SCHENECTADY, N.Y. – A long and winding road through the first half of the regular season for the Cornell men's hockey team ended with a long and winding tie. Junior forward
Tristan Mullin had a goal and an assist for a second straight night, and the Big Red scored twice in the third period to escape Messa Rink with a 3-3 tie against Union on Saturday night.
Despite becoming the last team in the nation to surrender three goals in a game, Cornell (12-1-2, 8-1-1 ECAC Hockey) maintains its perch at #1 in the Pairwise Comparison Ratings – which are used to determine and seed the NCAA tournament field in late March. Meanwhile, Clarkson defeated Quinnipiac, 5-2, to take a one-point lead for first place in the league standings – though the Big Red still has one game in hand.
But when you're shaping up to being one of the best teams in the country and preparing for what hopes to be a lengthy postseason run, 'all's well that ends well' doesn't exactly apply. Thus, the Big Red leaves the Capital District more with the feeling that Saturday's result was a point lost – not a point earned.
"Our guys fought back and got the tie after going down twice and did a good job there," said
Mike Schafer '86, the Jay R. Bloom '77 Head Coach of Men's Hockey at Cornell. "But I think that overall, we just made some technical mistakes we've got to correct and get back to work."
At the head of that list may very well be the penalty kill, which was touched up for two Union goals on just three chances. Cornell's penalty kill is now ranked 58th of 60 teams in the nation at a success rate of just 72.9% -- a long ways from its traditional home among the best in the nation.
Parker Foo scored the first power-play goal for Union (6-15-2, 4-7-1) late in the second period to give the hosts a 2-1 lead entering the third. The Big Red tied the game just 1:23 into the frame when freshman defenseman
Sebastian Dirven set up Mullin for a shot from the top of the crease that ultimately went off sophomore forward
Michael Regush's shin pad and into the net. The assist was Dirven's first collegiate point.
Union regained the lead on Gabriel Seger's power-play goal with 10:51 to play in regulation time, but Cornell equalized again just 38 seconds later. Junior forward
Brenden Locke finished off an odd-man rush with a backhand past the glove of Union goaltender Darion Hanson for his seventh goal of the season.
Junior
Matthew Galajda made 19 saves in the tie, but was called upon to make some key stops after the Dutchmen got on the board. While Mullin's goal just 3:19 into the game got Cornell started, the home side responded with Vas Kolias' rebound goal after a solid Galajda stop to tie the game. It was just the ninth even-strength goal surrendered by Cornell in 14 games.
Having now entered the second half of its regular season, Cornell – which entered the weekend ranked second nationally in both the USCHO.com and USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine polls – continues to carry the nation's best winning percentage (.867), despite playing 11 of its first 15 games away from home. The Big Red returns to Ithaca for nine of its last 14, starting with a two-game non-league series next weekend against Northern Michigan at Lynah Rink.
"If you had told me at the start of the year that we're going to play (11) of our first (15) away from Lynah Rink and we'd be that (12-1-2), I'd say I'll take it. I'd be really happy," Schafer said. "But I think it's just a game-by-game (process) of analyzing things. We did some things that we didn't do right last night, and that carried over to tonight. Now we've got a chance to get home and get it rectified and back to where we need to go to."
The Big Red's Lineup:
How The Goals Were Scored:
Cornell's 1st Goal
1st period, 3:19 • Mullin 5 (Betts, Bauld) • Cornell 1, Union 0
• The puck was rung around the back boards in the Cornell zone, with Bauld first to it along the half wall on the left wing. He flipped the puck high in the air to the Union blue line, where a Dutchmen defender struggled to corral it. Mullin took control and gained the zone, then sent a pass to spring Betts around his defender along the wall. Betts wheeled below the goal line, then found Mullin at the top of the crease for a slam dunk.
Union's 1st Goal
1st period, 14:45 • Kolias 2 (Robertson, Harrison) • Cornell 1, Union 1
• Much like Cornell's first goal, a puck was rung around the back boards in the Big Red zone to Galajda's left. Foo won the battle to gain possession, then Sean Harrison send a pass to
Liam Robertson coming into the slot. Galajda made a big save on the initial chance, but Kolias came crashing down the slot to send the rebound past Galajda's blocker.
Union's 2nd Goal
2nd period, 17:09 (pp) • Foo 2 (Campolieto, Robertson) • Union 2, Cornell 1
• Working on the man advantage, Union rolled a few players along the blue line that created some confusion among potential Cornell shot-blockers. That freed up a lane for a blast from Campolieto in the middle of the ice. Foo worked his way free in the low slot for a deflection that beat a helpless Galajda to the stick side.
Cornell's 2nd Goal
3rd period, 1:23 • Regush 6 (Mullin, Dirven) • Cornell 2, Union 2
• Union flipped a puck high out of its own zone down ice, creating a race for the puck between a hard-charging Union forward and Galajda. The goaltender opted to come as far as the right hash mark to clear it, doing so with a bank shot off the glass that came within inches of sailing directly into the crowd (which would have been an automatic delay of game penalty). Instead, the puck was flagged down by Dirven at the blue line, and he sailed through the neutral zone, fought off a check on the left half wall in the Union zone, then picked out Mullin on top of the crease from the corner. Mullin's shot banked off the right shin pad of Regush, who was posted up on the other side of the crease.
Union's 3rd Goal
3rd period, 9:09 (pp) • Seger 3 (Anhorn, Rinaldo) • Union 3, Cornell 2
• Union held possession for a long time in the Cornell zone on the power play, which created some defensive scrambling. Still, a one-timer by Chaz Smedsrud high in the right circle was blocked by
Noah Bauld. The blast sent him to the ice as Rinaldi gathered at the bottom of the circle, then another Cornell defender slid to attempt to cut off the centering pass. But the puck got through to create a mismatch in front of the net. Rinaldi's pass hit Dylan Anhorn's skate, then the puck bounced right onto the tape of an open Seger for an easy goal.
Cornell's 3rd Goal
3rd period, 9:47 • Locke 7 (Barron, Malinski) • Cornell 3, Union 3
• A weak Union shot attempt was steered aside by Galajda at the post to his right, then Malinski played the puck along the end wall and up the left wing to send Barron away on a three-on-two. As a defender challenged him upon entry into the offensive zone, Barron slotted a pass ahead to Locke to create a two-on-one from the top of the circles with
Cam Donaldson. The last remaining defender sprawled to the ice to take away any passing lane, but it also left Locke a clear path to the net. He shifted to his backhand for a shot toward the far post that bounced in off the skate of the retreating defender.