By Tim Healey/DFP
Staff
The No. 10/11 Boston University men’s hockey team may not
have picked up a win against Providence College Saturday night, but it still
came away with three out of four points on the weekend.
The points are particularly important considering the Terriers
(13-9-1, 10-6-1 Hockey East) started the weekend tied with the Friars (10-10-4, 8-6-3 Hockey East) for third in the conference,
and missed a pair of prominent players (Garrett Noonan for both games, Evan
Rodrigues for Saturday’s contest).
Here’s a look at what went
right and what went wrong for BU.
Three up
BU takes the season series
Saturday’s tie doesn’t affect
this at all, but it is noteworthy nonetheless.
By winning two of the three
regular-season games against the Friars, BU won the series and therefore gets
the tiebreaker in the
event that the teams finish the season with the same number of points.
The way things
are going in Hockey East right now — the top five teams are separated by just
five points — the tiebreaker could be a difference-maker, especially if BU and
PC are on the cusp of who gets the home-ice advantage during the conference
quarterfinals.
“We got five out of six points against Providence College
this year in the regular season, and that’s an accomplishment because this
team, Providence College, really works hard,” said BU coach Jack Parker. “They
pride themselves on outworking the other team. They’ve got plenty of talent as
well.”
Danny O’Regan
With another goal and another
assist, the freshman forward continued his absolutely torrid stretch of 11
points in his last six games. His most recent point, the game-tying goal in the
third period Saturday, proved to be especially important, allowing the Terriers
to salvage a point after falling behind twice.
He is now second on the team
in total points (nine goals, 13 assists for 22 points) and second in goals,
trailing only senior captain Wade Megan’s 12.
Parker said he
was impressed with both O’Regan and junior forward Matt Nieto — both San Jose
Sharks draft picks — because their line continued to score even in Rodrigues’
absence.
O’Regan’s game-tying tally
allowed him to tie the freshman goal total of his father Tom, who was a rookie
at BU in 1979-80.
Terriers blocking shots, still
It has been a theme all
season, and Saturday was no different.
BU blocked 26 Friar shots —
led by sophomore defenseman Alexx Privitera’s eight and senior assistant captain
Ryan Ruikka’s five — considerably more than PC’s 17. Privitera now has 70 on
the season.
The Terriers did a good job
getting in shooting lanes, and although their shot selection wasn’t always the
best at the other end, they did a good job giving the Friars similar problems
while in the BU defensive zone.
Three down
Matt O’Connor
Parker generally rids his
goalies of a lot of the goals they let up, but the Terriers’ freshman netminder
Saturday night gave up a couple softies.
The first came in the opening
period when PC tied it on a one-timer from the point. O’Connor looked like he
made the save but the puck trickled through his legs.
It happened again in the
second when freshman forward Sam Kurker turned the puck over and PC’s Steven
McParland scored unassisted. McParland drove to the net on the left side and
appeared to have barely tapped the puck before it went throug O’Connor’s
five-hole again.
To be sure, O’Connor did make
26 saves and his outing represents an improvement over his last few games. His
three goals allowed are the fewest in four starts since Christmas.
The game was progress, so
Parker will take it.
“I don’t think he is quite as … dominant as he was first
semester in many of his games,” Parker said. “But he is certainly playing
really solid right now, and he doesn’t look antsy or rattled.”
Another slow start
BU’s bench boss hasn’t used
the phrase “60 minutes of BU hockey” or a “a good 60-minute effort” of late,
but that doesn’t mean Parker isn’t looking for it.
Both nights this weekend the
Terriers came out of the gate slow in the first before waking up and looking
like the team they have the potential to be. Bad turnovers and sloppy passes
marred BU’s play before senior forward Ben Rosen gave the team a 1-0 lead at
17:34.
“We’re still coming out of our grand funk since Christmas,”
Parker said. “We’re a little jumpy with the puck. That’s why we’re turning it
over. We’re hesitant sometimes, but it’s almost like a tennis match. You take a
little time to get your stroke down and then all of a sudden now we feel like
we’re getting going.”
If BU can get the slow starts
out of the way and play a strong game for all three periods, it has a good
chance of again becoming the force it was during first semester.
Late penalties
The Terriers are likely
thinking “No harm, no foul,” but this one could have very easily gone the other
way.
After O’Regan tied it up 3-3
and gave BU much of the momentum, it started to swing in favor of the Friars
thanks to a pair of ill-advised Terrier penalties.
Junior defenseman Patrick
MacGregor got called for interference at 13:59, then Privitera went to the box
for a blatant trip at 16:10. Both plays handicapped a BU team that had been
flying around the ice looking for a sweep but instead was left a man short.
On the weekend BU took just
eight penalties — all of them minors— which is a marked improvement over recent
weeks. But it again took the steam out of the team late.
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