Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Brickley is back for Mavericks

Minnesota State should get a nice boost this weekend when sophomore defenseman Daniel Brickley returns to the lineup after missing eight games with an upper-body injury.

Brinkley returned to practice in full this week and will get in a game for the first time since Oct. 22 at Alaska when he was hurt in the third period after appearing to lose an edge and crash into the boards with a checking player falling on top of him. Coincidently, the Mavericks will be hosting the Nanooks on Friday and Saturday in Mankato.

“It’s been tough watching the team play when you want to be out there,” the sophomore said after practice Wednesday. 

Brickley has been doing a lot of skating after practice in recent weeks with student-assistant Tim Jackman, so his conditioning should be up to speed, he said.

Brickley turned the heads of fans and pro scouts alike over his first five games of the season, scoring 10 points, nine of which were assists, and helping MSU get off to a 5-0-0 start.

The Mavericks lost the game in which he got hurt and are 3-4-1 since.

“I have to give it up to the guys; the team is real close,” Brickley said. “We all bonded well, and it translated to the ice. The power play was working well at times. We knew where everybody was going to be, and we were all on the same page and meshed really well. We just have to get back to that.”

The Mavericks averaged 4.8 goals per game and were 30 percent on the power play in their first five games. Since then, they’ve averaged 2.33 goals per game and are 12.2 percent with the man advantage.

Read more in The Free Press story here.

Monday, November 28, 2016

Mavericks ranked 15th

After being off over Thanksgiving weekend, Minnesota State dropped one spot to No. 15 in the latest U.S. College Hockey Online rankings

A few things threw the pollsters for loop this weekend, including red-hot Bemidji State getting an ice bath in the form of previously winless Princeton. The Tigers (whom MSU will play on the road in a couple of weeks) went to Bemidji and swept the Beavers 4-1 and 3-1.

Bemidji State (35 points) remains firmly atop the WCHA standings at 11-0-1, with an eight-point lead over second-place Michigan Tech (27). Both have played 12 conference games.

Bowling Green, Minnesota State and Ferris State, each of whom has played 10 league games, are next in line at 20, 16 and 14 points, respectively. Alabama Huntsville, which has played 12 games also sits at 14 points.

The Mavericks will host eighth-place Alaska (11 points, 10 games) this weekend before closing out the first of their WCHA schedule at Ferris State and playing Princeton before winter break.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Pawloski honored; MSU moves up

Minnesota State sophomore goaltender Jason Pawloski was named WCHA Defensive Player of the Week for his performance in last weekend's two nonconference games against Minnesota, a 4-1 win and a 1-0 loss.

The Omaha, Neb., native stopped 62 of 64 shots for a .969 save percentage and a 1.01 goals against average in the series, including 25 in the win in Mankato on Friday and a career-high 37 in Minneapolis on Saturday.

Pawloski is 2-2-1 with a 2.02 goals against average and a .919 save percentage this season. He has started four of MSU's last five games. You can read more about him in today's MSU Hockey Review. For more on the WCHA players of the week this week, go here.

Meanwhile, the Mavericks moved up one spot, to No. 14 in the latest USCHO rankings and USA Today/USA Hockey poll.

In case you're wonder how the Minnesota teams are ranked ...

1. Minnesota Duluth
10. Bemidji State
11. Minnesota
14. Minnesota State
15. St. Cloud State

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Gophers 1, Mavericks 0

Freddy's three thoughts of the game ...

1. Tough-luck loss: That was the case for goalie Jason Pawloski, who stopped a career-high 37 shots, only to fall 1-0 to the Gophers. He was nothing short of outstanding, and even made two good saves on a scramble in front of his net before giving up the game's lone goal, a power-play goal by Justin Kloos. The 38 shots were the most MSU has allowed this season. The previous high was 29 to Lake Superior State. The Mavericks' 23 shots on goal tied a season-low when they had that number on opening night against Michigan Tech. They had just 12 shots through two periods, three in the second.

2. Tale of two nights: Other than Pawloski's play, the things the Mavericks did well in Friday night's win over Minnesota didn't show up on Saturday. They didn't get bodies in front of goalie Eric Schierhorn. They didn't get on loose pucks and rebounds. They didn't control the puck up top in the offensive zone. It was a struggle getting any offense going. "I didn’t think we were as hard, and I thought they were harder," coach Mike Hastings said. "I thought they defended a lot better than last night, and our second and third efforts weren’t what they were last night. (We) didn’t get a lot of second and third opportunities. When we got pucks to the net and they were laying between the hash marks, a white jersey was getting there, not a purple one."

3. Break time: The Mavericks will get their first idle weekend of the season over Thanksgiving, and it probably comes at a good time. They have played seven straight weeks to start the season and have a record of 8-5-1. After the week off, they will play three series, including two on the road before the holiday break. The hope is they'll have defenseman Daniel Brickley from injury back sometime in that stretch. With some struggles by their defensemen to control the puck against the Gophers, they sure could have used him on Saturday.

Read my game story here.

Around the WCHA: Ferris State 7, Lake Superior State 5 ... Bemidji State 5, Northern Michigan 2 ... Bowling Green 8, Alabama Huntsville 3 ... Michigan Tech at Alaska Anchorage (late)

Live coverage: MSU at Minnesota

The Mavericks will go for the series sweep against the Gophers, with Game 2 taking place at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis. No TV tonight. The puck drops at 8:05 p.m. Follow along or join the conversation below tonight's lines:

MINNESOTA STATE 
20-Michaelis, 15-Franklin, 10-Knutson
6-Tuomie, 17-Huntebrinker, 19-McClure
23-Rivera, 16-Nelson, 12-Coatta
25-Stepan, 26-French, 9-Gerard

11-Flanagan, 18-Scheid
4-Lewis, 5-Foguth
14-Bigelbach, 27-Schwalbe

39-Pawloski
34-Huggins
29-Nelson

Scratches: Brickley, Cooper, Hookenson, Madry, Vanko

MINNESOTA
21-Reilly, 25-Kloos, 22-Sheehy
18-Bristedt, 25-Kloos, 16-Ramsey
9-Szmatula, 19-Lettieri, 13-Cammarata
10-Gates, 26-Romanko, 12-Marooney

5-Lindgren, 28-Bischoff
4-Johnson, 2-Sadek
20-Zuhlsdorf, 3-Glover

37-Schierhorn
34-Lehr
1-Kautz

Friday, November 18, 2016

Mavericks 4, Gophers 1

Freddy's three thoughts of the game ...

1. Big crowd, big win: Last season, Minnesota State flopped in front of its biggest home crowds, getting shut out at home three times against Omaha, Minnesota and Bemidji State. On Friday, with 5,048 in the Verizon Center, the Mavericks put on a good show for their home fans. "That was in the back of our heads," said Brad McClure, who scored two goals. "Last year we didn't perform as well as we could in front of big crowds. It was a learning experience. But this was good for our team inside that locker room, too." Indeed, the Mavericks looked like the team that started out so strong at home in October with wins over Michigan Tech and St. Cloud State, scoring four times including two power-play goals.

2. Leaders lead: Coach Mike Hastings said his team needed a good effort from its older players, and the Mavericks got that. McClure, who was moved to Michael Huntebrinker's line, scored both of his goals in 5-on-5 play. Huntebrinker assisted on both. C.J. Franklin had a goal and an assist and could have had so much more, with eight shots on goal, including some high-quality chances. "I think it all starts with us playing hard and getting on their D right away," Franklin said. "We weren't panicking. We were possessing pucks, getting pucks behind their D and forechecking. That's always big.

3. Youngsters, too: Parker Tuomie had perhaps his best game of the season so far. The freshman forward, playing with McClure and Huntebrinker, had a goal and two assists. His power-play goal, which gave MSU a 3-1 lead, came after he was elbowed in the head at center ice. The penalty was just a 2-minute one, but Tuomie got the last laugh, blasting a shot through traffic from the high slot. Freshman defenseman Ian Scheid and two assists, and sophomore goaltender Jason Pawloski was outstanding with 25 saves, only allowing a point-blank power-play shot to get past him.

Read my game story here. Check out Pat Christman's photo gallery here.

Around the WCHA: Ferris State 3, Lake Superior State 0 ... Bemidji State 2, Northern Michigan 1 ... Bowling Green 4, Alabama Huntsville 1

Live coverage: MSU vs. Minnesota

The No. 15 Mavericks will host the No. 7 Gophers at the Verizon Center in the first game of a home-and-home series. Follow along or join the conversation below tonight's lines:

MINNESOTA STATE 
20-Michaelis, 15-Franklin, 10-Knutson
6-Tuomie, 17-Huntebrinker, 19-McClure
23-Rivera, 16-Nelson, 12-Coatta
25-Stepan, 26-French, 9-Gerard

11-Flanagan, 18-Scheid
4-Lewis, 5-Foguth
14-Bigelbach, 27-Schwalbe

39-Pawloski
34-Huggins
29-Nelson

Scratches: Brickley, Cooper, Hookenson, Madry, Vanko

MINNESOTA
9-Szmatula, 25-Kloos, 13-Cammarata
21-Reilly, 17-Novak, 22-Sheehy
10-Gates, 19-Lettieri, 18-Bristedt
23-Norman, 26-Romanko, 16-Ramsey

5-Lindgren, 28-Bischoff
4-Johnson, 2-Sadek
20-Zuhlsdorf, 6-Collins

37-Schierhorn
34-Lehr
1-Kautz


Friday Morning Skate

It's Gopher Weekend! The No. 15 Mavericks will host No. 7 Minnesota at the Verizon Center on Friday night, and the series will move to Mariucci Arena on Saturday. Folks in Mankato are expecting a full house tonight; hopefully the weather doesn't keep ticket-holders away.

These are always games that fans circle on the calendar. Possibly players and coaches, too. In-state bragging rights are always on the line when the Minnesota teams play each other. All five Division I teams currently are ranked in the top 15, something, The New York Times even noted this week.

Tonight's game will be on both Fox Sports North, with former MSU defenseman Andy Hedlund helping with the broadcast, and Charter. Unfortunately, Saturday's game will not be televised but available on the Big Ten Network's streaming service.

For more on the series, see The Free Press' College Hockey Gameday.

Going around the WCHA ...

Northern Michigan at Bemidji State: The Beavers return home with their undefeated conference record to host the Wildcats. The Bemidji Pioneer profiles the player whose overtime goal on Saturday kept their streak alive. Northern Michigan, meanwhile, enters the series having won just once in its last six games.

Bowling Green at Alabama Huntsville: The Falcons appear to have righted their ship after starting the  season 0-6-1. They are 4-1-0 in their last five and getting good play from upperclassmen such as Brett D'Andrea, according to bgsuhockey.com. The Chargers, like Minnesota State, are hoping to bounce back from a one-point home weekend.

Lake Superior State at Ferris State: The Lakers were the surprise team of the WCHA early but have lost three games in a row. They head to Big Rapids where the Bulldogs are playing better hockey after their eight-game winless start.

Michigan Tech at Alaska Anchorage: The Huskies have won five of their last six games and are embarking on a two-weekend Alaska trip. Last Friday, Tech coach Mel Pearson won his 100th game since returning to his alma mater. Anchorage, meanwhile has won just once this season, and the beat-up Seawolves enter the weekend on a six-game losing streak.

Read more about the WCHA in this week's USCHO column.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Tickets going fast for Mavericks-Gophers

Tickets for Friday night’s men’s hockey game at the Verizon Center between the Minnesota State and Minnesota have been selling fast.

As of Thursday morning, according to a Ticketmaster search, less than 100 actual seats were still available for the game, the first of a home-and-home series. Standing-room-only tickets are also available.

“The atmosphere, it’s always a lot more fun to play with a lot more people in the stands,” Mavericks co-captain C.J. Franklin said. “It’s just that little extra push that we might need in the third period or something to get us going. So it’s always nice to have some extra fans in the seats.”

The Verizon Center seats 4,832 for hockey, but, with standing room, the record attendance is 5,446, set Feb. 28, 2015 for a game against Michigan Tech. The Mavericks have been averaging 3,819 fans per game in eight home games this season.

On its Twitter feed, Minnesota State athletics said that students lined up on campus beginning at 7:30 a.m. on Wednesday to get their allotment of tickets. Those were all gobbled up by noon.

“I heard about that,” Franklin said. “I heard (the line) was out to the gym. Expecting a good crowd from the students here, and hopefully they can bring some energy along with it.”

The second game of the series will be played at 8 p.m. at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis.

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Beavers 2, Mavericks 1 (OT)

Freddy's three thoughts of the game ...

1. Drought continues: Minnesota State started the season 6-1-0 but has since one just once in five games. The Mavericks have scored eight goals in those last five games, five in the last four, including two in two games against Bemidji State. Lots of credit has to go to Michael Bitzer, the Beavers' outstanding goaltender, who has a save percentage of .944 right now, .963 against conference opponents. But MSU's goal-output has to be a concern. With the way the Mavericks scored goals early in the year, it appeared those issues were behind them this season. Not so right now. Coach Mike Hastings said the team's effort and attitude are fine right now, but scoring is the puzzle. "That’s the job, I think, of the staff," he said. "It’s our job to provide them with some answers and how-to."

2. Catch them if you can: Bemidji State is 9-0-1 in league play with a 3-on-3 OT win on Friday, giving it 29 points. With the three-point system, it seems the Beavers are running away with the WCHA. They have a 12-point lead over second-place Michigan Tech and a 13-point lead over third-place MSU. There's a lot of season left, of course, but they're rolling right now. They're a confident team that plays a disciplined style (although one that has more offense that previous versions, making it quite dangerous). Minnesota State will play at Bemidji on Feb. 24-25, the final weekend of the regular season. It will be interesting to see where those teams are at.

3. Foguth out: Mavericks senior defenseman, co-captain and minutes-muncher Carter Foguth was on the line chart an hour before the game but ended up being scratched. Hastings wouldn't detail his injury, only saying that Foguth woke up Saturday not feeling right. Hastings said he wanted to be cautious and not risk anything by playing him. Alec Vanko, who was a scratch on Friday, got in the lineup, but it was converted forward Ryan Schwalbe, who logged a lot of minutes, along with Clint Lewis. Foguth's injury left MSU without their top two defensemen, as Daniel Brickley remains out with his injury. "You have 5 not in the lineup; you have 8 not in the lineup," Hastings said, referring to Foguth and Brickley, respectively, by their numbers. "We’ve got to collectively find a way. We might not be as gifted offensively with those guy out of the lineup so you better find ways."

Read my game story here.

Deep thought


Around the WCHA: Michigan Tech 4, Lake Superior State 2 ... Bowling Green 5, Northern Michigan 3 ... Alaska 3, Alabama Huntsville 1 ... Penn State 3, Alaska Anchorage 1 ... Michigan State 4, Ferris State 3

Live coverage: MSU vs. Bemidji State, Game 2

Minnesota State and Bemidji State will wrap up their series, following Friday night's 3-on-3 overtime win for the Beavers. Follow along or join the live chat, located below tonight's lines:

MINNESOTA STATE
15-Franklin, 20-Michaelis, 19-McClure
6-Tuomie, 16-Nelson, 10-Knutson
23-Rivera, 17-Huntebrinker, 12-Coatta
25-Stepan, 26-French, 9-Gerard

4-Lewis, 27-Schwalbe
11-Flanagan, 18-Scheid
14-Bigelbach, 21-Vanko

34-Huggins
39-Pawloski
29-Nelson

Scratches: Brickley, Cooper, Foguth, Hookenson, Madry

BEMIDJI STATE
19-L. Fitzgerald, 21-G. Fitzgerald, 18-Harms
9-Marinaccio, 14-Bauman, 22-O'Connor
6-Dickman, 23-Sjodahl, 11-Arentz
13-Soucier, 7-Roo, 15-Heller

28-Beauvais, 2-Bilett
29-Baudry, 32-Whitecloud
20-Eichstad, 3-Muck

1-Bitzer
35-Wilkins


Friday, November 11, 2016

Mavericks 1, Beavers 1 (BSU wins in 3x3)

Freddy's three thoughts of the game ...

1. New rules: Fans in Mankato, as well as both teams, got to experience the WCHA's new tiebreaking format on Friday night. Bemidji State came away with the 3-on-3 victory. Although the game officially went down as a tie after the first five-minute overtime, the Beavers got the extra point for the WCHA standings thanks to Charlie O'Connor's goal in the second session. Had no one scored in that five-minute, open-ice period, there would have been a shootout. "It was fun," BSU coach Tom Serratore said, "for the players and the fans."

2. What happened to the scoring? With one goal on Friday, the Mavericks have just four total over their last three games. Freshman forward Charlie Gerard scored his first career goal to give the Mavericks a 1-0 lead, which they clung to until the Beavers tied it midway through the third period. Freshman Parker Tuomie had four shots on goal and also hit a post during a dominant first period in which MSU needed to get a second goal. Credit Bemidji State goalie Michael Bitzer, too, though as he came up big in the first period and in overtime when MSU had a 5-1 shot advantage.

3. All even: Both Bitzer and Mavericks goalie Jason Pawloski finished the game with 23 saves. It was a hard-ice game between the first- and second-place teams in the WCHA. “You know it’s going to be a real close game when you play these guys,” Mavericks coach Mike Hastings said. “It’s playoff-type hockey.” Said Serratore: “That was a game for the ages. It was an epic battle with no easy ice. It was like a heavyweight fight — punch and counterpunch.”

Read my game story here.

Around the WCHA: Michigan Tech 6, Lake Superior State 1 ... Bowling Green 5, Northern Michigan 1 ... Alaska 3, Alabama Huntsville 3 (Alaska wins in 3x3) ... Penn State 6, Alaska Anchorage 3

Deep thought:

Live coverage: MSU vs. Bemidji State, Game 1

It's a battle between the top two teams in the WCHA, as first-place Bemidji State travels to Mankato to take on Minnesota State. Live updates and chat can be found below tonight's lines:

MINNESOTA STATE
15-Franklin, 20-Michaelis, 19-McClure
6-Tuomie, 16-Nelson, 10-Knutson
23-Rivera, 17-Huntebrinker, 12-Coatta
25-Stepan, 26-French, 9-Gerard

4-Lewis, 5-Foguth
11-Flanagan, 18-Scheid
14-Bigelbach, 27-Schwalbe

39-Pawloski
34-Huggins
29-Nelson

Scratches: Brickley, Cooper, Hookenson, Madry, Vanko

BEMIDJI STATE
19-L. Fitzgerald, 21-G. Fitzgerald, 18-Harms
9-Marinaccio, 14-Bauman, 22-O'Connor
6-Dickman, 23-Sjodahl, 11-Arentz
13-Soucier, 7-Roo, 15-Heller

28-Beauvais, 2-Bilett
29-Baudry, 32-Whitecloud
20-Eichstad, 3-Muck

1-Bitzer
35-Wilkins

Friday Morning Skate

It's a battle of top-15 teams in the nation and one of the top two teams in the conference as No. 11 Minnesota State and No. 15 Bemidji State will play each other at the Verizon Center. The Mavericks trail only the Beavers, who are undefeated in WCHA play, in the league standings.

Minnesota State has split its last three series, most recently winning 2-1 at Lake Superior State. A big key to winning that game was the play of captain and senior defenseman Carter Foguth, who logged a whopping 26:47 of ice time that night. Despite never putting up big offensive numbers, he is as valuable to the Mavericks as any player on the roster.

For a preview of this weekend's series, check out the Freep's College Hockey Gameday.

The Bemidji Pioneer's Jack Hittinger wrote about the Mavericks-Beavers rivalry and the connection between the coaches. (ICYMI, here is my Tuesday column about rivalries in college hockey, many of which have stayed strong even in the post-realignment era.) Earlier this week, Jack opined about BSU's impressive sweep at Alaska.

Time to go around the WCHA ...

Ferris State vs. Michigan State: The Bulldogs got this nonconference series off to a good start on Thursday night with a 4-1 road victory over the Spartans. The series will go to Big Rapids on Saturday night. Freshman goalie Justin Kapelmaster stopped 26 saves and has all three of Ferris' wins this season, starting with one at Minnesota State.

Alaska Anchorage at Penn State and Alaska at Alabama Huntsville: Both Alaska teams were on the road when they received good news about the athletic teams at their schools Thursday — officials have opted to not cut sports at the schools. Early proposals mentioned the elimination of one or both hockey teams, and those were saved by another plan to cut skiing among other sports. But those were saved as well. On the ice, both teams hope to get something going on the road. The Seawolves are 1-7 and have lost four in a row. The Nanooks are 3-7 and coming off two home losses to Bemidji State. The Chargers, meanwhile, are getting set for a six-game home stretch after playing 10 of their first 12 games on the road — in four different states.

Lake Superior State at Michigan Tech: Big series in Houghton as the No. 20 Lakers will try to stay in the top four of the conference. The Huskies are one point behind them. After starting the season 0-4, Tech is 4-2-2 in its last eight games. Lake Superior State has split its last two series after starting 5-0.

Bowling Green at Northern Michigan: This is a matchup of the eighth- (NMU) and ninth-place (BG) teams in the WCHA, and one between two teams that expect to finish much, much higher than that. The Wildcats have won one of their last five games and are winless in three games in their home rink. The Falcons have won twice in their last three games after starting off winless in their first seven. A better PK might be a reason for that improvement, but they are still seeking consistency.

Minnesota State is the focus of this week's USCHO column. See that site's WCHA picks here.

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Signing Day

The Chicago Steel's "Mankato Line" of Reggie Lutz, Jake Jaremko and Walker Duehr. USHL photo
The Minnesota State men's hockey team signed nine recruits to national letters of intent for the fall of 2017. The group includes five forwards, three defensemen and a goaltender. All are currently playing in the United States Hockey League.

“We’re excited because of the quality of players and people we’re bringing in,” Mavericks coach Mike Hastings said. “There’s not a position on the team that isn’t impacted by someone in this group.”

The group includes team captains, players who have won championships, a Mr. Hockey winner, an international player and some National Hockey League DNA.

Here's a look at each player with comments from MSU assistant coach and recruiting coordinator Todd Knott:

Jake Jaremko won Minnesota’s Mr. Hockey in 2015 after his senior year at Elk River, where he racked up 68 points in 26 games. A 5-foot-10, 180-pound assistant captain, he leads the Chicago Steel in scoring with 14 points, including four goals, in 13 games and had 20 goals and 48 points in 60 points there a year ago.

“He’s very talented,” Knott said. “He’s a good skater, very fast, and has a good skill set and good vision.”

Reggie Lutz, Jaremko’s high school teammate at Elk River and current teammate in Chicago, is a 5-10, 175-pound forward and has five goals and 11 points in 13 games this season. Last spring, he led the Faribanks Ice Dogs to the North American Hockey League championship, and was named Robertson Cup MVP after scoring nine goals and 12 points in 12 playoff games.

“He’s always found a way to score,” Knott said. “In high school (35 goals as a senior), last year in Faribanks (30 regular-season goals). He has a knack.”

Walker Duehr is a 6-3, 205-pound winger from Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The Chicago forward has seven goals and 11 points in 13 games in is his third season in the USHL. He had 23 points in 38 games last season at Tri-City, helping the Storm win a Clark Cup title, and seven in 49 a year earlier. He’s still draft eligible and is a cousin of MSU junior forward Zeb Knutson.

“He’s our power forward,” Knott said. “He’s a long-body kid that can skate. He has very good tools and is a big kid who can protect pucks.”

The Green Bay Gamblers' Jared Spooner and Connor Mackey.
Green Bay Gamblers photo
Jared Spooner, is a 6-0, 185-pound forward, who has six goals and 10 points in 14 games for the Green Bay Gamblers, where he is a team captain. He had 17 points in 55 games last season and spent the previous season in the NAHL in his hometown of Bismarck, North Dakota.

“He’s a very honest player who plays a 200-foot game,” Knott said, comparing Spooner to former MSU player Dylan Margonari. “He’s a warrior of a kid.”

Dallas Gerads, a 5-9, 195-pound Blaine native who has seven points this season for Dubuque. He is the team captain for the Fighting Saints, with whom he had 30 points a year ago. He also spent a season with Rio Grande Valley of the NAHL.

“He plays a similar role (to Spooner),” Knott said. “He’s old school; he’d rather go through you than around you.”

Connor Mackey was named the USHL’s defenseman of the week the last two weeks. The 6-2, 190-pound Barrington, Ill., native has 13 points in 14 games and is the top-scoring defenseman in the league. The Gamblers' assistant captain is the son of Dave Mackey, who played in 126 NHL games for the Blackhawks, North Stars and Blues from 1987 to 1994.

“He’s got very good hockey sense,” Knott said. “There aren’t a lot of holes in his game.”

Riese Zmolek is a 6-1, 205-pound Rochester Century graduate. Back from injury, he’s played in just two games for Cedar Rapids but had 11 points in 56 games last season. He is he son of former NHL defenseman Doug Zmolek, who played for the Sharks, Stars, Kings and Blackhawks from 1992 to 2000.

“He’s got good hockey sense; he plays the game the right way,” Knott said, comparing him to current MSU captain Carter Foguth. “He’s an honest, defense-first player who makes the game hard on the other team’s best players.”

Jack McNeely is a 6-3, 185-pounder from Lakeville North. He has one assist and is plus-2 in 12 games with the Tri-City Storm. He is the Storm's captain. A year ago, he had 10 assists and was minus-2 in 70 games, including the Storm's playoff run to the USHL title.

“He’s a long-body, athletic kid who plays a simple game,” said Knott, comparing him to former MSU player Brett Stern. “He’s worked extremely hard to get stronger. (Tri-City) has done a great job with him and his development.”

Matiss Kivlenieks, is a 6-2, 190-pound goalie from Riga, Latvia (Teddy Blueger's hometown), who ranks sixth in the USHL with a 1.86 goals-against average and seventh with a .928 save percentage. He played last season with Coulee Region of the NAHL where he won 16 games and had a .925 save percentage. He’s also played twice for Latvia’s U20 national team.

“With goalies, it’s about history,” Knott said. “He started at the Junior B level in Minnesota when he was 17 and worked his way up. He’s been through a lot already.”

In other signing news from Wednesday, Hastings' daughter, Hannah, a catcher for the Mankato West High School softball team, inked her NLI to continue playing at Minnesota State.

Monday, November 7, 2016

Top 15 matchup coming

Minnesota State slipped a spot in the national polls today, following its WCHA series split at Lake Superior State over the weekend. The Mavericks, who are 7-3-0 overall and 5-3-0 in the WCHA are ranked 11th in the nation by USCHO and USA Today/USA Hockey.

That sets up a battle of top-15 teams this weekend as Minnesota State hosts Bemidji State, which moved up to 15th in the USCHO top 20 (just receiving votes in the USA Today top 15) after its sweep at Alaska. The Beavers are in first place in the WCHA with an 8-0-0 record (8-2-0 overall). 

Lake Superior State, meanwhile, which is 6-2-0, 4-2-0, is ranked 20th.


Saturday, November 5, 2016

Mavericks 2, Lakers 1

Freddy's three thoughts from afar ...

1. Bounce back: The Mavericks split their third series in a row, but it was the first time in which they needed to win the second game to get out of the weekend wth points. "That, to me, could be defined as a character win," coach Mike Hastings said in a phone interview afterward. "Our mental toughness was a lot more evident." Hastings said his team went away too easily on Friday after giving up a couple of quick goals, but it responded on Saturday, playing a physical style seldom shown so far this season. "I thought we were harder than we've bee in our last four games," Hastings said. "We were more physical; we have to make that a staple of our team."

2. Isn't that special? All three goals were scored on special teams with the Mavericks going 1 for 4 on the power play. Brad McClure scored on the power play for the game's first goal, which came in the final minute of the first period. Jordan Nelson gave MSU a 2-0 lead with a short-handed goal, the Mavericks' second shorty of the weekend. Lake Superior State was 1 for 6 on the power play. McClure now leads MSU with five goals. His goal snapped an 0 for 15 slump on the power play. Marc Michaelis assisted on the goal and now has a team-leading 12 points.

3. Goalie change: After relieving Cole Huggins, who struggled in giving up the Lakers first three goals on Friday, Jason Pawloski got the start on Saturday. It was his second start of the season and his first win. Pawloski stopped 19 of 20 shots, including all 12 he faced in the third period. "They're a good hockey team," Hastings said of the 6-2-0 Lakers. "But I thought we deserved tonight's game. I'm happy for our guys. I thought they stuck together. That was a real important road win."

Around the WCHA: Michigan 5, Michigan State 1 ... Ferris State 3, Bowling Green 1 ... Wisconsin 2, Northern Michigan 0 ... Alabama Huntsville 3, Alaska Anchorage 2 (OT) ... Bemidji State 3, Alaska 1

Lakers 5, Mavericks 1

Freddy's three thoughts from afar:

1. Lakers are legit: I was covering Mankato West football tonight, so I don't have a lot of insight tonight. However, it does appear that Lake Superior State is for real. Five more goals tonight, a 6-1 record ... the Lakers are flying high. Two goals in the game's first 3:34 got them going in the right direction and had MSU reeling for the rest of the night.

2. Powerless: Minnesota State's power play went 0 for 5, putting the team at 1 for 25 over the last four games, three of which have been losses. The Mavericks' lone goal on Friday was a short-handed one by freshman forward Marc Michaelis, who took over the team's point lead with 11. His goal made it a 2-1 game at 7:23 of the second period, but the Mavericks couldn't get the equalizer.

3. Tough night: Didn't look like the best night for goalie Cole Huggins, who allowed three goals on 13 shots before being lifted. Jason Pawloski allowed one goal (the fifth was an empty-netter) on 15 shots the rest of the way. Meanwhile, the Lakers' Gordon Defiel, who shut out MSU on 57 shots last year in the playoffs, stopped 24 of 25 shots for the win. From the little I saw online, he made a few tough saves, too.

Around the WCHA: Michigan State 3, Michigan Tech 2 (OT) ... Bowling Green 4, Ferris State 1 ... Northern Michigan 5, Wisconsin 2 ... Alabama Huntsville 5, Alaska Anchorage 2 ... Bemidji State 6, Alaska 2

Friday, November 4, 2016

Friday Morning Skate

The Mavericks are on the road for the second time this season, playing at surprising Lake Superior State today and Saturday. Both teams started the season 5-0 before dropping a game to Alaska.

Minnesota State is 1-2 in its last three games, and a big difference between those games and the first five is the success rate of the power play. The Mavericks were 9 for 30 when they were undefeated but 1 for 22 since. They hope they can get a little of that mojo back soon.

Read more about this weekend's matchup in the Freep's College Hockey Gameday.

Going around the WCHA ...

Ferris State at Bowling Green: Two conference teams that were winless until last Saturday will square off this weekend. For the Falcons, they hope they can limit some of the damage by having success in league play, as they have only played two WCHA games so far.

Alabama Huntsville at Alaska Anchorage: Huntsville has had quite the road swing over the first six weeks of the season. Alaska will be the fifth state the Chargers have played in already. The others were Michigan (twice), Connecticut, Alabama and Minnesota. The Seawolves, meanwhile, are excited to get a couple of injured players back in the lineup.

Bemidji State at Alaska: The Beavers take their undefeated conference record on the road. Read a feature story about sophomore forward T.J. Roo, a BSU legacy player. The Nanooks, meanwhile, hope to hand the first conference loss to a third straight team.

Michigan Tech at Michigan State: The Huskies are coming off their first sweep of the season and will step out of league play to take on the 1-4-0 Spartans of the Big Ten.

Northern Michigan at Wisconsin: Another WCHA-Big Ten matchup and a rematch of a season-opening series in Green Bay, Wis., in which the Wildcats and Badgers split.