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Cornell University Athletics

Notes 1-27

Men’s Hockey Heads To North Country To Face St. Lawrence, Clarkson

1/28/2009 11:24:34 AM

Game 20 • Cornell at St. Lawrence
Faceoff:
Friday, Jan. 30, at 7:00 p.m.
Site: Appleton Arena (3,000) • Canton, N.Y.
2008-09 Records: Cornell (14-2-3, 9-1-2 ECAC Hockey) • St. Lawrence (12-10-2, 4-6-2 ECAC Hockey)
Series Record: Cornell leads, 52-39-7
Last Meeting: Cornell won, 1-0, on Dec. 6, 2008, in Ithaca, N.Y.
Television: none
Radio: WHCU 870 AM • Jason Weinstein (play-by-play)
Live Stats: www.cornellbigred.com
Live Audio: www.CornellBigRed.com
Tickets: Available by calling (607) 254-BEAR

Game 21 • Cornell at Clarkson
Faceoff: Saturday, Jan. 31, at 7 p.m.
Site: Cheel Arena (3,000) • Potsdam, N.Y.
2008-09 Records: Cornell (14-2-3, 9-1-2 ECAC Hockey) • Clarkson (7-13-4, 5-6-1 ECAC Hockey)
Series Record: Cornell leads, 52-49-11
Last Meeting: Cornell won, 4-1 • Dec. 5, 2008, in Ithaca, N.Y.
Television: none
Radio: WHCU 870 AM • Jason Weinstein (play-by-play)
Live Stats: www.CornellBigRed.com
Live Audio: www.CornellBigRed.com
Tickets: Available by calling (607) 254-BEAR

Game Notes In PDF Format

ITHACA, N.Y. -- The Cornell men's hockey team travels to the North Country this weekend for a pair of games at two of its least friendly venues of the past few seasons. Cornell will face St. Lawrence in a 7 p.m. contest on Friday night at Appleton Arena in Canton before battling Clarkson at Cheel Arena at 7 p.m. on Saturday. Cornell has not won at either venue since the 2005 season, but will be seeking to win the season series against both foes after claiming wins against the Golden Knights and Saints back in Decenber at Lynah Rink. Both games can be heard in the Ithaca area on WHCU 870 AM, with Jason Weinstein on the play-by-play. Live streaming audio of both games will also be available through the Cornell RedCast subscription service.

Cornell (14-2-3, 9-1-2 ECAC Hockey) split its two games last weekend, seeing its 10-game unbeaten streak snapped at the hands of Yale, 4-3, on Friday night, before claiming a 5-1 victory over Brown on Saturday. On the weekend, Blake Gallagher, Riley Nash and Michael Kennedy each registered a goal and an assist, while Joe Devin chipped in with a pair of goals on Saturday against Brown. Ben Scrivens stopped 46 of the 51 shots he faced on the weekend, posting a 2.57 goals-against average and a .902 save percentage.

For the season, Nash leads the Big Red offense with 18 points in 19 games on eight goals and 10 assists, while Colin Greening has seven goals and 10 assists for 17 points. Michael Kennedy's nine goals are the most on the roster, while Evan Barlow and Blake Gallagher are tied for the team lead with 11 assists. Despite the rocky weekend last weekend, Scrivens continues to lead the nation in goals-against average (1.32) and save percentage (.950), while the Big Red penalty kill is ranked seventh in the nation at 89.7 percent (87-of-97), while the power play is converting at 16.0 percent (16-of-100), good for 29th in the nation.

Cornell is led by head coach Mike Schafer, who has compiled a 268-141-48 record and is in his 14th season. Schafer has guided the Big Red to four ECAC Hockey championships and six NCAA tournament berths during his tenure. Additionally, he led the Big Red to its last NCAA Frozen Four appearance in Buffalo in 2003. Schafer is assisted by associate head coach Casey Jones, assistant coach Scott Garrow and volunteer goaltender coach Ian Burt.

ABOUT ST. LAWRENCE
The Saints have found their stride of late, posting a 7-2-1 record since falling to the Big Red, 1-0, on Dec. 6 at Lynah Rink. Last weekend, St. Lawrence dropped a 7-6 overtime decision at home to Rensselaer, but rallied the following night for a 5-2 win over Union. Junior Mike McKenzie leads the Saints offensively, collecting 24 points this season on 10 goals and 14 assists. The 10 goals are a team-best, while the 14 assists are tied with senior Kevin DeVergilio for the team lead. In goal, junior Alex Petizian has made the majority of the starts, posting a .922 save percentage and a 2.30 goals-against average. St. Lawrence has converted on 17.2 percent of its power play chances (22-of-128) while the Saints are killing off penalties at an 87.1 percent rate (121-of-139).

THE SERIES WITH ST. LAWRENCE
Cornell holds a 52-39-7 lead in the all-time series with St. Lawrence after scoring a 1-0 win in the first meeting of the season on Dec. 6 at Lynah Rink. Friday night's meeting will be the 99th in the history between the two schools, while Cornell holds a slim 13-11-4 lead in the series during the coaching tenure of Mike Schafer.

ABOUT CLARKSON
The Golden Knights appear to have turned their season around, winning four straight league games to move back into the thick of the first-round bye race. Of the last four wins, three have come in overtime, including both games last weekend at Cheel Arena, and all three have come by identical 4-3 margins. Sophomore Scott Freeman has been the top playmaker for the Knights, collecting 20 points on two goals and 18 assists, while senior Chris D'Alvise has a team-best nine goals on the year. The goalie tandem of freshmen Paul Karpowich and Richie LeVeau has split time over the last two weekends, with Karpowich getting the Saturday night start and LeVeau starting Friday's game. Cornell faced Karpowich in the first meeting this season and shelled the freshman for four goals on 18 shots. Karpowich has a .903 save percentage and a 3.00 goals-against average, while LeVeau has a .910 save percentage and a 2.56 goals-against average. The Knights have converted on 12.6 percent of their power plays (16-of-127) and have killed off 85.1 percent of opponents' power plays (126-of-148).

THE SERIES WITH CLARKSON
Cornell and Clarkson will be meeting for the 113th time on Saturday night, a series dating back to 1922-23. Cornell holds a slim 52-49-11 lead in the all-time series, including the victory on Dec. 5 at Lynah Rink. Under the direction of head coach Mike Schafer, the Big Red is 24-12-3 against Clarkson.

NOT SO FRIENDLY NORTH COUNTRY
Cornell has had its share of struggles in the North Country over the past few seasons. The Big Red has not claimed a win at either Clarkson or St. Lawrence since pulling off a four-point weekend on Feb. 25-26, 2005, scoring a 3-2 overtime win against St. Lawrence before taking a 3-0 victory over Clarkson. Since then, the Big Red has posted an identical 0-2-1 record on the road against the two schools.

A CHANGE WILL DO YOU GOOD
A pair of scoring changes were recorded following the Big Red's split last weekend against Yale and Brown. Riley Nash's power-play goal on Friday night against Yale had one assist changed from Evan Barlow to Blake Gallagher, while on Saturday, Sean Collins' goal had its assists changed from Taylor Davenport to both Keir Ross and Sean Whitney.

FRESHMAN TO FRESHMAN TO FRESHMAN
Sean Collins' goal on Saturday night against Brown marked the first time this season that three freshmen combined for all the scoring on a goal. The two assists went to Keir Ross and Sean Whitney, the second assist on the season for both players. Cornell's freshmen class has combined for 13 points on three goals and 10 assists.

SNUB THIS
When Riley Nash was released from the Canadian Junior National Team camp on Dec. 15, he could have taken the snub one of two ways: sulking, or proving his worth. Well, the sophomore has chosen the latter path, to the tune of scoring 11 points on five goals and six assists in the nine ensuing contests. Nash also struck for his first three-point game of the season on Jan. 16 at Union, recording a goal and two assists in the 4-1 victory. He has also recorded at least one point in four straight games.

EXTRA, EXTRA!
Brendon Nash's extra-attacker goal in the closing seconds of the Jan. 23 loss to Yale was the first such goal for the Big Red since Raymond Sawada scored one on March 8, 2008, in game two of the ECAC Hockey first-round series against Dartmouth. Cornell hasn't had many chances for an extra attacker goal this season, as the Big Red has had an empty net for just 4:52 of the 1155 minutes this season - and 3:01 of that time came in the loss to Yale.

HALFWAY HOME
Ben Scrivens picked up his fifth shutout of the season on Jan. 17 at Rensselaer in his 17th game of the season. Scrivens is now halfway to equaling the Cornell record for shutouts in a season of 10, set by David McKee in 2004-05. McKee used 35 games to reach that mark.

WE'RE GOING STREAKING!
Cornell's 10-game unbeaten streak that was snapped on Jan. 23 against Yale was the longest such streak since the 2004-05 season, when the Big Red went a span of 19 games without a defeat. Over the course of that streak, the Big Red went 18-0-1, won the ECAC Hockey tournament title with a 3-1 victory over Harvard, and advanced to the NCAA regional final before falling at Minnesota, 2-1, in overtime.

LET'S GO TO THE POLLS
In both of the Jan. 20  national polls, the Big Red was ranked third, Cornell's highest mark in three seasons. The number three ranking was the highest in the USCHO poll since the Feb. 6, 2006, poll had the Big Red third. Cornell reached a high of second that season, and last was atop the poll on March 24, 2003. In the USA Hockey poll, Cornell is at its highest ranking since Nov. 7, 2005. The Big Red last reached number one in that poll on Feb. 28, 2005, when it was tied for the top spot. This week, the Big Red dropped a spot to number four in both polls after falling to Yale on Jan. 23, 4-3.

TWO'S MY LIMIT
With the Cornell offense ranked 35th in the nation, averaging 2.74 goals per game, the defense has more than made up for it with its outstanding play as a unit. The Big Red has allowed more than two goals on just two occasions this season - with both times resulting in a defeat. The first came in a 7-3 loss at North Dakota on Nov. 28, with the second happening on Jan. 23 in a 4-3 loss to Yale. Cornell has posted five shutouts and had another seven games of allowing just one goal. The Big Red currently leads the nation in scoring defense at 1.42 goals allowed per game.

THIS IS SPORTSCENTER
While senior Evan Barlow scored what would turn out to be the game-winning goal on the power play in the first period on Friday night, it was his effort on the other end of the ice that found him on SportsCenter. With Cornell goaltender Ben Scrivens at the bench on a delayed penalty call, the Big Red was in control of the puck in the neutral zone. A backwards pass from Riley Nash missed its mark, and the puck went slowly skidding along toward the Cornell goal. Barlow slipped twice but regained his feet and got enough momentum to make a diving effort to sweep the puck to the side of the goal post with just a foot and a half to go before crossing the goal line. That play wound up as the number nine play on that night's SportsCenter.

LEADING BY EXAMPLE
Senior co-captain Michael Kennedy has certainly stepped up his game in the new year, as he has tallied 10 points over the last eight games dating back to the Florida College Classic Championship game against Colgate. Kennedy has only been held scoreless once over that span, on Jan. 16 at Union, while picking up a pair of two point games.

ON THE REBOUND
Back-to-back losses have been hard to find for the Big Red lately, as in each of Cornell's last seven defeats, the Big Red has come back to win the following night. Dating back to last season's 3-2 loss to Union on Feb. 15, Cornell has followed up each of the last seven defeats with a victory, including the Nov. 29 win over North Dakota and the Jan. 24 win over Brown. Cornell has not suffered back-to-back defeats since dropping three straight games from Feb. 8-15 against Clarkson, St. Lawrence and Union.

EVAN THE ASSISTER
Like his classmate, Evan Barlow has stepped up his game lately, picking up nine points in his last nine games. Barlow has a point in four straight games and has only been held off the scoresheet once over that span, on Jan. 10 against Niagara. Barlow has two goals over his last 10 games to go along with eight assists, a big reason why he is tied for the team lead in the latter category with Blake Gallagher.

THREE FOR ALL
Riley Nash's three-point outing on Jan. 16 at Union was the first three-point performance for the Big Red this season. Nash became the first player to record three points in a game since Michael Kennedy tallied three assists in the ECAC Hockey consolation game against Colgate on March 22, 2008.

UPON FURTHER REVIEW
A review of the game tape from the Jan. 17 win at Rensselaer has resulted in the game-winning goal being changed from Colin Greening to Michael Kennedy. The goal becomes Kennedy's team-leading eighth and gives him 11 points on the season.

STAY POSITIVE
Through the first 19 games of the season, the Big Red as a team has a combined +102 rating, with all but two skaters currently with a positive rating. Only Taylor Davenport (-1) and Derek Punches (even) are not in the positive range of the +/- category. Jared Seminoff has the top rating on the team at +12, while Brendon Nash is also in double figures at +11.

TWO PERIOD GAME
A trademark of Mike Schafer-coached teams is the ability to protect a lead, and the numbers continue to bear that out. Since the start of the 2002-03 season, Cornell holds a 111-3-7 record when leading at the end of two periods. This season, Cornell is off to a 13-0-0 start when leading at the second intermission.

BROTHERLY LOVE
There must be something about lining up against a purple uniform that triggers an offensive outburst among the Kennedy family. Brothers Michael and Patrick both tallied a pair of goals and an assist each as Cornell swept Niagara at Lynah Rink on Jan. 9-10.

MICHAEL REALLY LIKES NIAGARA
Should Cornell qualify for the NCAA Tournament, senior Michael Kennedy will probably be pulling very hard to face Niagara in the opening round. In six career games against the Purple Eagles, the senior co-captain has tallied six goals and six assists for 12 points.

DOMINATING THE CONFERENCE
Through the first 10 games of league play, goaltender Ben Scrivens is threatening the record books for a historic campaign. The junior has a 0.99 goals-against average and a .962 save percentage in league play to go along with four shutouts. The league record for save percentage in conference games is .948, set by Brown's Yann Danis in 2003-04 and tied by Cornell's David McKee a year later. In goals-against average, Cornell's David LeNeveu holds that mark with his 1.15 goals-against average set in 2002-03 while backstopping the Big Red to the Frozen Four.

LAST ONE STANDING
Freshman Locke Jillson is the lone remaining skater on the 2008-09 roster to have yet to be whistled for a penalty after Joe Scali earned two minutes in the box on Jan. 23 agaisnt Yale. Jillson has appeared in 15 games and tallied a goal and four assists, all without being penalized.

FIVE SPOT
Junior Blake Gallagher had a streak of five games with a point snapped in the 3-0 win over Niagara on Jan. 9. The Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, native had his first two goals of the season in that stretch and a two-assist performance on Dec. 27 against St. Cloud State. For the season, Gallagher is tied for team-high honors with Evan Barlow, with both players recording 11 assists.

BALANCED SCORING
Another hallmark of a Cornell hockey team is offensive balance, and that number has certainly been achieved this season. A total of 17 different players have contributed toward the 52 goals scored by the Big Red, while all but two skaters - seniors Derek Punches and Taylor Davenport - have tallied at least one point this year.

UNBEATEN THROUGH EIGHT
When Cornell opened the ECAC Hockey slate with a 6-0-2 mark through the first eight games, the Big Red entered rare territory. Cornell's last time being undefeated after eight league games came during the legendary 1969-70 undefeated, untied national championship season. Cornell last went seven league games without a defeat in 2003-04 before suffering a 2-1 overtime loss to Brown in its eighth game.

AND THE AWARD GOES TO...
A trio of players were recognized for their play at the Florida College Classic, as Blake Gallagher and Brendon Nash were both selected to the all-tournament team. Additionally, goaltender Ben Scrivens received the Shawn Walsh Trophy as the tournament's most valuable player. Cornell won the tournament for the third time in program history, tying Maine for the most championships won in the nine-year tournament.

AND THEN THERE WERE SIX
When Cornell and St. Cloud State met in the opening round of the Florida College Classic on Dec. 27, the list of current NCAA Division I programs that Cornell has never faced dropped to six.The Big Red has never played against Bemidji State of College Hockey America, Alaska-Anchorage and Nebraska-Omaha of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association and Bentley, Connecticut and Holy Cross of Atlantic Hockey.

SUNSHINE STATE SUCCESS
The Big Red has already claimed one trophy this season, picking up a tournament victory at the Florida College Classic with a 3-2 win over St. Cloud State and a 2-2 overtime tie against Colgate in the championship game, winning the title in a shootout. The Big Red has now claimed three Florida College Classic championships, joining the titles won in 2003 and 2005. Cornell now is 7-8-3 all-time in nine appearances at the Florida College Classic.

STREAK ENDS, STREAK BEGINS
Junior Colin Greening had his streak of four games with at least one goal stopped on Dec. 27 against St. Cloud State. Previously, Greening had scored at least one goal in each of four games, including two at North Dakota over Thanksgiving weekend. Meanwhile, classmate Blake Gallagher has garnered at least one point in five straight games, including a pair of assists in the win over St. Cloud State on Dec. 27.

TWO-FER
Sophomore Joe Devin scored the first two-goal game of his career when he tallied a pair of markers on Dec. 27 against St. Cloud State. Devin scored the tying goal just 20 seconds after the Huskies took the lead, then added the game-winner later in that same period. Devin now has seven goals and two assists in 18 games this season after adding his second career two-goal game on Jan. 24 against Brown.

MUGFORD'S BACK
Senior Tyler Mugford returned to the Cornell lineup on Dec. 5 against Clarkson after missing five games with a leg injury and immediately provided a spark to the offense. The senior picked up a pair of assists in the game to give him four points for the season. Mugford's previous career high for points in a season is seven, set as a freshman in 2005-06.

NATIONAL LEADERS
Ben Scrivens enters the weekend leading the nation both in goals-against average (1.32) and in save percentage (.950),  a strong reason why the Big Red is ranked first in scoring defense in the country, allowing just 1.40 goals per game.

DISCIPLINED HOCKEY
Another reason the Big Red has been so solid on defense this season would come from Cornell's current ranking as the seventh-least penalized team in the nation. The Big Red averages just 12.7 minutes in the penalty box per game. Princeton leads the nation in that category, averaging just 9.6 minutes per game in penalties.

FROM THE DEPTHS
All 23 players who made the trip to North Dakota saw playing time, including the final two members of the freshman class to appear in a regular-season game for the Big Red. Mike Garman came on in relief of Ben Scrivens in the third period of Friday night's 7-3 loss, while Sean Whitney made his collegiate debut in Saturday night's 2-1 victory.

SCORING THE SHORTIES
After going all of the 2007-08 season without a short-handed goal, the Big Red has tallied a pair of them already this season. Michael Kennedy scored a short-handed goal in the 2-1 win against North Dakota on Nov. 29, the first such goal for the Big Red in 49 games. More recently, Riley Nash scored a short-handed goal in the 3-2 win over St. Cloud State on Dec. 27 in Estero, Fla. Prior to Kennedy's goal, the last player to score a short-handed goal was Mark McCutcheon, who tallied one on Feb. 10, 2007, at Rensselaer. McCutcheon's came one game after Mitch Carefoot scored one at Union, marking the last time a short-handed goal was scored in back-to-back games.

RARE OCCURRENCES
The seven goals allowed by the Big Red on Nov. 28 at North Dakota were the most surrendered by the Cornell defense since allowing a seven-spot at Rensselaer on Feb. 26, 1999, in a 7-5 loss to the Engineers. Cornell's last time allowing six goals or more came during Thanksgiving weekend last season, when Cornell allowed six goals to Boston University in a 6-3 defeat at Madison Square Garden.

HATS OFF TO YOU
North Dakota forward Matt Frattin's hat trick against Cornell on Nov. 29 night also was a rare occurrence, as the last time an opposing player scored three goals against the Big Red came 328 games ago when Ohio State's Hugo Boisvert tallied three goals on Jan. 15, 1999.

CORNELL AGAINST THE WCHA
With Cornell limited to seven non-conference games per year, games against Western Collegiate Hockey Association members have been few and far between, but Cornell has added a full 10 percent onto its all-time total against that league this season. Entering the year, Cornell had only played a total of 30 games against WCHA members, posting a 14-15-1 mark against those 10 schools. This season, Cornell has moved to .500 all-time against the WCHA with a 2-1 record, scoring a 2-1 win over North Dakota and a 3-2 win over St. Cloud State. The lone loss was a 7-3 defeat at the hands of the Fighting Sioux to open the two-game set on Nov. 28. Cornell holds a winning record against Alaska-Fairbanks (1-0), Colorado College (3-1), Minnesota-Duluth (1-0-1), Minnesota State (1-0) and St. Cloud State (1-0), while posting a sub-.500 mark against Minnesota (0-2), North Dakota (2-4) and Wisconsin (2-4).

GO WEST, YOUNG MAN
The Nov. 28-29 series at North Dakota was the first regular-season trip west for the Big Red since playing Wisconsin in the Badger Showdown in 1998 in Milwaukee. Prior to the series in Grand Forks, each of Cornell's first nine games against WCHA foes during the tenure of head coach Mike Schafer had come in either an in-season tournament or in the NCAA tournament.

LOCKDOWN DEFENSE
In each of the first six games of the season, the Big Red held its opposition to two goals or fewer, with Colgate being the only team to put more than one puck in the goal in a 2-2 tie on Nov. 15 at Lynah Rink. That streak was snapped in game seven when North Dakota scored seven times against the Big Red. Cornell last put together such a streak to open the year in the 2004-05 season, going 10 straight games of allowing two goals or fewer, surrendering just 13 total goals over that span with a pair of shutouts. Still, Cornell has only allowed more than two goals in a game just twice through the first 19 games of the season.

LET'S GO TO THE VIDEOTAPE
After reviewing the Nov. 22 game against Dartmouth, sophomore Tyler Roeszler was the beneficiary of a scoring change. Roeszler picked up the second assist on Michael Kennedy's power-play goal in the first period. The assist gives Roeszler his first multi-point game of his career and the first two points of the season for the Chatham, Ontario, native.

WE'RE GETTING TIRED OF SEEING YOU...
With the Nov. 22 game against Dartmouth at Lynah Rink, the Big Red had played five of its eight previous home games against the Big Green. Cornell closed out the 2007-08 season with Dartmouth and Harvard, then played three games against the Hanover, N.H., school in the first round of the ECAC Hockey tournament. Cornell then opened this season with a game against Colgate before taking on Harvard and Dartmouth on Nov. 21-22.

BREAK OUT THE BROOMS
Cornell's sweep of Harvard and Dartmouth on Nov. 21-22 marked the first time that the Big Red took a pair of victories in the same weekend against its colorful Ivy brethren since Dartmouth and Harvard were matched up as travel partners prior to the 2005-06 season. Previously, Cornell had endured five splits and one weekend sweep at the hands of the the Crimson and Big Green.

HEY, YOU'RE NOT ST. LAWRENCE!
Sophomore Riley Nash posted a pair of goals in the Big Red's 2-1 win over Harvard on Nov. 21, the first time in his young career that he has had a two-goal game against a team other than St. Lawrence. In two career games against the Saints, Nash has struck for four goals. While Nash had 10 multi-point games last season to lead the Big Red, he only had the two two-goal contests among those.

TO THE VICTORS GO THE SPOILS
For the second time in three weeks, Ben Scrivens was named the ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week on Nov. 24 after backstopping the Big Red to a pair of wins over Harvard and Dartmouth. Scrivens allowed just one goal in both games, stopping 14 shots against Harvard and 27 against the Big Green. Scrivens has twice previously won the award, earning top honors on Nov. 10, 2008, and on Dec. 3, 2007.

LATE STARTS
Cornell's Nov. 15 home opener marked the latest home opener in program history since the 1996-97 season, when Cornell also played its first home game on the midpoint of the 11th month. That season, Cornell defeated Vermont, 6-4, on its way to a 21-9-5 record and a berth in the NCAA tournament. The last time Cornell had a home opener later than Nov. 15 was in 1993-94 when the Big Red opened its home slate on Nov. 19 against Harvard.

LATE STARTS, PART TWO
Not only was Cornell's season opener on Nov. 7 the latest for the Big Red since head coach Mike Schafer's second year in 1996-97, when Cornell opened on Nov. 8, it also made the Big Red the last team in Division I college hockey to play its first regular-season game. The late start parallels that of the Cornell football team, which was scheduled to be the last team in Division I to begin play this season with its game at Bucknell on Sept. 20.

PENALTY SHOT BONANZA
Just four games into the 2008-09 season, the Big Red had already seen a pair of penalty shots this year – one for and one against the Big Red. Cornell's Evan Barlow was awarded a penalty shot on Nov. 8 at Quinnipiac, which was saved by the Bobcats' Nick Pisellini, while Colgate's Brian Day was awarded a penalty shot against the Big Red on Nov. 15, which he slid between the legs of Cornell goaltender Ben Scrivens. Since 2000, there have been 10 penalty shots called in games involving Cornell, with seven of those coming since the start of the 2006-07 season.

SCRIVENS AND THE SHOT
Cornell goaltender Ben Scrivens keeps finding ways to put himself into the record books. On Nov. 15 against Colgate, he became the first Cornell goaltender in program history to have faced three penalty shots. Scrivens stopped the first one he faced in his collegiate debut against Wayne State's Tylor Michel on Nov. 25, 2006, then allowed a goal to Quinnipiac's Mike Atkinson on Nov. 3, 2007 before allowing a goal to Colgate's Brian Day on Nov. 15, 2008. Interestingly enough, all three penalty shots faced by Scrivens occurred during the month of November, and all three have come at Lynah Rink.

THE CURSE OF JOE NIEUWENDYK
When Joe Nieuwendyk scored on a penalty shot against Rensselaer's Steve Duncan in the third period of a 6-1 Cornell victory on Feb. 27, 1987, little did he know that nearly 22 years later, he still had scored the most recent penalty shot in Cornell history. Since then, eight players have attempted a shot, with each one being turned away. The newest addition to the penalty shot parade was Evan Barlow, who was stopped in the second period on Nov. 8 by Quinnipiac goaltender Nick Pisellini. Since the start of 2006-07 season, Cornell has had four penalty shot attempts, with Mitch Carefoot, Tony Romano, Blake Gallagher and Barlow each coming up short. A total of 690 games have passed since Nieuwendyk converted his penalty shot.

ON THE OTHER END OF THE SPECTRUM
Evan Barlow's penalty shot carried with it extra irony, given that in last year's second league game against Quinnipiac at Lynah Rink, it was Barlow who tripped up the Bobcats' Mike Atkinson, giving Atkinson a penalty shot in the second period. The Bobcats converted on their attempt against Ben Scrivens to tie the score at three, but Cornell would respond with a pair of third-period goals to take a 5-3 victory.

BETTER LATE THAN NEVER
Freshman Jordan Kary made his Cornell debut in the tie against Colgate on Nov. 15 after sitting out the first three regular season games and the two exhibition contests. Kary was not cleared to play until just before the Colgate series as the result of a paperwork mixup with the NCAA that has since been resolved. In his first contest since playing in junior hockey last season with the Spruce Grove Saints of the Alberta Junior Hockey League, Kary had a clean scoreline with no points, shots or penalties.

WE'RE GOING STREAKING THROUGH THE QUAD!
Junior goaltender Ben Scrivens had his school-record shutout streak snapped on Nov. 13 at Colgate after tallying 206:44 straight without allowing a goal. Colgate's Brian Day stopped that streak with his goal just 59 seconds into the third period in the Big Red's 4-1 win at Starr Rink. Scrivens' streak is now the longest in Cornell history, surpassing the 189:48 set by Brian Cropper during the 1969-70 season, though he fell short of the ECAC Hockey shutout streak of 217:06, held by Colgate netminder Mark Dekanich.

DOUBLE SQUADOOSH
For the second time in as many seasons, Cornell posted a scoreless tie in a regular season game when it played to a 0-0 tie on Nov. 8 at Quinnipiac. Last season, Cornell and Massachusetts played 65 minutes without a goal in a 0-0 tie at Lynah Rink on Nov. 30, 2007. The amazing thing about that feat is that the only other scoreless tie in Cornell hockey history came nearly 85 years ago, as the Big Red battled to a 0-0 tie with Clarkson on Jan. 20, 1923.

THE CENTURY CLUB
With his appearance in each of the first 19 games this season, senior co-captain Michael Kennedy has now appeared in 117 games in a Cornell uniform. In his three-plus seasons, Kennedy has scored 27 goals and tallied 27 assists for 54 points. In all, five current players have appeared in more than 100 college hockey games, as Derek Punches (109), Jared Seminoff (113), Tyler Mugford (110) and Evan Barlow (110) have also crossed the century mark.

ONE GOAL + TWO GAMES = THREE POINTS
The rarest of statistical oddities occurred for the Big Red on its season-opening weekend as it picked up a win over Princeton and a tie at Quinnipiac. Despite scoring just one goal, the Big Red miraculously came away with three valuable points in the league standings. The last time the Big Red went on the road and scored just one goal in two games was at Michigan State on Nov. 12-14, 2004, tying the Spartans, 1-1, on Nov. 12, and falling, 2-0, two days later. The last one-goal road performance for the Big Red in league play came at Princeton and Yale on Feb. 9-10, 2001, as Cornell fell, 4-1, at Princeton and 1-0 at Yale the following night.

ALL YOU NEED IS ONE
Cornell's 1-0 victory at Princeton on Nov. 7 not only was the Big Red's first win of the season, it also marked the first time since the 2004-05 season that Cornell went on the road and came away with a 1-0 victory. That year, the Big Red downed Colgate, 1-0, on Feb. 4, 2005, at Starr Rink, behind a goal by Mike Iggulden at the 18:27 mark of the third period.

NO SOUP FOR YOU!
When Ben Scrivens turned away all 43 shots he faced on Nov. 7 at Princeton, it marked the first time since the 1990-91 season that the Big Red opened the season with a shutout. On Nov. 9, 1990, goaltender Jim Crozier turned away 20 shots on his way to a 5-0 shutout victory. In all, Cornell has only posted seven season-opening shutouts in the modern era (1957-present), with four of those coming prior to 1970.

PITCHING SHUTOUTS
Even more impressive than Ben Scrivens posting a shutout in the season opener was the fact that never before in Cornell history had a Big Red goaltender posted back-to-back shutouts to open the season. In the six previous times the Big Red opened the year with a shutout, Cornell went 4-2 in the next contest, twice allowing one goal, twice allowing three goals and allowing four and eight goals once each.

YOU BETTER RECOGNIZE
The ECAC Hockey office took notice of Ben Scrivens' play on the weekend of Nov. 7-8, as the junior from Spruce Grove, Alberta, was named the ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week on Nov. 10. Scrivens earned the honor for the second time in his career, with the first coming after his 45-save shutout tie against Massachusetts on Nov. 30, 2007.

THE NATION'S BEST
Not only did Ben Scrivens earn ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week honors, but he was also named the Inside College Hockey National Player of the Week on Nov. 11 after shutting out Princeton and Quinnipiac. He becomes just the second Cornell player to ever earn the honor, joining Michael Kennedy, who was named to the list on Jan. 8, 2008, after scoring six points in a weekend sweep over Niagara at Lynah Rink.

ROAD WORK
Cornell's three-game road trip to open the season is such a rare occurrence, not even Cornell head coach Mike Schafer was alive the last time the Big Red opened the year with three games away from Lynah Rink. The 1959-60 team that finished 2-19 under head coach Paul Patten opened its season with four straight road games, followed by a pair of neutral site games and another three road contests before finally playing its first game at home on Jan. 16 against Yale. All of this occurred nearly three years before the 46-year-old Schafer was born.

ECAC HOCKEY AND SEASON OPENERS
The Nov. 7 contest against Princeton was not only the season opener, but also the first league game of the season. The last time the Big Red jumped directly into league play without any nonconference contests came in 1999-2000, when the Big Red opened with a 5-4 overtime loss at Rensselaer. Under the direction of Mike Schafer, Cornell has opened its season with a conference game just twice, with the first time coming in his second season behind the bench, a 5-4 victory at Brown.

MORE ON THE SEASON OPENER
While Cornell opening its year against a league foe is an uncommon occurence under Mike Schafer, the Big Red has had success in its first games of the year under the 14th-year mentor. In the 14 seasons under Schafer's direction, the Big Red is 9-4-1 in season openers.

...AND OPENING ON THE ROAD
The Big Red opened the 2008-09 season on the road for the second straight season and fifth time under the direction of head coach Mike Schafer. Last season, Cornell opened at Rochester Institute of Technology at the Blue Cross Arena in Rochester and fell by a 4-1 margin. The last time Cornell opened back-to-back seasons on the road came in Schafer's first two years, opening at Michigan State in 1995-96 and at Brown in 1996-97.

STARTING OFF ON THE RIGHT FOOT
With Cornell's win at Princeton on Nov. 7, the Big Red avoided starting the season with a loss for the second year in a row, another uncommon occurrence for the Big Red under Mike Schafer. In the modern era of Cornell hockey, from the opening of Lynah Rink in 1957 to the present day, the Big Red has only once dropped back-to-back season openers, that coming in the 1999-2000 and 2000-01 seasons, falling to Rensselaer by a 5-4 score on Nov. 5, 1999, and dropping a 5-3 contest to Sacred Heart on Nov. 4, 2000.

THOSE MASKED MEN
Cornell has the benefit of having four capable collegiate goaltenders on the roster in 2008-09, two of whom have been the team's top goaltender at one point or another. Senior Troy Davenport was the starter in 2006-07, appearing in 24 games and posting a 2.41 goals-against average and an .899 save percentage. Last season, current junior Ben Scrivens grabbed the top job, appearing in 35 contests and posting a 2.02 goals-against average and a .930 save percentage. Joining the two are senior Dan DiLeo, who saw his first collegiate action in the ECAC Hockey consolation game win over Colgate last season, and freshman Mike Garman, who backstopped the Nanaimo Clippers to the British Columbia Hockey League regular season title last year.

TRANSFER TICKET
For the fourth straight season, the Cornell men's hockey roster includes a player who began his career at another school, as Derek Punches joins the Big Red after playing his first three seasons at Wayne State. Punches served as an assistant captain last year for the Warriors and finished second on the team with 10 goals and was fifth overall with 19 points. Punches was a two-time College Hockey America All-Academic Team selection while at Wayne State. For the past three seasons, the transfer role was filled by Chris Fontas, who sat out one year and played in 2006-07 and 2007-08 after tranferring from Massachusetts-Lowell.

FOR AND AGAINST
Derek Punches holds the distinction of being the most recent player to have played both for and against the Big Red. Punches played two games at Cornell as a sophomore at Wayne State, helping the Warriors to a split at Lynah Rink on Nov. 25-26, 2006. In the two games against the Big Red, Punches recorded a pair of shots and had an even plus-minus rating. The last time Cornell had players who played for the Big Red after playing against them came in 1978-79 when Doug Berk, Geoff Roeszler, Steve Shandley, Tim Strawman and Tom Whitehead each transfered to Cornell after beginning their careers at Penn. Much like Punches' situation with Wayne State, Penn dropped its program following the 1977-78 season.

I FEEL A DRAFT
For the second straight season, Cornell has four players on the roster who have been selected in the NHL Entry Draft. Juniors Colin Greening and Justin Krueger, sophomore Riley Nash and freshman Sean Collins have each been selected by NHL clubs.

CUSHING CONNECTION
While the New England prep schools typically send their top prospects on to collegiate careers at Boston area schools, freshman Sean Whitney has become the fourth product of Cushing Academy to play for the Big Red. He joins Chris Fontas, who played for Cornell from 2006-07 through 2007-08, and Ryan Moynihan, who played on East Hill from 1996-2000, as Cushing alumni to suit up in the Red and White. That trio all follow after Anthony Steere, who played for Cornell in 1962-63.

WHAT'S IN A NUMBER?
Freshman Sean Whitney will be wearing jersey number 19 this season, a number that has several interesting connections for the Scituate, Mass., native. His older brother, Ryan, plays for the Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League, and he sports the same number 19 on his uniform. Additionally, the last Cushing Academy alumnus to play hockey at Cornell, Chris Fontas, closed out his career by wearing number 19. Like Fontas, Whitney is an alumnus of Cushing Academy.

WICKED SMART KIDS
Eight players from last season's team were named to the ECAC Hockey All-Academic team for their achievements in the classroom last year. Five of those players return this season, as seniors Troy Davenport and Dan DiLeo, juniors Colin Greening and Justin Krueger and sophomore Patrick Kennedy each were named to the team. Additionally, graduated seniors Chris Fontas, Doug Krantz and Topher Scott were also selected as All-Academic Team members.

CLIMBING THE CHARTS
Cornell head coach Mike Schafer is quickly moving up the ranks of the coaching fraternity in his win totals. In his 14th season, Schafer has 268 career victories, with the Jan. 17 win over Rensselaer moving him ahead of Dartmouth's Bob Gaudet for third place among active coaches in ECAC Hockey. Schafer currently trails Quinnipiac's Rand Pecknold by just nine. St. Lawrence's Joe Marsh, the dean of coaches in ECAC Hockey, has 427 career wins to his credit in his 24th season.

REMEMBERING NED HARKNESS
Legendary coach Ned Harkness, who guided the Big Red to its two national championships in 1967 and 1970, passed away on Sept. 19, his 89th birthday. Harkness led Cornell to the only undefeated, untied NCAA championship season in 1970, going 29-0-0. His legendary career also included stops at Rensselaer, where he guided the Engineers to the 1954 NCAA championship, and Union, along with the Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League. Harkness also coached the Big Red lacrosse team for three seasons, guiding that squad to a 35-1 mark during his tenure. This season, the Cornell men's hockey and men's lacrosse teams will both be wearing a sticker bearing the initials “NH” on their helmets in memory of Ned Harkness.

ONE LONG SEASON
The 2007-08 season for the Big Red has found its own space in the record books, as the 19-14-3 campaign tied the 2002-03 season for the most games in a single season with 36. That season marked the last time that the Big Red advanced to the NCAA Frozen Four, where it fell to New Hampshire in the national semifinals.

HATS OFF
Colin Greening recorded the Big Red's first hat trick in 101 games when he tallied three goals on Feb. 29, 2008, against Dartmouth. The junior co-captain became the first player since Matt Moulson recorded the feat against Union on Feb. 19, 2005.

THE BACKUP OF THE BACKUP'S BACKUP
For the first time under head coach Mike Schafer, and the first time since the 1990-91 season, four netminders will be battling for time in between the pipes for the Big Red. Seniors Troy Davenport and Dan DiLeo, junior Ben Scrivens and freshman Mike Garman make the first quartet of goaltenders for Cornell since the foursome of Parris Duffus, Corrie D'Alessio, Jim Crozier and Steve Coultes graced the roster in Brian McCutcheon's fourth season behind the bench. That season, D'Alessio and Crozier were both seniors, with Coultes a sophomore and Duffus a freshman. Cornell has also had four goaltenders on the roster in 1986-87, 1983-84, 1982-83, 1976-77 and 1958-59.

BACK BEHIND THE BENCH
Casey Jones returns to his alma mater as an associate head coach for 2008-09 after spending the last 13 years in the same role with Ohio State. Jones, a Big Red captain 1989-90 under head coach Brian McCutcheon, fills the spot on the coaching staff that was created when assistant coach Brent Brekke departed for Miami (Ohio).

BROTHERLY LOVE
The 2008-09 edition of the Big Red continues a theme started a year ago, as the three sets of brothers on the Cornell roster all return intact for a second season. Michael and Patrick Kennedy, Brendon and Riley Nash, and twins Joe and Mike Devin will again make life difficult on visiting radio and TV announcers.

IT'S A FAMILY AFFAIR
One might think that Chuck and Donna Devin, parents of sophomores Mike and Joe Devin, would have life easy, given that the brothers are attending the same school, making it easy to follow their season. That's not the case, though, as the brothers' younger sister, Molly Kate, is a freshman on the Union College women's hockey team. The Devin hockey family follows a year after Cornell had a pair of sisters - Rebecca and Sarah Johnston - with their brother, Jacob, on the men's team.

CLIPPER SHIP
Cornell typically has had success recruiting players from the British Columbia Hockey League in general and from the Nanaimo Clippers in particular, and the 2008-09 season is no exception. Six members of this year's team played their junior hockey for the BCHL powerhouse club, with incoming freshman goaltender Mike Garman adding to the long line of Nanaimo alumni who have gone on to play for the Big Red. Of those six players, three - Colin Greening, Tyler Mugford and Jared Seminoff - will serve as either a co-captain or an alternate captain this season for the Big Red.

250 AND COUNTING
Cornell coach Mike Schafer picked up his 250th career coaching victory with the Big Red's 3-2 win in game one of the ECAC Hockey quarterfinal series against Dartmouth. Schafer's .640 winning percentage entering the 2008-09 season is also good for eighth among active Division I head coaches.

IN THE AIR TONIGHT
All of Cornell's games this season can be heard in the Ithaca area on WHCU 870 AM. Jason Weinstein returns for his fifth season of calling Big Red hockey action.

ON THE TUBE
Eight of Cornell's regular season games are scheduled to be on television this season, beginning with the Nov. 7 season opener at Princeton. Even better for Big Red fans, seven of those contests will be road games, making it easier to track the team while it's away from Lynah Rink. Two of those games - the Nov. 27 game at North Dakota and the Jan. 16 game at Union - will also be simulcast across the U.S. on the NHL Network, with another two available on national TV, including the Nov. 7 game at Princeton, to be shown on ESPNU, and the Feb. 14 game at Harvard, seen on CBS College Sports. Last season, Cornell had eight games total on television, and the Big Red went 4-4 in those contests.

REDCAST
Live streaming video of most of Cornell's home hockey games is available through Cornell REDCast. In addition to streaming video of home games, fans can also get live audio of all of Cornell's road games. REDCast is a subscription-based joint venture of Cornell athletics and Internet Consulting Services (ICS). Numerous subscription options, including yearly, monthly, sport-by-sport and pay-per-view passes, provide viewing and listening flexibility without the worry of automatic renewal. REDCasts are available on all computer operating systems.

UP NEXT
Cornell returns home for a showdown against its first two opponents from this season, taking on Quinnipiac on Friday, Feb. 6, before facing Princeton the following night. Both games are slated for a 7 p.m. start at Lynah Rink.
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