Posts Tagged ‘Princeton’

Posts Tagged ‘Princeton’

Huskies Tie Tigers, Move To Finals After Shootout Victory

December 30th, 2011

Minneapolis — It might not have been the way head coach Jim Madigan pictured it, but Northeastern is in the finals of this year’s Mariucci Holiday Classic. After NU and Princeton played three periods and five minutes of overtime to a 3-3 tie, the Huskies bested the Tigers in an eight-round shootout, with Justin Daniels putting the final puck past Mike Condon.

The Huskies led the semifinal game three different times, and each time Princeton responded to even the score with a power play strike. Though NU outshot the Tigers 41-26, Princeton went 3 of 8 with the extra man to hang in the game.

The Huskies opened the scoring late in the first period when Braden Pimm put home a shorthanded goal from Mike McLaughlin. The game marked McLaughlin’s return to the lineup after missing five games with a broken jaw. Princeton, however was able to convert under a minute later on the same man advantage, getting a goal from Jack Berger.

It wasn’t until 4:35 into the third period that another goal was scored. Vinny Saponari, who had one of his best games as a Husky moved in on the net and slipped the puck past Condon’s short side, putting NU on top 2-1. But once again the Tigers evened things up, getting a power play goal from freshman Tyler Maugeri to even the score.

Under a minute after Maugeri’s goal, Pimm found the back of the net for the second time. For his eighth goal of the season, Pimm put home a centering pass from Cody Ferriero and Steve Quailer. It didn’t take long for the Tigers to respond for the third time as Kevin Ross scored his first career goal, the game’s third in under two minutes.

Both teams had good chances later in the period and in overtime but neither could put home a deciding goal and the game ended in a 3-3 tie.

In the shootout to determine which team would advance to the final, neither team scored in the first seven rounds until Daniels finally won the battle for NU.The Huskies will face Minnesota in the final tomorrow at 8 p.m. EST. The Golden Gophers defeated Niagara 5-1 in the other semifinal.

Our Observations

  • The Huskies continue to struggle on the power play, going 0-7 with the man advantage on the night. They are one of the worst units in the country, converting at a paltry 8 percent.
  • McLaughlin was eager to get back in the lineup after missing 5 games. He made an impact right away by assisting on Pimm’s shorthanded goal and blocking shots during Princeton’s power play opportunities.
  • Saponari had a hard-working game for NU, making some hustle plays on both ends of the ice. His goal was his second of the season and first since he scored in the second game of the year at Maine.
  • Chris Rawlings didn’t have his best game, allowing more than two goals for the first time since mid-November when the Huskies lost at UMass. NU will need Rawlings on his A-game tomorrow night if they want to have a chance at bringing home the title.

Quotable

“We knew that Princeton works hard, they skate hard, they come at you, I didn’t think we matched their intensity at periods of time and I thought it was an ugly win from our perspective. We executed poorly, we had way too many penalties, we were undisciplined in our play and every time we got a lead, we’d throw it right back to them.”
- Jim Madigan

Full post-game interview:

Memo-8.m4a

“I was a little rusty in the first but I got my lungs back under me and I felt fine after that. Whenever you come back after being out for six weeks it helps to get a point right away and get the confidence back, it felt good. We know we have a lot more than that. Princeton played well, but we’ve got to turn it around and have a better game tomorrow.”
- Mike McLaughlin

Full post-game interview:

Memo-7.m4a

Jared Shafran Hockey ,

QuickCast: Mariucci Classic Semifinal vs. Princeton

December 30th, 2011

The Huskies give up three power play goals and finish regulation 3-3 but survive a tense shootout to advance to the Mariucci Classic championship.

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Catching up with NU basketball’s non-conference opponents

December 29th, 2011

Though only about a third of the games have been played, this is a good time of year to step back and look at where the Northeastern men’s basketball team is at. The majority of the non-conference schedule has been played, with the exception of a tilt at Vermont on Friday and the BracketBusters game against a still to-be-determined opponent in late February. After winning three of their first four, the Huskies have  now dropped six straight and head into the weekend of the new year with a 3-7 overall record, including one conference game.

It’s a slate that features just two power conference teams, in St. John’s (Big East) and NC State (Atlantic Coast), but it has proven to be yet another challenging non-league schedule nonetheless. That is not to be unexpected, however, as Bill Coen tends to schedule strong mid-major opponents to prepare his team for the challenges of the Colonial Athletic Association. Before the season started, nearly every one of these games could have been considered winnable – some more than others, but none that Northeastern seemed to have absolutely no shot at winning. After the victory at St. John’s, it seemed like the Huskies would be on a roll and even the tougher games like NC State, which many expected to be a loss to begin with, seemed more winnable than they had.

Here’s an update on each of the ten teams Northeastern has played so far this year, plus a look at the Huskies’ next opponent, Vermont – click the team name to read our recap from each of those games (all records are through Wednesday, December 28):

Boston University: 4-8 (1-3 home, 0-0 America East) – 82-74 win (OT)

After starting the season on a 4-game losing streak, the Terriers won their next four over Rhode Island, CAA members Hofstra and Delaware, then Boston College to even their record. They have lost all four since then, with two games remaining before AE play begins at Vermont on January 5 (at La Salle, 12/29; at Quinnipiac, 12/31). Just two of the losses have come by fewer than seven points, while only one of the wins was decided by more than seven (75-61 at BC).

University of Massachusetts: 10-3 (6-0 home, 0-0 Atlantic 10) – 83-67 loss

In contrast to BU, the Minutemen started with four wins, lost three of five including a 1-2 record at the Paradise Jam in the Bahamas, and are currently riding a four-game win streak. Each of the recent wins have been close, but all of the team’s first six wins were decided by double-digits including a 36-point blowout at BC and a 30-point trouncing of Towson. They’ll have one more non-con game vs. Central Connecticut (12/30) before opening their A10 slate vs. Fordham. UMass will then finish their out-of-conference schedule at La Salle before returning to Atlantic 10 play for the rest of the regular season.

Southern Illinois: 3-8 (1-2 away, 0-0 Missouri Valley Conference) – 64-57 win

It’s been a tough season in Carbondale, where the Salukis fell to Division II Ohio Dominican to start the year before a 19-point loss at the hands of Saint Louis and a trip to Boston that resulted in yet another loss at Matthews Arena. The three wins were all decisive, but came against Chicago State (0-13), Northern Illinois (0-11) and SIU-Edwardsville (2-7). The only OOC game remaining for SIU is the BracketBusters game, as they start MVC play at Evansville on Thursday.

St. John’s: 7-5 (7-1 home, 1-0 Big East) – 78-64 win

With a similar pattern to UMass, the Red Storm opened the season with three straight wins, including their season opener against William & Mary in the 2K Sports Classic, before dropping five of six with three more wins since their last loss. They have already started Big East play with a 91-67 win over Providence on Tuesday that saw Moe Harkless post 32 points, a record for Big East freshmen in his conference debut. Their only non-conference game remaining is UCLA on February 18 – although with the Big ‘East’ expansion, the Bruins will probably be joining the conference before too long.

La Salle: 8-4 (5-0 home, 0-0 Atlantic 10) – 68-51 loss

By looking strictly at the record, an 8-4 mark might be a surprise for the team picked to finish last in the A10. However, despite a few blowouts, their 26-point win over Bucknell (8-6) is perhaps their most impressive. They also defeated CAA foe James Madison, 92-83, and smoked the still-winless Towson by 36. The losses are actually the brightest point of optimism for La Salle, after staying within seven at Villanova and four at Pittsburgh, and falling to an underrated Delaware team by just four on the road. The Explorers have two non-con games, next vs. Boston University on Thursday, then two A10 games before their final OOC game of the year at Penn.

*Old Dominion: 6-6 (1-2 away, 1-0 CAA) – 69-59 loss

The Monarchs started with a 63-46 drubbing by Northern Iowa (10-2) at home. Three straight wins, including the first win by a CAA team over a power conference team in a 68-66 victory over South Florida, and just a 10-point loss to #2 Kentucky in the Hall of Fame Tip-Off at Mohegan Sun seemed to have ODU back on track before a 10-point overtime loss at home against Vermont. After that game, they beat East Carolina and Northeastern, lost to Fairfield, Central Florida and Richmond (OT), then beat Virginia Military Institute. They’ll host #8 Missouri on Friday before returning to CAA action at James Madison on Monday.

Bradley: 5-8 (4-3 home, 0-1 Missouri Valley Conference) – 79-68 loss

Another team of streaks, the Braves started 2011-12 with three wins, then lost four in a row, won two, and have lost their last four. The latest streak started with a 73-68 loss at Drexel. That run also includes a one-point loss vs. Western Carolina, an 11-point defeat at the hands of #19 Michigan, and a 90-51 shellacking by Wichita State at home to open the MVC portion of their schedule. With the exception of BracketBusters, each of their remaining games will be against conference opponents.

Princeton: 6-7 (3-4 away, 0-0 Ivy) – 71-62 loss

The Ivy Leaguers started by winning just one of six, then won five of six. Their only game since the trip to Boston on December 18 resulted in a 4-point loss at Siena. The Tigers are in a stretch of 11 straight road games against Division 1 opponents when they won’t play any home games during the months of December and January with the exception of The College of New Jersey (Division III) on January 8, lasting from December 7 at Rutgers to February 4 at Yale. They’ll have a pair of games in Tallahassee, against Florida State on Friday and Florida A&M on Sunday, then their tune-up against TCNJ before opening the Ivy schedule at Cornell on January 13.

Louisiana Tech: 7-6 (5-0 home, 0-0 WAC) – 56-53 loss

A team that has been up and down over the past few years, a weak schedule has the Bulldogs looking like they’re back on the up – for now. They haven’t lost a home non-conference game since December of 2007, though they’ve had several close calls this season. Each of their last four wins, which were all at home, came by three points or fewer with a one point, double overtime win over Northwestern State. After Arkansas, who La Tech lost to by 14 in their last game, the only teams with much name recognition are Wyoming, McNeese State and Arkansas-Little Rock. According to RealTimeRPI.com, their strength of schedule ranks 306th in the country. They have two more non-conference games before starting WAC play, including NAIA Spring Hill on Thursday (their second non-Division 1 opponent after D-III Mississippi College to start the season) and Southern Methodist on Sunday.

North Carolina State: 8-4 (6-2 home, 0-0 ACC) – 88-59 loss

New head coach Mark Gottfried has the Wolfpack energized and in control, exciting fans and local media with a strong start to the 2011-12 season. The ‘Pack has three games left before starting their league schedule, with their next tilt coming against Campbell in their on-campus gym, the Reynolds Coliseum (instead of the RBC Center, their normal home arena). With no bad losses, a win over Texas and a couple other decent victories, NC State looks to keep rolling into conference play and hopes to make some noise in a weak ACC.

Vermont: 6-7 (1-3 home, 0-0 America East)

The Catamounts have a solid balance in the difficulty of their schedule. After beginning the year with a two-point defeat at South Florida, they bounced back with wins over Dartmouth and Marist. A loss to Long Island was followed by an overtime win at Old Dominion and a home victory over Siena. A five-game losing streak may look like a rough patch, but that included a 7-point loss to Harvard (in the week preceding the first-ever appearance in the AP and ESPN/USA Today polls in program history), a 4-point loss to Quinnipiac and a 1-point loss to Iona are nothing to be ashamed of. The contest against Northeastern will be their last before traveling to Stony Brook, last year’s AE runner-up, to open the conference slate.

For those wondering what next year’s non-conference schedule will be like, it is very similar to this one. Not all of the opponents will be the same, but BU, UMass, La Salle and Vermont are expected to make a return trip to Boston, while the Huskies will travel to Princeton. In addition, UNC Asheville owes a return to Northeastern as part of the BracketBusters contract from last year, and NU will be playing in the Great Alaska Shootout over Thanksgiving break against a field that will be announced in March or April. They will also have a road BracketBusters game, leaving room for just two more opponents to reach the total of 27 games plus the tournament allowed by the NCAA.

In the coming days, we’ll evaluate the team’s performance as they head into the meat of the conference schedule. In the meantime, be sure to tune into WRBB Sports as we bring you live action of three Huskies athletic events this weekend, including the basketball team’s game at Vermont on Friday and a pair of hockey games at the Mariucci Classic in Minnesota.

Andy Towne Basketball , , , , , , , , , ,

This week on WRBB Sports (Updated)

December 26th, 2011

Friday, December 30

4:15 p.m. – Huskies Basketball Pre-Game
4:30 p.m. – Northeastern Basketball: Huskies at Vermont Catamounts
from Patrick Gym in Burlington, Vt.
with Patrick McHugh and Andy Towne

4:45 p.m. – Huskies Hockey Pre-Game
5:00 p.m. – Northeastern Hockey: Mariucci Classic – Huskies vs. Princeton
from Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, Minn.
with Alex Faust, Jared Shafran, and Ben Horner
Available on WRBB Sports Extra; joined in progress on WRBB-FM

Saturday, December 31

6:45 p.m. – Huskies Hockey Pre-Game
7:00 p.m. – Northeastern Hockey: Mariucci Classic – Final
from Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, Minn.
with Alex Faust, Jared Shafran, and Ben Horner

WRBB Sports Basketball, Hockey , , , ,

QuickCast: Basketball vs. Princeton Tigers

December 18th, 2011

Turnovers once again plague the Huskies as an early 2nd-half run propels Princeton to a 71-62 victory at Matthews Arena.

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WRBB Sports Basketball, QuickCast

This week on WRBB Sports

December 12th, 2011

Sunday, December 18

12:45 p.m. – Northeastern Basketball Pre-Game
1:00 p.m. – Northeastern Basketball: Huskies vs. Princeton Tigers
from Matthews Arena
with Patrick McHugh, Andy Towne, and TBA

WRBB Sports Basketball

Princeton 65, NU 63: Huskies rally but can’t tame Tigers

December 30th, 2010

ORLANDO, Fla. – With 1:20 remaining on the clock, Northeastern trailed Princeton 63-53 in the semifinals of the UCF Holiday Classic on Wednesday. It appeared as though the Huskies’ two-game winning streak would be short-lived as Princeton just needed to run out the clock.

But rather than concede defeat in the final 80 seconds, NU staged a feverous rally in hopes of pulling off a miracle comeback.

“When that clock is ticking down you get a sense of urgency to make a play,” Huskies head coach Bill Coen said. “We got a couple of steals and some breaks and fortunately they missed some free throws which kind of opened the door.”

Northeastern cut the deficit to one point with 16 ticks remaining and had the final possession of the game trailing by two points with a chance to tie or win. Unfortunately for the Huskies the comeback fell short as Joel Smith’s running layup rolled out of the rim and the put-back attempt was off-target. Princeton narrowly survived 65-63.

Had the Huskies played the entire game the way they did in the final 1:20, they probably would not have needed such a comeback effort. Trailing 26-25 at the break, Northeastern allowed the Tigers to go on a 13-0 run in the early portion of the second half. NU faced its largest deficit with 9:59 to go when Kareem Maddox threw down an alley-oop dunk on a fast break to make it 49-33 Tigers.

Though Coen’s team was fresh off a 17-point comeback against Texas State at the Cancun Governor’s Cup, trailing by double-digits in the second half is no way to win basketball games. In Northeastern’s seven losses this season the team can point to a five or six-minute stretch in which they allowed their opponent to take control. It seems as though the Huskies have not been able to consistently put forth 40-minute efforts, which is to be expected from a team that consists of nine freshmen and sophomores. If NU wants to be a factor in the CAA, that needs to change, especially when the schedule starts to include three games in a week.

Another major letdown was the lack of production from Ryan Pierson and Jon Lee. Pierson, the CAA Rookie of the Week, only had six points on 2 of 8 shooting, well below the output of 19 points and 17 points we saw in the final two Cancun games. Lee, who had a career-high 22 points in the win over the Bobcats, finished with a disappointing four points against Princeton, also well-below his season average. In addition Pierson and Lee turned the ball over a combined six times.

Credit the Huskies for not quitting early and fighting until the finish. This team has proven it is capable of overcoming major deficits, but I think we’d all prefer if they didn’t need these late heroics in the future. As Northeastern has learned the hard way, playing catch-up is not a winning formula.

Patrick McHugh Basketball , ,

Press Pass: Basketball vs. Princeton

December 30th, 2010

After a tough loss to Princeton in the UCF Holiday Classic, Bill Coen commented on his team.

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QuickCast: Basketball vs. Princeton

December 30th, 2010

After going down by 14, the Huskies attempt a furious last-minute comeback but come up short, 65-63.

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