ITHACA, N.Y. — The Cornell men's hockey team warps up a home-and-home series with Colgate tonight in the fifth annual Courage Classic at Lynah Rink.
The game will be streamed on ESPN+ in the U.S. The same production can be viewed by international viewers through a different platform via Stretch Internet. The game can also be heard on WHCU (870 AM, 97.7 FM) and worldwide via the station's website with 15th-year play-by-play man Jason Weinstein on the call.
GAME INFORMATION
Colgate at #11/12 Cornell
TIME: 7 p.m.
DATE: Saturday, Jan. 26, 2019
PLACE: Lynah Rink • Ithaca, N.Y.
RECORDS: Cornell 12-5-1, 8-2-1 ECAC Hockey, 7-1 Ivy League
Colgate 6-15-2, 3-6-2 ECAC Hockey
VIDEO: ESPN+ —
United States |
International
RADIO:
WHCU (870 AM, 97.7 FM)
LIVE STATS:
CornellBigRed.com
TICKETS:
CornellBigRedTickets.com
GAME NOTES (PDF):
Cornell |
Colgate
About The Courage Classic:
• Tonight's game is dedicated to the children of Camp Good Days, which has assigned honorary coaches for both Cornell and Colgate.
• This is the fifth consecutive season in which the Big Red's annual home game against the Raiders has served as the Courage Classic.
• The honorary coaches will take part in a ceremonial puck drop at center ice.
Friday Night Redux:
• Cornell owns the nation's longest active unbeaten streak after a 3-2 victory over Colgate on Friday night in Hamilton pushed the Big Red to 7-0-1 over its last eight games and solo possession of first place in ECAC Hockey (17 points).
•
Michael Regush broke a 2-all tie midway through the third period with his first goal since Nov. 10, steering in a puck from close range after pretty passes by
Brenden Locke and
Jeff Malott.
•
Mitch Vanderlaan scored just 71 seconds into the game, then helped set up
Tristan Mullin's strike to give Cornell a 2-0 lead heading into the first intermission before Colgate clawed its way back to level early in the third.
•
Matthew Galajda, the reigning ECAC Hockey's Goaltender of the Week, made 18 saves to earn the victory and improve to 8-4 on the year.
Pairwise Power Move:
• Last night's victory at Colgate helped bump Cornell up one spot to No. 8 in the Pairwise rankings, which is an improvement of 24 spots since a Nov. 30 loss at Dartmouth.
January Juggernaut:
• Cornell is now 15-0-2 in its last 17 January games, dating back to a Jan. 28, 2016 loss to Dartmouth.
Forward Thinking:
• Sophomore forward
Morgan Barron (8-11–19; 4 PPG) continues to lead the team in points and power-play goals, though his seven-game scoring streak was snapped last night. He also leads the team with 79 shots on goal and ranks third in the nation with an average of 4.39 shots on goal per game.
• Sophomore
Cam Donaldson (10-6–16; 4 PPG) leads the team in goals, is second in rating (plus-10) and third in overall scoring. His average of 0.56 goals per is tied for third-best among ECAC Hockey players.
• Barron and Donaldson were placed on a line pivoted by
Brenden Locke (4-3–7) following the semester break, with all four of Locke's goals coming in that seven-game span.
• Senior forward
Mitch Vanderlaan (4-13–17) leads the team in assists and is now second in scoring with six points in his last five games. The Big Red's second-year captain is also the team's active leading scorer with 84 points in 114 collegiate games.
• Cornell hasn't averaged more than 30 shots on goal per game in a season since the 2005-06 campaign, but it currently has an average of 30.44.
• The Big Red has scored first in 15 of its 18 games so far and is outscoring the opposition in first periods, 20-5.
More Than Just Defense:
• A two-time All-Ivy League first-team selection, junior defenseman
Yanni Kaldis (4-8–12; 2 PPG) leads the team's blueliners in scoring with assists in each of last weekend's games.
•
Matt Nuttle (1-10–11), one of three senior pillars on defense, has a lofty plus-18 rating and is now a staggering plus-41 over the last two seasons.
• Senior
Brendan Smith (1-2–3) celebrated his return to the lineup Jan. 4 with a goal, but he's also started off as one of the country's best shot-blockers. His average of 2.50 blocks per game would rank fifth in the nation if he had enough games played to qualify.
Goaltending, Inc.:
• Sophomore
Matthew Galajda (8-4, 2.26, .902, SO) a first-team All-American last year, recently returned to the lineup after a five-game absence and continues to round into form. He was named men's ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week on Monday after a 25-save shutout of Harvard.
• But since returning, Galajda has been splitting starts because of the strong play of sophomore
Austin McGrath (4-1-1, 1.71, .935). Unbeaten in five straight starts, the ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Week from Jan. 7 ranks third in the country in both goals against average and save percentage.
Special Teams Resurgence:
• The Big Red's recent unbeaten streak has a strong correlation to improved special teams. The team's combined special teams percentage was ranked 56th of 60 teams in Division I as of Dec. 1, but now sits a respectable 34th at 49.6% just eight games later.
• Since Dec. 1, Cornell's power play is the best in the nation with a 34.8% success rate, and the penalty kill ranks fifth at a 90% clip.
Hobey Hopefuls:
• Junior defenseman
Yanni Kaldis and sophomore forwards
Morgan Barron and
Cam Donaldson were announced among the 81 initial nominees for the Hobey Baker Memorial Award earlier this month.
• The process for selecting college hockey's most outstanding player is in the fan voting phase, with Cornell looking to place someone in the round of 10 finalists for a second straight year.
Matthew Galajda was in that elite group last year, becoming the first freshman goaltender to ever be selected among the final 10.
Next Man Up:
• Cornell has already lost 23 man-games to injury from its top six defensemen, having played six straight games without two of its top four before
Brendan Smith's return on Jan. 4 (
Alex Green has remained out).
• The Big Red's injury woes on defense are in stark contrast to last season, when Cornell led the country in team defense. For the entirety of the
2017-18 season, the Big Red lost just 10 man-games to injury from its top seven defensemen.
#OneIvy Update:
• Having won the Ancient Eight crown with a sterling 9-0-1 record last season, Cornell is 17-1-2 in its last 20 Ivy League contests (the one loss was Nov. 30 at Dartmouth).
• Cornell extended its lead to six points in the Ivy League standings after last weekend's wins over Harvard and Dartmouth and is now one point away from clinching the program's 23rd Ivy League championship. The earliest it could clinch is Feb. 2, if Brown ties or defeats Yale.
Best Behavior:
• The opposition has had more power plays than the Big Red just three times in 18 games this year. Cornell has been on the penalty kill just 59 times so far, which is third-fewest in the nation.
• Cornell and Princeton played a rare penalty-free game on Jan. 4. It was a first in the Division I men's ranks since AIC and Bentley met Dec. 1, 2015.
• It was Cornell's first outing without any penalties since a 4-1 victory over Brown on Feb. 19, 1999 — a span of 660 games.
Wasting No Time:
• Underclassmen have been at the forefront of Cornell's arsenal, scoring 33 of the team's 54 goals (61.1 percent).
• The Big Red's sophomore class averages 1.44 goals per game, which is highest in ECAC Hockey and fourth-highest in the nation.
Circle Time:
• Cornell ranks fifth in the nation in team faceoff percentage (54.5%). Senior
Beau Starrett leads the Big Red in draws taken with a 57.7% success rate.
•
Max Andreev (60.5%) ranks second among the nation's active freshmen in faceoff percentage and ranks 11th overall.
Understudy Extraordinaire:
• With
Mike Schafer not in attendance for the Jan. 4-5 games due to illness, Associate Head Coach
Ben Syer continued his unbeaten streak as an acting head coach. Now in his eighth season with the program, Syer is 7-0-4 all-time when at the helm. All but one of those games has been at Cornell.
Feel The Draft?:
• Cornell has five players on the roster who have been selected in the NHL Entry Draft — one in each of the last five drafts. Sophomore defenseman
Matt Cairns (Edmonton Oilers) was selected earliest in that group, having been taken in the third round with the 84th overall pick in 2016.
• Senior forward
Beau Starrett (Chicago Blackhawks) was also taken in the third round during the 2014 draft. One other forward is a draft pick in
Morgan Barron, who was snagged in the sixth round by the N.Y. Rangers in 2017. He then became the first freshman in program history to have at least one point in each of his first seven games.
• Three underclassmen represent the Big Red's three NHL Draft picks along the blue line.
Alex Green leads that group after his outstanding collegiate debut led to a fourth-round selection by the Tampa Bay Lightning last summer.
• Defenseman
Misha Song (N.Y. Islanders in 2015) is the only newcomer to have his NHL rights already owned.
Scouting Colgate:
• In addition to its loss to the Big Red last night, the Raiders dropped a pair of one-goal games to Dartmouth and Harvard last weekend to fall to 6-15-2 overall and 3-6-2 in ECAC Hockey.
• Colgate has just four goals over its current five-game losing streak, entering this weekend ranked 59th of 60 Division I teams in the country with an average of 1.39 goals per game.
• As he did last season, junior forward Bobby McMann (6-8–14; 3 PPG) leads the team in goals and overall scoring. He typically plays on the left wing of a line with sophomore Josh McKechney (3-7–10) at center and junior John Snodgrass (1-4–5) on the right side that produced both goals last night.
• Two of the team's top four scorers are sophomore defensemen, Nick Austin (2-8–10; 2 PPG) and Trevor Cosgrove (4-4–8; 3 PPG).
• Colgate is tied for second in the nation with a 55.8% success rate on draws. Senior Adam Dauda (2-5–7) and junior Ben Sharf (0-3–3) both rank in the top 10 nationally at 61.9% and 61.3%, respectively.
• At 71%, the Raiders' penalty kill ranks at the bottom of Division I.
• After the early departure of Colton Point following last season, all three of Colgate's goaltenders are freshmen. Mitch Benson (5-13-2, 2.80, .907) has started all but three games.
• Don Vaughan is in his 26th season as head coach at Colgate.
The Series Against Colgate:
• Cornell holds an 84-57-15 lead in the all-time series, which dates back to 1921.
• The Big Red has seven straight victories against the Raiders and has lost only four times in the last 35 meetings between the teams.
• Cornell entered the weekend on the heels of three straight shutouts against Colgate, but that streak ended at 213 minutes, 52 seconds with Bobby McMann's goal in the second period.
Up Next:
• Cornell starts February with a pair of games on the road. The Big Red heads to Union on Friday, then plays at Rensselaer the next night.