The Big Red plays its first regular-season home games in seven weeks with its North Country rivals descending on Lynah Rink this weekend. Cornell will play host to St. Lawrence on Friday before a clash of nationally ranked teams with Clarkson in town Saturday. Live video of both games will be available on the new Ivy League Digital Network subscription service. Jason Weinstein will also handle the play-by-play for both games, which can be heard in the Ithaca area on WHCU-AM (870) or worldwide via the Ivy League Digital Network.
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ST. LAWRENCE at #12/12 CORNELL
TIME: 7 p.m.
DATE: Friday, January 24
PLACE: Lynah Rink
· Ithaca, N.Y.
RECORDS: Cornell 9-4-4, 5-3-3 ECAC Hockey
· St. Lawrence 8-12-2, 2-6-2 ECAC Hockey
LIVE VIDEO:
Ivy League Digital Network
AUDIO:
Ivy League Digital Network
RADIO: WHCU-AM (870)
LIVE STATS:
CornellBigRed.com
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#13/13 CLARKSON at #12/12 CORNELL
TIME: 7 p.m.
DATE: Saturday, January 25
PLACE: Lynah Rink
· Ithaca, N.Y.
RECORDS: Cornell 9-4-4, 5-3-3 ECAC Hockey
· Clarkson 15-7-2, 8-2 ECAC Hockey
LIVE VIDEO:
Ivy League Digital Network
AUDIO:
Ivy League Digital Network
RADIO: WHCU-AM (870)
LIVE STATS:
CornellBigRed.com
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Cornell game notes (PDF)
St. Lawrence game notes (PDF)
Clarkson game notes (PDF)
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ABOUT THE BIG RED
Cornell is riding a five-game unbeaten streak (tied for sixth-longest in the country) and has lost just once in its last 10 games (6-1-3). Mostly recently, the Big Red enjoyed a three-point road trip through a pair of Ivy League towns with a 3-2 victory last Friday at Harvard and a 1-1 tie with Dartmouth on Saturday. Senior forward
Dustin Mowrey provided the big goals in both games for Cornell, netting the winner with 20 seconds to play in the second period against the Crimson and scoring the squad's lone goal in the first period against the Big Green. Prior to that, the Big Red's last game action was a 6-0 victory over the Russian Red Stars in a Jan. 3 exhibition at Lynah Rink. ... Special teams have been at the forefront of the Big Red's success. Cornell has the third-most effective power play in the nation with a 24.4 percent conversion rate. The Big Red's penalty kill has also excelled of late, killing off its opposition's last 21 power-play opportunities. ... The team's scoring race is extremely tight, with junior forward
Brian Ferlin (8 goals-10 assists–18 points; 5 PPGs) leading the team in goals and tied for the overall scoring lead with junior defenseman
Joakim Ryan (5-13–18). Ryan is second in the nation in points per game for blueliners (1.06), trailing only Bentley's Steve Weinstein. ... Junior captain
John McCarron (4-13–17) is tied for second in scoring with classmate and linemate
Joel Lowry (6-11–17). ... Senior
Andy Iles (8-4-4, 2.15 goals-against average, .923 save percentage) is in his third season as the Big Red's undisputed starting goaltender.
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ABOUT ST. LAWRENCE
The Saints were nationally ranked when the Big Red played them in mid-November, but SLU has gone 2-8 since and is currently on a seven-game losing streak. The Saints' offense has remained as potent as it was early in the season, but the team has surrendered at least four goals in six straight games. ... Brothers Greg Carey (14-26–40) and Matt Carey (14-13–27; 8 PPGs) lead the team in scoring. Greg is third in the nation in overall points per game (1.82), while Matt leads the nation in points per game for rookies (1.23). ... Senior Matt Weninger (6-9-2, 3.78, .863) is in his fourth season as the team's starting goalie.
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ABOUT CLARKSON
The Golden Knights continue to stay in line for an at-large bid for the NCAA tournament, despite being selected for dead last in both ECAC Hockey preseason polls. Clarkson is an astounding 12-3 in one-goal games, including a pair of 3-2 victories at home last weekend against Yale and Brown. ... Senior forwards Ben Sexton (5-14–19; 4 PPGs) and Allan McPherson (8-10–18) lead the team in scoring. ... Sophomore Greg Lewis (8-4, 2.60, .895) and freshman Steve Perry (6-3-2, 2.02, .919) have been splitting time in goal.
THE SERIES WITH ST. LAWRENCE
Cornell leads the all-time series against St. Lawrence,
57-42-7, including victories in five of the teams' last six meetings. The Big Red used a four-goal first period to vault itself to a 5-2 victory in the teams' first meeting this season, on Nov. 16 at Appleton Arena.
Joel Lowry and
Brian Ferlin each had two goals and an assist, and
Dustin Mowrey had three assists for the Big Red. Cornell head coach Mike
Schafer is 21-16-5 all-time against the Saints. Cornell
and St. Lawrence first met during the 1926-27 season, when the Big Red's home games were played on Beebe Lake.
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THE SERIES WITH CLARKSON
Saturday's game will be the 124th all-time meeting between the Big Red and Golden Knights. Cornell owns a 58-51-14 lead in the all-time series and recently had a nine-game unbeaten streak against Clarkson until the Golden Knights won the last two meetings. The most recent clash came Nov. 15 at Cheel Arena, when Allan McPherson scored with 37 seconds left in the third period to lift Clarkson to a 3-2 victory.
John McCarron and
Brian Ferlin scored power-play goals for the Big Red to erase a 2-0 deficit. Cornell head coach
Mike Schafer holds a 31-16-7 record against the Golden Knights.
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POWERFUL STUFF
Cornell power play ranks third in the nation with a 24.4 percent conversion rate. The Big Red has 11 power-play goals over its last 11 games and also scored seven goals on the man advantage in two games Oct. 25-26 at Nebraska Omaha. All four of the Big Red's goals in the second game came against the Mavericks on the power play. It marked the first time the Big Red has scored four power-play goals in a game since Nov. 6, 2009 against Dartmouth (a 5-1 victory).
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NOT JUST A DEFENSEMAN
As of Monday, junior blueliner
Joakim Ryan is second in the nation in points per game for defensemen (1.06). Just six games into the season, Ryan had already equaled his goal total from all of last year with three. Two of his strikes came in a 3-3 tie Nov. 8 at Rensselaer. He led the team with 20 assists last season and was tied for third in points with 23. He was also on the ice for 41 of the team's 83 goals, which ranked second on the team to only leading scorer
Greg Miller (43). The production was nothing new for the San Jose Sharks draft pick, who set a program record for goals by a freshman defenseman in 2011-12 with seven.
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POLLS PROSE
The Big Red held steady at 12th in both the USCHO.com and USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine polls this week, marking the third consecutive week at the ranking. It's also the highest Cornell has been ranked in both polls this season. More importantly, the Big Red is also currently tied for 12th in the PairWise Rankings, which are used to help determine which teams qualify for the NCAA tournament.
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BLANK YOU VERY MUCH
Cornell has recorded at least one shutout in each of the last 18 seasons. The last time the Big Red went a full season without posting a shutout came during the 1994-95 season under former coach Brian McCutcheon, as Cornell finished that year 11-15-4. The following year marked the first season for current head coach
Mike Schafer, and his clubs have never gone a full year without recording a shutout.
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THE PUCK STOPS HERE
With 30 saves in a Nov. 23 victory over Yale, senior goaltender
Andy Iles moved up to second on the program's all-time list in saves. Just 13 games into his final season on East Hill, Iles has now accumulated an even 2,576 saves over his collegiate career. He passed Jason Elliott (2,462) for second on the all-time list, and now trails only current Los Angeles Kings starting goalie Ben Scrivens (2,873) (see chart on opposite page). For his 55-save effort over two games against Brown and Yale from Nov. 22-23, Iles was named the ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week.
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NOW THAT'S A STREAK
It has been 1,532 games since the Big Red has been shutout in back-to-back contests — a streak that stayed alive with the Big Red's two goals Nov. 15 at Clarkson. The streak dates back December 1963 with games vs. Clarkson and St. Lawrence.
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IRON MAN
Andy Iles started 80 consecutive games in goal for the Big Red, spanning all of the last two seasons and the final game of his freshman campaign, before the streak came to an end Nov. 26 with
Mitch Gillam getting the nod against Niagara. Iles' 80 consecutive starts are tied for fifth in NCAA Division I history, leaving him 24 games a familiar leader. Cornell's Ben Scrivens holds the current record of 104 consecutive starts from 2006-10. Iles was one of just two goalies to be used exclusively by his team in 2011-12, with Minnesota's Kent Patterson being the other. By starting and finishing all of the Big Red's games that season, Iles became the first goalie at Cornell to accomplish that feat since Darren Eliot in 1982-83, and the first Cornell sophomore to do so since Laing Kennedy in 1960-61 — when the season was just 19 games long.
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FEEL THE DRAFT?
Cornell has seven players on the roster who have been selected in the NHL Entry Draft, including one pick from last June. Freshman forward
Matt Buckles became the first Cornellian to be selected by the Florida Panthers, when the NHL's southern-most team nabbed the Toronto native in the fourth round with the 98th overall selection. Other NHL draft picks on the team include defensemen
Reece Willcox (Philadelphia Flyers),
Joakim Ryan (San Jose Sharks) and
Kirill Gotovets (Tampa Bay Lightning; has since been traded to the Chicago Blackhawks) and forwards
John McCarron (Edmonton Oilers),
Brian Ferlin (Boston Bruins) and
Joel Lowry (Los Angeles Kings).
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FOR THE RECORD
With three consecutive shutouts in November 2011,
Andy Iles recorded the second-longest shutout streak in program history, spanning 213 minutes, 35 seconds over a five-game span. The only Cornell shutout streak that went longer was posted by Los Angeles Kings goalie Ben Scrivens, who held the opposition scoreless for 267:11 during the 2010 playoffs. But Iles wasn't done there — he posted back-to-back shutouts against St. Lawrence and Clarkson on Dec. 2 and Dec. 3, respectively, spurring a other lengthy shutout streak of 152:36 that ranks ninth all-time in Big Red history. His success has stretched into the postseason, as evidenced by a career-high 46 saves in a March 9 double-overtime victory against Dartmouth. Iles was third in the nation with six shutouts and 10th in goal-against average (2.12). He also set a record for longest streak in ECAC Hockey play of 286:54 from November 2011 to January 2012.
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FIVE-ON-THREE PROWESS
There are few situations in hockey more dire than when a team is facing a two-man disadvantage, but the Big Red has made a habit of rising to the occasion in those scenarios. Cornell is a perfect 14-for-14 killing off a two-man disadvantage over last season and the beginning of this season, spanning a total of 12 minutes, 4 seconds. The last time Cornell surrendered a five-on-three goal was against Yale on Feb. 11, 2012.
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THE 35th TO 350
Already the winningest coach in program history,
Mike Schafer hit 350 victories for his career — all of which have come from behind the Big Red's bench — with a 4-2 win over Princeton on Nov. 1. He became the 35th coach all-time to rack up 350 victories across all NCAA divisions, with four of them passing the milestone last season (Ferris State's Bob Daniels, Connecticut's Bruce Marshall, Notre Dame's Jeff Jackson and Quinnipiac's Rand Pecknold). Schafer is also just the third coach to pass 350 victories with Ivy League tenure, joining Ned Harkness (Cornell, Union and Rensselaer) and Tim Taylor (Yale).
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CLASS-Y GUY
Andy Iles is one of 20 national candidates for the Senior CLASS Award, which is presented annually to an NCAA Division I senior that has notable achievements in four areas of excellence — community, classroom, character and competition. Iles is continuing the program's tradition of highly decorated goaltenders, having been named the ECAC Hockey Rookie of the Year (2011) and an All-Ivy League First Team selection (2012). Outside of the rink, he has been involved in a service trip with the Portal De Belen Foundation to Don Juan, Dominican Republic, and is the organizer and planner of the Cornell Hockey Teddy Bear Toss, which donates proceeds to Cancer Resource Center of the Finger Lakes and the Franziska Racker Centers. He is also a five-time member of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences' Dean's List and carries a 3.78 cumulative grade point average.
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GLOBAL INFLUENCE
The Big Red has 13 players on the roster born in the United States. Cornell also now has players native to seven different countries on its squad. Aside from the bulk of its roster hailing from the United States and Canada, Cornell also has a player from Belarus (
Kirill Gotovets), Denmark (
Christian Hilbrich), Finland (
Teemu Tiitinen), Singapore (
Dustin Mowrey) and South Africa (
Armand de Swardt).
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GOLDEN AGAIN
Junior forward
Cole Bardreau won a gold medal while serving as an assistant captain for the United States at the 2013 International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship in Ufa, Russia. He then scored a goal and added an assist in his first game back with the Big Red last weekend against Union. It wasn't the first time Bardreau's earned gold with the U.S. either — he also wore an "A" while capturing gold at the IIHF Under-18 World Championship in April 2011. Junior defenseman
Joakim Ryan was also among the 45 players who started in camp for the United States before the roster was trimmed in advance of the World Junior championships.
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COLLECTING HARDWARE
While forward
Cole Bardreau became the first Cornell player to earn gold with the U.S. at the IIHF World Junior Championships, goalie
Andy Iles was the first to earn a medal with Team USA. Iles claimed bronze at the 2011 tournament in Buffalo, N.Y., with the only player before him to compete with the United States being goaltender Jean-Marc Pelletier in 1998.
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CLOSER TO HOME
Hometown fans of the Big Red got a rare treat when goalie
Andy Iles became the first Ithaca native to play for the team since Mike Tallman in 1988-89. Forward
Kevin Cole then made his collegiate debut in 2011, marking the first time in at least 50 years — and perhaps the first time in program history — that two Ithaca natives have played for the Big Red in the same season. Yet another Ithaca area connection came on board last season when the Big Red added 6-foot-4 defenseman
Craig Esposito, who is also from Lansing and also competes on Cornell's men's golf team.
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INTERNATIONAL EXPOSURE
Junior
Kirill Gotovets got a taste of the big time when he was selected to represent his native Belarus in the 2010 IIHF World Championships — not an age group World Championships (though he did play for Belarus at the U20 World Championship as well) — playing against some of the best players the world has to offer. He played in three of Belarus' eight games at the World Championships.
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UP NEXT
The Big Red's respite from the road is short, as the squad will play its next three contests away from home. The Big Red makes an Ivy League swing to Yale on Jan. 31 and Brown on Feb. 1 before taking on regional rival Colgate on Feb. 8 at Starr Rink in Hamilton, N.Y. Cornell next home games are Feb. 15 against Union and Feb. 16 vs. Rensselaer.