{"id":27615,"date":"2005-10-04T15:11:22","date_gmt":"2005-10-04T20:11:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/10\/04\/200506-womens-ecachl-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:18","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:18","slug":"200506-womens-ecachl-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2005\/10\/04\/200506-womens-ecachl-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2005-06 Women’s ECACHL Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
With its third Frozen Four appearance in the five-year history of the NCAA women’s hockey tournament, St. Lawrence solidified its status as one of the nation’s elite programs. But while the Frozen Four banners have been perennial, the championship banners have not \u2013 at either the conference or national level. Could this be the year the Saints finally get over the hump? <\/p>\n
If the ECACHL coaches are right, that answer is yes. The Saints earned eight of 11 first-place votes in the league’s preseason poll with good reason. They return four of their top five scorers, six defensemen and their top two goalies, giving them far and away the most veterans of any of last year’s Frozen Four contenders.<\/p>\n
Harvard, winner of the last three ECACHL regular season titles and the last two postseason titles, has typically been the Saints’ nemesis. St. Lawrence is just 0-9-3 against Harvard dating back to 2001, a run that includes two ECAC and two NCAA tournament defeats. Expectations for the Crimson this season have been muted since the team lost two-fifths of its top power play unit to graduation and the other three-fifths to the Olympic camps. Yet Harvard did take three of four points from St. Lawrence in 2002 with a roster of comparable inexperience, so the Crimson can never be taken lightly.<\/p>\n
Dartmouth, the league’s third perennial Frozen Four contender, has seen lofty preseason expectations deflate under the burden of injuries in each of the past two seasons. This season might be different with less pressure of expectations, fewer distractions to national team callups, and perhaps additional help in the net. And the team returns Tiffany Hagge, one of the most dynamic scorers left in college hockey.<\/p>\n
Aside from the usual powers, no conference will be as deep and unpredictable as the ECACHL. The league has several teams that seem capable of finishing anywhere from second to eighth this season. Yale and Princeton, each with all-star goalies, should be capable of maintaining their success, although each also lost a superstar to the Olympic camp. Former power Brown seems headed back on the right track behind strong freshman and sophomore classes. Both Colgate and third-year program Clarkson have made rapid progress in recent years with no signs of slowing down this season. Either could have the kind of breakthrough results that Yale had a year ago by advancing to the ECACHL semifinals.<\/p>\n
Rounding out the league is Cornell, Quinnipiac, and Union. Quinnipiac joins the league for its first season after going winless in College Hockey America a year ago. Next year, the league will welcome D-I newcomer Rensselaer, who is playing this season as an independent. The addition of RPI will make the ECACHL the first D-I league to have matching membership among its men’s and women’s programs.<\/p>\n
In a change from recent seasons, the 2006 ECACHL Championships will be held at the site of the highest seed instead of a predetermined location. If the prognostications hold true, the ECACHL’s best will be headed to the North Country come March.<\/p>\n
2004-05 Record:<\/b><\/b> (28-8-5, 14-3-3 ECACHL)
\nHead Coach:<\/b> Paul Flanagan (142-60-8, 7th season) was the ECAC and AHCA National Coach of the Year in 2001, and he has led St. Lawrence to three Frozen Four appearances in five seasons.
\n2004-05 Stat Highlights:<\/b> The Saints were a steady eighth in the nation in both scoring offense and defense. Special teams were an area of weakness as the Saints were just 15th and 14th on the power play and penalty kill, respectively. SLU led the conference in penalty minutes.
\nKey Departure:<\/b> All-League forward Rebecca Russell (32-38-70) figured on more than half of the Saints’ goals and finished her career as the school’s all-time leading scorer.<\/p>\n