51 5 15 20 14 3 0 2 0 Hibbing, Minn. 98-99 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Montreal, PQ 91-92 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 09-P D Port Coquitlam, B.C. 64-66 W 25 12 11 23 6 0 2 1 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 75-79 W 122 47 66 113 42 8 3 7 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 66-67 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Espanola, Ontario
B Bachmeier, Ryan Back Backman, Jerry Badiuk, Pat Bakeberg, Greg Baker, Arne Baker, Tony Baldwin, Dale Balsimo, Jesse Bari, Marcos Barnes, Travis Barnum, Orrin Bat, Daryl Bates, Brian Baumgartner, Jeff Becker, Joe Beckett, Glen Belisle, Omer uBelisle, Ted Bellmore, Paul Bender, Matt Bennett, Austin Benson, Earl Bergstrom, Terry Bergstrom, Tim Berryman, Brett Bertrand, Roger Bestul, Bob Bethel, Steve uBillberg, Emil Bina, Jerod Birkley, Dale Birrenkott, John Biskup, Greg Bissell, John Bjork, Stefan Bjornson, Kris Block, Steve Blue, Charlie Bluhm, Jake Bock, Garry Bodnar, Chris Boeke, Dan Bolles, Travis Bombay, Harry Borden, Jim Bostock, Cody Bouchard, Ron Boulianne Sr., Jude Boulianne Jr., Jude Bovay, Wayne Bovitz, Brent Bozak, Ryan Bradley, Drey Brandt, Jack Broten, Mike Brown, Charlie Brown, Dave Brown, David Brtko, Ron Budge, Rich Buhn Burhans, Ledyard Burns, Terry Burstad, Gary Burton, Hal Bydlon, Jim Byfuglien, Matt Bynski, Michael
98
Career P 00-01 D 49-50 D 63-65 W 69-73 C 65-67 W 91-92 D 86-87 D 76-80 RW 00-04 D 87-88 C 00-04 F 47-48 F 99-01 W 68-69 F 75-77 D 64-65 D 69-72 LW 91-95 C 97-01 F 90-91 D 90-91 D 69-72 D 61-62 W 65-69 D 64-65 C 85-88 D 70-72 D 85-87 W 91-92 W 07-P F 95-99 W 98-00 D 70-74 D 84-88 D 67-68 D 99-00 D 91-95 D 76-77 W 46-47 F 04-08 F 69-72 RW 98-99 W 72-76 LW 96-97 W 67-68 D 70-74 D 05-09 F 78-79 D 68-71 D 91-95 W-D 59-61 F 86-87 C 66-67 W 80-84 D 60-63 D 71-72 LW 68-71 D 62-65 D 85-86 D 66-67 D 62-66 W 46-47 F 46-48 C 66-69 RW 74-77 D 75-79 D 76-78 LW 90-91 D 97-98 D
GP 10 1 14 84 14 0 0 119 113 0 87 4 53 1 55 12 55 123 90 4 0 15 11 80 12 13 28 2 0 31 121 52 93 110 0 34 117 0 1 115 72 25 102 0 0 83 140 7 80 119 7 2 0 113 34 4 62 36 0 0 48 1 9 62 49 122 36 0 0
G 2 0 2 38 1 0 0 93 0 0 10 0 16 0 10 4 54 49 10 0 0 1 4 8 4 1 0 0 0 4 33 3 11 29 0 15 19 0 0 15 46 3 42 0 0 12 15 0 19 39 3 0 0 26 3 0 20 3 0 0 50 0 0 58 3 10 1 0 0
A PTS PIM 0 2 10 0 0 0 4 6 0 40 78 54 3 4 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 70 163 182 9 9 128 0 0 0 11 21 36 0 0 0 21 37 52 0 0 0 17 27 40 3 7 21 34 88 29 82 131 176 12 22 54 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 4 4 3 7 0 17 25 86 3 7 4 2 3 18 2 2 43 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6 4 46 79 138 11 14 72 53 64 64 77 106 42 0 0 0 18 33 47 56 75 69 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 38 123 55 101 97 4 7 2 61 103 180 0 0 0 0 0 0 38 50 67 39 54 187 0 0 0 56 75 36 76 115 108 3 6 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 71 97 160 6 9 16 0 0 0 47 67 102 7 10 73 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 69 32 0 0 0 2 2 4 42 100 24 15 18 137 55 65 36 5 6 6 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cameron, Paul Campbell, Ross Camrud, Neil Carey, Jim Carleton, Brian Carlson, Dave uCarlson, Matt Carpentier, Rob Carr, Burton Carr, Gene Carter, Tony Casey, Bob Catapano, Andrew Chaput, Vic Chartrand, Calvin Chiodo, Glen Chiodo, Wade Christensen, Buzz Christy, Matt Chupka, Cory Classman, Frank Clay, Sheldon Clendenning, Scott Clemens, George Cochrane, George Coleman, Bill Collins, Al Collins, Brad Comstock, Derrick Cook, Brendan Hometown Cordray, Jeff Calgary, Alberta Coseo, Dennis uCramer, Ryan Babbitt, Minn. Cranston, Matt Fort Frances, Ontario Cullen, Pat Hopkins, Minn. Curley, Steve Woodbury, Minn. Currie, Kelly Bemidji, Minn. Currie, Scott Oxbow, Sask. St. Paul, Minn. D Rochester, Minn. Medicine Hat, Alberta Dade, Kurt Stevens, Minn. Dahl, Doug Orillio, Ontario Dahl, Todd Dryden, Ontario Dahlen, Keith Bemidji, Minn. Danners, Jim Minneapolis, Minn. Winnipeg, Manitoba Deamon, Dan Thunder Bay, Ontario Delaney, Kevin Deleone, Chris Nipigon, Ontario DeMarchi, Pat Grand Forks, N.D. DeMars, Donnie Anoka, Minn. Demchuk, Garry Port Edward, BC Dempster, Bill Virginia, Minn. DeMuth, Ray Bloomington, Minn. Deterding, David Bloomington, Minn. Devescovi, Kevin Great Falls, Mont. Dewhurst, Gerald White Bear Lake, Minn. Dick, Mike Bagley, Minn. Dickson, Bob Fridley, Minn. Stockholm, Sweden Dickson, Scot Dillon, Barry Grand Forks, N.D. Donaghue, Tim Edmonton, Alberta Donahue, Mike Anoka, Minn. Donaldson, Todd Roseau, Minn. Dow, Larry Stockholm, Sweden Drewes, Jerry Drieger, Ryan Calgary, Alberta Drzystek, John Austin, Minn. Dumke, Jim Canada Dunbar, Lyle Red Wing, Minn. Dupuis, Phil Port McNeil, BC
PP SH GW GT 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 4 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 13 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 14 1 6 0 17 1 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 2 3 1 0 0 1 0 5 1 3 0 6 1 6 1 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 8 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 5 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 Thunder Bay, Ontario 8 0 4 0 Owatonna, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Columbia Hts, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Ft. Frances, Ontario 1 0 2 0 St. Paul, Minn. 10 0 4 0 Salmon Arm, B.C. 0 0 0 0 Apple Valley, Minn. 0 0 4 0 Willow Bunch, Sask. 9 1 4 0 St. Anne, Manitoba 0 0 1 0 Belleville, Ontario 0 0 0 0 Eden Prairie, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 13 0 3 0 Hastings, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Regina, Sask. 0 0 0 0 5 0 4 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 1 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fort William, Ontario 3 0 6 0 E. Grand Forks, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 9 0 5 1 Swift Current, Sask. 0 0 1 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. 2 1 1 0 Maple Creek, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Kenora, Ontario
2009-10
Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 85-86 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Inver Grove Hts, Minn. 85-87 D 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Alexandria, Minn. 66-67 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 78-79 D 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Detroit Lakes, Minn. 76-80 C 114 42 111 153 76 8 0 5 0 Estevan, Sask. 74-75 RW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Louis Park, Minn. 08-P D Grand Forks, N.D. 83-85 W 18 3 3 6 9 1 0 1 0 Hermantown, Minn. 66-67 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bloomington, Minn. 65-66 W 13 3 0 3 4 0 0 0 0 86-90 W 104 36 55 91 94 6 1 3 0 Bothell, Wash. 67-68 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Coleraine, Minn. 76-77 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 North Bellmore, N.Y. 61-64 C 33 26 15 41 6 0 0 2 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 96-00 W 130 46 72 118 146 12 5 9 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 71-75 W 88 38 59 97 10 7 4 3 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 01-04 F 70 13 24 37 40 6 0 1 1 Thief River Falls, Minn. 73-74 D 10 4 8 12 12 3 0 1 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 95-97 D 28 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 0 Grand Rapids, Minn. 91-94 F 3 0 2 2 6 0 0 0 0 Thompson, Manitoba 81-83 W 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 59-60 D 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Baudette, Minn. 87-90 F 50 4 4 8 64 0 0 0 0 Fort Frances, Ontario 61-62 F 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 West St. Paul, Minn 62-65 D 26 0 4 4 12 0 0 0 0 Poplar Pt., Manitoba 88-92 W 114 21 25 46 184 1 2 2 0 Forest Lake, Minn. 64-65 D 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Regina, Sask. 96-98 D 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Thunder Bay, Ontario 90-92 W 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. 01-05 F 136 55 47 102 52 22 9 11 0 Reston, Manitoba 88-91 D 11 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 Burnsville, Minn. 63-64 W 12 3 3 6 2 0 0 0 0 Canton, N.Y. 07-P F 63 6 5 11 38 0 0 1 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 79-81 W 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fergus Falls, Minn. 88-91 D 73 24 49 73 42 11 0 2 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 71-75 D 104 11 46 57 102 3 1 2 0 Roseville, Minn. 91-94 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Wawota, Sask. 75-79 LW 122 77 88 165 107 18 4 10 0 High River, Alberta
Career P 79-83 W 59-61 W 83-84 F 83-85 F 66-68 D 79-82 C 78-79 LW 90-94 F 70-72 C 01-03 F 71-72 W 76-77 LW 63-64 W 04-08 D 86-90 W 60-61 D 96-97 F 66-67 F 98-01 W 66-70 C 90-91 W 94-98 D 83-87 D 67-68 F 61-62 W 93-94 F 67-69 F 72-73 D 70-73 W 66-68 LW
GP 112 14 1 31 25 65 11 94 49 23 0 0 6 138 97 4 10 8 84 93 0 127 120 0 12 27 4 0 59 38
G 57 7 0 4 1 4 1 11 21 1 0 0 0 1 11 0 2 0 28 41 0 26 15 0 8 4 0 0 15 3
A PTS PIM 68 125 88 1 8 0 1 1 0 3 7 4 2 3 15 15 19 24 1 2 2 20 31 175 28 49 66 1 2 41 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 14 209 21 32 56 0 0 0 5 7 4 0 0 0 26 54 55 73 114 37 0 0 0 54 80 95 51 66 106 0 0 0 3 11 0 4 8 20 0 0 0 0 0 0 21 36 16 5 8 2
PP SH GW GT Hometown 16 2 7 0 Wayne, N.J. 0 0 0 0 Estevan, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Brainerd, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Bloomington, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 0 0 0 0 Golden Valley, Minn. 0 0 0 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. 1 1 2 0 Lynwood, Wash. 6 1 4 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Gilbert Plains, Manitoba 0 0 0 0 Chelmsford, Mass. 0 0 0 0 West St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Alexandria, Minn. 1 1 1 0 Eveleth, Minn. 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 Altona, Manitoba 0 0 0 0 5 4 4 0 North Vancouver, BC 10 2 5 0 Wainwright, Alberta 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 3 3 5 0 Bemidji, Minn. 11 0 1 0 Littleton, Colo. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Grand Rapids, Minn. 1 0 0 0 Carman, Manitoba 0 0 0 0 Lemerick, Sask. 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Oxbow, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Beinfait, Sask.
Career P 72-76 C 66-67 W 91-92 W 91-92 F 93-97 D 67-70 D 93-94 D 47-49 D 79-81 W 89-93 W 82-83 D 67-68 D 03-07 F 93-96 F 46-48 LW
GP 116 0 8 6 122 59 9 14 14 108 3 21 125 0 8
G 100 0 3 1 12 10 0 3 4 86 1 2 52 0 0
A PTS PIM 125 225 80 0 0 0 0 3 6 2 3 2 69 81 217 15 25 14 0 0 2 1 4 0 4 8 14 94 180 71 0 1 0 4 6 16 69 121 125 0 0 0 0 0 0
PP SH GW GT Hometown 23 5 13 0 Roseville, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Mountain View, Alaska 1 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 1 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 5 0 2 0 Broadview, Sask. 1 0 1 0 Bienfait, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Holland, Manitoba 0 0 0 0 Inver Grove Hts, Minn. 0 0 1 0 St. Paul, Minn. 34 2 12 1 Oak Bluff, Manitoba 0 0 0 0 Crystal, Minn. 0 0 1 0 Richfield, Minn. 23 1 6 0 Roseau, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Princeton, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Erskine, Minn.
E Eagles, Mark Earles, Fred Echternach, Jared Echternach, Tyler Edwards, Troy Elchyson, Barry Elder, Scott Emkovik, John Engle, Wally Erb, Jamie Erickson, Dave Erickson, Dick Erickson, Luke Erickson, Thomas Espeseth, Charles
F Fahlstedt, Ric Fairchild, Mike Falk, Bruce Fatticci, Rico Fehrman, Gary Ferroni, Dave Ferry, Paul
Career 75-76 77-81 67-71 99-01 63-64 67-68 88-92
P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Littleton, Colo. W 113 44 64 108 87 12 0 6 0 Bemidji, Minn. F 101 56 64 120 12 7 4 4 0 Salol, Minn. D 51 6 15 21 62 3 1 0 0 Hibbing, Minn. W 6 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Eveleth, Minn. D 120 24 79 103 172 9 0 4 0 Seattle, Wash.
G Gabardi, Derek Gager, Eric Ganyo, George Garritan, Lou Gartner, Garth Geatz, Dave uGeorge, Jordan Gendreau, Brett Gerber, Tim Gervais, Jean-Guy Gibbons, Dennis Gibbons, Mike Gibbs, Richard Gilbertson, Jade Giles, Laurie Glaesman, Bob Goulet, Marty Grams, Steve Grand, Bryan Grand, Wendell Grannum, L. Graves, Steve Gregory, Del Gunn, Aaron Gustafson, Jared Gustafson, Kim Gustason, Gary Guyer, Tim
H Haider, John Hallgren, Mark Hamilton, Todd Hampson, Russ Hanowski, Jared Hansen, John Hansen, Mark Hanson, Al Hanson, Jay Hanson, Lee uHardwick, Kyle Harrison, Blaine Hartman, Brian uHartmann, Matt Harvey, Dexter Harvey, Harry Harvey, Joe Hasbargen, Darrell Hause, John Headman Heaviland, Tom Hede, George Heisler, Rod Hernesman, David Hiemer, Manuel Hills, Scott Hinchman, Dick Hjelle, Arlan Hodgins, Chris Hoffard, Mark Hoglund, Dan Hokanson, Gary Holman, Shane Holmstrom, Neal Holte, Jim Hopkins, John Horn, Billy Howarth, Todd Howe, Bill Howe, Bruce Howells, Rob Hudak, Gregg Huddy, Ryan Huerd, Vince Huewe, Neil Huff, Steve Hugeback, Mark Humphrey, Jim
Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 48-50 C 19 9 13 22 4 0 0 1 0 Lake Bronson, Minn. 73-75 D 45 4 8 12 6 0 0 0 0 Edina, Minn. 08-P F 14 0 2 2 16 0 0 0 0 Bristol, Quebec 80-84 W 96 39 26 65 71 10 0 5 1 Thief River Falls, Minn. 71-72 LW 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Steelman, Sask. 70-71 RW 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. 91-94 D 69 10 25 35 55 4 0 1 0 Warroad, Minn. 78-81 LW 68 32 28 60 78 7 2 4 0 Ferland, Sask. 74-75 RW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Wayzata, Minn. 06-09 F 63 18 23 41 44 5 0 5 0 Surrey, B.C. 75-76 RW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. 60-61 F 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 79-80 D 31 5 11 16 22 2 0 1 0 Grand Rapids, Minn. 78-82 C 121 23 89 112 118 5 1 2 0 Marquis, Sask. 86-87 W 10 1 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 Irondale, Minn. 64-66 W 17 2 2 4 4 0 0 0 0 Bloomington, Minn. 93-95 W 63 32 34 66 127 10 1 5 0 Olds, Alberta
H (cont’d) uHunt, Bradley Hunt, Marco Hurlburt, Terrance
Career 08-P 84-88 66-67
P D C W
GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 37 9 23 32 24 7 0 1 0 Ridge Meadows, B.C. 71 12 13 25 44 3 0 3 0 Woodbury, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Redville, Sask.
J
James, Ryan Jarvis, Blaine Jellison, Wendal Jensen, Brent Jensen, Jon Jenson, Jim Jerome, Dave Jobling, Jim Joffe, Aaron Johnson, Bill Johnson, Bob Johnson, Brad Johnson, Chad Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown Johnson, Ed 96-97 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hibbing, Minn. Johnson, Eric 81-85 F 131 74 67 141 72 20 4 11 0 Bovey, Minn. Johnson, Errol 66-68 W 34 12 7 19 4 1 1 1 0 Warroad, Minn. Johnson, Kelly 02-06 F 66 8 6 14 26 0 3 2 0 Pittsburgh, Pa. Johnson, Ken 98-99 W 26 5 4 9 43 0 0 0 0 Vernon, BC Johnson, Robert M. 81-85 D 108 8 36 44 116 2 0 1 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. Johnson, Scott 09-P F Verona, Wis. Johnson, Travis 83-84 F 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bismarck, N.D. Johnston, Patrick 66-68 W 24 4 3 7 6 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Johnstone, Leonard 02-06 F 140 33 30 63 220 5 0 7 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba Jonsson, Peter 82-85 D 99 16 46 62 58 6 0 1 1 White Bear Lake, Minn. Joyce, Steve 75-79 D 106 27 69 96 191 8 0 6 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. Jungwirth, Dave 93-96 W 57 6 13 19 20 1 0 2 0 Saskatoon, Sask. uJundt, Tyler 84-87 F 13 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 Grand Forks, N.D. Justice, Chris 67-68 W 21 14 13 27 2 2 0 0 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 61-65 D-W 34 11 16 27 24 0 0 2 0 St. Paul, Minn. K 99-03 F 134 47 53 100 184 20 2 5 2 Banff, Alberta 89-90 C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hoyt Lakes, Minn. Kalbrener, Ryan 67-70 C 59 42 112 154 33 5 5 5 0 Roseau, Minn. Kalbrener, Shane 66-68 F 18 9 6 15 12 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. Kaplan, Tom 46-47 D 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fosston, Minn. Karner, Jim 82-83 F 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ames, Iowa Kathenbeutel, Tom 81-85 F 38 2 4 6 18 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 94-98 F 98 24 25 49 63 0 0 3 0 Thunder Bay, Ontario Kauppinen, Aki Keinänen, Juha 97-98 D 32 4 7 11 14 1 0 2 0 Salol, Minn. Kelly, Jason 75-76 C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Minneapolis, Minn. Kelly, Mike 89-93 D 115 28 66 94 110 6 0 2 0 Taconite, Minn. Kelly, Neil 84-88 C 101 24 31 55 33 2 3 4 0 Taconite, Minn. Kelly, Tim Kenashuk, Mike Kennett, O.J. Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown Kimball, Dan 01-05 D 143 19 37 56 153 9 0 1 1 Forest Lake, Minn. Kimball, Joe 76-77 LW 8 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 North St. Paul, Minn. Kincaid, David 87-90 W 39 2 4 6 26 0 0 1 0 Fort Frances, Ontario uKinne, Ben 83-85 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Brainerd, Minn. Kinney, Pat 00-04 F 136 13 33 46 74 3 1 0 2 Regina, Saskatchewan Klein, Tom 79-81 C 56 38 38 76 97 7 0 4 0 North St. Paul, Minn. Kleisinger, Len 93-97 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Taber, Alberta Klingfus, Josh 67-68 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Knott, Kurt 98-00 D/LW 11 1 1 2 24 0 0 1 0 Sartell, Minn. Knott, Todd 79-81 W 54 11 9 20 13 4 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Knox, Matt 06-P D 49 1 4 5 24 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. Knudson, Joe 86-90 F 100 14 28 42 178 2 1 2 0 Dauphin, Manitoba Koen, Bayne 80-82 C 56 37 44 81 72 8 1 2 1 Sioux City, Iowa Koenen, Chad 09-P F Hugo, Minn. Kofstad, Lee 61-62 W 12 5 3 8 0 0 0 1 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba Kostiuk, Rob 49-50 F 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 Grand Rapids, Minn. Krawchuk, Gary 74-75 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Richfield, Minn. Kristo, Mark 91-92 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Birchdale, Minn. Krohn, Nathan 90-94 D 69 7 31 38 103 1 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Kuharski, Myles 46-47 F 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kvarnlov, Dave 75-79 W 92 18 15 33 49 1 0 2 0 Marquette, Mich. Kvarnlov, Lyle 82-83 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Kverno, Dale 75-79 RW 121 100 90 190 70 26 4 15 0 Moose Jaw, Sask. Kyle, Kevin 87-90 W 55 11 13 24 30 0 0 1 0 Grand Rapids, Minn. 94-96 D 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Silver Bay, Minn. 80-81 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Grafton, N.D. L 64-65 C 6 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Indianapolis, Indiana 61-62 W 12 2 6 8 0 0 0 0 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. Lafleur, Marc 01-02 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kitchener, Ontario Lafond, Paul 46-47 D 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 McIntosh, Minn. Langen, Tom 73-74 D 12 0 4 4 16 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Larkin, Dan 68-69 W 25 15 23 38 44 0 1 2 0 Warroad, Minn. Larson, Mark 02-07 D 100 15 17 32 93 2 1 4 0 Hibbing, Minn. uLehrke, Tyler 78-82 D 117 11 26 37 80 3 1 2 0 Roseville, Minn. Lehtenin, Tom 75-76 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Baudette, Minn. Leipert, Bevin 62-65 W 34 14 25 39 6 1 0 3 0 Edmonton, Alberta Leitch 48-50 W 10 12 10 22 2 0 0 1 0 Hibbing, Minn. Lemieux, Denny 90-91 W 7 3 3 6 2 1 0 1 0 Thunder Bay, Ontario Leonard, Tom 48-50 D 13 3 6 9 4 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Lescarbeau, Mark 71-72 LW 11 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Lescarbeau, Tim 72-76 C 50 0 2 2 6 0 0 0 0 Mound, Minn. Lescarbeau, Todd 81-82 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Golden Valley, Minn. Lester, Bill 02-06 F 139 28 62 90 38 7 0 5 0 Edmonton, Alberta Letourneau, Steve 96-98 F 56 20 21 41 56 0 0 2 0 Warroad, Minn. Levasseur, Jim 97-98 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Levasseur, Larry 90-92 D 14 1 2 3 6 0 0 0 0 Minnetonka, Minn. Leverty, Denny 8-91 W 90 34 39 73 90 5 0 8 0 Rochester, Minn. Lewis, Brad 67-71 W 89 35 62 97 57 6 2 4 1 St. Paul, Minn. Lillegard, Jim
Career P 97-98 F 04-08 F 81-85 F 71-72 LW 75-76 C 90-91 W 80-84 D 67-68 RW 88-90 C 75-76 C 66-68 F 99-01 F 84-85 F 46-50 D 86-87 W 59-60 D 96-97 D 46-47 RW 64-66 D-C 87-91 F 97-00 D 83-84 F 62-63 W 02-05 D 79-80 LW 83-88 W 08-P D 93-96 W
GP 0 130 134 4 0 0 102 2 0 0 0 46 16 20 0 4 0 2 25 132 78 0 6 109 4 105 20 29
G 0 33 86 0 0 0 7 1 0 0 0 11 1 5 0 5 0 1 8 96 9 0 0 7 0 10 0 1
A PTS PIM 0 0 0 32 65 91 99 185 157 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 55 62 20 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 25 39 5 6 10 3 8 10 0 0 0 2 7 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 6 14 34 95 191 94 25 34 195 0 0 0 0 0 0 46 53 70 0 0 2 20 30 86 0 0 6 6 7 18
PP SH GW GT Hometown 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. 11 2 6 0 Gladstone, Manitoba 19 3 14 0 Eston, Sask. 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Marble, Minn. 4 0 0 0 E. Grand Forks, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Skokie, IL 0 0 0 0 Great Falls, Mont. 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 4 0 4 0 Bemidji, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. 0 0 2 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Mounds View, Minn. 0 0 1 0 Roseau, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Biwabik, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 0 1 1 0 Hallock, Minn. 42 5 12 2 Bemidji, Minn. 3 0 0 0 Thunder Bay, Ontario 0 0 0 0 Baxter, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 5 0 2 0 Astorp, Sweden 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. 0 0 0 0 WIlliston, N.D. 0 0 0 0 Edina, Minn.
Career P GP 99-00 C 12 97-01 C 101 76-77 RW 0 90-94 W 98 81-82 W 0 00-01 D 25 05-06 D 17 97-98 D 1 87-90 C 18 70-71 LW 2 74-75 C 18 77-78 C 0 89-92 W 80 83-87 W 133 87-88 W 0 59-60 F 4 08-P F 37 75-79 D 122 89-91 D 0 67-68 G 0 94-98 W 126 00-02 F 40 98-01 F 72 87-89 C 33 78-82 D 123 92-93 D 0 92-94 D 0 93-95 D 4 81-85 W 123 76-80 D-LW 120 72-76 C 107 96-97 F 0 02-05 F 104 72-75 W 48 71-75 C 69 47-50 D 10 90-92 D 47
G 1 36 0 37 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 50 15 0 1 8 17 0 0 47 4 14 5 25 0 0 0 50 16 65 0 23 8 23 1 4
A PTS PIM 3 4 12 60 96 90 0 0 0 51 88 94 0 0 0 1 1 12 2 3 8 1 2 0 1 3 10 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 90 140 108 24 39 102 0 0 0 1 2 0 7 15 14 64 81 64 0 0 0 0 0 0 56 103 172 7 11 29 9 23 38 8 13 20 42 67 66 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 38 88 90 39 55 68 57 122 81 0 0 0 29 52 88 15 23 16 51 74 48 1 2 2 14 18 48
PP SH GW GT Hometown 0 0 0 0 Grafton, N.D. 7 4 3 0 Grafton, N.D. 0 0 0 0 Owatonna, Minn. 5 6 6 0 Grand Forks, N.D. 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Espoo, Finland 0 0 0 0 Tampere, Finland 0 0 0 0 Nester Falls, Ontario 0 0 1 0 Bloomington, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Calgary, Alberta 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Morden, Manitoba 19 2 10 0 Fort Frances, Ontario 3 0 2 0 Rochester, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 0 1 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 5 0 4 1 North St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Coon Rapids, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Regina, Saskatchewan 3 0 4 0 Rochester, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Red Lake Falls, Minn. 0 4 1 0 Red Lake Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. 7 0 2 0 Warroad, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Palmer, Alaska 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. 14 1 12 0 Benito, Manitoba 1 0 2 1 Elk Point, Alberta 25 0 9 0 Owatonna, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 4 0 4 0 Neepawa, Manitoba 1 1 0 0 Warroad, Minn. 2 1 2 0 Warroad, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. 1 0 1 0 St. Louis, Mo.
Career P GP 95-99 C 109 59-62 C 26 62-66 W 25 71-72 D 22 90-92 W 4 06-P F 86 61-62 D 5 68-69 D 5 49-50 D 1 68-72 C 91 65-66 D 13 81-85 C 125 82-86 W 101 83-87 W 110 74-77 W 88 72-76 W 113 60-61 D 6 64-65 F 8 70-72 C-LW 35 67-68 F 2 46-47 LW 4
G 37 29 12 1 0 9 0 0 0 59 2 43 75 66 18 42 0 4 5 0 0
A PTS PIM 64 101 98 18 47 0 12 24 10 10 11 16 1 1 2 13 22 45 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 70 129 112 3 5 28 64 107 142 58 133 96 99 165 64 31 49 74 56 98 16 0 0 0 4 8 0 3 8 12 0 0 0 1 1 2
PP SH GW GT Hometown 10 4 2 0 Hearst, Ontario 0 0 3 0 Rainy River, Ontario 1 0 2 0 St. Louis Park, Minn. 1 0 0 0 Mahtomedi, Minn. 0 0 0 0 St. Cloud, Minn. 1 0 1 0 Park Rapids, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Moose Jaw, Sask. 0 0 0 0 9 7 11 0 Alida, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 11 1 4 0 Hopkins, Minn. 19 1 11 0 Hopkins, Minn. 15 1 11 1 Hopkins, Minn. 3 0 3 0 Anoka, Minn. 10 1 6 0 Rochester, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Virginia, Minn. 0 1 0 0 Baudette, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Anoka, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 0 0 0 0 McIntosh, Minn.
2009-10
99
Beaver hockey alumni
F (cont’d)
Fertig, Sheldon Finks, Jim uFindlay, Darcy Fitzgerald, Bob Fleck, Randy Foss, Darrell Foster, Damon Fournier, Alain Fox, Tom Francis, Matt French, Mike Frillici, Vince Frizzell, Irwin Froehlich, Wade Fuhr, John Fuller, Don Fulton, Eric
Beaver Hockey Alumni
L (cont’d) Career
Lillesvie, Harry Lindell, Ben Lindholm, Miikka Lofman, Heikki Logan, Jim Lorch, Daniel Love, Dave uLowe, Ian Lundeen, Steve Lyons, Dave
46-49 01-03 00-01 00-01 94-98 91-92 84-85 07-P 83-86 92-93
P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown F 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 D 34 0 2 2 20 0 0 0 0 Rosemount, Minn. RW 30 6 3 9 6 2 0 0 1 Kerava, Finland C 46 6 15 21 26 4 0 0 1 Kerava, Finland F 122 43 61 104 226 8 2 5 0 Nipigon, Ontario C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hoyt Lakes, Minn. D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 F 57 4 16 20 30 2 0 0 0 Bradwardine, Manitoba D 54 9 33 42 56 4 0 2 0 Fergus Falls, Minn. D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
N (cont’d) Career
Northagen, Duane Nosan, Fran Novak, Aaron Novak, Nick Nyhus, Craig Nyhus, Steve
O
Oldcorn, Malcolm Oliver, Mike Olson, Buzz M Olson, Daryl Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown uMacIntyre, Dan 07-P F/D 24 0 1 1 24 0 0 0 0 Fort Frances, Ontario Olsson, Anders Mack, Jason 90-94 W 122 42 64 106 148 3 3 6 0 E. Grand Forks, Minn. O’Neil, Jerry Mackenhausen, Steve 87-89 D 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. Ophus, Roger uMacQueen, Jamie 08-P F 36 4 4 8 18 0 0 0 0 St. Thomas, Ontario Opozda, Jim Opsahl, Wayne Madsen, Bill 60-61 W 10 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hibbing, Minn. uOrban, Brance March, Clyde 63-64 D 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Osborn, Cale Marino, Brandon 0509 F 116 15 36 51 99 6 0 4 2 Riverside, Calif. Osborne, Don Martens, Andrew 02-06 D 101 11 29 40 67 2 1 2 0 Friendswood, Texas Martin, Bob 88-89 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fort Frances, Ontario Oster, Jim Otto, Joel Martine, Claude 88-91 D 81 3 22 25 72 0 0 0 0 Antler, Sask. Owens, Jack Marvin, Charles 66-67 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. Masterson, Mark 78-82 F 106 47 51 98 62 6 3 8 0 San Mateo, Calif. Matatall, Bruce 95-99 F 103 30 42 72 125 7 1 3 0 Regina, Sask. P Matatall, Craig 92-96 W 123 67 83 150 283 26 2 9 1 Regina, Sask. Mather, Gary 63-65 W 21 2 3 5 4 0 0 0 0 Regina, Sask. Pace, Chris Matson 49-50 W 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Parenteau, Bill Mattson, Don 66-67 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Parizino, Phil Mattson, Terry 85-88 D 93 25 81 106 121 11 0 1 0 Minneapolis, Minn. Patnaude, Robert Mauricio, Scott 97-98 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Arden Hills, Minn. Pauletti, Mike McCannell, Daryl 71-72 C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Elva, Manitoba Pederson, Tyler McCleary, Tom 75-77 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Watertown, Conn. Pelawa, Joe McClellan, Aaron 94-98 W 51 6 23 29 19 1 0 1 0 Lino Lakes, Minn. Pelkey, Jerry McClellan, Jeff 88-89 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lino Lakes, Minn. Pelletier, Dan McDonald, Bill 59-60 D 4 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. Pelowski, Brian McDonald, Jim 59-60 F 4 3 4 7 0 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. uPeluso, Chris McElmury, Jim 67-71 D 89 34 44 78 109 7 2 3 0 Cottage Grove, Minn. Perpich, Mike McGill, Jeff 99-03 F 136 34 51 85 62 11 0 4 1 Carman, Manitoba Perreault, Grant McGavack, John 72-73 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Gilbert, Ariz. Peterson, Mike McGraw, Mike 67-68 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Petterson, Bob McIntosh, Mike 95-96 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Great Falls, Mont. Pfau, Pat McIntyre, Brendan 04-06 F 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Ottawa, Ontario Phaneuf, Scott McIvor, Merv 63-64 D 8 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba Phenow, Mark McKechney, Craig 91-95 W 125 44 59 103 173 14 0 7 0 Powerview, Manitoba Phrakonkham, Says McKechney, Ron 59-61 C 5 4 4 8 0 0 0 0 0 Beinfait, Sask. Pieper, Korre McKechnie, Bill 48-49 C 8 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. Pomplun, Shawn uMcKelvie, Chris 06-P F 83 10 5 15 62 0 1 0 1 New Brighton, Minn. Pope, Matt McKinnon, Tim 74-75 W 28 7 15 22 8 0 0 2 0 Warroad, Minn. Potapinski, Dean McLachlan, Jim 67-69 D 22 4 7 11 14 0 0 0 0 Calgary, Alberta Power, John uMcLeod, Aaron 09-P F Ottawa, Ontario Prenevost, Lex McLeod, Murray 67-68 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Preston, Scott McManamin, Graham 06-09 D 68 6 18 24 100 2 0 1 0 Anchorage, Alaska Prodahl, Mike McNellis, Pete 82-83 W 9 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 Coon Rapids, Minn. Pyle, Dan Meiers, Nick 97-99 W 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bismarck, N.D. Melhus, Duff 72-78 C 110 32 76 108 101 6 1 3 0 Richfield, Minn. R Melville, Ed 93-97 F 102 23 37 60 86 0 2 1 0 Calgary, Alberta Methven, Bill 00-04 F 126 15 17 32 137 1 0 4 0 Mora, Minn. Radke, Jim Methven, Bryce 00-04 D 140 16 39 55 162 10 0 1 0 Mora, Minn. Ramiller, Frank Michels, Travis 89-90 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hoyt Lakes, Minn. Rand, Bruce Michie, Del 84-86 D 23 1 1 2 16 0 0 1 0 Rapid City, Manitoba Raske, Neal Miller, Brian 63-64 W 10 7 3 10 2 0 0 0 0 Oakville, Ontario uRead, Matt Miller, Gary 61-62 D 11 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Virginia, Minn. Reekie, Ray Miller, Ryan 03-07 F 119 30 37 67 114 11 3 3 0 Fergus Falls, Minn. Reif, Dave Miller, Wayne 62-63 D 10 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba Reise, Tom Milless, Mike 78-81 RW 89 32 26 58 36 9 3 2 0 Rogers, Minn. Remus, Willie Millington, Dave 71-74 W 65 38 38 76 54 7 0 4 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. Resch, Ian Modahl, Jesse 00-01 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. Rethwill, Scott Moggach, Joey 06-08 F 55 6 25 31 48 2 0 0 0 Brandon, Manitoba Reynolds, Doug Molloy, Tom 68-70 F 39 7 6 13 10 1 1 0 0 Calgary, Alberta Rice, Pat Molstad, Jud 94-95 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Grand Forks, N.D. Richards, Dan Money, David 76-77 RW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hallock, Minn. Riddell, Bruce Monkman, Stacy 87-89 D 29 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 Salol, Minn. Riddell, Riley Monsrud, Eric 91-96 W 114 44 49 93 159 14 4 8 0 Rochester, Minn. Rieger, Bob Monsrud, Scott 80-84 W 87 48 47 95 24 16 2 9 0 Rochester, Minn. Ring, Dwayne Montebello, Tony 77-81 D 114 22 59 81 51 5 1 1 0 Bemidji, Minn. Roberts, Brian Morque, Chris 90-94 D 120 28 79 107 345 7 3 2 1 Grand Forks, N.D. Mueller, Dave 74-78 D 112 22 44 66 144 7 0 2 0 St. Louis Park, Minn. Roberts, Paul Roddick, Jim Mulally, Brian 72-75 F 28 3 6 9 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Romanchuk, Steve Munn, Doug 81-82 W 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oxbow, Sask. Roo, Jim Murphy, John 75-79 C 122 71 98 169 50 17 4 9 0 Bovey, Minn. Murphy, Tom 90-94 C 114 28 40 68 154 8 0 1 0 Grand Rapids, Minn. Rood, Tim Rose, Mike Murray, Andrew 01-05 F 118 46 69 115 131 17 2 6 1 Selkirk, Manitoba Ross, Garry Roth, Garrett N Ruff, Jamie Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown Ruedebusch, Mike Nagle, Arlen 80-82 F 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Russell, Pat Nathe, Chris 03-05 D 11 1 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 Elk River, Minn. Rygh, Ken Nathe, Joe 72-75 W-D 69 21 25 46 68 4 0 4 0 New Brighton, Minn. Nelson, Chris Nelson, Dave Neuman, John Newton, Brent Nicholls, Kelly Nodsle, Mark Nokelby, Marc Nordaune, Jeff Norland, Scott
100
84-85 77-79 96-98 88-90 91-94 89-90 80-81 96-98 81-84
D D F D D D D F F
0 17 0 25 0 0 15 0 52
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 6 14 33
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Bemidji, Minn. St. Louis Park, Minn. Shakopee, Minn. Thompson, Manitoba Detroit Lakes, Minn. E. Grand Forks, Minn. Glenwood, Minn. Hallock, Minn.
2009-10
P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 75-76 RW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Beaver Bay, Minn. 74-75 LW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hibbing, Minn. 94-98 F 79 38 43 81 108 8 1 5 0 Cloquet, Minn. 69-73 F 91 31 39 70 32 4 1 5 0 Hibbing, Minn. 73-75 D 57 2 7 9 10 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 75-77 D 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn.
Career 92-95 82-83 65-69 76-78 01-04 59-62 46-47 82-83 87-90 09-P 94-96 65-66 66-68 80-84 49-50
P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown D 38 1 7 8 24 0 0 0 0 Carman, Manitoba W 37 2 4 6 18 0 0 1 0 D 60 4 17 21 36 1 0 0 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. D 10 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Two Harbors, Minn. D 101 7 33 40 75 4 0 2 0 Tingsryd, Sweden F 26 7 14 21 0 0 0 2 0 Baudette, Minn. D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Erskine, Minn. D 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Minot, N.D. D 64 18 28 46 68 8 0 0 1 Duluth, Minn. F Lethbridge, Alberta D 39 1 3 4 18 0 0 0 0 Fargo, N.D. D 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fridley, Minn. W 17 1 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 Fort Frances, Ontario C 122 89 115 204 134 26 4 14 0 Elk River, Minn. F 2 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0
Career P 96-98 F 76-81 RW 67-68 F 66-67 W 60-61 D 07-08 D 87-89 W 74-77 LW 96-00 C 66-67 W 06-P D 99-01 F 97-99 C 91-94 W 63-64 C 81-83 F 85-87 D 98-01 D 99-02 F 90-91 W 95-97 D 04-08 F 88-89 W 95-98 F 74-75 F 70-73 W 70-72 D 81-85 D
GP 0 88 0 4 4 0 1 54 126 8 97 51 25 4 12 1 28 132 90 0 57 143 0 10 1 72 44 56
G 0 16 0 0 0 0 1 6 42 0 1 5 2 0 6 0 0 8 8 0 13 33 0 1 0 24 4 2
A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Thunder Bay, Ontario 36 52 44 3 0 1 0 St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Virginia, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Louis Park, Minn. 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 5 11 59 1 0 0 0 Silver Bay, Minn. 49 91 139 14 3 10 0 Regina, Sask. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. 28 29 84 1 0 0 0 Wadena, Minn. 11 16 36 0 0 1 0 Hibbing, Minn. 12 14 6 0 0 1 0 Fort Frances, Ontario 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 Deerfield, Wis. 4 10 0 0 0 2 1 Estevan, Sask. 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 Bottineau, N.D. 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 Parkville, Minn. 28 36 72 3 0 1 0 Osseo, Minn. 21 29 38 0 2 1 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Williams, Minn. 42 55 55 8 2 3 0 Warroad, Minn. 38 71 126 10 2 7 0 Langley, B.C. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Alida, Sask. 5 6 4 0 0 0 0 Detroit Lakes, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Red Lake Falls, Minn. 37 61 40 5 1 2 0 Yorkton, Sask. 12 16 18 1 0 1 0 Richfield, Minn. 17 19 43 0 0 0 0 Oklahoma City, Okla.
Career P 72-76 F 47-49 F 65-68 C 87-91 D 07-P F 65-68 W 76-77 D 69-72 RW 47-50 W 84-88 F 82-83 W 72-73 C 78-82 D 85-89 F 76-77 C 01-04 F 66-68 D 64-68 F 74-77 D 81-82 W 65-66 W 67-68 F 81-85 D 79-83 D 77-81 D 73-75 D 04-07 F 07-08 F 96-97 F 72-75 W 60-61 W
GP 46 18 31 33 73 3 8 59 14 134 0 2 34 131 31 107 30 47 16 0 13 0 92 100 62 38 61 4 0 81 10
G 4 9 8 0 24 1 0 11 1 65 0 0 2 87 12 35 4 32 1 0 4 0 7 9 0 22 8 1 0 13 3
A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 3 7 2 0 0 1 0 Rochester, Minn. 10 19 0 0 0 1 0 10 18 18 1 0 2 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba 2 2 17 0 0 0 0 Apple Valley, Minn. 43 67 87 6 3 3 0 Ilderton, Ontario 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Anchorage, Alaska 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. 21 32 6 2 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 4 5 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 94 159 64 14 2 5 0 Weyburn, Sask. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Columbia Hts, Minn. 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Grande Prairie, Alberta 4 6 21 0 0 0 0 Cottage Grove, Minn. 93 180 40 16 6 14 2 Grand Forks, N.D. 21 33 6 1 1 2 0 Moose Jaw, Sask. 53 88 56 7 1 3 1 Camrose, Alberta 10 14 49 2 0 1 0 Regina, Sask. 18 50 23 0 2 0 0 Regina, Sask. 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 Brooklyn Ctr, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 6 10 2 2 0 0 0 Anchorage, Alaska 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oakdale, Minn. 27 34 67 1 0 1 0 Blaine, Minn. 33 42 26 2 0 0 0 Grand Forks, N.D. 4 4 10 0 0 0 0 Anoka, Minn. 25 47 51 7 2 1 0 Roseau, Minn. 14 22 48 1 0 3 0 Cary, Ill. 0 1 4 0 0 1 0 Rochester, Minn. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Huron, SD 19 32 34 3 2 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 2 5 0 0 0 1 0 Roseau, Minn.
S Salentine, Mike Salmon, Ryan Sanderson, Merv Sargent, Gary Saterdalen, Tom Sauer, Don
Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 79-80 RW 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 96-99 D 15 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Stillwater, Minn. 60-63 F/D 34 17 15 32 16 0 0 2 0 Glenboro, Manitoba 72-73 D 30 23 24 47 30 7 1 2 0 Bemidji, Minn. 62-64 D 22 5 8 13 4 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. 86-88 W 6 1 0 1 6 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn.
Career P GP Sauer, Rob 87-88 W 2 Sauter, Dennis 66-68 C/RW 26 Savage, Brooks 89-90 D 0 Scaletta, Joe 61-65 D 47 Scanlon, Joe 74-76 C/RW 1 Schmitz, Bill 75-79 W 118 Schmitz, Bob 80-81 F 0 Schroeder, Don 65-67 D 5 Schroeder, Tim 74-75 D 0 Schueller, Dennis 67-71 D 94 Schultz, Brad 86-87 D 0 Schwartzbauer, Nathan 03-07 D 126 Scofield, Tyler 05-09 F 129 Segall, Brad 85-86 D 0 Searles, Jacob 98-00 W/D 55 Seide, Steve 74-78 C/LW 119 Sellars, John 67-68 D 5 uSerratore, Tom 84-87 C 69 Sertich, John 88-91 W 0 Shandro, Drew 92-95 F 0 Shedlov, Bill 46-47 D 0 Shinabarger, Tom 85-89 D 103 Simmons, Clay 99-02 D 102 Simonet, Tom 46-47 D 0 Simpson, Scott 92-94 F 0 Sims 47-48 W 3 Sirianni, Rob 03-07 F 131 Skrivseth, Glen 78-79 W 0 Slepica, Merrill 71-72 C 3 Slocombe, Reggie 61-63 W 23 Smedsmo, Dale 69-72 LW 63 Smith, Bob 86-89 D 72 Smith, Lynn 69-73 W 78 Smith, Mike 79-80 D 26 Smith, Ron 85-89 W 82 Smrekar, Bill 63-65 W 7 Soares, Mark 05-06 F 0 Sobb, Jeff 93-97 C 125 Starkey, Ed 76-77 C 0 Steinmetz, Shane 87-90 F 31 Stengrim, David 91-94 F 0 Stewart, Adam 98-00 D 32 Stewart, George 48-50 D 13 Stewart, Wayne 48-49 C 8 Strandell, Jeff 84-86 C 64 Stuart, Derek 98-99 W 11 Studebaker, Mark 91-93 F 0 Sturk, Bob 59-61 C/D 11 Suoraniemi, Niko 04-06 D 20 Swanger, Gary 63-64 D 2
T Taggart, Sean Talarico, Terry Talbot, Paul Tamane, Brent Taylor, John Taylor, Milt Theis, Jerry Thompson, Don Thompson, Jim Thompson, Mike Thordarson, Vic Thul, Brian Tieranta, Anssi Tighe, Greg Tkachuk, Kelly Tollefson, Dan Tookenay, Brent Trimborn, Tony Turgeon, Walt Tveit, Gary Tykeson, Jeff Tyler, Jim
U / V / Udovich, Frank Usackis, Jay Vadnais, John Vatnsdal, Scott Vekich, Derrick uWacker, Brady Wagner, Derrick Waldhauser, Tom Wallestad, Austin Walsh, Ernie Walters, Dick uWalters, Shae Ward, Tony Warner, Todd Watkins, Bruce Watson, Charles Webb, Tim Welchlin, Jim Weller, Bill Wellock, Lloyd Wendorf, Troy
G 0 5 0 11 0 73 0 0 0 17 0 0 48 0 13 38 1 32 0 0 0 17 25 0 0 0 48 0 0 7 30 2 24 1 15 2 0 45 0 4 0 1 6 9 20 3 0 2 0 0
A PTS PIM 0 0 2 4 9 4 0 0 0 27 38 60 0 0 0 56 129 83 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 35 52 111 0 0 0 17 17 102 63 111 112 0 0 0 17 30 28 43 81 141 0 1 4 50 82 28 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 63 80 60 26 51 96 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 53 101 128 0 0 0 0 0 2 11 18 2 12 42 95 14 16 38 25 49 59 1 2 8 12 27 40 0 2 0 0 0 0 65 110 221 0 0 0 6 10 12 0 0 0 4 5 16 3 9 4 1 10 0 31 51 42 4 7 4 0 0 0 1 3 0 3 3 8 0 0 0
U / V / W / X / Y / Z (cont’d)
PP SH GW GT Hometown Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Wenkus, Eric 98-99 C 24 3 7 10 4 0 0 0 0 Eden Prairie, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Richfield, Minn. Werner, Dick 62-63 D 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fergus Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Hastings, Minn. Weselowski, Riley 04-08 D 124 8 31 39 150 1 1 2 0 Pilot Mound, Manitoba 0 0 2 0 St. Boniface, Manitoba Weston, Stu 79-81 W 43 4 6 10 20 1 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. Wheelock, Joel 96-97 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bloomington, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Cloquet, Minn. Whiting, John 46-50 W 22 19 12 31 2 0 0 0 0 Hibbing, Minn. 12 5 8 0 Farmington, Minn. Wilson, Dean 92-93 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Farmington, Minn. 79-80 C 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Grand Forks, N.D. 0 0 0 0 E. Grand Forks, Minn. Wilson, John Wilson, Scott 94-98 D 35 3 5 8 27 0 0 1 0 Grand Forks, N.D. 0 0 0 0 Moorhead, Minn 05-09 F 118 28 37 65 73 16 2 4 0 St. Cloud, Minn. 2 3 1 0 Inver Grove Hts, Minn Winter, Travis Woldum, Steve 66-67 C 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Minneapolis, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Greenwood, Minn. Woods, Bernie 62-66 W 42 13 9 22 14 1 0 1 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Wasilla, Alaska 87-88 W 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Indianapolis, Ind. 17 2 7 0 Prince George, B.C. Wyrick, Craig Yetter, Jon 87-89 D 35 1 11 12 6 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Young, Kyle 95-98 D 76 2 26 28 66 0 0 0 0 Cloquet, Minn. 3 0 1 0 Centerville, Minn. Young, Mike 93-94 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 4 3 0 Minneapolis, Minn. Yurek, Mike 77-78 LW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Andover, Minn. Zakrajsek, Bob 60-61 D 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nashwauk, Minn. 6 0 4 0 Coleraine, Minn. Zorick, Biz 82-83 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Anchorage, Alaska 0 0 0 0 Duluth, Minn. Zywiec, Joe 68-72 F 41 3 1 4 6 0 1 0 0 Inver Grove Hts, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Saskatoon, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Fosston, Minn. 6 0 2 1 St. Louis, Mo. Goaltenders 14 0 2 0 Princeton, B.C. Career GP MIN GAA W L T SO GA SV Hometown 0 0 0 0 Little Falls, Minn Abraham, Jason 90-91 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Estevan, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Carndoff, Sask. Alamano, Orlando 04-09 20 1,031 2.97 6 12 0 1 51 465 Fresno, Calif. 0 0 0 0 Anderson, John 66-67 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. 18 0 5 2 Edmonton, Alberta Anderson, Matt 96-00 24 554 3.47 4 3 0 0 32 231 Detroit Lakes, Minn. 0 0 0 0 St. Louis Park, Minn. Bahr, Clinton 88-89 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Robinsdale, Minn. uBakala, Dan 08-P 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Calgary, Alberta 0 0 1 0 Winnipeg, Manitoba Beaton, Jon 93-96 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fargo, N.D. 2 0 1 0 Roseau, Minn. Beaton, Mike 92-96 41 1,895 3.61 16 10 4 0 114 841 Fargo, N.D. 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Bend, Tom 64-67 36 2,168 2.68 27 7 2 3 97 1,066 Poplar Point, Manitoba 1 1 4 0 White Bear Lake, Minn. uBosch, Travis 09-P Regina, Sask. 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. Buckley, Joe 76-78 1 10 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 4 Homer, Alaska 3 2 1 0 Bemidji, Minn. Cabot 48-49 1 40 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 Ely, Minn. Calder, Roy 70-71 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Burnaby, B.C. Caldwell, Jim 89-90 1 5 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 2 8 3 7 1 Calgary, Alberta Casareto, Joe 89-90 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Waterloo, Iowa Chilcote, Gary 67-68 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Grand Forks, N.D. Climie, Matt 04-08 95 5,427 2.45 45 30 11 12 222 2,201 Leduc, Alberta 0 0 0 0 Thief River Falls, Minn. Comstock, Blane 67-71 86 4,878 2.34 70 12 1 9 190 1,818 Roseau, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Seattle, Wash. Comstock, Will 72-73 2 12 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 6 Roseau, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Williamston, Mich. Cook, Robin 92-96 87 4,823 3.22 57 19 5 1 259 2,115 Winnipeg, Manitoba 0 0 1 0 Staples, Minn. Cooper, Neil 96-98 23 1,227 3.62 14 6 1 2 74 519 Fort Frances, Ontario 1 0 0 0 E. Grand Forks, Minn. Dalton, Matt 07-09 36 2094 2.29 20 14 1 3 80 864 Clinton, Ontario 1 0 0 0 Calgary, Alberta Delmonte, Terry 69-72 6 60 3.00 0 0 0 0 3 27 St. Paul, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Wayzata, Minn. uDugas, Mathieu 09-P L’Assomption, Quebec 0 0 0 0 Coleraine, Minn. Fermoyle, Denny 73-74 1 3 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 2 Minneapolis, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Angelholm, Sweden Fermoyle, Patrick 96-97 6 48 3.75 0 0 0 0 3 20 Warroad, Minn. 0 0 0 0 Rochester, Minn. Freeman, Kyle 85-87 1 6 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 5 Groschupf, Jim 49-50 4 220 5.45 1 1 0 0 20 58 Bemidji, Minn. Grove, Tom 59-60 1 30 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 2 Stillwater, Minn. Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown Hallett, Jeff 72-74 2 66 2.73 1 0 0 0 3 24 Warroad, Minn. 88-93 W 106 20 25 45 83 2 0 3 0 Fort Frances, Ontario Horner, Jack 74-78 86 4,712 3.31 59 17 4 6 260 2,062 St. Paul, Minn. 49-50 F 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 Hibbing, Minn. Horton, Mike 63-64 3 30 2.00 0 0 0 0 1 9 St. Paul, Minn. 89-91 W 3 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 Albuquerque, N.M. Howell, Carl 62-63 2 40 3.00 0 0 0 0 2 10 Muskegan, Mich. 08-09 F 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pickering, Ontario Hunt, Grady 00-04 106 6,002 3.07 39 51 12 5 307 2,717 Vernon, BC 72-74 W 29 4 4 8 2 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. Ignjatovic, Verko 92-93 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Belgrade, Yugoslavia 75-76 LW 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. Kleisinger, Len 67-68 22 1,218 3.55 13 8 0 3 72 603 Regina, Sask. 73-75 F 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Maple Grove, Minn. Kreibich, Todd 89-93 55 3,171 3.22 38 9 3 3 170 1,407 Crookston, Minn. 61-63 W 22 4 4 8 4 0 0 0 0 Regina, Sask. Kvarnlov, Mike 70-72 17 737 4.72 4 7 0 0 58 414 Roseau, Minn. 62-66 C 49 54 38 92 38 1 1 14 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. Larson, R.J. 90-93 1 40 7.50 0 1 0 0 5 12 Grand Forks, N.D. 86-87 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 West St. Paul, Minn. Lennox, Calvin 46-47 6 370 9.57 0 5 1 0 59 41 Williams, Minn. 67-69 F 29 8 3 11 12 1 0 1 0 Gimli, Manitoba Liska, Mark 81-85 87 4,717 2.76 61 10 3 4 217 2,013 Mendota Hts, Minn. 92-93 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Long, Bob 60-61 7 312 3.65 3 3 0 0 19 84 Duluth, Minn. 05-06 D 22 1 0 1 12 0 0 0 0 Lempääla, Finland Loos, Rob 80-81 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fargo, N.D. 74-75 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fort Frances, Ontario Martin, Jim 82-86 45 2,276 3.59 29 7 1 0 136 1,043 Mahtomedi, Minn. 92-93 D 31 3 12 15 30 3 0 1 0 Medicine, Chris 93-95 1 20 3.00 0 0 0 0 1 16 Emo, Ontario 88-93 C 117 44 73 117 61 20 4 5 0 Willmar, Minn. Morgan, Dannie 00-04 24 1,168 3.08 5 8 4 3 60 473 Calgary, Alberta 87-91 C 131 41 65 106 76 7 3 2 0 Nipigon, Ontario Nagle, Galen 80-84 26 1,089 2.04 22 0 0 3 37 498 Bemidji, Minn. 93-94 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ness, Jon 86-87 2 11 5.45 0 0 0 0 1 5 Roseau, Minn. 67-68 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Olson, Dan 77-80 45 2,350 2.53 35 3 0 2 99 893 Bemidji, Minn. 76-81 D 83 5 45 50 24 1 0 1 0 Int’l Falls, Minn. Olson, Gordon 47-49 8 340 4.76 5 1 0 1 27 47 94-95 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Spring Lake Pk, Minn. O’Shea, Steve 85-89 104 5,828 3.53 55 34 7 5 343 3,065 Park River, N.D. 85-89 F 124 83 63 146 129 28 3 10 0 Waterloo, Iowa Ostry, Larry 59-60 4 193 2.80 2 2 0 0 9 39 Winnipeg, Manitoba Palmiscno, Toby 01-02 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Grand Forks, N.D. Pavlatos, Adam 96-00 88 5,121 3.23 52 30 4 5 276 2,214 Duluth, Minn. W / X / Y / Z Perry, Chad 89-92 31 1,639 3.70 15 9 5 2 101 796 Coon Rapids, Minn. Career P GP G A PTS PIM PP SH GW GT Hometown Petterson, Robert 68-69 1 20 9.00 0 0 0 0 3 7 Estevan, Sask. 98-02 W 77 6 2 8 161 0 0 0 0 Ely, Minn. 66-67 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 South St. Paul, Minn. 98-99 D 29 2 4 6 20 1 0 1 0 Lac du Bonnet, Manitoba Quirk, Jim Radniecki, Dick 47-50 24 1,270 4.39 10 12 0 2 93 514 Trail, Minn. 06-08 D 47 3 11 14 34 1 0 2 0 Stillwater, Minn. Reid, Ryan 97-98 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fort Frances, Ontario 84-87 D 33 0 5 5 12 0 0 0 0 Roseau, Minn. 90-92 C 29 10 8 18 10 1 0 0 0 Bovey, Minn. Robberstad, Jim 61-64 8 370 1.46 6 0 0 0 9 111 Williams, Minn. 09-P D Jansen, Sask. Robinson, Dan 67-68 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 83-86 F 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 Fargo, N.D. Rossiter, Dick 72-73 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. 72-76 F 95 7 19 26 24 0 0 1 0 St. Paul, Minn. Ryan, Jerry 62-66 25 1,337 3.05 13 7 2 2 68 526 Marblehead, Mass. 66-69 LW 49 46 23 69 14 3 2 5 0 Roseau, Minn. Sand, Jeff 84-85 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bismarck, N.D. 61-62 D 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Scanlon, Chuck 71-75 101 5,977 3.87 62 34 3 4 386 2,657 Richfield, Minn. 46-48 RW 5 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 Scanlan, Jim 78-82 85 4,807 2.82 62 19 0 9 226 2,211 Cottage Grove, Minn. 08-P F 34 4 11 15 10 1 0 1 0 Hibbing, Minn. Sedevie, Layne 03-07 56 3,022 2.88 29 21 4 2 145 1,289 Bismarck, N.D. 96-97 F 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Chaska, Minn. Serratore, Frank 80-81 10 383 2.35 6 0 0 1 15 164 Coleraine, Minn. 84-87 W 40 4 4 8 4 0 0 0 0 Grand Forks, N.D. Shields, Kelly 02-03 6 258 4.35 0 3 1 0 20 110 Victoria, B.C. 84-88 D 118 22 49 71 116 8 0 1 0 Bothell, Wash. Sinclair, Rob 60-63 25 1,176 2.70 14 6 0 0 53 384 Baudette, Minn. 49-50 W 3 5 1 6 2 0 0 0 0 Glencoe, Minn. Stevens, Rob 87-90 47 2,575 3.73 23 16 3 2 160 1,254 Madison, Wis. 85-87 W 44 5 19 24 38 1 0 0 0 Bemidji, Minn. Stodgell, Aaron 98-99 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Warroad, Minn. 66-67 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul, Minn. Tallarico, Bob 99-01 27 1,398 5.15 7 16 0 0 120 780 St. Paul, Minn. 67-70 F 76 46 58 104 77 9 1 4 0 St. Paul, Minn. Thompson, Dick 78-80 7 62 4.84 0 0 0 0 5 25 Stillwater, Minn. 66-67 D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Estevan, Sask. Warren, Gary 73-74 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 Proctor, Minn. 89-91 W 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Stillwater, Minn. Wizner, Jeff 75-77 17 840 3.50 10 3 0 1 49 365 Bemidji, Minn.
2009-10
101
Beaver hockey alumni
S (cont’d)
50 legends for 50 years
In 2005-06, Bemidji State University and the BSU Athletics Department came together to celebrate the 50th season of competition for one of the most celebrated collegiate men’s ice hockey programs in the history of the sport. The 2005-06 season represented the 50th season of intercollegiate competition for the Beaver men’s ice hockey program, which played its first game on January 18, 1948. Throughout the season, Bemidji State athletics paid special tribute to the men who helped establish the Beaver program over the previous 49 seasons. To celebrate this historic anniversary BSU assembled the 50 Legends for 50 Years Team, established to recognize the top 50 players in the history of the program. Collegiate hockey coaching legend R.H. “Bob” Peters, who won 702 games and 13 national championships at the NAIA, NCAA Division III and NCAA Division II levels during a remarkable coaching tenure at Bemidji State, was named head coach of the 50 Legends for 50 Years Team. The season-long celebration culminated with a special ceremony prior to Bemidji State’s Feb. 18, 2006 contest against Robert Morris. Forty-four of the 50 members of the 50 Legends for 50 Years team were on-hand.
C C RW C D D W/D D D RW C G F LW C C W F D F D C D RW G F F W C C W W G D W D D C F C F F D D G G W D C F
Name
Years
Home town
Career Notes
Bernie Adlys Mike Alexander Dale Baldwin Omer Belisle Greg Biskup Jude Boulianne, Sr. Jude Boulianne, Jr. Drey Bradley Charlie Brown Terry Burns Brian Carleton Blane Comstock Brendan Cook Scott Currie Barry Dillon Mark Eagles Jamie Erb Bruce Falk Paul Ferry Eric Gager Mike Gibbons Bryan Grand Gary Gustason Rod Heisler Grady Hunt Wendal Jellison Scott Johnson Brad “O.J.” Kennett Mark Kristo Denny Lemieux Tim Lescarbeau Todd Lescarbeau Mark Liska Jim McElmury Craig Matatall Bryce Methven Chris Morque John Murphy Andrew Murray Joel Otto Ian Resch Dan Richards Garry Ross Gary Sargent Chuck Scanlon Jim Scanlan Bill Schmitz Tom Shinabarger Jim Thompson Jim Tyler
1992-96 1982-86 1976-80 1991-95 1984-88 1968-71 1991-95 1981-84 1968-71 1966-69 1976-80 1967-71 2001-05 1975-79 1966-70 1972-76 1989-93 1967-71 1988-92 1981-85 1975-79 1967-70 1989-93 1975-79 2000-04 1981-85 1987-91 1989-92 1972-76 1968-72 1982-86 1983-87 1981-85 1967-71 1992-96 2000-04 1990-94 1975-79 2001-05 1980-84 1984-88 1985-89 1973-75 1972-73 1971-75 1978-82 1975-79 1985-89 1962-66 1985-89
Waterloo, Ontario Apple Valley, Minn. Oxbow, Saskatchewan Thunder Bay, Ontario Roseau, Minn. Willow Bunch, Sask. St. Anne, Manitoba Hastings, Minn. Minneapolis, Minn. Swift Current, Sask. Estevan, Saskatchewan Roseau, Minn. Reston, Manitoba High River, Alberta Wainwright, Alberta Roseville, Minn. Oak Bluff, Manitoba Salol, Minn. Seattle, Wash. Bovey, Minn. White Bear Lake, Minn. Roseau, Minn. Taconite, Minn. Moose Jaw, Sask. Vernon, British Columbia Eston, Saskatchewan Bemidji, Minn. Fort Frances, Ontario Owatonna, Minn. Alida, Saskatchewan Hopkins, Minn. Hopkins, Minn. Mendota Heights, Minn. Cottage Grove, Minn. Regina, Saskatchewan Mora, Minn. Grand Forks, N.D. Bovey, Minn. Selkirk, Manitoba Elk River, Minn. Weyburn, Saskatchewan Grand Forks, N.D. Roseau, Minn. Bemidji, Minn. Richfield, Minn. Cottage Grove, Minn. Farmington, Minn. St. Louis, Mo. International Falls, Minn. Waterloo, Iowa
Member of three consecutive NCAA Division II national champions BSU’s career scoring leader; two-time national champion Two-time national champion; BSU career leader in short-handed goals 1995 team captain; three-time national champion BSU’s third-leading career scorer amongst defensemen Helped lead BSU to three consecutive national titles from 1969-71 BSU career scoring leader amongst defensemen Captained BSU’s unbeaten, untied 1984 Division II national champion Three-time national champion; 1972 U.S. Olympic Team member Three-time team captain; helped lead BSU to 1st national title Fifth on BSU career list for assists (111) BSU career leader in goaltending wins (70), tied for lead in shutouts (9) 1st BSU Division I-era skater with 40 points in a season; 102 career points 10th on BSU career scoring list 1968 All-America selection, three-time national champion One of two four-time All-America selections in BSU history 1993 All-America selection; three-time First-Team All-NCHA Four-time national champion; 27th on BSU career scoring list Fifth on BSU career scoring list for defensemen 18th on BSU career scoring list; member of unbeaten 1984 team 7th-leading defenseman scorer in BSU history; 1982-83 head coach BSU career leader with 2.61 points per game; 14th on BSU scoring list Top 10 in career goals, assists and points by a defenseman Pitcher for Team Canada at 1984 Summer Olympics BSU career leader in minutes played; Top 10 in GAA, save pct. & wins Ranked 6th on career scoring list, Top 10 in both goals and assists 4th on BSU career scoring list; 1991 NCHA Player of the Year 3-time honorable mention All-NCHA; 1992 2nd-Team West All-America 26th on BSU career scoring list 1971 NAIA All-America; three-time national champion (1970-71-72) 20th on BSU career scoring list; 1986 First-Team All-NCHA 1987 NCHA Player of the Year and First-Team All-America selection One of two three-time Titan AHCA All-America honorees in BSU history Only four-time All-America selection in school history Two-time All-NCHA pick; career leader in PIM by a forward Two-time First-Team All-CHA; 2nd in BSU Div. I era in def. scoring 2nd on BSU career scoring list for defensemen; career leader in PIM 9th on career scoring list; two-time NAIA All-America pick BSU Division I-era career leader in points and assists 1984 Hobey Baker Award winner; captained 1984 unbeaten nat’l champ two-time First-Team All-NCHA selection tied for 7th on BSU career scoring list (180) Member of 1976 U.S. Olympic Team Scored 47 points in lone season with BSU; 9-year NHL veteran 1 of 2 BSU goalies with 5,000 minutes, 50 wins and 2,500 saves 1982 NCHA Player of the Year 22nd on BSU career scoring list 1989 All-America selection; t-13th on career scoring list for defensemen Only member of Legends team to play at BSU prior to Peters era Two-time All-NCHA honoree
Forty-four of the 50 members of Bemidji State’s 50 Legends for 50 Years Team and Vic Weber, Bemidji State’s head coach from 1960-64 and 1966, were on hand during a ceremony to honor the team during BSU’s Feb. 18, 2006 contest against Robert Morris.
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2009-10
24
Bryan Grand’s #10 jersey was retired in conjunction with Bemidji State’s Feb. 18, 2006 ceremony to recognize the 50 greatest players in school history, the 50 Legends for 50 Years team, which was selected during a year-long celebration of BSU’s 50th season of intercollegiate competition. In three years at Bemidji State, Grand helped the Beavers to three consecutive NAIA national championships and served as a captain in his final two seasons. One of five three-time All-America selections in BSU history, Grand is the 14th-leading scorer in Bemidji State history with 42-112=151 total points in just 59 games. His career scoring average of 2.61 points per game is nearly threequarters of a point better than any other skater in BSU history. Grand led BSU in assists during both his junior and senior seasons, and his 112 career assists rank fourth all-time at BSU. During his tenure at BSU, the Beavers posted a record of 63-13-0.
Joel Otto’s jersey became the first number in the history of Bemidji State hockey to be retired, as his #24 made its way into the rafters following a ceremony to recognize BSU’s 1984 undefeated, untied NCAA Division II national championship team on October 18, 2003. As part of the ceremony, BSU sophomore Ryan Huddy - who had been wearing #24 - presented his jersey to Otto, switching to #26 while Otto’s banner was raised into the John Glas Fieldhouse rafters by his children. Perhaps the most-decorated athlete in Bemidji State history, Otto was a three-time All-America selection, a Northern Collegiate Hockey Association Player of the Year, a Hobey Baker Award winner, a U.S. Olympian and a Stanley Cup champion. Otto captained BSU’s undefeated, untied 1984 national champions, scoring 32-43=75 points and leading the team in assists, scoring and short-handed goals (4). Otto earned Division II All-America honors for his efforts. In addition, Otto was the 1984 recipient of college hockey’s most prestigious honor, the Hobey Baker Memorial Award (Division II). Otto departed Bemidji State in 1984 and went on to a lengthy career in the NHL. He played 14 seasons for the Calgary Flames (1984’95) and Philadelphia Flyers (1995-’98), finishing his career with 195-313=508 points in 943 games.
Bryan Grand
Bryan Grand
10
1967-1970
Joel Otto
Joel Otto
24
1980-1984
2009-10
103
retired numbers
10
D-i-era awards
First-Team All-CHA
Cody Bostock Stefan Bjork Matt Climie Brendan Cook Luke Erickson Marty Gouleta uBrad Hunt Grady Hunt Peter Jonsson Andrew Martens Bryce Methven Andrew Murray uMatt Read Travis Winter
D D G F F F D G D D D C F F
2008 2000 2006 2004 2006 2002-03 2009 2003 2005 2006 2003-04 2005 2009 2007
a= first two-time 1st-Team pick in CHA history
Second-Team All-CHA
Cody Bostock Calvin Chartrand Matt Climie Brendan Cook Matt Dalton Grady Hunt Peter Jonsson Riley Riddell Tyler Scofield Clay Simmons Travis Winter
D F G F G G D C F D F
2009 2000 2008 2005 2009 2002-04 2004 2002-04 2009 2001 2008
F D G D D F F D C D F C F D G
2000 2006 2005 2000 2009 2009 2000 2001 2002 2002 2008 2002 2006 2000 2000
Sr, F
2005
Sr, D So/Sr, G So/Jr, F So, F Sr, F Sr, G Jr, D Jr, F
2008 2005 & 2007 2005-06 2008 2008 2006 2006 2007
CHA All-Rookie Team
Daryl Bat Cody Bostock Matt Climie Rico Fatticci uBrad Hunt uBen Kinne Brad Johnson Bryce Methven Andrew Murray Anders Olssona uMatt Read Riley Riddell Tyler Scofield Clay Simmons Bob Tallarico
a= first-year sophomore
CHA Player of the Year Andrew Murray
Pre-Season All-CHA
Cody Bostock Matt Climiea Luke Ericksona uMatt Read Tyler Scofield Layne Sedevie Riley Weselowski Travis Winter
a= two-time selection
CHA Pre-Season Player of the Year
Matt Climiea Luke Erickson
So, G Sr, F
2005 2006
F W F D
2002 2004 2008 2009
a= first sophomore to win honor
CHA Rookie of the Year
Riley Riddell Luke Erickson uMatt Read uBrad Hunt
CHA Student-Athlete of the Year Andrew Murray
Sr, F
CHA All-Tournament Team
Cody Bostock Brendan Cook Matt Dalton Matt Francis John Haider uBrad Hunt Bryce Methven Ryan Miller Andrew Murray uMatt Read Tyler Scofield
CHA Tournament MVP
Matt Climie uMatt Read
2005
F F G F D D D F C F F
2008 2005 2009 2009 2004-05 2009 2003 2005 2003 2009 2008
Fr, G So, F
2005 2009
CHA/EASTON Three-Star Award Brendan Cook
All-USCHO.com Andrew Murray
Pre-Season All-USCHO Matt Climie
Sr, F
2005
Sr, C
3rd tm, 2005
So, G
HM, 2005
Commissionerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Choice Finalists Grady Hunt Myles Kuharski Grady Hunt
player Nov. 2002 rookie Nov. 2002 player Mar. 2002
Academic All-CHA
uRyan Adams Orlando Alamano Jesse Balsimo Travis Barnes uEmil Billberg Jake Bluhm Cody Bostock Wade Chiodo Matt Climie Brendan Cook uRyan Cramer Donnie DeMars David Deterding Scot Dickson Luke Erickson Matt Francis Lou Garritan Jean-Guy Gervais Marty Goulet John Haider Jared Hanowski uKyle Hardwick Ryan Huddy Blaine Jarvis Peter Jonsson Todd Knott uTyler Lehrke Ben Lindell uIan Lowe uDan MacIntyre Brandon Marino Jeff McGill uChris McKelvie uGrahm McManamin Andrew Martens Bill Methven Bryce Methven Ryan Miller Joey Moggach Dannie Morgan Andrew Murray Chris Nathe Anders Olsson uChris Peluso Mike Perpich Matt Pope uMatt Read Riley Riddell Garrett Roth Nathan Schwartzbauer Jacob Searles Layne Sedevie Rob Sirianni Niko Suoraniemi Bob Tallarico John Vadnais Riley Weselowski Travis WInter
CoSIDA Academic All-District V
Bill Methven Bryce Methven Peter Jonsson Bryce Methven Peter Jonsson Andrew Murray Riley Weselowski Riley Weselowski Riley Weselowski Travis Winter Travis Winter Cody Bostock
CoSIDA Academic All-America Peter Jonsson
D G D F F F D F G F F F D F F F F F F D F D F F D F F D F D F F F D D F D F F G F D D D F F F F F D F D F D G D D F
2009 2006-07-08-09 2004 2002-03-04 2009 2006-07-08 2007-08-09 2003-04 2006-07-08 2003-04-05 2009 2003 2006-07-08 2000-01 2005-06-07 2008-09 2004-05-06 2004-05-06 2002-03 2003-04 2003-04 2008-09 2004-05-06 2006 & 08 2003-04-05 2001-02 2008-09 2003 2009 2009 2007-08-09 2001-02-03 2008-09 2008 2004-05 2002-03-04 2002-03-04 2005-06-07 2008 2002-03-04 2003-04-05 2005 2003-04 2008-09 2001 2006-07-08 2009 2003 2005-06-07 2005-06-07 2000 2005-06-07 2005 2006 2001 2008 2006-07-08 2007-08-09
Jr Jr Jr Sr Sr Sr So Jr Sr Jr Sr Sr
2nd tm, 2003 2nd tm, 2003 1st tm, 2004 1st tm, 2004 1st tm, 2005 2nd tm, 2005 2nd tm, 2006 2nd tm, 2007 1st tm, 2008 2nd tm, 2008 2nd tm, 2009 1st tm, 2009
Sr
1st tm, 2005
uPlayer returning for 2009-10 season
104
2009-10
College Hockey America Players of the Week 1999-2000 11/29 Calvin Chartrand, F, Sr 12/13 Stefan Bjork, D, So 1/17 Stefan Bjork, D, So (2) 1/24 Daryl Bat, F, Fr 2/21 Stefan Bjork, F, So (3)
Offense Defense Defense Offense Offense
2000-01 11/27 1/1 1/29 2/12 2/25
Offense Defense Defense Defense Rookie
Shane Kalbrener, F, Sr Grady Hunt, G, Fr Grady Hunt, G, Fr (2) Grady Hunt, G, Fr (3) Dannie Morgan, G, Fr
2001-02 10/15 Marty Goulet, F, Jr 10/15 Andrew Murray, C, Fr 10/22 Riley Riddell, C, Fr 10/29 Jeff McGill, F, Jr 11/12 Mark Phenow, D, Sr 11/19 Grady Hunt, G, So (4) 11/19 Riley Riddell, C, Fr (2) 12/3 Grady Hunt, G, So (5) 12/17 Riley Riddell, C, Fr (3) 1/14 Grady Hunt, G, So (6) 1/14 Riley Riddell, C, Fr (4)a 1/21 Todd Knott, F, Sr 1/21 Grady Hunt, G, So (7) 2/4 Jeff McGill, F, Jr (2) 2/4 Andrew Murray, C, Fr (2)
Offense (co) Rookie Rookie (co) Offense (co) Defense Defense Rookie Defense Rookie Defense Rookie Offense Defense Offense Rookie
2002-03 10/28 11/4 11/11 11/18 12/16 12/31 1/27 2/3 2/3 3/3
Peter Jonsson, D, So Kelly Shields, G, Fr Grady Hunt, G, Jr (8) Grady Hunt, G, Jr (9) Bryce Methven, D, Jr Marty Goulet, F, Sr (2) Myles Kuharski, F, So Marty Goulet, F, Sr (3) Ryan Huddy, F, Fr John Haider, D, So
Rookie Rookie Defense Defense Defense Offense Rookie Offense Rookie Defense
2003-04 10/20 11/10 11/17 12/1 12/1 12/8 1/5 1/5 1/12 1/26 1/26 2/2 2/2 2/23 3/1 3/9
Luke Erickson, Fr, F Grady Hunt, Sr, G (10) Grady Hunt, Sr, G (11) Wade Chiodo, Sr, F Luke Erickson, Fr, F (2) Brendan Cook, Jr, F Grady Hunt, Sr, G (12) Luke Erickson, Fr, F (3) Layne Sedevie, Fr, G Brendan Cook, Jr. F (2) Luke Erickson, Fr, F (4) Brendan Cook, Jr, F (3) Grady Hunt, Sr, G (13)b Layne Sedevie, Fr, G Rob Sirianni, Fr, F Dannie Morgan, Sr, G
Rookie Defense Defense Offense Rookie Offense Defense Rookie Defense Offense Rookie Offense Defense Rookie Rookie Defense
2004-05 11/15 11/22 12/13 1/10 1/17 2/7 3/7 3/7
Ryan Huddy, So, F Luke Erickson, So, F Andrew Murray, Sr., F Matt Climie, Fr, G Brendan Cook, Sr, F Matt Climie, Fr, G (2) Matt Climie, Fr, G (3) Jean-Guy Gervais, Sr, F
2005-06 10/10 Jake Bluhm, F, So. 10/10 Andrew Martens, D, Sr. 10/17 Luke Erickson, F, Jr. (2) 10/17 Cody Bostock, D, Fr. 10/31 Layne Sedevie, Jr., G (2) 12/5 Luke Erickson, F, Jr. (3) 12/5 Tyler Scofield, F, Fr. 1/23 Ryan Huddy, F, Sr. (2) 1/23 Riley Weselowski, D, So. 1/23 Brandon Marino, F, Fr. 3/6 Layne Sedevie, Jr., G (3)
Offense Offense Offense (co) Rookie Offense Rookie Rookie (co) Offense Offense (co) Defense Offense Rookie Defense Offense (co) Rookie Offense Defense Rookie Defense
2006-07 11/6 Orlando Alamano, Jr., G Defense 11/6 John Vadnais, Fr., D Rookie 11/13 Matt Climie, Jr., G Defense 11/20 Rob Sirianni, Sr., F Offense 12/4 Luke Erickson, Sr., F Offense 12/4 Chris Peluso, Fr., D Rookie 12/11 Joey Moggach, Fr., F Rookie 12/18 Rob Sirianni, Sr., F (2) Offense 12/18 Matt Climie, Jr., G (2) Defense 12/18 Chris Peluso, Fr., D (2) Rookie 1/7 Joey Moggach, Fr., F (2) Rookie 2/5 Travis Winter, So., F Offense 2/5 Joey Moggach, Fr., D (3) Rookie (#) no. of career awards won a= 1st CHA player to win four Rookie awards b= CHA career record 13th award CHA Rookie of the Week was established for the 2000-01 season
Academic All-Conference
CHA Student-Athlete of the Year
Academic All-CHA
Bemidji State’s Andrew Murray became the first player in College Hockey America history to be named Player of the Year and Student-Athlete of the Year in the same season, picking up the historic sweep at the 2005 CHA awards banquet. Murray, a unanimous First-Team All-CHA pick, became the first BSU skater to be named CHA Student-Athlete of the Year.
Academic All-District V Over the last seven years, seven Bemidji State skaters have earned 12 positions on the ESPN the Magazine / College Sports Information Directors of America Academic All-District V At-Large Team. Cody Bostock and Travis Winter kept the streak alive in 2009, and in 2005 Peter Jonsson became just the second BSU men’s hockey player to be named Academic All-America. He was the only men’s hockey player in the nation to earn First-Team Academic All-America laurels in 2005. He was a two-time Academic All-District V selection, so honored in 2004 and 2005. BSU’s other Academic All-District picks include Andrew Murray (2005), Bryce Methven (2003-04), Bill Methven (2003) and Riley Weselowski (200607-08).
Academic All-CHA
For the seventh consecutive season, Bemidji State led College Hockey America in Academic All-CHA honorees in 2008-09. BSU placed a league-high 15 skaters on the 2009 Academic All-CHA Team. The 15-member group continued BSU’s recent domination of the Academic All-CHA Team; in conjunction with BSU’s 15 picks in 2009, its league record 18 in 2008, its 14 in 2005 and 2007, and 16 honorees in 2003, 2004 and 2006, BSU has an all-time total of 123 Academic All-CHA picks. BSU’s 116 picks in eight years under head coach Tom Serratore leads CHA by a significant margin. Academic All-CHA picks, 2002-present
02 03 04 05 06 07 08 uBSU 7 16 16 14 16 14 18* Niagara 7 10 13 13 12 11 11 Wayne State 9 8 3 5 11 12 6 Ala.-Huntsville 9 7 2 7 12 9 3 Air Force 4 3 4 3 11 - - Robert Morris - - - 1 13 12 12 * single-season record
09 TOT 15 116 12 89 - 54 12 61 - 25 9 47
2009 CHA All-Academic Team: Fromt Row (L to R): Kyle Hardwick, Matt Francis, Tyler Lehrke, Brandon Marino, Travis Winter, Orlando Alamano, Chris McKelvie. Back Row (L to R): Emil Billberg, Ian Lowe, Ryan Adams, Chris Peluso, Cody Bostock, Dan MacIntyre, Ryan Cramer, Matt Read.
CoSIDA Academic All-District V
2003 2nd Team Bill METHVEN
2003 2nd Team 2004 1st Team Bryce METHVEN
2004 1st Team 2005 1st Team Peter JONSSON
CoSIDA Academic All-America
2005 2nd Team Andrew MURRAY
Peter Jonsson (Astorp, Sweden) was named to the ESPN the Magazine Academic AllAmerica University Division Men’s At-Large First Team, as announced by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA), in 2005. Jonsson was the only men’s ice hockey player in the nation to earn First-Team Academic All-America laurels. Colorado College’s Brett Sterling was named to the second team, while Harvard’s Dov Grumet- 2005 1st Team Peter Morris and Dartmouth’s Lee Stempniak were JONSSON honored on the third team. Jonsson never missed a game at BSU, playing in 107 consecutive contests during his three-year career. He ended his BSU career as the program’s all-time Division I-era assist leader for defensemen (45) and with 7-45=52 career points is tied for 32nd on BSU’s career defenseman scoring charts. Jonsson also was a two-time Academic All-CHA selection. Jonsson was named First-Team Academic All-District V. It
2006 2nd Team 2007 2nd Team 2008 1st Team Riley WESELOWSKI
2008 2nd Team 2009 2nd Team Travis Winter
2009 1st Team Cody BOSTOCK
marked his second consecutive All-District laurel; he was a second-team selection in 2004. Jonsson joined former BSU defenseman Bryce Methven as the only two skaters in BSU men’s ice hockey history to twice be named Academic All-District V. Jonsson joined Jim Karner as one of only two BSU men’s ice hockey players to earn Academic All-America honors. Karner was honored on the College Division All1994 America Team in 1994. Jim The Academic All-America Teams are KARNER selected by a vote of the 2,000-member CoSIDA. To be eligible, an athlete must be a varsity starter or key reserve and maintain a cumulative GPA of at least 3.20 on a scale of 4.00. Sports information directors nominate eligible athletes from their schools, who are then voted onto the all-district teams. First-Team All-District honorees advance to the All-America ballot. The program honors 816 student-athletes nationwide each year.
2009-10
Since 1987, 78 Bemidji State men’s ice hockey players have earned a total of 167 Academic All-Conference honors, starting during BSU’s small-college era in the Northern Collegiate Hockey Association and continuing in the program’s Division I era as a member of College Hockey America.
uRyan Adams uOrlando Alamano Jesse Balsimo Travis Barnes uEmil Billberg Jake Bluhm uCody Bostock Wade Chiodo Matt Climie Brendan Cook uRyan Cramer Donnie DeMars David Deterding Scot Dickson Luke Erickson uMatt Francis Lou Garritan Jean-Guy Gervais Marty Goulet John Haider Jared Hanowski uKyle Hardwick Ryan Huddy Blaine Jarvis Peter Jonsson Todd Knott uTyler Lehrke Ben Lindell uIan Lowe uDan MacIntyre uBrandon Marino Jeff McGill uChris McKelvie Grahm McManamin Andrew Martens Bill Methven Bryce Methven Ryan Miller Joey Moggach Dannie Morgan Andrew Murray Chris Nathe Anders Olsson uChris Peluso Mike Perpich Matt Pope uMatt Read Riley Riddell Garrett Roth Nathan Schwartzbauer Jacob Searles Layne Sedevie Rob Sirianni Niko Suoraniemi Bob Tallarico John Vadnais Riley Weselowski uTravis WInter
Academic All-NCHA Matt Anderson Mike Beaton Omer Belisle Greg Biskup Chris Bjornson Jeff Cordray Robin Cook Mike Donaghue Troy Edwards Scott Elder Jamie Erb Blaine Harrison James Karner Marc Lafleur Robert Larson Terry Mattson Aaron McClellan Chris Medicine Ed Melville Nicholas Meiers John Neuman Neal Raske Dan Richards Drew Shandro Jeff Sobb Dan Tollefson Scott Wilson Kyle Young
D 2009 G 2006-07-08-09 D 2004 F 2002-03-04 F 2009 F 2006-07-08 D 2007-08-09 F 2003-04 G 2006-07-08 F 2003-04-05 F 2009 F 2003 D 2006-07-08 F 2000-01 F 2005-06-07 F 2008-09 F 2004-05-06 F 2004-05-06 F 2002-03 D 2003-04 F 2003-04 D 2008-09 F 2004-05-06 F 2006 & 08 D 2003-04-05 F 2001-02 F 2008-09 D 2003 F 2009 F/D 2009 F 2007-08-09 F 2001-02-03 F 2008-09 D 2008 D 2004-05 F 2002-03-04 D 2002-03-04 F 2005-06-07 F 2008 G 2002-03-04 F 2003-04-05 D 2005 D 2003-04 D 2008-09 F 2001 F 2006-07-08 F 2009 F 2003 F 2005-06-07 D 2005-06-07 F 2000 D 2005-06-07 F 2005 D 2006 G 2001 D 2008 D 2006-07-08 F 2007-08-09
G G F D D D G D D F F F F F G D F G F F F D F F F F D D
1998-99 1996 1995 1987 1995 1991 1995-96 1998 1996-97 1994 1993 1989-90 1992-93-94 1997-98-99 1993 1987 1996-97-98 1995 1996 1998 1988 1991 1987-89 1996 1996-97 1990-91-92-93 1997-98 1997-98
105
Academic Excellence
As Bemidji State has made inroads in its development as a Division I program, its progress in the classroom has been remarkable. In its eighth year under head coach Tom Serratore, the BSU program has become an academic juggernaut, annually dominating the Academic All-College Hockey America honor roll. In addition, BSU has had 12 ESPN the Magazine / College Sports Information Directors of America Academic AllDistrict V selections since 2004 and has passed the NCAA’s Academic Progress Rate performance checks with flying colors. Overall, BSU men’s ice hockey carries a cumulative GPA of 3.5.
D-I Beavers in post-college hockey
By Player
G Orlando Alamano (2004-2009) Bakersfield (Calif.) Condors F Daryl Bat (1999-2001) Asplöven HC HC Örebro Tilburg Trappers
Youngstown Steelhouds Dayton Bombers ECHL
2009-P
SWE1 SWE1 IIHF
2004-05 2005-06 2006-07
D Stefan Bjork (1999-00) Djurgårdens IF Huddinge IK Hammarby IF
SEL ALS ALS
1995-97 1998-99 2002-05
D Cody Bostock (2005-09) Odense Bulldogs
DKL
2009-P
G Matt Climie (2004-08) Iowa Stars AHL Idaho Steelheads ECHL Dallas Stars NHL Houston Aeros AHL F Brendan Cook (2001-05) Pensacola (Fla.) Ice Pilots Utah Grizzlies Columbia (S.C.) Inferno Austin Ice Bats Nottingham Panthers F Luke Erickson (2003-2007) Gwinnett Gladiators Pensacola (Fla.) Ice Pilots Alaska Aces F Rico Fatticci (1999-2001) Greenville Grrrowl Wichita (Kan.) Thunder Kalamazoo (Mich.) Wings Port Huron (Mich.) Beacons Roanoke Valley (Va.) Vipers Port Huron (Mich.) Flags Tulsa Oilers F Matt Francis Gwinnett (Ga.) Gladiators F Marty Goulet (1999-2003) Höchstädter EC Quad City (Ill.) Mallards F Ryan Huddy (2002-06) Peiting EC Hannover Indians Stockton Thunder Springfield Falcons G Grady Hunt (2000-04) Rockford (Ill.) IceHogs Tulsa (Okla.) Oilers
ECHL ECHL ECHL CHL EIHL ECHL ECHL ECHL ECHL CHL UHL UHL UHL UHL CHL
2008 2008-09 2009 2009 2005-07 2006-07 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2002-04 2003-04 2004-05 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2006-07
ECHL
2009-P
OBL UHL
2003-04 2003-04
OBL OBL ECHL AHL
2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2008-09
UHL CHL
2004-05 2004-05
F Blaine Jarvis (2004-08) Idaho Steelheads Rapid City Rush
ECHL CHL
2008 2008-09
D Peter Jonsson (2001-05) Rögle BK Rögle BK
SWE1 1996-99 ALS 1999-01; 2005-P
D Andrew Martens (2002-06) Greenville (N.C.) Grrrowl Johnstown (Penn.) Cheifs Ontario Reign Manitoba Moose Toronto Marlies
ECHL ECHL ECHL AHL AHL
2005-06 2006-07 2008 2008-09 2009
FIN AUS
2002-03 2003-07
D Jamie Mattie (2001-02) JYP Jyväskylä EC Graz
F Andrew Murray (2001-05) Syracuse (N.Y.) Crunch AHL Columbus Blue Jackets NHL D Anders Olsson (2001-04) Tingsryds AIF Tingsryds AIF Varese HC Bakersfield (Calif.) Condors Tingsryds AIF
SWE1 ALS ITA ECHL SWE1
2005-08 2008-P 1996-99 1999-01 2004-05 2005-06 2005-06
D Mark Phenow (1999-2002) Kalamazoo (Mich.) Wings UHL Jacksonville (Fla.) Barracudas WHA2/SPHL Fayetteville (Ark.) FireAntz SPHL Greenville (N.C.) Grrrowl ECHL Bloomington Prairie Thunder UHL
2003-04 2003-05 2004-06 2005-06 2006-07
F Matt Pope (2004-08) Bakersfield Condors Binghamton Senators Manitoba Moose
2008-09 2009 2009
F Riley Riddell (2001-04) Idaho Steelheads Atlantic City (N.J.) Boardwalk Bullies Wheeling (W.V.) Nailers Columbus (Ga.) Cottonmouths Egna HC D Nathan Schwartzbauer (2003-07) Pheonix Roadrunners
106
ECHL AHL AHL ECHL ECHL ECHL SPHL ITA ECHL
2004-05 2004-05 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007
CHL ECHL
2007-08 2008-09
CZK
2009-P
G Layne Sedevie (2003-07) Youngstown Steelhounds Montana Ice Miners Whichita Thunder
CHL MAHL CHL
2007-08 2007 2007
G Kelly Shields (2002-03) Fort Wayne (Ind.) Komets Bakersfield (Calif.) Condors Victoria (B.C.) Salmon Kings Fresno (Calif.) Falcons Jacksonville (Fla.) Barracudas Pee Dee (S.C.) Cyclones Roanoke (Va.) Vipers Heereveen Flyers
UHL ECHL ECHL ECHL SPHL SPHL UHL IIHF
F Rob Sirianni (2003-07) Younstown Steelhounds Syracuse Crush Utah Grizlies Wheeling Nailers Binghampton Senators Philadelphia Phantoms
CHL AHL ECHL ECHL AHL AHL
D Tyler Scofield (2005-09) HC Plzen
F Frank Udovich (1999-2002) Reading (Pa.) Royals
ECHL
F Luke Erickson (2003-07)
2007-08
Reading (Pa.) Royals F Frank Udovich (1999-02)
2001-02
Utah Grizzlies F Brendan Cook (2001-05) F Rob Sirianni (2003-07)
2006-07 2007-08
Victoria (B.C.) Salmon Kings G Kelly Shields (2002-03)
2004-05
2003-05 2004-05 2004-05 2004-05 2005-06 2005-06 2005-06 2006-07
Wheeling (W.V.) Nailers F Riley Riddell (2001-04)
2004-05
Southern Professional Hockey League Columbus (Ga.) Cottonmouths F Riley Riddell (2001-04)
2005-06
Fayetteville (Ark.) FireAntz D Mark Phenow (1999-2002)
2004-06
2006-07 2007 2007-08 2008-09 2008 2008-09
Jacksonville (Fla.) Barracudas D Mark Phenow (1999-2002) G Kelly Shields (2002-03)
2004-05 2004-05
Pee Dee (S.C.) Cyclones G Kelly Shields (2002-03)
2005-06
United Hockey League Fort Wayne (Ind.) Komets G Kelly Shields (2002-03)
2003-05
Kalamazoo (Mich.) Wings F Rico Fatticci (1999-2001) D Mark Phenow (1999-2002)
2004-05 2002-03
Port Huron (Mich.) Beacons F Rico Fatticci (1999-2001)
2004-05
AHL
Quad City (Ill.) Mallards F Marty Goulet (1999-2003)
2003-04
2008 2009
Roanoke Valley (Va.) Vipers F Rico Fatticci (1999-2001) Rockford IceHogs G Grady Hunt (2000-04)
2001-02
D Riley Weselowski (2004-2008) Idaho Steelheads
ECHL
2008-09
F Travis Winter (2005-2009) Cincinatti Cyclones
ECHL
2009-P
By League
Minor Professional American Hockey League Binghamton Senators F Rob Sirianni (2003-07) F Matt Pope (2004-08) Houston Aeros G Matt Climie (2004-08) Iowa Stars G Matt Clime (2005-08) Manitoba Moose F Matt Pope (2004-08) Philadelphia Phantoms F Rob Sirianni (2003-07) Springfield Falcons F Ryan Huddy (2002-06) Syracuse (N.Y.) Crunch F Andrew Murray (2001-05) F Rob Sirianni (2003-07)
2009 2008 2009 2008-09 2009 2005-08 2007 CHL
World Hockey Association 2 Jacksonville (Fla.) Barracudas D Mark Phenow (1999-2002)
SPHL
UHL
2005-06 2004-05 WHA2 2003-04
European Non-Elite Leagues German Oberliga Höchstädter EC F Marty Goulet (1999-2003)
GerOBL 2003-04
Italy ITA Varese HC F Riley Ridell D Anders Olsson (2001-04)
2006-07 2004-05
Central Hockey League Gwinnett Gladiators F Luke Erickson (2003-07) F Matt Francis (2006-09)
2007 2009-P
Allsvenskan (Sweden) Hammarby IF D Stefan Björk (1999-00)
2000-05
Tulsa (Okla.) Oilers D Rico Fatticci (1999-2001) G Grady Hunt (2000-04)
2006-07 2004-05
Huddinge IK D Stefan Björk (1999-00)
1998-99
Wichita (Kan.) Thunder F Rico Fatticci (1999-2001)
2003-04
HC Plzen (Czech Republic) D Tyler Scofield (2005-09)
CZK 2009-P
Youngstown Steelhounds G Layne Sedevie (2003-07)
2007-09
Odense Bulldogs (Denmark) D Cody Bostock (2005-09)
DKL 2009-P
Rögle BK D Peter Jönsson (2001-05)
1999-01; 2005-P
Tingsryds AIF D Anders Olsson (2001-04)
1999-01
First Division (Sweden) Asplöven HC F Daryl Bat (1999-2001)
2004-05
HC Örebro F Daryl Bat (1999-2001)
2005-06
2006-07
Rögle BK D Peter Jönsson (2001-05)
1996-99
Fresno (Calif.) Falcons G Kelly Shields (2002-03)
2004-05
Tingsryds AIF D Anders Olsson (2001-04)
1996-99; 2005-06
Greenville (N.C.) Grrrowl F Rico Fatticci (1999-2001) D Mark Phenow (2001-04) D Andrew Martens (2002-06)
2002-04 2005-06 2005-06
European Elite Leagues Austrian League EC Graz D Jamie Mattie (2001-02)
2003-07
Idaho Steelheads F Riley Riddell (2001-04)
2004-05
Elitserien (Sweden) Djurgårdens IF D Stefan Björk (1999-00)
1995-97
SM-liiga (Finland) JYP Jyväsylä D Jamie Mattie (2001-02)
2002-03
East Coast Hockey League Atlantic City (N.J.) Boardwalk Bullies F Riley Riddell (2001-04)
2004-05
Bakersfield (Calif.) Condors D Anders Olsson (2001-04) G Kelly Shields (2002-03) G Orlando Alamano (2004-09)
2005-06 2004-05 2009-P
Cincinatti (OH) Cyclones F Travis Winter (2005-09) Columbia (S.C.) Inferno F Brendan Cook (2001-05)
Johnstown Chiefs D Andrew Mertens (2002-06) Pheonix Roadrunners D Nathan Schwartzbauer Pensacola (Fla.) Ice Pilots F Brendan Cook (2001-05)
2009-10
ECHL
2009-P
2006-07 2006-07 2005-2007
ALS
SWE1
AUS
SEL
FIN
The BSU Logo
In February, 1920, an assembly hour was set aside for the selection of school colors. After the balloting on colors had resulted in a deadlock, Cyrillus Freeman, a student from Minneapolis, rose and commanded attention. “As we sat here discussing this question,” she said, “I happened to glance out the window. The sight that met my eyes was fresh, green pines silhouetted against pure white snow. What could be more appropriate than green and white?” This idea was accepted unanimously.
During the fall semester of 1998, campus-wide discussions were held on the need for new marks to represent the University as well as BSU athletics. The University marks at the time had been in place since 1974, with minor revisions in 1987, while no official athletic mascot, logo or image had been adopted for University use. A committee was formed and for the next academic year an audit and review were conducted on the school logo and athletics imagery to determine what images were being used to represent the institution. During the spring and summer of 1999, requests for proposals (RFP) were sought from outside firms to assist the university in this historic undertaking. The BSU coaching staffs took great interest in the efforts to produce the new Beaver logo. They desired an image that would represent pride and confidence while being gender-neutral and not appearing cartoonish in nature. The public relations firm of Russell & Herder of Brainerd was awarded the RFP for the logo project during the summer of 2000. For the remainder of 2000 and through early 2001, Russell & Herder helped oversee focus groups and surveys regarding the logo change. In Dec. 2000, preliminary logo designs were presented to the committee, and revisions were made until the time the new marks were formally adopted and officially unveiled March 28, 2001 at a ceremony on campus.
The Naming of the Beavers As President Deputy reviewed football practice one evening in May, 1932, he called the team into a huddle and raising his hands above their heads declared, “I christen this team the Beavers.” The name “Beavers” is symbolic of the silent, hard-working teams representing Bemidji State University.
Fight Song “Go Bemidji Beavers Go you green and white Go Bemidji Beavers Fight with all your might! Rah! Rah! Rah! We are here to cheer you We are out to bring you fame So go Bemidji Beavers Fight and win this game!”
Beaver Hockey Alumni
Bemidji State’s storied hockey legacy has led numerous BSU players to advance to the next level of hockey, representing the Beavers at the professional level or the United States in international competition. Bemidji State has produced six NHL players, including Joel Otto who won a Stanley Cup with the Calgary Flames in 1989. National Hockey League Matt Climie Dallas Stars Jim McElmury Minnesota/Kansas City/Colorado Andrew Murray Columbus Joel Otto Calgary/Philadelphia Gary Sargent Los Angeles/Minnesota Dale Smedsmo Toronto
The World Famous Red Line Swingers pep band has provided music, entertainment and excitement for Bemidji State hockey for three decades. Open to all Bemidji State undergraduates and alumni, the Red Line Swingers accommodate 15-25 members annually. Formed in 1974 by then-head coach R.H. “Bob” Peters, the band is currently under the direction of Dr. Erika Svanoe.
2008-P 1984-98 1975-83 1972-73
National Hockey League Draft Picks Dale Smedsmo Toronto Seventh Round 93th pick Gary Sargent Los Angeles Third Round 48th pick Andrew Murray Columbus Eighth Round 242nd pick Chris Peluso Pittsburgh Seventh Round 194th pick United States National Team Charlie Brown 1970, 1973 Bruce Falk 1970 Bryan Grand 1970 Jim McElmury 1971 Blane Comstock 1973, 1974, 1975 Gary Sargent 1973, 1976 Gary Ross 1976 Joel Otto 1984, 1987, 1991,1996 United States Olympic Team Charlie Brown Jim McElmury Blane Comstock Gary Ross Joel Otto
Red-Line Swingers
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British Hockey League Greg Biskup Lee Valley/Trafford Dan Richards Trafford German First Division Mike Alexander Straubing EHC
1972 (Silver) 1972 (Silver) 1976 (5th) 1976 (5th) 1998 (5th)
1988-91 1990-91
1990-93
International Hockey League Dale Baldwin 1980-87 Fort Wayne Pat DeMarchi 1972-76 Muskegon/Port Huron/Virginia/Syracuse Jim Logan 1998-2001 Detroit/Michigan/Milwaukee The 1972 Olympic team (left) trained in Bemidji from Aug.Sept. 1971 prior to competition in Sapporo, Japan. front row: Pete Sears, Keith Christiansen, Murray Williamson, Hal Trumble, Tim Sheehy, Lefty Curran middle row: Buddy Kessel-Equipment, Bruce McIntosh, Jim McElmury, Larry Bader, Frank Sanders, Ron Naslund, Wally Olds, Charlie Brown, Tim Regan, Dr. Nagobads back row: Mark Howe, Craig Sarner, Tom Mellor, Henry Boucha, Dick McGlynn, Kevin Ahearn, Robbie Ftorek, Stu Irving
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BSU Traditions
The School Colors
Bemidji State University 108
The Bemidji area is home to a population of more than 30,000 and includes the Leech Lake, White Earth, and Red Lake Indian Reservations, and Lake Itasca, the headwaters to the Mississippi River. The City of Bemidji provides a focus for educational, business, and medical services. Recreational and cultural activities reflect a multicultural heritage that includes American Indian, European and Canadian influences. Bemidji is a “golden city” along the river’s bank, only miles from where the mighty Mississippi River begins its 2,552 mile journey to New Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico, a city at the center of the legends of Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox. Bemidji’s natural beauty and bounty as a meeting or group tour destination is also enhanced with historic character. From world renown statues and architecture listed on the National Register of Historic Places, to ancient earth mounds and burial grounds, the past takes an interesting turn in Bemidji. Bemidji’s waterfront is home to the worldfamous statues of Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Nearby is Bemidji’s Tourist Information Center. In addition to Paul Bunyan memorabilia, The Bunyan House features the Fireplace of States built with stones from every state in the U.S. and Canadian provinces. To the north, you’ll encounter Library Park and the statue of Bemidji’s founding Chief Bemidji, as well as the Community Arts Center in the Carnegie Building, also on the National Register. At the south end of Lake Bemidji is Nymore Beach, site of the Crookston Lumber Co. The burning of the mill in 1924 marked the end of the county’s logging era. On the way into Bemidji, you may cross over the historic Mississippi River Bridge, built in 1916. This structure is listed on the National
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Register as one of the earliest examples of a steel-reinforced concrete bridge. At the southern end of Minnesota Avenue lies the Great Northern Depot, completed in 1913. On the Historic Register, the Depot is the last early 20th century railroad building left in its original condition. The Commercial Building on Third Street, built in 1910, is cited in the Architecture of Minnesota Guide as a successful prairie-style solution for a single-story building. Other examples of historic architecture include the Beltrami County Courthouse built in 1902. Across the street you’ll find the 1917 Colonial Revival-style former Post Office. Perhaps Bemidji’s best-known historic district is the eight-block section of Lake Boulevard. Once known as Bemidji’s “Gold Coast,” among the many venerable homes to be viewed is the Dr. Johnson House built in 1910 with a showcase garden. The Bacon House was also built in 1910, later used for a Catholic convent. An unusual log structure, the Fisk House was reconstructed log-by-log at the present site. Judge Fisk enjoyed entertaining many distinguished guests, including writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. Further along you’ll find Warfield House, the 1912 home of the man who built Bemidji’s electric light plant. Two lady teachers resided at the 1930s Parker & Mangelsdorf House, also known for its large, informal gardens. Birchmont Drive displays two art deco classics built in 1937, one with a semicircular glass projection, is located at Bemidji State University, the only lakeshore campus in the state with architecture dating back to 1919. Located about midway between Minneapolis/ St. Paul to the south and Winnipeg, Canada to the north, Bemidji has easy access by air, motor carrier, and automobile to metropolitan areas and international airports.
Bemidji State’s vision - Shaping Potential, Shaping Worlds - reflects the opportunities that approximately 5,000 students have each year at BSU to expand their talents and skill and to use their abilities in making an impact within their personal, professional, community and global spheres. It also exemplifies Bemidji State’s role in shaping students’ interests and talents while preparing them for the future.
History
Bemidji State began as a state Normal school in 1919, became a leading teachers’ college in the region, and achieved University status in 1975. Currently, BSU recognizes over 40,000 alumni.
Financial Aid / Scholarships
Eighty-two percent of students at Bemidji State receive some form of financial assistance. Over $16 million was awarded last year to students, including $6 million in grants and scholarships.
Bemidji State University offers the following degree programs:
Academic ProgramS The only baccalaureate institution in northern Minnesota, Bemidji State offers 65 undergraduate major fields of study and 13 graduate programs housed in one of three major colleges: College of Arts & Sciences, College of Health Sciences and Human Ecology and the College of Business, Technology, and Communications. Quality education is a priority at BSU, as many programs have earned national acclaim. The accounting program ranks among the nation’s Top 10 in preparing students for the CPA examination, and scientific research has gained national exposure in a variety of fields.
Students / Faculty
While more than 86 percent of Bemidji State students come from Minnesota, the University attracts a broad and diverse student body from 35 states and 35 foreign nations. Through teaching and informed attention to the educational needs of students, the University seeks to instill the spark of openness and commitment for lifelong learning. In fact, many BSU faculty members continue to pursue knowledge as specialists and educators in their fields.
Location
Bemidji State University lies in the heart of the city of Bemidji, midway between Minneapolis/St. Paul and Winnipeg, deep within Minnesota’s lakes and forest region. With stands of pine, oak and birch reflecting the nearby presence of the northern woods, the east side of campus lines the shores of Lake Bemidji. The city of Bemidji, which serves a population of approximately 40,000, provides a regional focus for educational, business and medical services. Entertainment and activities include lively downtown Bemidji, shopping malls, theatre, art, downhill and cross country skiing and various forms of water recreation.
Facilities
The modern campus spans 89 acres on the shores of Lake Bemidji, including the Physical Education Complex which houses the John S. Glas Fieldhouse, host to several NCAA Championships. The BSU Gymnasium hosts the basketball and volleyball events, and a 3,000 square foot weight room, human performance labratory, indoor track, and tennis, racquetball and swimming areas complete the complex.Football fans can catch a spectacular view of Lake Bemidji through the east end zone of Chet Anderson Stadium.
Internships
Each year, students complete internships with the likes of the NASA space program in Houston, Texas, Disneyland, Compaq, Rubbermaid and a host of architectural firms.
Bachelor of Science Accounting Applied Psychology: Human Services Aquatic Biology Art (Teacher Licensure) Biology Business Administration Chemistry Community Health Computer Information Systems Computer Science Criminal Justice Design Technology Economics Elementary Education (Teacher Licensure) English (Teacher Licensure) Environmental Studies Geography German (Teacher Licensure) Health Education (Teacher Licensure) History Industrial Technology International Studies Life Science/Biology (Teacher Licensure) Life Science/Chemistry/Physics (Teacher Licensure) Marketing Communications Mass Communication Mathematics Mathematics (Teacher Licensure) Medical Technology Music (Teacher Licensure) Nursing Physical Education (Teacher Licensure) Physics Psychology Science (Teacher Licensure) Social Studies Social Work Spanish (Teacher Licensure) Technology Education (Teacher Licensure) Vocational Education (Bachelor of Science) Bachelor of Arts Art Biology Chemistry English Geography German History Humanities Indian Studies Industrial Technology Music Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Social Studies Sociology Spanish Sports Management Program Theatre Bachelor of Fine Arts Art Creative & Professional Writing Pre-Professional Programs Pre-Chiropractice Program Pre-Denistry Program Pre-Engineering Program Pre-Law Program Pre-Medicine Program Pre-Mortuary Science Program Pre-Nursing Program Pre-Occupational Therapy Program Pre-Optometry Program Pre-Pharmacy Program Pre-Physical Therapy Program Pre-Physician’s Assistant Program Pre-Veterinary Medicine Program Specialized Licensure Programs Devlopmental Adapted Physical Education Early Childhood Early Childhood Family Education Emotional/Behavioral Disorders Middle School Reading Secondary Developmental Reading Special Education Specific Learning Disabilities (Mild to Moderate Mentally Impaired ) Vocational Education Minors Not Included In Major Fields Anthropology Applied Public Policy Art History Chemical Dependency Earth Science Geology International Studies Ojibwe Outdoor Management Peace & Justice Studies Religious Studies Space Studies Women’s Studies
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Welcome to Bemidji
Goals
Facilities Chet Anderson Stadium is home to BSU’s football and outdoor track and field programs. It is one of just three collegiate football stadiums in the nation with a lakeside setting.
BSU Baseball Field plays host to the Beaver baseball program in the spring. The stadium grandstand was completed for the 2002 season and the facility id currently undergoing a $170,000 renovation project including the installation of new dugouts and a Fair-Paly electronic LED scoreboard.
BSU Gymnasium is the home of BSU’s men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball programs. The facility underwent a $150,000 floor replacement project prior to the 2005-06 season and will be home to new state-of-the-art Daktronics scoreboards in 2007-08.
Bemidji State’s softball program plays its home contests at the BSU Softball Field, adjacent to the baseball field. In the spring of 2008, the school will unveil a new permanent scoreboard at the facility.
John S. Glas Fieldhouse is the legendary home of BSU’s men’s and women’s ice hockey programs. BSU’s men have won five national championships in the building.
The BSU indoor track and tennis teams make their home in the Gillett Recreation and Fitness Center, one of the finest indoor facilities in the region. It is the annual host of the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference Indoor Track & Field Championships and also serves as the campus recreational center.
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Beaver Pride
Help Fill a Piece of the Puzzle Support BSU Student-Athlete Scholarships Join Beaver Pride Call (218) 755-2827 http://www.gobeaverpride.org Beaver Pride 1500 Birchmont Drive NE David Park House Bemidji, MN 56601
Lisa Hofstad phone: e-mail:
(218) 755-2872 lhofstad@bemidjistate.edu
Wray Wright phone: e-mail:
(218) 755-2827 wrwright@bemidjistate.edu
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ncaa compliance
Media Services
Bemidji State provides extensive Internet information resources for those covering BSU ice men’s hockey and its other athletics programs. The BSU athletic media relations Web site contains schedules, rosters, updated statistics and some historical information from previous seasons. Print-quality photos of BSU players and coaches are also available for download. BSU’s weekly game-notes package is completed and made available on-line during the season, and are typically available Wednesday afternoon. BSU’s game notes are in Adobe PDF format and will be distributed via electronic means only (e-mail or Web). Due to the size of the release, it will not be regularly distributed via fax. Information on Bemidji State men’s ice hockey is available on other reputable web sites which cover college hockey: • http://www.collegehockeyamerica.com • http://www.collegehockeystats.net • http://www.uscho.com Official BSU athletics web site: • http://www.bemidjistate.edu/athletics Game-Day Services Gameday packages containing programs, line charts, game notes and other information will be available in the John S. Glas Fieldhouse press box prior to all home contests. Final statistics include an official NCAA box score and per-period shot charts. Game notes and quotes from coaches and selected players will also be available. Telephone, copier and fax services are available on a first-come, first-served basis. There is wireless Internet service in the John Glas Fieldhouse. In addition, media requiring postgame Internet access are welcome to use the BSU athletic media relations offices in the adjoining Gillett Recreation/Fitness Center. Credentials / Pass List Season credentials will be issued to all media covering the Beavers on a regular basis. For single-game passes and credentials, contact the BSU office of athletic media relations no less than 24 hours before the scheduled starting time of the event. Credential requests must be submitted via fax on official letterhead. Credentials will be issued only to representatives of an accredited media outlet who will be working in an official capacity to cover a BSU athletic event. No credentials will be issued to friends, spouses, children or other family members. Credentials remain the property of Bemidji State University and may be revoked at any time.
Who Are Boosters?
You are considered a booster or a representative of Bemidji State University Athletics interests if you: • Participated in or are currently a member of any athletics department booster group, including Beaver Pride • Have made a donation to the athletic program • Have assisted or been asked to assist with recruiting of prospective student athletes • Have assisted in providing benefits to enrolled student athletes or families • Have helped to promote BSU athletics or BSU athletic interests in any way Once a person has become identified as a booster to BSU they retain that identity indefinitely even if they no longer support the athletics program.
Who Are Prospective Student-Athletes?
The NCAA defines a “prospect” as anyone who has started classes for the ninth grade. In addition, a student who has not started classes for the ninth grade becomes a prospect if the institution provides any financial assistance or other benefits not provided to any prospective student.
What Are Permissible Activities by Boosters?
The following are activities that BSU boosters can participate in: • May attend events such as contests or banquets where prospects are present so long as the booster is there on their own initiative. Boosters are NOT able to contact prospects or prospect’s relatives at such events. • Boosters CAN inform BSU coaches of prospects in their area by contacting the BSU staff and/or sending newspaper clippings about the prospect. • Boosters may arrange employment for prospects. Prospects may not start the job until after completion of their senior year in high school, and compensation must be based on actual work performed at a normal rate. • Boosters can continue to establish family relationships with friends and neighbors. Contacts with prospects are permitted as long as they are NOT for recruiting purposes and are NOT initiated by BSU staff members.
Dolly Fieldman Compliance G.A.
BSU Athletics Compliance Office 1500 Birchmont Drive NE, Box 29 Bemidji, MN 56601 Compliance Coordinator Sarah Levesque phone: (218) 755-2142 fax: (218) 755-3898 e-mail: slevesqque@bemidjistate.edu Compliance Graduate Assistant Dolly Fieldman phone: (218) 755-2771 e-mail: dfieldman@bemidjistate.edu
What is a Contact? What is Considered Recruiting? Contact is any face-to-face encounter between a prospect or their parents/guardians and a BSU staff member or athletics representative (booster) during which dialogue occurs in excess of a greeting. Recruiting is any solicitation of a prospect or the prospect’s relatives by a BSU staff member or athletics representative (booster) for the purpose of securing the prospect’s enrollment and eventual participation in the BSU intercollegiate athletics program.
Professional Scouts By NCAA regulation, persons in attendance at a Bemidji State hockey contest for the purpose of scouting players for professional leagues or franchises must purchase a ticket in order to gain access to the contest. Scouts will be provided with a pass which will give them access to the press box for the purpose of obtaining line charts and statistics. Requests for these passes must be made through Director of Athletic Media Relations Brad Folkestad.
info.bemidjistate.edu/sports
The official Web site of the Bemidji State University Office of athletic Media Relations, www.bemidjistate.edu/athletics contains all the information you need to assist with your coverage of Bemidji State men’s ice hockey or any of the other 16 varsity intercollegiate sports offered at BSU. The Web site contains typical schedule and roster information, biographical sketches of the Beavers and the coaching staff, comprehensive statistical information and news release archives. Additionally, information from previous seasons is archived and remains available on the Web site, providing a valuable research tool for media or others covering the Bemidji State men’s ice hockey program. Season stats are available for BSU’s entire Division I era, beginning with the 1999-2000 season, and small-college era statistics are currently available back to the 1997-98 season. More information is being added to the archive sections of the web site on a frequent basis, so if you cannot find what you’re looking for check back or contact the athletic media relations office for assistance. Also available at the site are complete media guides for men’s and women’s ice hockey, men’s and women’s basketball, football and volleyball in Adobe PDF format. available in the archives.
Practice Bemidji State’s daily practice sessions are open to the media. Please contact Brad Folkestad if you wish to attend. Interview Policies All player interviews outside of post-game and practice time must be arranged through the BSU office of athletic media relations. Player interviews are typically arranged during early-afternoon hours before the team has its afternoon practice. For interviews with coaches, contact the athletic media relations office at (218) 755-4603. By NCAA rule, no player interviews will be available on gameday until the conclusion of that day’s contest. Contact the office of athletic media relations with questions or for assistance. Directions to John Glas Fieldhouse Highway 2 passes through Bemidji east-west, and Highway 71 is the main north-south thoroughfare. Each leads to Bemidji Avenue/Paul Bunyan Drive. Follow Bemidji Avenue / Paul Bunyan Drive to 19th Street; the John S. Glas Fieldhouse is on the corner of 19th Street and Paul Bunyan Drive, directly across the street from Slumberland Furniture.
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• Bemidji Pioneer Phone (218) 333-9200 Fax (218) 333-9819 1320 Washington Ave, SE Bemidji, MN 56601 http://www.bemidjipioneer.com Jim Carrington (editor) sports@bemidjipioneer.com John McRae (hockey beat) jmcrae@bemidjipioneer.com Eric Strongren estromgren@bemidjipioneer.com • The Northern Student Phone Fax Bemidji State University Bemidji, MN 56601
(218) 755-2987 (218) 755-3757 or 2913
Local Television
• KAWE/KAWB-TV (Lakeland Public Television) Phone (218) 751-0085 or (800) 292-0922 Fax (218) 759-0460 or (800) 861-7544 Lakeland News Bemidji State University, Box 9 Bemidji, MN 56601 http://www.lakelandptv.org Dennis Weimann (news director) dweimann@lakelandptv.org Aaron McElherne (sports director) sports@lakelandptv.org • KBSU TV-17 (local hockey telecast production) Phone (218) 755-2402 Fax (218) 755-2402 Bemidji State University Bemidji, MN 56601 Scott Williams (play-by-play) scottw1000@charter.net Eric Monsrud (analyst) monzie34@hotmail.com Virgil Bakken (advisor) vbakken@bemidjistate.edu
Local Radio
• R.P. Broadcasting, Inc. (BSU radio flagship) Phone (218) 751-7777 Fax (218) 759-0658 2115 Washington Ave.; Bemidji, MN 56601 TalkRadio 1360 am (radio home for BSU football) MIX 103.7 fm (radio home for BSU hockey) Dan Voss (general manager) dvoss@kkbj.com Brian Schultz (sports director) bschultz@kkbj.com Brian Bissonnette (analyst) bbissonnette@paulbunyan.net • Paul Bunyan Broadcasting, Inc. Phone (218) 444-1500 Fax (218) 751-8091 502 Beltrami Avenue Bemidji, MN 56601 Kevin Jackson (sports director) kjackson@pbbroadcasting.com Moose Richards moosenb@paulbunyan.net Scott Williams scottw1000@charter.net • FM90 (BSU student radio) Phone Fax Bemidji State University Bemidji, MN 56601
Regional Print
• Duluth News-Tribune Phone Fax e-mail 424 W. First Street Duluth, MN 55802 http://www.duluthnews.com Kevin Pates • Fargo Forum Phone Fax e-mail 101 5th Street North Fargo, ND 58102 http://www.in-forum.com Brian Peterson • Grand Forks Herald Phone Toll-free Fax P.O. Box 6008 Grand Forks, ND 58206 http://www.gfherald.com Kevin Fee • Minneapolis Star-Tribune Phone Fax 425 Portland Ave. Minneapolis, MN 55488 http://www.startribune.com Rachel Blount Joel Rippel
Statewide Outlets (800) 456-8181 (218) 723-5314 sports@duluthnews.com
kpates@duluthnews.com (701) 235-7311 (701) 241-5487 sports@forumcomm.com
bpete@forumcomm.com (710) 780-1100, x243 (800) 477-6572 (701) 795-4603
• Minn. Associated Press Phone Toll-free Fax 511 11th Avenue S. (404) Minneapolis, MN 55415
(612) 332-2727 (800) 552-7250 (612) 342-5299
• Minn. News Network Radio Phone Toll free Fax 100 N. 6th St. Suite 476A Minneapolis, MN 55403 • Let’s Play Hockey Phone Fax e-mail East 42nd Street Minneapolis, MN 55406
(612) 321-7211 (800) 879-3462 (612) 321-7222
612-729-0023 612-729-0259 2721 editor@letsplayhockey.com
National Outlets kfee@gfherald.com (800) 829-8742 (612) 673-7774
• USA Today Online Edition Phone Fax 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA 22229 http://www.usatoday.com
(800) 872-3410 (703) 276-5505
• ESPN http://www.espn.com rblount@startribune.com jrippel@startribune.com
• St. Paul Pioneer Press Phone Fax 345 Cedar State St. Paul, MN 55101
(612) 228-5516 (612) 228-5527
Regional Television
• KVLY-TV (Ch. 11; Fargo, N.D.) Phone (701) 237-5211 or (800) 450-5844 Fax: (701) 237-5396 P.O. Box 1878 Fargo, ND 58103 (sports director) • WDIO-TV (Ch. 13; Duluth, Minn.) Phone: (218) 727-6865 Fax: (218) 727-2318 or (218) 727-4415 10 Observation Road Duluth, MN 55811 Tyler Jacobson (sports director) tjacobson@wdio.com
National Hockey • U.S. College Hockey Online http://www.uscho.com Jason Moy (GM) Matt Mackinder also...
gm@uscho.com chawriter@uscho.com makindermedia@yahoo.com
• Inside College Hockey http://www.insidecollegehockey.com Nate Ewell nate@insidecollegehockey.com Mike Eidelbes mike@insidecollegehockey.com • USA College Hockey Magazine phone web 145 Temple Street Duxbury, MA 02332 Brian McDonough
(781) 934-5888 http://www.usacollegehockey.com
• American Hockey Coaches Association web http://www.ahcahockey.com
(218) 755-4120/2059 (218) 755-4119
Radio R.P. Broadcasting, Inc.
R. P. Broadcasting of Bemidji has been only flagship radio home Bemidji State University athletics has known, serving as BSU’s radio outlet since 1999. Since the begining of 2006-07, Bemidji State men’s ice hockey has made its home on MIX 103.7 FM, giving the Beavers unprecedented coverage north-central Minnesota. Additionally, all game broadcasts will be streamed live over the Internet via KKBJ’s web site (http://www.kkbj.com/sports.html). Broadcasts are available by using any mp3 player. Voice of the Beavers Brian Schultz enters his sixth year behind the mic and Brian Bissonette provides color commentary for BSU all home games. Radio and Internet coverage of BSU men’s ice hockey begins 40 minutes prior to the drop of the puck with a comprehensive pregame show, featuring interviews with BSU players, coaches and others involved with the school’s athletics programs, as well as analysis and insights on the coming game.
TV Charter Communications
In 2003, Bemidji State athletics entered a new era of media coverage, partnering with Charter Communications to provide live coverage for BSU home athletics events each year exclusively to Bemidji-area customers on Charter cable systems channel 17. KBSU, Bemidji State’s campus television station, will continue its long-standing tradition of producing BSU athletics telecasts. In addition to the full home schedule of BSU men’s hockey, KBSU will also produce BSU’s full schedule of home football games and a selection of men’s and women’s basketball and a selection of volleyball contests in 2009-10. In total, KBSU and Charter have a nearly 50-game schedule on tap, giving BSU unparalleled media coverage for its intercollegiate programs. Local radio personality Scott Williams, recognized as one of the region’s preeminent on-air talents, returns for his 10th seasons to handle play-by-play duties for all KBSU-produced football, basketball and men’s hockey television broadcasts. Former BSU captain Eric Monsrud provides expert commentary for men’s ice hockey.
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Administration
Dr. Jon Quistgaard President, Bemidji State University University of Arizona (1970)
Dr. Jon E. Quistgaard became the ninth president of Bemidji State University in August, 2001. The Minnesota State Colleges and Universities Board of Trustees named him to the position in late May, 2001 following a national search. A member of the BSU community for 23 years, he had served since 1997 as the vice president for academic and student affairs. As the chief academic officer of the institution, he was responsible for academic programming in three colleges, integrative studies, distance
Dr. Rick Goeb Director of Athletics
North Dakota State University (1989)
A new era in Bemidji State University athletics began July 13, 2001 when Dr. Rick Goeb was named BSU‘s first full-time director of intercollegiate athletics. Goeb directs a 17-sport varsity athletics program at BSU with NCAA Division I men’s and women’s ice hockey and 15 Division II sports. Beaver athletics has undergone dramatic changes in Goeb’s tenure, having seen more than a dozen positions created or filled with new hires - including head coaches for women’s hockey, men’s and women’s basketball, soccer, softball, baseball, women’s golf, tennis and volleyball - and the hiring of BSU’s first full-time athletics fundraiser. In Goeb’s five years overseeing BSU athletics, the program has entered one of the best all-around eras in the program’s history. Men’s ice hockey has won two College Hockey America regular-season titles, two tournament titles and made its first Division I NCAA Tournament appearance; men’s basketball won its first NSIC Championship in decades, advanced to its first-ever NCAA Tournament and has hosted first-round NSIC playoff games each of the last four years; women’s basketball hosted and won its first-ever NSIC playoff game; indoor track won its first-ever NSIC Championship; men’s and women’s golf have made NCAA regional appearances with both full teams
Brad Folkestad
learning, academic services, international student services, counseling, career services, the American Indian Resource Center, and student development programs. Quistgaard began his association with BSU in 1979 as an admissions representative. He became the director of admissions and advising in 1980; was named the dean of undergraduate admissions and graduate studies in 1988; served as acting vice president for academic and student affairs from 1993-94; and was the associate vice president for academic affairs and dean of academic services from 1994-1997. Quistgaard is an active presenter on the national level in the areas of continuous quality improvement, challenges in higher education, planning, assessment models, and transforming higher education. He received a doctorate in political science from the University of Arizona, where he also earned his master’s and bachelor’s degrees in government.
and individual performers. BSU athletics has also assembled a strong academic reputation under Goeb’s leadership. Men’s hockey has set a CHA single-season record for number of Academic All-CHA performers three times and produced the 2005 CHA Student-Athlete of the Year; women’s ice hockey posted three consecutive WCHA Student-Athletes of the Year from 2002-04; and nearly two dozen BSU student-athletes have been recognized on the CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District V Team with four Academic All-America honorees. Goeb came to Bemidji State after six years as senior associate athletics director at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. At Fairbanks, Goeb served as NCAA compliance officer, monitored academic eligibility and acted as the liaison for booster clubs. Prior to his position at Fairbanks, Goeb spent two years as an administrator at North Dakota. Goeb also served as the head wrestling coach at St. Cloud State from 1990-93 when he was an instructor in physical education and a facility coordinator; was the strength and conditioning coach at Northern Colorado from 1989-’90; and served as an assistant wrestling coach at North Dakota State from 1988-’89. Originally from Anoka, Minn., Goeb received his undergraduate degree at North Dakota State, where he was also a Division II national wrestling champion. Goeb earned his master’s from Northern Colorado and doctorate from North Dakota. He and his wife Carol have two daughters, Amber and Anne and a son, Jordan.
Director of Athletic Media Relations Bemidji State University (2001)
Brad Folkestad is in his eighth year in the Office of Atheltic Media Relations at Bemidji State. As Director, he oversees all publicity and media relations operations for BSU’s 17-sport athletics department, and directly handles communications for the university’s football, men’s hockey, golf and track and field programs. Entering his 10th year in the athletic media relations field, Folkestad was promoted to the Director post in the spring of 2007. Folkestad has spent seven years of professional career at BSU. Starting with a two-year stint as a graduate assistant in 2002, he returned as the Assistant SID in the fall of 2004 after a one-year assignment in the same capacity at the University of Minnesota Duluth.
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In addition to serving as the men’s and women’s basketball contact during each of the first four years in the business, Folkestad’s interests and experience in collegiate basketball run deep. He has volunteered at numerous conference, regional and national tournaments including the 2003 and 2006 NCAA Division I Men’s Midwest Regional Tournament in Minneapolis, Minn., the 2005 NCAA Division II Elite Eight in Grand Forks, N.D. at the 2003 NCAA Division II Women’s Frozen Four. He is an active member of the College Sports Information Directors of America and has been recognized for excellence in publications on a number of occasions including a Ninth in the Nation finish for his 2005 BSU Volleyball Media Guide. Folkestad, 31, received his bachelor’s degree in communication from BSU in 2001 and continues to work toward a master’s degree in sports studies. He resides in Bemidji, Minn. with his wife Lisa and their five children Tim, Nicole, Carly, Mackenna and Baylor.
2009-10
BSU Athletic Media Relations staff Director Brad Folkestad (Bemidji State, 2001) football, men’s hockey (218) 755-4603 bfolkestad@bemidjistate.edu Assistant Director Dax Larson (Minnesota State, 2007) volleyball, men’s & women’s basketball (218) 755-2763 dlarson@bemidjistate.edu Graduate Assistant Ross LaDue (Iowa State, 2009) soccer, women’s ice hockey, softball (218) 755-2763 gladue@bemidjistate.edu Student Interns Alayna Skibness Eric Story John Peterson Coorrine Milien
3rd year 3rd year 1st year 1st Year
Sarah Levesque Associate Athletic Dir. Compliance/SWA
Bill Crews Head Athletic Trainer
Brad Folkestad Director of Athletic Media Relations
Vance Balstad Equipment Manager
Justin Enfield Equipment Manager
Deb Slough Office Manager
Laurie Bitter Head Volleyball Coach
Jeff Tesch Head Coach Football
Tom Serratore Head Coach Men’s Ice Hockey
Steve Sertich Head Coach Women’s Ice Hockey
Matt Bowen Head Coach Men’s Basketball
Mike Curfman Head Coach Women’s Basketball
Jim Stone Head Coach Soccer
Craig Hougen Head Coach Track & Field/XC
Don Niskanen Head Coach Men’s Golf
Krissi Super Head Coach Women’s Golf
Toby Palmiscno Head Coach Tennis
Tim Bellew Head Coach Baseball
Jeremy Popp Head Coach Softball
Bucky the Beaver Mascot
Administration & Support Staff
phone
Coaching Staff
phone
Dr. Rick Goeb, Athletics Director 755-2941 Sarah Levesque, Associate AD, Compliance/SWA 755-2142 Debbie Slough, Athletics Administrative Assistant 755-2941 Brad Folkestad, Director Athletic Media Relations 755-4603 Dax Larson, Assistant Director 755-2763 Ross LaDue, Graduate Assistant 755-2763 Bill Crews, Head Athletic Trainer 755-2769 Corinne Dauksavage, Ass’t Trainer 755-2769 Travis Shock, Ass’t Trainer 755-2769 Vance Balstad & Justin Enfield, Equip. Mgrs 755-3292 Jeff Tesch; HC, Football Rich Jahner, Assoc. HC, Football Brent Bolte, Ass’t Football Coach Eric Medberry, Ass’t Footbal Coach Matt Bowen; HC, Men’s Basketball Jeremy Tiers, Ass’t MBB Coach
755-2772 755-3785 755-2768 755-3770 755-2774 755-2323
rgoeb slevesque dslough bfolkestad dlarson gladue wcrews cdauksavage tshock
jtesch rjahner bbolte emedberry mbowen jtiers
Coaching Staff
Laurie Bitter; HC, Volleyball Tim Bellew; HC, Baseball Steve Sertich; HC, Women’s Hockey Heather Ferrell, Ass’t WIH Coach Shane Veenker, Ass’t WIH Coach Tom Serratore; HC, Men’s Hockey Bert Gilling, Ass’t MIH Coach Ted Belisle, Ass’t MIH Coach Mike Curfman; HC, Women’s Basketball Krissi Super, Ass’t WBB/HC, Women’s Golf Craig Hougen; HC, Track & Field Jim Stone; HC, Soccer Toby Palmiscno; HC, Tennis Don Niskanen; HC, Men’s Golf Jeremy Popp; HC Softball
phone
755-3785 755-4108 755-2958 755-4251 755-4251 755-2879 755-2765 755-2765 755-2783 755-2324 755-2883 755-3784 755-2325 755-4641 755-4619
lbitter tbellew ssertich hferrell sveenker tserratore bgilling ebelisle mcurfman ksuper chougen jstone tpalmiscno jpopp
All numbers area code (218); e-mail suffix @bemidjistate.edu
2009-10
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staff directory
Dr. Rick Goeb Director of Athletics
Media Speed Chart 116
3 Ryan Adams
8 Jake Areshenko
33 Dan Bakala
16 Emil Billberg
1 Travis Bosch
5 Matt Carlson
15 Ryan Cramer
Jr., Defenseman
So., Defenseman
So., Goaltender
Jr., Forward
Fr., Goaltender
So., Defensseman
Jr., Forward
35 Mathieu Dugas
6 Darcy Findlay
28 Jordan George
27 Kyle Hardwick
21 Matt Hartmann
29 Brad Hunt
2 Tyler Jundt
Fr., Goaltender
So., Forward
Fr., Forward
Sr., Defenseman
Fr., Forward
So., Defenseman
So., Defenseman
20 Ben Kinne
26 Tyler Lehrke
22 Ian Lowe
4 Dan MacIntyre
17 Jamie MacQueen
23 Chris McKelvie
14 Aaron McLeod
So., Forward
Sr., Forward
Jr., Forward
Jr., Forward/Defense
So., Forward
Sr., Forward
Fr., Forward
7 Brance Orban
9 Chris Peluso
19 Matt Read
25 Brady Wacker
11 Shea Walters
Fr., Forward
Sr., Defenseman
Jr., Forward
Fr., Defenseman
So., Forward
Tom Serratore
Bert Gilling
Ted Belisle
Ryan Marvin
Head Coach Ninth Season
Assistant Coach 11th Season
Assistant Coach Seventh Season
Graduate Assistant Second Season
2009-10
Beavers in the NHL Hockey tradition at Bemidji State University reaches beyond the scope of the collegiate ranks. In addition to supplying the U.S. National and Olympic Teams with several players over its 53-year existence, the BSU hockey program has produced six players that have gone on to skate on hockeyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s grandest stage--the NHL. Not only that, Joel Otto, a member of the Beaversâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 1984 NCAA Division II national Championship team, reached the pinnacle of professional hockey in 1988-89 when we had his name engraved on the Stanley Cup as a member of the World Champion Calgary Flames. Since 2005 alone, four Beavers have inked NHL contracts and as of conclusion of the 2008-09 season, BSU had two alumni, Andrew Murray and Matt Climie, logging time for their respective NHL clubs, while four other players were skating in the AHL.
Andrew Murray Columbus Blue Jackets 2008-Present
Jim McElmury
Minnesota/Kansas City/Colorado 1972-78
Dale Smedsmo Toronto 1972-73
Gary Sargent
Los Angeles/Minnesota 1975-83
Matt Climie Dallas Stars 2009-Present
Joel Otto
Calgary/Philadelphia 1984-98
2009-10 BEMIDJI STATE UNIVERSITY MENâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S HOCKEY
OCTOBER 9 10 23 24 31
Air Force Air Force at Northern Michigan at Northern Michigan at Alabama-Huntsville*
Bemidji, MN Bemidji, MN Marquette, MI Marquette, MI Huntsville, AL
at Alabama-Huntsville* Robert Morris* Robert Morris* at Minnesota at Minnesota Alabama-Huntsville* Alabama-Huntsville* SUBWAY HOLIDAY CLASSIC vs. Miami-Ohio vs. Ohio State
Huntsville, AL 1:00 pm Bemidji, MN 7:35 pm Bemidji, MN 7:05 pm Minneapolis, MN 7:37pm Minneapolis, MN 6:07 pm Bemidji, MN 7:35 pm Bemidji, MN 7:05 pm Grand Forks, ND Grand Forks, ND 4:00 pm Grand Forks, ND 4:00 pm
4 5 11 12
Niagara* Niagara* Minnesota State Minnesota State
Bemidji, MN Bemidji, MN Bemidji, MN Bemidji, MN
7:35 pm 7:05 pm 7:35 pm 7:05 pm
2 3 15 16 22 23 29 30
at Western Michigan at Western Michigan at Niagara* at Niagara* Minnesota Duluth at Minnesota Duluth Robert Morris* Robert Morris*
Kalamazoo, MI Kalamazoo, MI Lewiston, NY Lewiston, NY Bemidji, MN Duluth, MN Bemidji, MN Bemidji, MN
6:30 pm 3:30 pm 6:05 pm 6:05 pm 7:35 pm 7:07 pm 7:35 pm 7:05 pm
12 13 19 20 26 27
at Robert Morris* at Robert Morris* Niagara* Niagara* at Nebraska-Omaha at Nebraska-Omaha
Moon Township, PA Moon Township, PA Bemidji, MN Bemidji, MN Omaha, NE Omaha, NE
6:05 pm 6:05 pm 7:35 pm 7:05 pm 7:05 pm 8:05 pm
NOVEMBER 1 6 7 14 15 20 21 27-28 27 28
DECEMBER
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH 5 6 12-14
at Alabama-Huntsville* Huntsville, AL at Alabama-Huntsville* Huntsville, AL COLLEGE HOCKEY AMERICA TOURNAMENT
* CHA Conference game
7:35 pm 7:05 pm 6:35 pm 6:35 pm 7:00 pm
5:30 pm 3:00 pm TBA
Home games played at John S. Glas Fieldhouse
A member of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system, Bemidji State University is an equal opportunity educator and employer. BSU COMMUNICATIONS & MARKETING 08-408