Game 13: Cornell vs. St. Lawrence
Face Off: Friday, December 3 • 3 p.m.
Site: Lynah Rink • Ithaca, N.Y.
Series Record: St. Lawrence leads, 31-21-1
Last Meeting: Tied, 2-2 (ot), on Jan. 30, 2010, in Canton, N.Y.
Game 14: Cornell vs. Clarkson
Face Off: Saturday, December 4 • 3 p.m.
Site: Lynah Rink • Ithaca, N.Y.
Last Meeting: Cornell won, 4-3 (ot), on March 7, 2010, in Ithaca, N.Y.
Game Notes in PDF Format
ITHACA, N.Y. -- The Cornell women's hockey team, ranked first in the nation, wraps up play for the fall semester this weekend with a pair of games against opponents fron New York's North Country. The Big Red will battle St. Lawrence in a 3 p.m. contest on Friday before taking on Clarkson at the same time on Saturday. Fans attending Saturday's contest can help benefit the United Way of Tompkins County, as $1 for each ticket sold for the game will be donated to the organization. For those unable to make it to Ithaca, live streaming video of the game is available through the Cornell Redcast subscription service, with live stats available free of charge.
HEAD COACH DOUG DERRAUGH
Now in his sixth season as head coach of the Cornell women's hockey team,
Doug Derraugh has turned the program into a contender for the national championship. With a 69-82-15 overall record, Derraugh guided the Big Red to a 21-9-6 record last season and a berth in the national championship game. He led Cornell to its first-ever ECAC Hockey regular season and tournament championships and first appearance in the NCAA tournament, defeating traditional powers Harvard and Mercyhurst on the way to the national title game. He has led the Big Red to double-digit win totals in each of the past four seasons and set a program record for wins in a season with 21 last year. Derraugh took over the program prior to the 2005-06 season after a 13-year professional playing career in Europe and has transformed the Big Red into one of the top young programs in the country. He is assisted by fifth-year assistant coach
Danielle Bilodeau, a former Cornell player and 2001 graduate, Edith Zimering, in her second season with the Big Red, and volunteer assistant coach Meredith Roth, in her first year with Cornell.
ABOUT THE BIG RED
The same day the Big Red garnered the first No. 1 ranking in program history, Cornell stormed out to a 4-1 victory at Syracuse on Tuesday.
Lauriane Rougeau led the way with a pair of assists in the game, as
Laura Fortino,
Brianne Jenner,
Hayley Hughes and
Chelsea Karpenko each scored a goal on the night.
Amanda Mazzotta picked up the win, making 15 saves in goal. Cornell finished the night 2-for-4 on the power play. For the year, Jenner leads the squad offensively, recording 18 points on 10 goals and eight assists in 10 games.
Rebecca Johnston is right behind with six goals and 11 assists for 17 points in 10 games. In all, six different players are averaging better than a point per game, with eight players scoring in double figures on the season. Mazzotta has been outstanding in seeing just over 90 percent of the time in goal, posting a .949 save percentage and a 0.98 goals-against average. Cornell has converted on 14-of-51 power-play chances this season (27.5 percent, first nationally) while killing off all but two penalties this year (36-of-38) for a 94.7 percent conversion rate, second in the country.
ABOUT ST. LAWRENCE
The Saints enter the weekend with a 7-6-2 overall record and a 3-2 mark in ECAC Hockey action. St. Lawrence brings a three-game winning streak into Friday's game at Cornell, having defeated Yale, Brown and Vermont in its last three contests, though the Saints have not played since beating the Catamounts on Nov. 23. St. Lawrence is led by Rylee Smith, who has 12 points on six goals and six assists, while Kayla Sullivan, Vanessa Emond and Brooke Fernandez each have 10 points on the season. In goal, the Saints have relied on a platoon of netminders, with Maxie Weisz getting eight games in goal and posting a .929 save percentage and a 1.91 goals-against average. Caitlyn Lahonen has played seven contests, recording a .909 save percentage and a 2.29 goals-against average. St. Lawrence has converted on 12-of-76 power play chances (15.8 percent, 17th nationally) while killing off 50-of-56 opponents' power plays (89.3 percent, sixth in the nation).
THE SERIES WITH ST. LAWRENCE
The Saints hold a 31-21-1 lead in the all-time series against the Big Red, and were one of two opponents last season that Cornell did not defeat. The Saints claimed a 3-2 win on Nov. 11 at Lynah Rink before the two teams skated to a 2-2 tie on Nov. 29 at Appleton Arena. The Saints have held the upper hand in the series over the past decade, as Cornell has not scored a victory against St. Lawrence in 21 tries, with the last win coming as a 4-2 win on Jan. 23, 2000, in Lake Placid, N.Y.
ABOUT CLARKSON
The Golden Knights will play at Clarkson on Friday before taking on the Big Red on Saturday, bringing a 6-8-3 overall record and a 3-1-1 mark in league play into the weekend. Clarkson tied and defeated Vermont in a two-game series in its last action last weekend, skating to a 1-1 draw before blanking the Catamounts, 4-0. Clarkson's offense is led by Melissa Waldie and Juana Baribeau, who both have 10 points on the season. In goal, a platoon of Lauren Dahm and Erica Howe has split time this season, with Dahm getting 11 games in goal and Howe seeing time in nine. Dahm has a .922 save percentage and a 2.41 goals-against average, while Howe has posted a .935 save percentage and a 1.51 goals-against average. The Knights have scored seven power-play goals in 70 chances (10.0 percent, 27th nationally) while killing off 71-of-85 opponents' power plays (83.5 percent, 22nd nationally).
THE SERIES WITH CLARKSON
Cornell went 2-1 in three meetings against Clarkson last season, with the home team scoring a win in both contests. The Big Red took a 2-0 win over the Golden Knights on Nov. 13 at Lynah Rink before Clarkson responded with a 2-1 win at Cheel Arena on Jan. 30. The two programs met in the rubber match, the ECAC Hockey championship game, on March 7 at Lynah Rink, with Cornell garnering a 4-3 win on
Kendice Ogilvie's overtime game-winner. Cornell holds a 16-9-1 lead in the all-time series that dates back to the 1974-75 season.
900 AND COUNTING
Cornells game against St. Lawrence on Friday will mark the 900th game all-time in the history of the Cornell women's hockey program. Cornell has a 404-445-50 all-time record for a .477 winning percentage.
AT THE CENTURY MARK
Junior
Catherine White became just the 13th player in program history – and the first since Erin Schmaltz in 1998 – to score her 100th career point when she reached that barrier on Nov. 26 against Niagara. White reached that mark in just 74 gameson 37 goals and 63 assists.
Rebecca Johnston will likely become the next Cornell player to reach the 100-point plateau, as she enters the weekend just six points shy of that mark.
NUMBER ONE
With Cornell's sweep over Niagara and Wisconsin splitting its series with Minnesota-Duluth last weekend, the Big Red moved up to first in the nation in this week's USA Today/USA Hockey and USCHO.com polls. This marks the first time in program history that the Big Red has been ranked as the top team in the nation in either of the two polls.
DRAWING A BLANK
While Cornell's offense provides the headlines, it the Big Red's defense that is suffocating opponents and turning into victories. The Big Red has allowed just 11 goals in 12 games and has surrendered just three goals in six league games. Cornell has allowed more than two goals just once this season, giving up four goals in a 4-3 loss to Mercyhurst on Nov. 2, the only blemish of the season on Cornell's record. The Big Red allowed just six goals during the entire month of November
GOING STREAKING
Junior goaltender
Amanda Mazzotta saw the second-longest shutout streak of her career snapped on Tuesday at Syracuse. Mazzotta's streak, which spanned parts of six games, lasted 218:51 before Syracuse's Kelly Dimmen got the Orange on the scoreboard. As impressive as that mark is, it's still more than a full game shy of Mazzotta's personal best mark of 286:54, set in Feb. 2010, a mark that stands as the fourth-longest streak in NCAA history. As a team, the Big Red has not conceeded a goal in 267:11.
GET IN THE GAME
Freshman
Lauren Slebodnick saw her first career action on Nov. 26-27 against Niagara, coming on in relief. Slebodnick stopped all 19 shots she faced in the two games, posting a scoreless 48:20 over the two nights.
REACHING A MILESTONE
Cornell's win on Nov. 19 against Princeton was the 400th victory in the history of the Cornell women's hockey program. Cornell now has 404 victories, the ninth-highest total among NCAA Division I programs. New Hampshire leads all programs with 695 victories.
ONE MORE
Cornell's win on Nov. 26 against Niagara marked the 100th victory for the Big Red since the NCAA officially recognized women's hockey as a championship sport prior to the 2000-01 season. Cornell is now 101-182-25 since women's hockey gained official status.
ANOTHER ONE FOR MAZZOTTA
Cornell has played only five weekends this season, but after three of them,
Amanda Mazzotta has earned the ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week award. Most recently, she picked up the honor after posting a pair of shutouts against Princeton and Quinnipiac at Lynah Rink, stopping 33 shots in the two games combined. Mazzotta previously earned the honor after leading the Big Red to wins at Quinnipiac and Princeton on Oct. 29-30 and again after going 2-1 from Nov. 2 through Nov. 6, scoring wins over Harvard and Dartmouth in the process.
ON THE BREAK
Cornell's players had a rare week off on Nov. 12-13 due to a quirk in the league schedule. Rather than play a non-conference series that weekend, the Big Red elected to take the weekend off to evaluate the team's progress in the early part of the season. Cornell has not had a similar break in the schedule since taking off the weekend of Nov. 23-24, 2007.
WHILE YOU WERE GONE...
Two Cornell players weren't entirely off during the team's break on Nov. 12-13, as
Rebecca Johnston and
Brianne Jenner took part in the 4 Nations Cup in St. John's, Newfoundland. Competing with the Canadian National Team, the pair came home with the tournament's gold medal, defeating the United States in the championship game, 3-2, in overtime. Johnston was especially strong in that championship game, scoring a pair of goals including the overtime game-winner. Johnston finished with seven points on four goals and three assists, ranking her tied for third among all scorers in the tournament. The pair missed Cornell's weekend series against Harvard and Dartmouth on Nov. 5-6, but the Big Red still posted a pair of victories in their absence.
WHAT A WEEKEND
With
Rebecca Johnston and
Brianne Jenner on international duty with the Canadian National Team at the 4 Nations Cup on Nov. 5-6, senior
Hayley Hughes stepped up with the best weekend of her career. Hughes potted a pair of goals and assisted on the third in Cornell's 3-0 victory against Harvard on Friday night, then tallied three assists in the 6-1 win against Dartmouth the following day. Hughes' six-point weekend equaled one-quarter of her career point total entering the 2010-11 season and earned her ECAC Hockey Player of the Week honors for the first time in her career. This season, Hughes has 10 points on five goals and five assists, just two points shy of her career best for a season of 12, set as a freshman in 2007-08.
FIRING BLANKS
Amanda Mazzotta became Cornell's all-time career leader in shutouts when she blanked Harvard, 3-0, on Nov. 5. With three shutouts this season, Mazzotta now has 15 shutouts in her Cornell career, surpassing the mark of 12 set by Kathryn LoPresti from 1985 through 1989. Mazzotta's 15 shutouts rank her tied for 14th all-time in NCAA history.
ONE BANNER YEAR
Cornell officially put the cap on the historic 2009-10 season on Nov. 6 against Dartmouth when the Big Red added three banners to the Lynah Rink rafters. Last year's four seniors –
Laura Danforth,
Melanie Jue,
Kelly McGinty and
Liz Zorn – were on hand for the unveiling of banners commemorating the program's ECAC Hockey championship, the Ivy League championship and national runner-up finish.
FOUR SQUARE
Cornell's wins on Oct. 29-30 at Quinnipiac and Princeton gave the Big Red victories in each of its first four games in a season for the first time since the 1978-79 season. That year, Cornell began the season with five straight wins on its way to a 13-5-1 overall record.
100 AND COUNTING
Senior
Karlee Overguard's appeared in her 100th career game on Nov. 5 against Harvard, the most games of any player on the roster. Overguard is on pace to become the school's career leader in games played, a mark that is currently held by 2010 graduate
Laura Danforth. Danforth appeared in 124 games during her four-year career spanning 2006 through 2010. Two of Danforth's classmates,
Liz Zorn (121) and
Kelly McGinty (116), stand second and tied for third, respectively, in games played at Cornell. Overguard stands at 106 career games played, while fellow senior
Hayley Hughes is 11 games away from the 100-games played mark herself.
LEAGUE OPENERS
Cornell won its ECAC Hockey opener for the second straight season with a 5-1 win at Quinnipiac on Oct. 29, and opened up 2-0 in league play for the second time in a row when it downed Princeton the following day by the same score. Last season, Cornell won its first five league games before falling to St. Lawrence. Prior to last season, the last time that Cornell won twice to begin the league campaign came during the 1998-98 season. Entering this weekend at 4-0 in league play, the Big Red will try to match its best start in league play in program history, set last season when Cornell won five straight games to begin the league campaign.
FRONTRUNNERS
Cornell has spent 73.2 percent of the total minutes of games this season with a lead, while trailing for just a total of 6:37, or 0.3 percent of the time. Cornell has been tied for 186:27 through 12 games, or 25.9 percent of the total minutes played.
TEAMMATES, ENEMIES
The Nov. 2 game against Mercyhurst featured a number of players who are teammates on the Canadian National Team that won the gold medal at the 4 Nations Cup from Nov. 9-13 in St. John's, Newfoundland. Cornell players
Rebecca Johnston and
Brianne Jenner skated against Mercyhurst's Meghan Agosta and Vicki Bendus at Lynah Rink before taking off to become teammates for Canada. Agosta and Johnston were teammates last year on the Canadian team that captured the Olympic gold medal at the Vancouver Olympics. Additionally, Bendus was a teammate of the eight Cornell players at the Canadian U22 National Team camp in mid-August.
BALANCING ACT
Through the first 12 games, despite the Big Red having scored 55 goals, only
Rebecca Johnston has collected at least one point in every game that she has appeared in. Johnston has 17 points this season on six goals and 11 assists, with three multi-point games on the year.
EVERYONE IS CLUTCH
Cornell has shown a tremendous balance on the scoresheet this season, illustrated by the fact that only
Brianne Jenner,
Rebecca Johnston and
Amber Overguard have recorded more than one game-winning goal this season. With 11 victories this year, eight different players have scored a game-winning goal.
ANOTHER QUICK START
Brianne Jenner added her first career ECAC Hockey Rookie of the Week award on Nov. 2 after her play in the league-opening weekend on Oct. 29-30. Jenner scored six points in the two games on two goals and four assists, scoring three assists against Quinnipiac and tallying two goals and an assist at Princeton.
AND THE WINNER IS...
Freshman
Jessica Campbell scored four goals for the Big Red in a 9-1 victory against Robert Morris on Oct. 23, enough to earn her the ECAC Hockey Rookie of the Week award in her first weekend. Campbell scored once in both the first and second periods and finished off her four-goal performance with a pair of markers in the third period. Campbell's four-goal outburst was the first for a Big Red player since Colette Bredin scored five against Colby on Feb. 28, 1998, in a 9-3 Cornell victory.
EVERYONE IN THE ACT
Cornell's 9-1 victory against Robert Morris on Oct. 23 came as a total team effort. Of the 15 skaters to dress for that contest, 14 of them recorded at least one point, with only freshman defenseman
Alyssa Gagliardi not picking up a point. Gagliardi didn't finish the weekend empty-handed, however, as she picked up an assist in the season opener on Oct. 22.
GOOD GIRLS
Cornell leads the nation in fewest penalty minutes per game, averaging just 6.5 minutes in the box per contest. Cornell has been called for just 39 penalties in the 12 games this season.
ON THE BOARD
When junior
Jenna Paulson recorded an assist on Oct. 23 against Robert Morris, it marked the first career point for the Toronto native. Paulson had played in 56 games through her first two seasons with the Big Red before collecting her first career point.
FROM THE START
The five skaters in Cornell's six-player freshman class each made their collegiate debut against Robert Morris on Oct. 22-23, with all five of them recording their first career points.
Jessica Campbell picked up four goals on the weekend and leads the team in scoring, while
Brianne Jenner tallied a goal and an assist and Hayley Cudmore picked up a pair of assists. The other two newcomers,
Olivia Cook and
Alyssa Gagliardi, both recorded one assist on the weekend.
OH CANADA!
Of the 20 members of the Cornell roster in 2010-11, nine were selected to participate in the Canadian U22 National Team Selection Camp in early August, and eight of those players were named to the select team that faced the United States in a three-game series later that month. The eight included goaltender
Amanda Mazzotta, defensemen
Laura Fortino and
Lauriane Rougeau, and forwards
Jessica Campbell,
Brianne Jenner,
Rebecca Johnston,
Chelsea Karpenko and
Catherine White. Also invited to the camp but not named to the select team was defenseman
Hayleigh Cudmore. The nine players invited to the camp far surpassed any other collegiate program, with Boston University placing four players in the initial camp and Mercyhurst placing three.
EARLY PICKS
When the ECAC Hockey preseason coaches poll was released, it was no surprise to see the Big Red standing as the favorite among league coaches to repeat as champions. Cornell received all 11 possible first-place votes with Clarkson gaining the final vote, with coaches unable to vote for their own teams.
THE FIRST SIX
Along with the preseason coaches poll, the ECAC Hockey bench bosses selected the preseason all-league team, with four Big Red players named among the six spots. The Big Red placed defensemen
Laura Fortino and
Lauriane Rougeau and forwards
Rebecca Johnston and
Catherine White among the top six, with Quinnipiac goaltender Victoria Vigilanti and Harvard forward Kate Buesser rounding out the league's preseason selections.
EVERYBODY'S ALL-AMERICAN
Cornell returns four players who have previously earned AHCA All-America honors during their career, including the program's first First-Team selection in sophomore defenseman
Laura Fortino, who was selected to the nation's top six in her freshman season. Joining in that group are 2010 second-team selections
Catherine White and
Lauriane Rougeau and 2009 second-team pick
Rebecca Johnston.
GO FOR THE GOLD
Rebecca Johnston returns to the Big Red for her junior season after sitting out the 2009-10 campaign while centralized with the Canadian senior national team. Johnston was named to the Canadian team that captured the gold medal at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, playing in five of Canada's six games and scoring one goal with five assists and a +9 rating.
WORLD CHAMPIONS
Cornell's roster includes a pair of players who were a part of the Canadian team that won the IIHF U18 World Championship last spring. Freshmen
Jessica Campbell and
Hayleigh Cudmore were both members of that squad, with Campbell being named the most valuable player of the tournament for her play.
DRAWING A BLANK
Last season, opponents found it exceptionally hard to score on Cornell goaltender
Amanda Mazzotta. The junior netminder set a Cornell record – men's and women's – by posting 11 shutouts last year, surpassing the total of 10 set by men's goaltender David McKee during the 2004-05 season. The previous best by a women's goaltender was six, set by Kathryn LoPresti in the 1988-89 season.
GOING STREAKING
Last season, Cornell goaltender
Amanda Mazzotta recorded the fourth-longest shutout streak in NCAA history, recording four straight shutouts from Feb. 5 through Feb. 13. Her total time stretched for 286:54, the longest streak in ECAC Hockey history. Wisconsin alumna Jessie Vetter owns two of the three longest streaks in NCAA history, including the record of 448:39.
TREATY OF NEUTRALITY
Cornell's two games at the NCAA Frozen Four last season marked the 42nd and 43rd games the Big Red has played on neutral ice. Cornell holds a 23-17-3 record all-time when playing at a neutral venue. Prior to last season's national championship weekend, the Big Red's last neutral site game came on Jan. 21, 2001, when it lost to St. Lawrence, 4-1, at Lake Placid, N.Y.
The Big Red is not scheduled to play any neutral site contests this season, but could potentially play as many as four, should Cornell advance in postseason play.
PENALTY KILLING? NO PROBLEM
Cornell was exceptional at staying out of the penalty box last season, ranking 33rd among the 35 teams in Division I in penalty minutes per game. Even when the Big Red found itself shorthanded, however, Cornell still played outstanding defense. The Big Red ranked first in the nation in penalty-killing percentage, allowing just 10 goals in 131 opponents' power plays (92.4 percent). Cornell's 2009-10 percentage ranked eighth all-time in NCAA history.
TWO-WAY PLAYER
Sophomore forward
Xandra Hompe gives new meaning to that term, as the New Cannan, Conn., native is a dual-sport athlete. Hompe spends her fall season with the Cornell women's soccer team, where she finished tied for third on the team in scoring and tied for the team lead in assists with four.
LYNAH LOCKDOWN
Cornell went 4-0 in postseason games at Lynah Rink last season. Prior to thiat, the Big Red had never won a postseason game, and had never played a postseason game at home.
UP NEXT
Cornell is off for five weeks for exams and the holiday break, finally returning to action on Jan. 7 at Yale in a 7 p.m. contest. The Big Red begins the second half of the season with five straight road games, playing at Yale, Brown, Rensselaer, Union and Mercyhurst before finally returning to Lynah Rink for a Friday, Jan. 21, matchup against Colgate.