{"id":39506,"date":"2011-11-10T09:00:28","date_gmt":"2011-11-10T15:00:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=39506"},"modified":"2020-08-24T21:24:18","modified_gmt":"2020-08-25T02:24:18","slug":"north-country-crossroads","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2011\/11\/10\/north-country-crossroads\/","title":{"rendered":"North Country crossroads"},"content":{"rendered":"
Quick — what team won the first women’s hockey NCAA tournament game?<\/p>\n
Admittedly, the title of this article, coupled with the fact that Clarkson didn’t even have a varsity women’s team until 2003, kind of gives it away, but yes, the St. Lawrence Saints upset top-seed Dartmouth to advance to the first NCAA Championship in 2001. That was the first of five Frozen Four appearances and seven NCAA tournaments for the Saints, including six tourney bids in succession, the last coming in coach Chris Wells’s inaugural season at the St. Lawrence helm in 2008-09.<\/p>\n
The Clarkson Golden Knights got their only taste of the NCAAs in 2009-10. Last season, they dropped to sixth in the ECAC, while the Saints came in seventh. When neither was invited to last season’s dance, it marked the first national tournament without North Country representation since 2003 — back when the Golden Knights didn’t even exist.<\/p>\n
So what are the prospects for the two upstate New York neighbors to return to the NCAA tournament, or at least get back to hosting an ECAC quarterfinal series?<\/p>\n
“I think everybody starts the league, their first goal is to get home ice in the playoffs,” Wells said.<\/p>\n
The Saints started out with promise, scoring 19 goals as they opened 3-0-1, but then saw the flip side of the coin as the offense dwindled to five goals over an 0-3-1 stretch. Scoring remained elusive for SLU through a 2-1 win at Rensselaer and a 2-2 tie at Union.<\/p>\n
“We had a lot of early success, and the puck got some favorable bounces in our direction, and we were able to capitalize on those and make good decisions with those pucks that bounced our way,” Wells said after the team’s first two league games hosting Harvard and Dartmouth. “I don’t think it’s for a lack of effort the last couple of weekends. We’ve hit posts and some great saves by the goalies, and they just haven’t gone in as much, but I think we’re getting as many quality chances.”<\/p>\n