PUCK DROP
The No. 6-seeded Cornell men’s hockey team (14-10-6, 10-8-4 ECAC Hockey) travels to No. 3-seeded Colgate (18-13-3, 13-7-2 ECAC Hockey) for a best-of-three quarterfinal round this weekend, aiming to secure its third consecutive trip to Lake Placid for championship weekend.
Puck drop for all games scheduled for the weekend is set for 7 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPN+. Jason Weinstein (play-by-play) and Tony Eisenhut ‘88 (analysis) will also provide commentary over the airwaves on WHCU (870 AM, 97.7 FM, cortacatoday.com).
ECAC HOCKEY CHAMPIONSHIP
Assuming the No. 6 seed in this year’s ECAC Hockey Championship, it is the first time in the 55 ECAC Hockey Championships that Cornell has participated in that it has been the No. 6 seed.
After earning opening-round byes in each of the last seven ECAC Hockey Championships, this year marks Cornell’s first time not being a top-four seed since 2016 (No. 8 seed). It is only the fifth time since 2005-06 that the Big Red had to compete on the tournament's opening weekend.
With last Saturday’s opening-round victory over Yale, Cornell has officially reached the quarterfinals in 20 of its last 21 appearances in the ECAC Hockey Championship (it did not play in the 2020-21 season).
LAST TIME OUT
A third-period salvo helped propel No. 6-seeded Cornell to a 5-1 victory over No. 11-seeded Yale during the Opening Round of the 2025 ECAC Hockey Championship last Saturday night at Lynah Rink.
Senior defenseman Tim Rego scored two of the Big Red’s five goals, marking his second career multi-goal game (Nov. 13, 2021, vs. RPI). Rego’s defensive partner, sophomore Ben Robertson, recorded two assists, while senior forward Ondrej Psenicka contributed a goal and an assist. Senior forward Kyle Penney and junior forward Nick DeSantis also found the back of the net.
Senior goaltender Ian Shane made 18 saves on 19 shots, securing his 61st career victory and surpassing Matthew Galajda for the fourth-most wins by a Cornell netminder.
IT'S AWARD SEASON!
Award season is in full swing, with numerous Cornell players receiving honors from both ECAC Hockey and the Ivy League over the past week.
Senior defenseman Tim Rego and junior forward Dalton Bancroft were the only Big Red players honored by both leagues. Rego, the reigning ECAC Hockey Defender of the Week, earned First Team All-Ivy honors on Wednesday afternoon after receiving Third Team All-ECAC Hockey recognition on Tuesday. Bancroft was chosen for the second team in both the ECAC Hockey and Ivy League awards.
Sophomore forward Ryan Walsh joined Rego and Bancroft in earning All-Ivy awards, being one of two unanimous First Team All-Ivy selections alongside Dartmouth’s CJ Foley. Senior goaltender Ian Shane received Honorable Mention All-Ivy recognition, while senior forward Sullivan Mack earned Academic All-Ivy honors.
FOUR SCORE …
This weekend’s best-of-three quarterfinal series will feature two of the highest-scoring teams from the past month, as Cornell (4.29) and Colgate (4.00) have averaged at least four goals per game since Feb. 14.
Cornell’s average of 4.29 goals per game (30 goals in seven games) ranks third nationally for the period, trailing only Western Michigan (5.00 — 40 goals in 8 games) and Quinnipiac (4.67 — 28 goals in 6 games). UConn (4.20 — 21 goals in 5 games), Clarkson (4.17 — 25 goals in 6 games), along with Colgate and St. Thomas (4.00 — 24 goals in 6 games) are the other teams that have averaged at least four goals per game during the timeframe.
Cornell’s 30 goals scored rank as the third-most by a Division I program since Feb. 14, behind Western Michigan (40) and Penn State (31).
While Cornell’s offense has been on a roll recently, so has the Big Red’s defense, ranking ninth in goals allowed per game (1.71) and matching Quinnipiac for the second-best penalty kill (.944 — 17-of-18). Only Stonehill (11-of-11) has had a better penalty kill over the last month.
With an average margin of victory of +2.57, Cornell ranks just behind Quinnipiac (+3.17) and UConn (+2.60) for the best scoring margin over the past month. Additionally, Cornell is one of eight teams (Minnesota — +2.50; Boston College — +2.43; Clarkson — +2.17; St. Thomas — +2.17; LIU — +2.00) that have an average scoring margin of at least two goals.
STREAK EXTENDED
With its victory over RPI on March 1, Cornell marked its eighth straight season with at least 10 wins in ECAC Hockey play.
The streak is the third-longest in program history, trailing behind a 19-year span from 1964-65 to 1982-83, and the most recent streak of 13 consecutive seasons from 1999-00 to 2011-12. Under Mike Schafer ‘86, the Big Red has achieved at least 10 conference victories in 24 out of the 29 seasons.
FINDING HIS SCORING TOUCH
Junior forward Dalton Bancroft (14-9—22) has scored at least 20 points in each of his first three seasons with the Big Red, making him the 49th player in program history to reach the milestone.
Under Mike Schafer ‘86, Bancroft has become the 10th player to reach the milestone, joining Kyle Knopp (1995-98), Ryan Moynihan (1996-99), Ryan Vesce (2000-03), Matt Moulson (2002-05), Topher Scott (2004-07), Riley Nash (2007-10), Brian Ferlin (2011-14), Joel Lowry (2011-14), and Anthony Angello (2015-18).
Fueled by his 35 goals, Bancroft ranks sixth for the most goals scored by a player in their first three seasons with the Big Red during Schafer’s 30-year coaching career.
If Bancroft scores a goal this weekend, he will tie Angello and Vesce for the fourth-most goals in his first three seasons with the Big Red. A two-goal weekend would tie him with Nash for the third-most goals, while a three-goal weekend would match Colin Greening for the second-most goals in a player’s first three seasons under Schafer’s tutelage.
In addition to his 40 assists, Bancroft is one of five players to tally at least 35 goals and assists over his first three seasons with Cornell, joining Vesce (36-66—102), Nash (37-64—101), Moulson (53-47—100), and Greening (38-42—80).
KILL, RED, KILL
During the 2025 part of the season, Cornell’s penalty kill has ranked among the best in Division I hockey, successfully killing 47 of their opponents' last 53 power-play opportunities (88.7 percent), which places them third nationally and second among ECAC Hockey programs. The only programs ahead of the Big Red are Quinnipiac (94.1 percent — 48-of-51) and Holy Cross (90.8 percent — 59-of-65).
Since the New Year, Cornell has allowed six power-play goals, which is tied for the third-fewest in Division I hockey alongside Bentley, Holy Cross, Lindenwood, Stonehill, and Western Michigan. Only Cornell’s ECAC Hockey rivals Quinnipiac (three) and Dartmouth (five) have conceded fewer goals while playing short-handed.
Since Jan. 18, the Big Red has allowed just three power-play goals in their last 40 penalty kills, achieving a 92.5 percent success rate, which ranks as the nation’s top penalty kill during the period. The Big Red is one of five programs that maintained at least a 90 percent penalty kill during the period, along with Holy Cross (91.8 percent — 45-of-49), Quinnipiac (91.7 percent — 33-of-36), and Dartmouth and Minnesota State (90.3 percent — 28-of-31).
HOCKEY HUMANITARIAN AWARD
After being selected as one of 14 nominees for the 2025 Hockey Humanitarian Award, senior defenseman Hank Kempf was named one of five finalists by the Hockey Humanitarian Award Foundation on Feb. 12.
Joining Kempf as finalists are Kendra Fortin from Bemidji State, Keri Clougherty from Boston College, Raice Szott from Merrimack, and Sarah Thompson from St. Lawrence.
Kempf is the fourth consecutive nominee from either Big Red hockey program and the sixth finalist from Cornell for the award, joining former women’s hockey players Erin Schmalz ’99, Alyssa Gagliardi ’14, and Morgan Richardson ’16. Sam Paolini ’03 is the only other men’s player to be named a finalist, winning the award in 2003. Since the award was introduced in 1997, Kempf’s nomination marks the 10th time a Big Red player has been nominated and is the only Big Red student-athlete to be nominated multiple times. This nomination is the fifth time a member of the Cornell men’s program has been considered for the prestigious award, joining Paolini, Topher Scott ‘08, and Andy Iles ‘10.
SHANE'S WORLD, IT'S PARTY TIME, EXCELLENT!
Senior goaltender Ian Shane has excelled in the crease during his time on East Hill. Throughout his 112 career appearances for the Big Red, Shane boasts a 61-31-16 record with a 1.87 goals-against average and a .915 save percentage.
With his victory against Yale last Saturday, Shane overtook Matthew Galajda for fourth place on the Big Red’s all-time wins chart and only trails Ken Dryden ‘69 (76), David McKee ‘06, and Ben Scrivens ‘10 (65).
Among active Division I goaltenders, Shane is one of only three players with over 60 wins (Western Michigan’s Cameron Rowe — 69; Wisconsin’s Tommy Scarfone — 66) and one of 10 goaltenders with 50 or more victories (Denver’s Matt Davis — 58; Boston College’s Jacob Fowler — 56; Boston University’s Mathieu Caron — 54; Bemidji State’s Mattias Sholl — 52; Minnesota’s Liam Souliere — 52; Clarkson’s Ethan Langenegger — 51; North Dakota’s TJ Semptimphelter — 51).
After making 13 saves in Cornell’s 6-0 shutout against St. Lawrence on Feb. 22, Shane notched his 13th career shutout, breaking his tie with Scarfone for the most shutouts by an active Division I goaltender. Shane’s shutout also ties Dryden for the fourth-highest total in program history.
2K SHANE
With his first save against St. Lawrence on Jan. 31, senior goaltender Ian Shane recorded his 2,000th save, becoming Cornell’s 10th goaltender to reach this milestone. He joins the ranks of Andy Iles ‘14, Ben Scrivens ‘10, Jason Elliott ‘98, Mitch Gillam ‘17, Corrie D’Alessio ‘91, Brian Hayward ‘82, David McKee ‘06, Darren Eliot ‘83, and Matt Underhill ‘02.
Shane enters the weekend trailing McKee by 31 saves, which would rank as the seventh-most stops by a Cornell goaltender in program history. He is also 48 saves short of tying D’Alessio for fifth place on the all-time saves list.
Shane’s 2,177 career stops rank 16th among active Division I goaltenders and is one of nine players to make all his saves with one program: Bemidji State’s Mattias Sholl, Colorado College’s Kaidan Mbereko, Bowling Green’s Christian Stoever, Omaha’s Simon Latkoczy, Air Force’s Guy Blessing, RPI’s Jack Watson, St. Thomas’ Aaron Trotter, and Providence’s Philip Svedebäck.
JOINING RAREFIED COMPANY
With his appearance against Quinnipiac on Jan. 18, senior goaltender Ian Shane became the fourth Big Red goaltender in program history to appear in 100 career games with Cornell, joining Andy Iles ‘14, Ben Scrivens ‘10, and David McKee.
Shane’s 112 career appearances rank third in Cornell program history, trailing Iles (118 from 2010-14) and Scrivens (117 from 2006-10).
Entering this weekend, Shane is one of seven active Division I goaltenders to have played in at least 100 career games, joining the likes of Western Michigan’s Cameron Rowe (123), Wisconsin’s Tommy Scarfone (119), Clarkson’s Ethan Langenegger (115), Bemidji State’s Mattias Sholl (113), Boston University’s Mathieu Caron (111), and Minnesota’s Liam Souliere (107).
Of the seven goaltenders with at least 100 career appearances, Shane and Sholl are the only two players who have registered all their games with the same program.
MAKING A NAME FOR HIMSELF
Senior goaltender Ian Shane has an impressive career goals-against average of 1.87, ranking as the 15th-best in Division I hockey history. Shane is one of 39 goalies to have played at least 1,500 minutes in net while maintaining a sub-2.00 goals-against average.
Cornell boasts four of the top 10 career goals-against averages in NCAA history, making it one of only two programs, along with Michigan State, to have multiple representatives in the top 10.
Shane and Ben Scrivens ‘10 (1.93) account for six of the 39 sub-2.00 career goals-against averages in NCAA history, the most for any Division I program. Other Division I programs with multiple sub-2.00 goals-against averages include Quinnipiac (four), Maine (three), and Denver, Miami, Michigan State, Michigan Tech, Minnesota State, and Notre Dame (two each).
Among active Division I goaltenders with at least 1,500 minutes, Shane is one of four netminders boasting a career goals-against average below 2.00, alongside Boija (1.85), Boston College’s Jacob Fowler (1.91), and Minnesota State’s Alex Tracy (1.95).
JONNY-ON-THE-DOT
Since the calendar year turned to 2025, sophomore forward Jonathan Castagna has been one of Cornell’s most reliable players at the faceoff dot, winning 61.1 percent of the draws he has taken (151 of 241), trailing Western Michigan’s Tim Washe (68.7 percent — 219 of 322) for the best faceoff percentage.
This season, Castagna has achieved a team-leading 58.8 percent success rate in faceoffs (234 out of 398), ranking ninth nationally and second among ECAC Hockey players with at least 200 faceoff wins, just behind Clarkson’s Ellis Rickwood (59.2 percent — 380 out of 642).
In last Saturday’s victory over Yale, Castagna went 11-for-12 (.917) on faceoffs, matching Notre Dame’s Hunter Strand (11-for-12) for the sixth-best single-game faceoff win percentage this season with at least 10 faceoff wins.
Castagna’s .917 win percentage was the Big Red’s best success rate on draws in a single game since Zach Tupker ‘23 went 16-of-17 (.941) against Sacred Heart on Nov. 22, 2022.
LUCK OF THE DRAW
The success of sophomore forwards Ryan Walsh (356 faceoff wins, 56.5 percent) and Jonathan Castagna (234 faceoff wins, 58.8 percent) in faceoffs has allowed Cornell to become one of six Division I programs (Bentley, Colorado College, LIU, Penn State, and Wisconsin) with multiple players recording at least a 56.5 percent success rate on 200-plus faceoff wins.
Walsh’s team-leading total of 356 faceoff wins is the 20th-highest in Division I hockey and ranks third among ECAC Hockey players, trailing only Brown’s Max Scott (447) and Clarkson’s Ellis Rickwood (380).
Averaging 11.87 faceoff wins per game this season, which ranks ninth nationally, Walsh is among 10 Division I hockey players who average at least 11.50 faceoff wins per game.
Entering this weekend’s series, Walsh has recorded a double-digit faceoff win total in 19 games this season and has secured at least 13 draws on 15 occasions. He stands alone as the player with the eighth-most games featuring 13 or more faceoff wins this season, trailing Air Force’s Clayton Cosentino (26), Brown’s Max Scott and Niagara’s Tyler Wallace (21), Notre Dame’s Danny Nelson (20), Bemidji State’s Jackson Jutting (18), and Bentley’s Ethan Leyh and Denver’s Carter King (17).
ON THE PLUS SIDE…
Entering this weekend’s series, senior forward Ondrej Psenicka (plus-56) and senior defenseman Tim Rego (plus-53) each have career plus-minus ratings of at least plus-50, making Cornell one of only four Division I programs (Boston College — three; Denver and Minnesota — two each) with multiple players who have reached a career plus-minus of at least plus-50.
Senior forward Kyle Penney’s plus-48 rating makes Cornell one of four Division I teams (Boston College, Denver, and Minnesota — all with four each) that have at least three players with plus-45 ratings.
In addition to the ratings of Psenicka, Rego, and Penney, senior forward Jack O’Leary’s plus-41 rating positions Cornell as one of four Division I programs — alongside Boston College and Minnesota, each with five, and Denver with four — that boasts at least four players with career plus-minus ratings of plus-40.
Psenicka and Rego’s plus-minus ratings, which rank seventh and ninth nationally, respectively, represent the top two career plus-minus ratings in program history, dating back to the 2002-03 season, when plus-minus was first tracked for a full year. Greg Miller ’13 (plus-52) and Travis Mitchell ‘23 (plus-51) are the only other Big Red players who have posted career ratings of at least plus-50.
WHAT CAN BLUE(LINERS) DO FOR YOU?
Of the Big Red’s 250 points this season, 78 (15 goals, 63 assists) have been contributed by its defense corps, accounting for 31.2 percent of the team’s scoring production. It is the highest percentage of points from defensemen by Cornell in a season since 1996-97, when they made up 33.5 percent of the scoring (106 of 316).
The Big Red’s 31.2 percent of points from defensemen entering the weekend represents the fourth-best average nationally, trailing Colgate (31.82 percent — 98 of 308), Robert Morris (31.78 percent — 82 of 258), and Merrimack (66 of 208 — 31.73 percent). Cornell is one of eight programs with at least 30 percent of its offensive production coming from defensemen, alongside Princeton (31.0 percent — 57 of 184), Air Force (30.8 percent — 73 of 237), Colorado College (30.5 percent — 82 of 269), and Minnesota Duluth (30.1 percent — 75 of 249).
Cornell’s 63 assists from defensemen represent 40.1 percent of its total assist count, marking the second-highest average in the nation for Division I hockey, behind Merrimack (41.1 percent — 53 of 129). This assist percentage by blueliners is the highest for the Big Red since the 1986-87 season (41.3 percent).
SHARING THE WEALTH
Cornell has received scoring contributions from almost every player who has participated in a game this season, as 23 of the 26 players who have played have registered at least one point.
The senior class (38-65—103) has contributed 41.2 percent of the team’s scoring, ranking just behind St. Lawrence (46.6 percent — 88 of 308). It is one of three programs with at least a 40-percent scoring rate this season, alongside Colgate (40.6 percent — 125 of 308).
Cornell heads into the weekend with 14 players with at least a double-digit point total, tying them with Augustana, Minnesota, Ohio State, UConn, and Providence for the fifth-most players in Division I hockey with 10 or more points. Western Michigan (16), Long Island, Michigan, and Michigan State (15 each) are ahead of the Big Red.
ALL HE DOES IS WIN, WIN, WIN
Mike Schafer ‘86, the Jay R. Bloom ‘77 Head Coach of Cornell Men’s Hockey, is one of four active Division I men’s hockey head coaches with 550 career victories, joining Quinnipiac’s Rand Pecknold (664), Mercyhurst’s Rick Gotkin (611), and Notre Dame’s Jeff Jackson (601).
Schafer’s 556 wins — which ranks 18th in college hockey history — make him one of six active Division I hockey head coaches with at least 500 career wins, also being accompanied by Air Force’s Frank Serratore (521) and Ferris State’s Bob Daniels (510), who, like Schafer, is retiring after the season.
With his victory over Harvard on Jan. 24, Schafer became the 10th Division I men’s hockey head coach to win 550 games with a single program, joining Jack Parker (Boston University), Red Berenson (Michigan), Bob Peters (Bemidji State), Pecknold, Jerry York (Boston College), Ron Mason (Michigan State), Gotkin, Richard Umile (New Hampshire), and John MacInnes (Michigan Tech).
#PRORED UPDATE
DENVER (MARCH 8, 2025) — Former Cornell defenseman Sam Malinski ‘23 recorded his third career multi-point game in the NHL, registering two assists in the Colorado Avalanche’s 7-4 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs at Ball Arena last Saturday night.
Malinski, who recorded multiple points in an NHL game for the first time since January 16, 2024, during a road victory against Ottawa, notched secondary assists on Valeri Nichushkin’s second goal of the first period and on Joel Kiviranta’s second-period goal, which marked the first of Colorado’s five consecutive goals.
This season, Malinski has played in 61 games with the Avalanche, recording nine points (two goals, seven assists), which leaves him one point shy of matching his career-high total from last season (3-7—10) in just 23 games. He has also blocked 88 shots this season, which ties him with Samuel Girard for the second-highest total on the Avalanche, behind only Cale Makar (99).
• • •
In the American Hockey League (AHL), former Cornell defenseman Jacob MacDonald ‘15 continues to fill up the stat sheet for the Colorado Eagles, the Avalanche’s AHL affiliate.
MacDonald recorded three points (two goals, one assist) in the Eagles’ 5-1 victory against Henderson on Sunday, increasing his point total to 42 (23 goals, 19 assists).
His career-high of 23 goals ranks tied for the ninth-highest total in the AHL this season, and he has 10 more goals than the second-place defenseman (San Jose’s Luca Cagnoni — 13).