Showing posts with label Bowdoin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bowdoin. Show all posts

Sunday, June 25, 2017

2016-17 Bowdoin Men's Hockey Year in Review

Terry Meagher was back in the Sid opening weekend, but this
time he was just a spectator. 
As we languish in the oblivion of the offseason, we will recap each team's season, as we are wont to do, from last to first.  Next up is the inaugral season of the Jamie Dumont era of Bowdoin hockey. 

8. Bowdoin
2016-17 Reccord
5-12-1 (8th in NESCAC)
8-16-1  Overall

Stats:
Overall (Conf. Rank)                                     Conference Games (Conf. Ranks)
Offense - 3.16 G/GM (3rd                                                      Offense - 2.78 G/GM (3rd)
Defense - 3.72 G/GM (10th)                                                       Defense - 3.61 G/GM (9th)
Power Play - 14/88 15.9% (9th)                                              Power Play - 7/55 12.7% (8th)
Penalty Kill - 90/116 77.6% 9th)                                              Penalty Kill - 64/83 77.1% (9th) 
Penalty Minutes - 12.8/Gm (3rd)                                             Penalty Minutes - 11.1/Gm (5th)


Season Review
Bowdoin men's hockey had only two coaches from 1959 to 2016, Sid Watson - whom the current arena is named after - and Terry Meagher, whom NBCSN did a segment on his final year that aired during the Winter Classic coverage. The two had an impressive 58 year run in the environs of the Pine Tree State that included only four single-digit winning seasons and three of those came under Watson before Meagher had even finished his collegiate playing career at Boston University in 1976.

Jamie Dumont stepped into some big shoes, but he inherited a team that finished third in the NESCAC in 2015-16 and included the majority of the roster intact. Dumont also had a large incoming freshman class and a total of 33 Polar Bears dressed for at least two games this season, but the team could not get into a groove regardless of the lineup in black and white. Bowdoin had a single digit winning season for the first time since 1998-99 and their worst finish in the NESCAC since the league began conference tournament play a year later in 1999-20.

The primary deficiency came on the defensive side of the puck.  Junior goalie Peter Cronin had his lowest save percentage (.900) of his collegiate career (.933 as sophomore and .911 as frosh) and none of his back-ups could do better than an .894 save percentage in the eight games he didn't appear in. Disparities were not limited to offense vs defense, either, as the Polar Bears went a mediocre 5-6-1 at Sid Watson Arena but a terrible 2-10-0 on the road with both wins coming the same weekend in a trip to Tufts and Conn College.

The season ultimately ended with a 4-2 loss at Hamilton in the NESCAC Quarterfinals. The Polar Bears, who won back-to-back NESCAC titles in 2013 and 2014 have now bowed out of the playoffs opening weekend for three straight seasons.


High Point
The aforementioned weekend at Tufts/Conn College left the PBs at 6-4-0 overall and 3-3-0 in the NESCAC right in the thick of things to close out the fall semester. The sweep, along with a non-conference W against Southern Maine,were a welcome way to end the semester following a  pair of one-goal losses in the heated Colby-Bowdoin weekend home-and-home.

After last year's 10 game unbeaten streak down the stretch and the growing pains of a program adjusting to a new coach for he first time in 34 years, it was reasonable to think Bowdoin might have made a push in the second semester....


Low Point 
...but they didn't. The team floundered, going 2-12-1 down the stretch, although both of those were solid wins at home against Trinity and Amherst, 5-1 and 3-1 respectively, showing what the Polar Bears might have done if they could have kept opponents from scoring. 

When the All-NESCAC teams were selected after the regular season, no Bowdoin player made a team for the first time since 2001. 

MVP
Cody Todesco (F, '19) Todesco may not have made the All-NESCAC First Team as he did as a freshman, but the 5'7" prep school product still produced for his new coach to the tune of a 25 point (15-10-25) sophomore campaign. The diminutive forward, who bulked up this past offseason , netted his second hat trick of his career in December with both having come against the Camels of Conn College.

Off the ice, Joe Lace (D, '17) deserves some recognition for enlisting in the Marines. He had his commissioning ceremony in Bowdoin Chapel the weekend of commencement.



The Bowdoin program is under a major transition after nearly six decades of only two men at the helm. 

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Recruiting in NESCAC, an updated look

By Benet Pols

Union College, one of the founding members of NESCAC, has won the 2014 NCAA DI men's ice hockey championship. As we wrote a couple of weeks ago, Union left the conference back in 1977 after its ambitions for a DI program rocked the campus and eventually cost its coach and president their jobs.

In the wake if Union's success and our brief view what recruitment was like back in the 1970's it is a good time to look into how current recruiting practices at NESCAC colleges have evolved both from an academic standpoint and an athletic standpoint.

Fortunately for the staff here at HockeyInTheCac, the hard work has been done for us by the Bowdoin Orient in a recent three part series on athletics at Bowdoin. The first part, Banded Together, gives an excellent overview of recruitment practices and policies across the conference and across all sports.

Posters on the USCHO online forums frequently denigrate the conference's stringent recruiting standards and point out that success like that had by Middlebury on the 1990's and 2000's is unlikely to be repeated.

In reading the Bowdoin Orient's Sam Weyrauch's excellent three part series on athletics at Bowdoin, we have to wonder if the forum gripers may not be right?  Weyrauch's first piece, Banded Together, certainly points out a homogenization across the conference that suggests it is unlikely that one school will ever be able to collect enough "B Band" students to dominate the way Middlebury once did.

Below are links to the three stories.

"Banded Together: recruited athletes with sub-average academics can receive preference in admissions."


"A Path to Campus: looking at the weight of recruitment visits and 'early reads.'"


After the Acceptance: walk-ons and GPAs.


Thursday, March 13, 2014

Three third period goals lift Oswego past Bowdoin in NCAA First Round

by Ray Biggs

Harry Matheson (#12) had a goal and an assist to
end his Bowdoin career with 100 points.
Oswego State Lyrics (21-6-2) 4
Bowdoin Polar Bears (17-9-2) 3


On Wednesday, an already long road to the postseason got even longer for both Oswego and Bowdoin. The night’s scheduled NCAA tournament contest between the two was temporarily wiped off the schedule as a sizeable blizzard pelted Central New York that afternoon, prompting Oswego to cancel classes and the game along with it. No matter what team you happened to be rooting for, the rescheduled matchup was worth the wait as Oswego advanced in an intense seesaw battle by a 4-3 final.

With the way the final score was decided, it was only fitting that the two teams played to a 0-0 tie at the end of the opening frame. Oswego had several chances to break open the scoring early, aided by their first powerplay opportunity just 3:22 into the matchup, but two hit posts and the outstanding goaltending of Bowdoin’s Max Fenkell (G, '15) helped keep the game scoreless. Fenkell’s first period performance was highlighted by a spectacular kick save with four minutes to go in the first period. Meanwhile, Oswego’s Matt Zawadzki (G, '17) was terrific as well, coming up with 13 saves.

But, with two offensively gifted teams, something had to give, and it was the young Lakers who would draw first blood by virtue of one of the components of their program's identity throughout the years: the transition game. At the 6:04 mark of the second period, freshman Alex Botten (F, '17) took advantage of crisp north-south passing from Nick Rivait (D, '15) to Matt Galati (F, '17). Botten took the entry pass over the offensive stripe, cut to his right, and backhanded a shot over the shoulder of Fenkell to give the Lakers a 1-0 lead.

But as fate would have it, the Polar Bears and Lakers would end the period tied. Coming up on the final minute of the period, Bowdoin’s Jay Livermore (D, '14) cranked up a blast to the top shelf to even things up at one.

Both goaltenders were lucky that two goals were all that was scored in the second period. Zawadzki and Fenkell both found themselves saved by a stoppage in play in a dangerous situation over the course of the period. First, a scrum erupted in front of Fenkell, who made the initial save through traffic but could not hang onto the rebound. Before either team could move in to clean up, the referees blew the play dead. Then, in the closing seconds of the period, Bowdoin’s Connor Quinn (F, '15) jumped on a pass and brought John Mcginnis in tow for a shorthanded rush, but it was not to be as the period expired when Quinn got to the offensive stripe.

Bowdoin carried the momentum forward into the third period as they killed off the remainder of the carryover penalty from Zach Kokosa (F, '17), then went on to lead by as many as two goals. Matt Rubinoff (F, '16) knocked home one of the two Bowdoin tallies in the period with the assist coming to Harry Matheson (F, '14), before Matheson assumed the role of goal scorer to give Bowdoin a 3-1 lead. The two points (1-1-2) on the afternoon gave Matheson exactly 100 (53-47-100) for his Bowdoin career.

With Bowdoin in command of the game, Oswego head coach Ed Gosek burned his timeout after the Matheson goal in attempt to turn the tide in the Lakers favor. The strategy paid off as Oswego rattled off three consecutive goals from Botten, David Titanic (F, '14), and Mike Montagna (F, '15). After the game, Gosek looked back on his game-changing decision to call timeout.

“With the timeout, the reality was, we had to change or the outcome was going to stay the same. We started moving our feet, started getting pucks in deep and with that came the momentum shift,” Gosek said.

Botten’s game-winner highlighted the Laker run, as Titanic drove in from the right wing side and dished out a picture perfect pass across the crease to Botten to pick up the go-ahead goal with 3:20 to go.

Bowdoin continued to fight all the way to the end, punctuated by reigning NESCAC Playero of the Week John McGinnis' (F, '14) shot block to deny Montagna the empty-net goal with under five seconds remaining, but Oswego would prevail, 4-3. Zawadzki racked up 27 saves to pick up the win for Oswego, while Fenkell nailed down 32 saves for Bowdoin.

Despite taking the loss, Bowdoin head coach Terry Meagher had reason to be proud of his team and the effort they put together on the road not only in this game, but throughout the postseason.

“I thought it was a great game today, I couldnt be more proud of a group of young men on not only how they performed today and how they’ve represented the conference, but the run they’ve been on in the past month. We haven’t been home in a month, they’ve dealt with it, and they met those challenges, and I couldn’t be more proud of them.”

The Polar Bears fall to a final record of 17-9-2 on the season, as their season once again came to an end in an NCAA Tournament game in Central New York for the fourth time in five years. Meanwhile, the Lakers improve to 21-6-2, and advance to the quarterfinal round, where they will square off with the Babson Beavers on Sunday, March 16th at 3 PM.

NCAA Tournament 1st Round: Bowdoin at Oswego 3PM 3/13/14

Who: Bowdoin Polar Bears (17-8-2)  at  Oswego State Lakers (20-6-2) 
Where: Campus Center Ice Arena  Oswego, NY 
When: 3 PM Thursday 3/13/14
Video          Audio          Live Stats


Number in parentheses is national rank 
Offense: 3.93 G/GM (9th)                   
Defense: 2.85 G/GM (29th)                    
Power Play: 24/109 - 22/02% (15th)           
Penalty Kill: 97/106 - 83.6% (23rd)       




Number in parentheses is national rank 
Offense: 4.11 G/GM (6th)                   
Defense: 2.39 G/GM (16th)                    
Power Play: 38/130 - 29.23% (4th)           
Penalty Kill: 80/101 - 79.2% (48th)  


The Lowdown
The third NCAA Tournament meeting in five years between Oswego and Bowdoin is here...finally. After a State of Emregency was issued for Western New York, the game, originally scheduled for 7 PM last night, was re-scheduled to today at 3PM. In weather related news but unrelated to the postponement, Bowdoin's parked team bus slid down a hill and crashed into the side of Canale's Restaurant in Oswego, NY. No one was on board, as the team was in the restaurant eating a pre-game meal. No one was injured in the restaurant and damage to the establishment was minimal. 

Back to hockey. Oswego has handled Bowdoin at the Campus Center Ice Arena in the past two meetings with a 7-5 victory in the 2011 NCAA Quarterfinals and a 9-2 victory in the 2010 NCAA Quarterfinals. Historically, this is the sixth NCAA men's hockey tournament appearance for Bowdoin and the 15th for Oswego, including five straight trips to the tourney and four straight appearances in the D-III Frozen Four. The Lakers won the national title in 2007, defeating Middlebury in overtime in the last appearance by the Panthers (or any NESCAC school) in the title game. Oswego has been the brides-maid more than the bride as national runner-up four times, including the last two years. The Polar Bears have never made it past the Quarterfinal round in their previous appearances, including an exit in the quarters last year at Utica. 

But the past is the past. As Bowdoin coach Terry Meagher said in the USCHO preview for this game, "Every year is really different for every team." This year, both the Polar Bears and Lakers enter the game having beaten their conferences 1st and 2nd seeds to win the NESCAC and SUNYAC conferences, respectively. 

Previews 
For X factors, keys to the game, players to watch and predictions, you should check out our round table preview with the voice of Utica hockey, Ray Biggs, the voice of Bowdoin hockey, Rob Kennedy, and the hockey beat writer for the Oswegonian, Andrew Pugilese. 

For Bowdoin Athletics written preview, click here. For Bowdoin's interview with senior co-captain Harry Matheson, find the embed below.

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For D3Hockey.com's preview of the NCAA first round, including a breakdown statistically, click here. The aformentioned USCHO preview with quotes from Bowdoin coach Terry Meagher can be found here.


The jokes will get old quick, but at least give us a 24 hour shelf-life to crack fun as no one was hurt and damage was minimal. Today's preview song is Dave Matthews "Crash into Me")

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

NCAA D-III Men's Hockey Tournament: Bowdoin at Oswego Round Table


The Bowdoin seniors have won three NESCAC title games, but they
lost to Oswego in the NCAA tournament in their freshman year. 
After winning the NESCAC tournament as the conference's fifth seed, the Bowdoin Polar Bears (17-8-2) travel to upstate New York Wednesday night (7 PM) to face the SUNY-AC champion Oswego Lakers (20-6-2) in an NCAA D-III men's hockey tournament first round game.

We invited Ray Biggs, Rob Kennedy, and Andrew Pugilese to help us preview the third NCAA tournament match-up in five years (Oswego won 7-5 and 9-2 in 2010,11 Quarterfinals) between these two schools. Biggs is the voice of Utica College men's hockey and host of "The Stampede", a sports talk radio show covering D-III hockey on Utica's WPNR-FM 90.7. NESCAC fans know Kennedy as the voice of Bowdoin  hockey on Northeast Sports Network and Pugilese is the assistant sports editor/men's hockey beat writer for The Oswegonian, SUNY Oswego's student-run newspaper.

Thanks to all our panelists for their contribution. If you want to chime in, you can find them on twitter: Ray Biggs (@feathermoose44), Rob Kennedy ( @RobKennedy70) and Andrew Pugliese (@PuGonian) from @OswegonianSport. 

The X-Factor in this game...
Ray Biggs: ...Special Teams. Oswego has a great power play. Bowdoin does as well, but both teams are average penalty killing squad. Whichever team is more efficient on special teams overall will likely be the victor. 

Rob Kennedy: ...Fatigue. Bowdoin has been on the road for two weeks now. They went to Middlebury for the NESCAC Quarterfinals two weekends ago, and then Connecticut this past weekend for the NESCAC Championships. They left Tuesday for Oswego after about 36 hours in Brunswick. That's a lot of travel; it's quite a grind for players who aren't used to that kind of schedule. However, the Bears have been finding ways to win these road games that very few thought they'd win--the Trinity game especially. They're confident, but how much can mind over matter win out, especially if this is a physical, fast paced contest? At some point, I wonder if the run of games catches up with them. It sure won't help against a talented team like Oswego. 


Andrw Pugilese: Oswego State senior forward, captain David Titanic: Throughout the SUNYAC Championships, Oswego struggled on the penalty kill, allowing six power play goals on 13 opportunities. In each game, the power play goals allowed shifted the momentum of the contest. Bowdoin touts an offense and power play that are both ranked in the top 15 nationally. The Lakers will need their senior captain, known for his grit, hard work and skill in the defensive zone, to step up when the Polar Bears go on the attack. Titanic’s play during the Lakers final penalty kill of Saturday’s game at Geneseo, including two key blocked shots, set the tone for a successful two minutes down a skater. The Lakers thwarted the Knights power play and went on to score the game-winner on a power play of its own just minutes later. His effort and leadership during the team’s short handed play, and throughout the game as a whole, may very well be the difference between his career at Oswego State continuing or ending on Wednesday night.


Bowdoin wins if....
RB: They can do four things:
 1. Use their speed to get on the majority of 50/50 pucks. The NHL Size sheet favors a larger Oswego team that can possess the puck on the walls all day long. If they can do it against Utica, they can do it against Bowdoin, too. 
2. Capitalize on their transition opportunities and test the still young Oswego goaltenders in one on one situations.
3. Sacrifice bodies on the PK to protect goalie Max Fenkell. Oswego is a team that loves to walk in their points on the 1-3-1 power play and bomb one-timers from the circles. The Polar Bears may be best served to pack inside and let Oswego do its thing from the perimeter. If they don't get caught chasing the puck at a bad time, they should be ok.
4. Do their damage in the first 40 minutes. Oswego has just two wins this year when trailing at the end of two.

RK: Bowdoin does three things. The first is that they need to have not just solid, but stellar goaltending. The Bears netminding situation has been so strange this year. Each guy seemed to get the "top dog" position and then play his way out of it. Steve Messina seemingly had the  #1 position sewn up until he was in net for the Bears regular-season finale loss at Tufts, a defeat that cost them home ice in the first round of the playoffs. So when the playoffs started against Middlebury, Max Fenkell got his first start since losing his bid to be the regular starter after a poor performance at Amherst on Feb 8. Fenkell played well enough in the win to earn the nod against Trinity and Amherst and he was very strong, especially in the 2nd period against the Lord Jeffs in which the Bears were pinned in their own zone for long periods at a time. If he continues to play at that level, they can win the game.

Second, Bowdoin obviously has to stay out of the box. Oswego had the best PP in the SUNYAC and the 4th best in the nation, and Matt Galati is an assassin when his team is up a man. The Bears are very good killing penalties, and held the nation's best PP (Trinity) to 1 for 6 on Saturday. And the Bears can score shorthanded: their 12 shorthanded goals far and away lead the nation. Connor Quinn and Colin Downey are both very aggressive. They are not afraid to pressure a team's PP unit and aggressively forecheck as they're fast enough to get back in the play even after attacking deep in the offensive zone. But obviously, even as venemous as they are shorthanded, anyone lives dangerously by letting Oswego play with an extra skater.  

Third, Meagher's men need secondary scoring.  Bowdoin spent so much of the year depending on Downey, Quinn, Matt Rubinoff and John McGinnis for so much of their goal output. Since mid-January, it seems like there's a new guy scoring big goals every night--at least in games they win. Harry Matheson's scoring has been down this year: he scored a big goal against Trinity and had 2 assists against Middlebury. Kyle Lockwood's battled nagging injuries all year: he seems to be coming into form at the right time--he has 4 goals in his last 5 games. Mitch Barrington hit an OT winner in late January against Middlebury, Danny Palumbo opened the scoring Sunday against Amherst. I think that's what they'll need to beat Oswego is a couple of goals from guys who haven't been the go-to offensive sources. 

AP: They win the physical battle. Oswego State is a strong passing team and its play on the forecheck, especially by Morgan Bonner, Chris Waterstreet and Josh Timpano, does well to open up passing lanes. The Polar Bears will need to out muscle the Laker enforcers, and disrupt the flow of their offense, in order to create turnovers in the defensive and neutral zone. A maximum number of turnovers will be needed for Bowdoin, who was outshot in each of its conference tournament games against Trinity College and Amherst College. The more shots on freshman Matt Zawadzki’s net, the more chances to score and the chances of victory increase.

 Oswego wins if...
RB:  They can do three things:
1. They make smart breakout decisions. Terry Meagher's bunch  is more than capable of making his opposition cough up the puck in their own end. 
2. The transition game is clicking. Like their predecessors, this Oswego team continues to see the ice well and make smart decisions on the rush to manufacture multiple chances each game. As a guy who has seen the Lakers play three times this season, it seems like other than some early consistency problems and the names on the jerseys, very little has changed for Oswego.
3. They can finish their checks cleanly. They come into Wednesday's game as the significantly larger team, and they specialize in taking their opponents out of the play without racking up a ton of minutes in the box. 

RKBowdoin has trouble getting the puck out of their own end as they did at times this year, the Lakers seem to have the talent to really punish Bowdoin. Bowdoin's had turnover issues for long stretches of games in the regular season; those seemed to improve as we headed into February, but they have room for a relapse against a team as offensively capable as Oswego. The Bears depend a great deal on freshmen on their blueline, and their kids will have to continue to deal well with the pressure as they head to Oswego. 

AP: They are  able to get players to the net throughout the game. Over the past month, the Lakers have done very well moving the puck around in the offensive zone under all circumstances. Their shortcoming has been getting players to the net to pick up rebounds and loose pucks. Oswego State has won five of seven games during this span, its two losses coming at the beginning of the stretch to SUNY Geneseo and The College at Brockport. The Lakers won the shots on goal battle in both contests, but their inability to take advantage of chances around the net led to just four goals on 84 shots during the two games. The Knights and Golden Eagles were able to clear Oswego State out of the crease and take some of the pressure off of their goalies.

Player to watch from Bowdoin 
RB: Colin Downey. Downey has had a career season for a Bowdoin team that took a slightly more scenic route to NCAAs than they have in years past. Without Ollie Koo, Downey has shown he can carry the load and will have to make the most of his ice time on Wednesday night. 

RK: The Bowdoin youth. Let's stay away from the usual suspects like Quinn, Downey, McGinnis, etc. I'll put Matt Rubinoff on the list of players to watch, because he's been such a catalyst for the team when he's out there: he compliments whoever he skates with extremely well. Matt Sullivan's a similar type of guy who brings a lot of energy but hasn't seen that pay off on the score sheet, but he's another guy who gives the Bears very good minutes from a 3rd line position. But overall, I think it's the defensemen that we'll have to put the spotlight on, especially Jay Kourkoulis, who besides taking some untimely penalties looked very good this weekend, Ryan Collier, Joe Lace and Brendan Conroy--all of whom surround captain Jay Livermore and make opponents battle for scoring opportunities, especially when they're good with the puck.

Player to watch from Oswego 
RB: Mike Montagna. The transfer from Vermont always seems to be in position when an opposing netminder makes a mistake. He's great at cleaning up rebounds in front and protects the puck extremely well.

AP:    Alex Botten  Freshman forward Alex Botten: The SUNYAC Championships’ Most Valuable Player, Botten’s conference-record tying five assists in the finals on Saturday epitomized his importance to the Lakers offense. On a team filled with goal scorers, from Matt Galati to Brandon Adams, they all need some one who can set them up and be a playmaker. For Ed Gosek’s team, that player is Botten. His 13 points in conference play were good enough for fourth among freshmen and his total of 24 assists, in all games, is currently tied for sixth in the nation. Botten’s ability to find his teammates, while staying a threat to score himself (with eight goals on the season), makes him a player any opponent needs to plan for.

Predictions 
RB: While this is by far the most competitive of the three opening round matchups, I can't see a red hot Oswego State team screeching to a halt just yet, especially not after a rousing win against Geneseo. Bowdoin, who has heated up significantly in the NESCAC Playoffs, will put up their best showing in three recent NCAA meetings with the Lakers, but will fall short. Oswego cans 2 powerplay goals and it makes the difference, 5-3 Oswego

RK I didn't expect Bowdoin to beat Trinity, and I had a bad feeling about Amherst as well, since the Bears have just been so inconsistent this year. They have everything against them tonight: long travel, fatigue, and perhaps the best opponent they've seen all year. They don't tend to do very well at Oswego, to say the least: they were brutalized 9-2 in 2010 and lost 7-5 in 2011. It wouldn't surprise me to see Bowdoin find a way to win this game, because that's what they've done over the past three, but I think I'll go with my head over my heart and say 5-3 Oswego .

AP4-3 Oswego

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Bowdoin travels to Oswego for First Round game, Trinity left out of NCAA Tournament

The NCAA announced the 11 team field for the D-III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament on a live webcast tonight. Bowdoin (17-8-2), who won the NESCAC championship today in double overtime against Amherst today as a fifth seed, is headed to Oswego, NY  to face the Lakers, the automatic qualifiers from the SUNY-AC. The perennial powerhouse Lakers were supposed to be in rebuild mode this year, but had a solid season at 20-6-2 and upset Geneseo (21-6-0), 7-6, in a shootout of a SUNYAC championship game.

Ironically enough, the Lakers might have held Trinity (21-5-0) from getting an at large bid. Geneseo ended up taking one of the three at-large Pool-C bids. The other two went to Norwich (19-6-3), the ECAC East runner-up and Adrian (22-2-4) of the NCHA. The Bantams are shutout from the tournament after coming it at the first spot in the East in each of the three public NCAA regional rankings, which are supposedly used for seeding and deciding at-large bids.

In order for Bowdoin to get to the NCAA D-III Frozen Four they are hosting in Lewiston, the Polar Bears will have to beat the Lakers and then the ECAC-E champion Babson Beavers (22-4-2). The Lakers are no stranger to Bowdoin, as the Polar Bears lost 7-5 to Oswego in the 2011 NCAA Quarterfinals and the year before, 9-2, also in the NCAA Quarterfinals. Bowdoin has faced Babson 53 times with the Polar Bears holding a 32-19-2 edge. The Beavers and Bowdoin last met in 2010 with Terry Meagher's team winning 7-3. Babson faced off against three NESCAC teams this year, defeating Amherst and Colby at home and losing to Williams in Williamstown.

Below is the full NCAA Tournament bracket from NCAA.com .


First Round
March 12

SUNY Geneseo
MAR. 12
Nichols

Norwich
MAR. 12
Salem State

Oswego State
MAR. 12
Bowdoin
Quarterfinals
March 15

St. Norbert
MAR. 15
Adrian

MAR. 15

Babson
MAR. 15

St. Thomas (Minn.)
MAR. 15
Wis.-Stevens Pt.
Semifinals
March 21, Lewiston, Maine

MAR. 21
4:00P.M.

MAR. 21
Championship
March 22, Lewiston, Maine
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
MAR. 22