ITHACA, N.Y. — With the No. 3 seed in the ECAC Hockey Championships already secured, the Cornell men's hockey team will attempt to simultaneously improve its Pairwise standing, play the spoiler role, and also celebrate Senior Night in a 7 p.m. game against league-leading Union tonight. The game will be broadcast on the Ivy League Digital Network, with Jason Weinstein on play-by-play and Tony Eisenhut providing color
commentary. Their call can also be heard in the Ithaca area on WHCU (870 AM, 95.9 FM) and accessed worldwide
here.
GAME #29: #7/8 UNION at #9/9 CORNELL
TIME: 7 p.m.
DATE: Saturday, Feb. 25, 2017
PLACE: Lynah Rink
· Ithaca, N.Y.
CORNELL: 18-6-4 overall, 13-4-4 ECAC Hockey
UNION: 23-8-2 overall, 16-4-1 ECAC Hockey
TV: None
RADIO:
WHCU (870 AM, 95.9 FM)
VIDEO:
Ivy League Digital Network
LIVE STATS:
CornellBigRed.com
Cornell game notes (PDF)
Union game notes (PDF)
Big Red Rewind:
•
Mitch Gillam made 31 saves for his third shutout of the season, and second-period goals by
Patrick McCarron and
Mitch Vanderlaan powered the Big Red to a 2-0 victory over Rensselaer last night at Lynah Rink.
• Gillam's shutout was the 11th of his career, which moved him into solo possession for fourth on Cornell's all-time list.
• McCarron scored the winner on the power play early in the second, wristing a shot through a two-man screen provided by
Matt Buckles and
Trevor Yates. The goal snapped a skid of 17 consecutive unsuccessful power plays for Cornell.
• Vanderlaan's insurance goal was his team-leading 13th strike of the year, and it gives him a goal in four straight games and seven points over the same span.
• The win pushed Cornell's unbeaten streak to eight games (6-0-2), but other results around the nation actually slid Cornell down one spot in the Pairwise to 10th. The Big Red was also locked into third in the regular-season league tables.
• Cornell came off a three-point trip to the North Country last weekend.
• The Big Red scored three first-period goals to defeat St. Lawrence, 4-2, last Friday. Vanderlaan scored the winning goal with 4 seconds left in the first.
• Vanderlaan and
Matt Nuttle scored third-period goals to pull the Big Red ahead Saturday, but Clarkson scored less than a minute later to force a 3-3 tie.
Highlights From Last Night's 2-0 Win Over Rensselaer:
Who's Who at CU:
• Sophomore forward
Mitch Vanderlaan (13-12–25) leads the team in goals and points. He's riding a four-game goal-scoring streak, which is the Big Red's first since Greg Miller from Feb. 15-23, 2013. Vanderlaan's plus-13
rating is also tied for a team-best with senior forward
Eric Freschi (1-11–12).
• Senior defenseman
Patrick McCarron (5-17–22) continues to lead the team in assists after picking up two last Friday at St. Lawrence. He averages the fifth-most points per game for ECAC Hockey blueliners (0.79) and had an eight-game points streak earlier this season — the first for a Cornellian since Greg Miller from Oct. 29 to Nov. 22, 2011, and the first for a Big Red defenseman since Mark McRae from Jan. 25 to Feb. 21, 2003.
• Junior forward
Trevor Yates (10-10–20) leads the team with six power-play goals and 11 power-play points. He has seven points in his last eight games.
• Sophomore defenseman
Alec McCrea (1-8–9) leads the team with a plus-15 rating, which is tied for third-best in ECAC Hockey for blueliners.
• Senior forward
Jeff Kubiak (3-10–13) ranks third on team scoring relative to points per games played (0.72), having missed 10 of the team's first 11 games due to injury. Linemate sophomore forward
Anthony Angello (10-6–16) has five goals in his last eight games.
• Senior
Mitch Gillam (18-5-4, 2.10, .921, 3 SO) had the nation's longest active unbeaten streak for goaltenders snapped Jan. 27, having backstopped the Big Red to a 10-0-1 record over 11 starts. The Big Red's lone nominee for the Hobey Baker Memorial Award had a 1.63 goals against average and .931 save percentage over that span.
Road Warriors:
• Cornell completed the road portion of its schedule with a sterling 9-2-2 record, with the .769 winning percentage ranking fourth-best in the country entering the weekend. This mark's the Big Red's best road winning percentage since the 2002-03 season (.821), when Cornell reached the Frozen Four.
• This year marks the first time since 2004-05 that the Big Red has swept three ECAC Hockey road weekends in a single season.
• Cornell has played just 11 home games this season, which is tied with Harvard for the lowest total in the country.
A Little Perspective:
• Cornell will finish the ECAC Hockey regular season in third place, meaning the Big Red has a first-round bye in the playoffs and will host a best-of-three quarterfinals series March 10-12. The pool of teams the Big Red may host includes Clarkson, Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, Colgate or Rensselaer
• Despite Cornell's victory, the results of last night's games nudged the Big Red down one spot to 10th in the Pairwise Rankings. If the season ended today, the Big Red would be in line for a berth to the NCAA tournament.
The Sum of Intangibles Is Tangible:
• A quick glance at Cornell's traditional statistics illustrates some of the team's storylines, though several others fly beneath the radar.
• Through 28 games, the Big Red has already accumulated 108 man-games lost to injury — which includes lengthy absences from the team's leading scorer last year (
Jeff Kubiak, 10 games) and a top-four defenseman (
Ryan Bliss, 28).
• Senior
Jake Weidner has the massive task of being the Big Red's leading
faceoff man. He entered the weekend fourth in the nation in average faceoffs per game (24.7), and his 60.3 winning percentage since Dec. 1 is fourth-best among those taking at least 200 draws over that span.
• By a wide margin, Weidner is also far and away the nation's top shot-blocker among forwards (2.29 per game).
What, Me Worry?:
• Seven of Cornell's 18 victories so far this season have come in games in which the Big Red has surrendered the first goal.
• The Big Red's resilience from an early deficit has become somewhat of a trend, with the team sporting a very respectable 12-11-4 record when conceding the game's first strike since the beginning of the 2015-16 campaign. That's a stark turnaround from the team's 14-34-5 record when yielding the game's first goal from the previous three seasons (2012-15).
Blip On The Radar:
• The Big Red has killed off 26 of its opponents' last 27 power plays after an ultra rare stretch of teams scoring multiple power-play goals against Cornell in three straight games. Before that slump, the Big Red had the third-best penalty kill in the nation on Jan. 29. It has since moved back up to eighth.
• Cornell's Jan. 28 loss to Dartmouth marked the first time the Big Red has lost a game in which it held a two-goal lead since Nov. 7, 2015 (a 5-4 overtime loss to Quinnipiac). The Big Red watched another two-goal lead evaporate
Feb. 3 at Union only to surge ahead with two late goals to salvage a 5-3 victory, then it yielded the final two goals of a 2-2 tie with Yale on Feb. 11.
Never Too Close For Comfort:
• Cornell's 1-0 win Jan. 7 at Merrimack was hardly new territory for the team. The Big Red had four 1-0 victories last season for the first time in program history. Cornell also set a team record by going to overtime in 14 of its 34 games last year. The previous record was 12, set in 1985-86, then matched in 2010-11 and 2011-12.
• Cornell went to overtime in seven of its final 15 games last year, with a 4-3-7 record in those games.
Turning The Trick:
•
Mitch Vanderlaan's hat trick Nov. 12 at Yale was Cornell's first since Jan. 22, 2011, when Tyler Roeszler scored three times against Colgate. Subsequently, Vanderlaan was named the ECAC Hockey Player of the Week on Nov. 15.
• Vanderlaan potted a couple more goals Nov. 19 against Princeton to become the first player from Cornell with seven goals in the first seven games of the season since Blake Gallagher did so at the start of the 2009-10 campaign.
• Freshman forward
Jeff Malott (4-3–7) then scored his first three collegiate goals in a span of 8 minutes, 44 seconds during the first period to power the Big Red past Princeton on Jan. 13. He was subsequently named ECAC Hockey Rookie of the Week after becoming the first Cornell freshman with a hat trick since current NHLer Matt Moulson on Feb. 7, 2003.
Gillam's Groove:
• Senior goaltender
Mitch Gillam moved up to fourth on the program's all-time list for career shutouts last night. By stopping all 31 shots from Rensselaer, Gillam earned his 11th career clean sheet.
• Gillam posted the third-longest shutout streak in program history last season, spanning 213 minutes, 17 seconds over four games in November 2015 — including consecutive shutouts at Yale and Brown. That marked the Big Red's first back-to-back shutouts since Andy Iles did so Dec. 2-3, 2011
against St. Lawrence and Clarkson, and it was the Big Red's first consecutive road shutouts since Ben Scrivens blanked Princeton and Quinnipiac from Nov. 7-8, 2008.
• An odd twist on Gillam's 11 career shutouts is that he's only won nine of them — Dec. 28, 2014 against Lake Superior State and Nov. 20, 2015 against Yale were both scoreless ties.
First Ivy League Coach To 400:
• Already the winningest coach in program history and in Ivy League history,
Mike Schafer has eclipsed another milestone in his career with his 400th victory in January. He ranks 10th in victories among active Division I coaches and is Cornell's fifth-winningest coach across all sports — second among current coaches, behind just Dave Eldredge (men's and women's polo).
Helping Out:
Members and friends of the Cornell men's hockey program embarked on another mission trip to the Dominican Republic through the Portal de Belén Foundation over the summer. It was the fourth time the program has participated, following trips in 2009, 2012 and 2014. Current members of the team
Ryan Bliss,
Alec McCrea,
Anthony Angello,
Dan Wedman,
Alex Rauter,
Hayden Stewart,
Trent Shore,
Jared Fiegl and
Dwyer Tschantz were on this year's trip, as well as
Mike Schafer, the Jay R. Bloom '77 Head Coach of Men's Hockey.
About Union:
• The Dutchmen are currently tabbed seventh in the Pairwise Rankings and USCHO.com poll, and eighth in the USA TODAY/USA Hockey Magazine poll.
• Union scraped out a 4-3 victory in overtime last night at Colgate to stay in first place in the ECAC Hockey standings entering the final day of games.
• Senior center Mike Vecchione (25-31–56; 7 PPGs, 4 SHGs) scored the winner last night in overtime. He currently ranks third in the overall national scoring race, while junior winger Spencer Foo (21-34–45; 8 PPGs) is fourth. They are both candidates for the Hobey Baker Award.
• Vecchione and Foo have played on the same line for much of the season, but were split up last weekend. Vecchione switched to pivot between
sophomores Sebastian Vidmar (14-23–37) and Brett Supinski (7-23–30).
• Senior Alex Sakellaropoulos (20-4-1, 2.38, .921) returned to action last weekend after missing four games — including the team's first game vs. Cornell.
• The Dutchmen have outscored opponents 47-23 in the second period of games this season. They're 13-0 when leading after two periods in ECAC Hockey play.
The Series Against Union:
• Cornell holds a 37-20-8 lead in the all-time series and it has never trailed at any point in its current three-game winning streak against the Dutchmen.
• The Big Red's current seven-game unbeaten streak started with a 5-3 victory Feb. 3 at Union. Cornell scored three goals in the first period, then
Jake Weidner and
Anthony Angello scored 39 seconds apart in the third period.
• In Union's last visit to Lynah, Cornell swept a two-game ECAC Hockey Championship first round series in 2016.
Holden Anderson scored off a faceoff win by
Jeff Kubiak with 6:12 left in the third period to power the Big Red to a 1-0 victory in Game 1.
Matt Buckles then beat his defender off the back boards and jammed a shot past Alex Sakellaropoulos 3:18 into overtime for a 2-1 victory in Game 2.
Apple Harvest:
• Freshman
Yanni Kaldis (1-12–13) ranks second on the team in assists. His passes set up the shots resulting in all three of the Big Red's power-play goals Nov. 5 at Harvard, making him the first Big Red player to record three power-play assists in a single game since Byron Bitz on Jan. 7, 2006.
Anniversary Season:
• The Jan. 27-28 weekend marked a reunion for the 50th anniversary of Cornell's first national championship team in 1967. There were festivities throughout, highlighted by a special ceremony to honor the returning members of the team during the first intermission of the second game.
• This is also the 60th year of hockey in Lynah Rink. The facility was dedicated April 6, 1957, a few weeks after it hosted an exhibition between the New York Rangers and the Rochester Americans (AHL).
The Offensive Defense:
•
Mitch Gillam leads the nation's goaltenders in career points. His quick outlet pass Jan. 21 against St. Lawrence set up the line rush leading to
Patrick McCarron's goal, giving Gillam five career points on one goal and four assists.
Feel The Draft?:
• Cornell has five players on the roster who have been selected in the NHL Entry Draft, including four from 2014. Sophomore forward
Beau Starrett (Chicago Blackhawks) was selected earliest in the group, having been taken in the third round with the 88th overall pick. Classmate
Anthony Angello, also a forward, was selected in the fifth round by the Pittsburgh Penguins. Junior forwards
Jared Fiegl (Arizona Coyotes) and
Dwyer Tschantz (St. Louis Blues) were then picked in the seventh round. Senior forward
Matt Buckles was taken by the Florida Panthers in the fourth round of the 2013 draft.
An Empire State of Mind:
• The Big Red's stars in the Nov. 26 win over New Hampshire at The Frozen Apple at Madison Square Garden all had ties to New York. Junior forward
Alex Rauter, who scored on a penalty shot in the third period, is from nearby Chatham, N.J., participated in the New York Rangers prospect development camp in 2012 and once played youth hockey on MSG ice in between periods of a Rangers game. Freshman forward
Noah Bauld, who scored the game-winner, was actually born in New York before moving to his hometown of Halifax, Nova Scotia when he was a toddler, and senior goaltender
Mitch Gillam once attended the New York Islanders' prospect camp.
Freshman Force:
• The jump to college hockey can be a big one for newcomers, but forward
Anthony Angello — a 2014 draft pick of the Pittsburgh Penguins — clearly felt right at home as a freshman last season. Angello was the Big Red's first player to have points in his first four collegiate games since Ryan Moynihan from Nov. 8-16, 1996 — which was
Mike Schafer's second season as head coach of his alma mater.
Binational Interests:
• Cornell has the unique distinction of having exactly 14 players hailing from both the U.S. and Canada. The Big Red joins just two other teams — Robert Morris and Michigan Tech — with an even split on their respective rosters.
The Streak Is Over!
• Junior forward
Alex Rauter's penalty-shot goal in The Frozen Apple on Nov. 26 ended a remarkable string of futility on such plays for the Big Red. Rauter became the first Cornellian to score on a penalty shot since Feb. 27, 1987 — 949 games since Joe Nieuwendyk scored on a penalty shot against Rensselaer.
Up Next:
• Cornell has earned a highly coveted first-round bye in the ECAC Hockey Championship playoffs, meaning it will prepare to host a best-of-three quarterfinal series against an opponent to be determined March 10-12 at Lynah Rink.