MANCHESTER, N.H. -
The Saint Anselm men's ice hockey team hosted the Assumption
College Ice Dogs this evening in the Northeast-10 Championship
finals. The Hawks decidedly outplayed the Ice Dogs, running
the final score to 10-1 and claiming their first Northeast-10 title
since 2006. The Hawks close out the season with a final
record of 15-11-1 and the Ice Dogs finish 13-11-1.
The Hawks opened the scoring just
1:59 into the first period, when Nick Wheeler (Nashua,
N.H.) banked in a slap shot by Chris Sullivan
(Needham, Mass.) to give the Hawks a quick 1-0 lead.
After a full period with no score, Timothy King (Weymouth,
Mass.) crossed the puck to Tucker Mullin (Andover,
Mass.) in front of the net at 2:35 in the second period,
who flipped it up and in for a 2-0 lead.
At 7:23, an Ice Dog boarding penalty gave the Hawks their first
power-play opportunity, and at 8:03, Paul Snell (Groton,
Mass.) passed the puck to Coleman Noonan (Norfolk,
Mass.) on the goal line, who crossed it to Mullin for his
second goal of the game. Four minutes later at 12:39, Mullin
set up King for a breakaway drive, giving the Hawks a 4-0 lead
heading into the final period of play.
At 5:19 in the third period,
Michael DeVita (Annandale, N.J.) slapped in a
fifth goal for the Hawks, assisted by Nick Wheeler, and at that the
Ice Dogs got riled up. At 6:08, Pat Keenan
and John Hennessey (Westwood, Mass.) received
matching minor penalties for holding and roughing. 16 seconds
into the 4-on-4 situation, another fight broke out leading to four
more penalties, including a five-minute major kneeing penalty, a
10-minute misconduct penalty, and the subsequent ejection of Tucker
Mullin.
One would have expected this to be
the Ice Dogs' big chance to make a comeback, but instead the Hawks
went on to score three short-handed goals before the five minutes
were up. At 8:19, just after Keenan and Hennessey returned to
the ice, Seth Goodrich (Salisbury, Vt.) drove the
puck down into Ice Dog territory and set up Coleman Noonan for the
first short-handed goal. At 10:12, Paul Snell netted a
breakaway short-handed goal to make it 7-0. At 10:38, the Ice Dogs
finally got on the board, as freshman Keven Meehan
knocked in a power-play goal for Assumption, but just 17 seconds
later, Coleman Noonan netted his fifth short-handed goal of the
season, to put the Hawks back up 8-1.
The Hawks finally returned to full
strength at 11:24, and 49 seconds later, Mike Richard
(Derry, N.H.) scored a ninth goal for the Hawks, and at
16:14, John Hennessey capped it off, converting passes from Snell
and Wheeler to render the final score of the NE-10 Championship
10-1 in favor of the Hawks.
Noonan, Mullin, Snell, King, and Wheeler all recorded three points
in the game. The Hawks outshot the Ice Dogs 51-16.
Assumption goaltender Nick Blanchette made 38
saves and allowed the first eight goals in 50:55 minutes in the
net, taking the loss. Steve DiDomenico
closed out the game for the Ice Dogs, allowing two goals and
stopping three shots in the final 9:05. Alex Wyse
(Amherst, N.Y.) made 15 saves in the game, picking up his
11th win of the season. Wyse is the first Hawk goaltender to
reach 11 wins since Jason Rafuse achieved 15 back in 2006.
The win gives the Hawks their fifth
Division II/Northeast-10 Championship title and their first since
2006. The Hawks scored the most goals and had the largest
margin of victory of any NE-10 Championship team in history.
Tucker Mullin, Ryan Holley (Owings, Md.) and
Coleman Noonan were all named to the All-Tournament team, and
Noonan won the Most Outstanding Player award.
The Hawks' three short-handed goals in today's game gave the team
a total of 13 on the season, a mark they last reached during the
1999-2000 season. The Hawks came into the game as the number
one male NCAA hockey team in the country in SHG, but after today's
additions, they surpassed the Manhattanville women's team to be the
number one hockey team in the country, male or female, in any
division, in short-handed goals. Additionally, Coleman
Noonan's points in today's game jumped him up to fifth in the
nation in both points (46, 1.7/gm) and goals (27, 0.85/gm) and
second in short-handed goals (5). Paul Snell moved up to
sixth in short-handed goals, with three, and Tucker Mullin is now
the seventh-best rookie scorer in the country, with 34 points,
averaging 1.31 per game.
The Hawks would like to thank all
of their supporters for a great season and look forward to
defending their title in 2011.