2010–11 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season

The 2010–11 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season began in October, ending with the 2011 NCAA Division I Women's Ice Hockey Tournament's championship game in March, 2011. The Frozen Four was hosted by Mercyhurst College at Louis J. Tullio Arena in Erie, Pennsylvania.[1]

Offseason

  • May 26: 2010 Winter Olympian Karen Thatcher has been named an assistant coach at Colgate.[2]
  • June 2, 2010: The University of Connecticut men's and women's ice hockey teams will play outdoor games at Rentschler Field on Sunday, Feb. 13. This event will be part of the "Whalers Hockey Fest". The UConn men's team will take on Sacred Heart. The women's team will face the Providence Friars women's ice hockey program in a Hockey East game.[3]
  • June 2, 2010: 2010 Canadian Olympic gold medallists Catherine Ward and Marie-Philip Poulin have tentatively agreed to join the Boston University Terriers.[4]
  • June 7: Yale Bulldogs head coach Hilary Witt will leave the program at the end of June. Witt coached the Bulldogs for eight seasons and is the program's most victorious coach, accumulating 96 wins during her tenure.[5]
  • June 7: Mandi Schwartz was recently diagnosed for a second time with acute myeloid leukemia. Schwartz will require a cord-blood or blood-marrow donor.[6]
  • June 7: Olympic silver medallist Julie Chu has been named as an assistant coach.[7] Previously, Chu was assistant coach for the University of Minnesota Duluth women's hockey team that won the 2008 NCAA National Championship.
  • August 27: Mercyhurst Lakers player Meghan Agosta was announced as a finalist for the Women's Sports Foundation's 2010 Sportswoman of the Year Team Award. It is awarded to the top female athlete (NCAA, Olympic, professional) who has demonstrated exceptional play in helping her team win a championship.[8]
  • September 13: The Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs visit the White House and are honored in a Rose Garden ceremony with President Barack Obama as the 2010 NCAA National Champions.[9]
  • September 17: Terrence M. and Kim Pegula from Boca Raton, Florida have donated $88 million to Penn State University for a multi-purpose arena. The arena will mean that Penn State will add an NCAA Division I men's hockey program and a Division I women's hockey program.[10] PSU plans to play as an independent for two years starting in 2012.[11] The new arena was scheduled to open in April 2014.

Season outlook

Preseason polls

  • USA Today/USA Hockey Women's Rankings
RankNCAA schoolPoints
1Minnesota Duluth187
2Cornell167
3Mercyhurst136
4Boston University132
5Wisconsin115
6Minnesota106
7Clarkson70
8Boston College46
9Harvard39
10Ohio State12

[12]

Exhibition

CIS Exhibition

DateNCAA schoolOpponentScoreNCAA goal scorers
Sept. 24ProvidenceMcGill3-1[13]
Sept. 24Boston CollegeWindsor3–0, BC[14]Ashley Motherwell, Danielle Doherty, Mary Restuccia
Sept. 25Boston UniversityWindsor4–1, BU[15]Jillian Kirchner
Jill Cardella
Britt Hergesheimer
Louise Warren
Sept 25MercyhurstWilfrid Laurier7–0, Mercyhurst[16]Cassea Schols, Pamela Zgoda, Kelley Steadman, Lauren Jones, Christie Cicero, Samantha Watt, Kylie Rossler
Sept. 25ProvidenceMcGill6-4[17]
Sept. 26NortheasternMcGill3–2 (OT), Northeastern[18]Katie McSorley
Lori Antflick
Kristi Kehoe (game winner)
Sept. 26MinnesotaManitoba8–0[19]Amanda Kessel (3), Emily West (2), Jen Schoullis, Becky Kortum, Nikki Ludwigson
Oct. 2Ohio StateWilfird LaurierOhio State, 2–0[20]Hokey Langan, Tina Hollowell[21]
Oct. 2VermontMcGillTie, 2–2[22]Emily Walsh, Celeste Doucet
Oct. 23HarvardMcGill2-2[23]

Other

DateNCAA schoolOpponentTimeScoreGoal scorers
09/24/2010QuinnipiacOntario Hockey Academy7:00 ETQpac, 3–1[24]Kelly Babstock (2), Lindsay Burman
09/25/10UnionEtobicoke (PWHL)7:00 pm3–0
09/25/10North DakotaToronto Aeros2:07 p.m. CT9–0Sara Dagenais, Mary Loken (2), Jocelyne Lamoureux (3), Monique Lamoureux (2)[25]
10/15/2010CornellEtobicoke (PWHL)7:00 ET6–0[26]Rebecca Johnston (2), Brianne Jenner, Jessica Campbell, Hayley Hughes

News and notes

October

  • October 1: Mercyhurst Lakers player Meghan Agosta joined Jesse Scanzano as only the second Mercyhurst player to have 100 career assists. She picked up the assist in the second period.[27]
  • October 1: In her first game as a Golden Gopher, Amanda Kessel registered four points (two goals, two assists). The following day, Kessel scored the game-winning goal as the Gophers won by a 3–0 score. The game against Clarkson marked the first time in school history that the Gophers opened a season against a ranked opponent.[28]
  • October 2: Olympic gold medallist Marie-Philip Poulin debuted with the Boston University Terriers women's ice hockey program. In her first game, she scored the first goal of her NCAA career. It was a 4–5 loss at North Dakota.[29]
  • October 9: With the 1–0 shutout over Wayne State, the Gophers have not allowed a goal in 180 minutes. Dating back to the 2009–10 season, Minnesota has not allowed a goal in 200:45 minutes played.[30]
  • October 12: The WCHA had five of its teams ranked in the two national polls for the week.[31] It is believed to be the first time five WCHA teams have ever been ranked among the top 10 in the nation at one time.
  • October 15: Bailey Bram registered two assists, including her 100th career point, in a game against the Bemidji State Beavers. She became the 11th Lakers player to crack the century mark in the 4–0 win.[32]
  • October 15: With her third shorthanded goal of the season on October 15, freshman Marie-Philip Poulin tied BU's single-season record for shorthanded tallies in just four games.
  • October 16: In a 7–1 win against Connecticut, Isabel Menard recorded the first hat trick in Syracuse Orange women's ice hockey history (and added an assist).[32]
  • On October 23, 2010, Jocelyne Lamoureux had a hat trick and one assist. In addition, one of her goals was the game-winning goal. The hat trick was the first by a North Dakota player since Cami Wooster in 2005.[33]
  • As the Lakers went 6–1–0 in October 2010, Bestland scored four goals, including two in a 7–3 defeat of the Robert Morris Colonials. In addition, she had six assists. In her first game as a Laker, she scored a goal. She registered points in five of the seven games played and finished the month with a plus/minus rating of +13. For her efforts, she was recognized as College Hockey America's Rookie of the Month.[34]

November

  • November 12–13: Kelly Babstock made Quinnipiac hockey history as she accounted for six of the seven goals scored over the weekend. Babstock registered back to back hat tricks against ECAC opponents (No. 10 ranked Harvard and Dartmouth). In addition, she is the first skater in Quinnipiac history to record two hat tricks in one season. As of November 14, Babstock led the team and the entire NCAA in goals (13) and points (27).[35]
  • November 13: The 1–0 shutout by Connecticut on November 13 ended New Hampshire's 17-game unbeaten streak against the Huskies The Huskies penalty kill was a perfect 6-of-6 on the weekend. The shutout on November 13 marked the first time the Wildcats were shut out at home since Nov. 28, 2004 (by Mercyhurst), a streak of 109 consecutive home games.[36]
  • November 21: Northeastern player Katie McSorley recorded her first career hat trick and added two assists as the Huskies prevailed by a 5-1 tally over the Providence Friars. The hat trick was the first hat trick for a Northeastern player since Julia Marty in 2008.[37] It was also the first five-point game by a Husky since Chelsey Jones tallied five points against Maine on Dec. 3, 2006.

December

  • Dec . 1: Northeastern Huskies freshman Rachel Llanes scored the first and last goal of the game in Northeastern's 4-0 win over New Hampshire with six shots on goal. It was her first-ever multi-goal game. Another freshman, Katie MacSorley scored a goal in the 4-0 win over New Hampshire. Florence Schelling made 22 saves for her third shutout of the season. With the win, Northeastern snapped a 27-game unbeaten streak (0-26-1) against New Hampshire.[38] Their last win over New Hampshire was Jan. 21, 2001, a 2-1 win. In addition, the fact that it was a shutout victory marks the first over UNH in the history of the program.
  • On Friday, Dec. 3 against Brown, Kelly Babstock became Quinnipiac's all-time leader in goals scored in a season by netting her 16th goal of the season. Babstock's nation leading sixth game-winning goal against Yale on Saturday, Dec. 4 was part of a Bobcats 3–1 win.[39]
  • January 3, 7-8: In three games played, Rachel Weber earned three victories and allowed only one goal. On January 3, she defeated Quinnipiac by a 3-0 tally and shutout Clarkson by a 2-0 score on January 7. The following day, she gave up her only goal of the week in a 3-1 win over St. Lawrence. Her shutout streak spanned six games and lasted 289:43. She is now the owner of the longest shutout streak in ECAC history[40] and the fourth longest in NCAA Division I since the 2000-01 season.
  • January 7–8: Cornell freshman goaltender Lauren Slebodnik earned two shutouts in her first two career starts.[40] On January 7, she made her NCAA debut by shutting out Yale by a 5-0 margin. With Cornell dressing just 12 skaters, she stopped all 23 Yale shots. The following night, Slebodnik shut out the Brown Bears by a 3-0 mark. Cornell only dressed 11 skaters for the game and she stopped all 15 shots.

January

  • January 15: Bailey Bram registered two goals and four assists for a career-high six points as Mercyhurst defeated Brown 12-0. Mercyhurst notched 12 goals in a game for the first time since the 1999-2000 season.[41]
  • On January 16, the Boston University Terriers defeated Maine and set a program record with their 11th home win of the season. The previous mark was 10 wins during the 2006-07 season.[42]
  • On January 22, 2011, Marie-Philip Poulin recorded a hat trick, including two power play goals as BU prevailed over Vermont in a 4-0 win. The win was the Terriers 100th win in program history. Poulin broke BU's single-season points record with her second goal of the game and later tied the single-season goals record with her third marker.[43]
  • January 21–22: Meghan Agosta recorded five points on two goals and three assists in a two-game sweep of Robert Morris. With the five point effort, Agosta is now just seven points away from breaking former Harvard player Julie Chu’s mark of 285 points to become the NCAA all-time points leader.[44]
  • Jan 21-22: Wisconsin right winter Meghan Duggan led the top-ranked Badgers with four scoring points in a win and tie at defending national champion Minnesota Duluth. Duggan registered two goals and two assists against the Bulldogs, recorded nine shots on goal and finished with a +4 plus/minus rating in the two games. She led all players with three points in the January 21 win (4-1). She scored the Badgers first goal of the game (it was the first women’s college hockey goal scored at the Bulldogs new AMSOIL Arena). In the second period, she assisted on a power-play tally to give Wisconsin a 3-0 lead. In the final two minutes, she had an empty net goal. The following day, both clubs skated to a 4-4 tie (Wisconsin prevailed 2-1 in the shootout). Duggan assisted on the Badgers’ second goal of the game and extended her current point streak to 22 games, the longest individual point streak in Wisconsin women's hockey history. On January 21, she broke the previous mark of 20 games set by Meghan Hunter from Oct. 14, 2000 to Jan. 12, 2001.[45]
  • The January 29, 2011 game between Wisconsin and Minnesota was played before a women's college

hockey record crowd of 10,668.[46]

February

  • On February 4, 2011, Meghan Agosta became the all-time leading scorer in NCAA women's hockey history with three goals and one assist in Mercyhurst College's 6-2 win over Wayne State in Erie, Pennsylvania.[47] Agosta's four points gave her 286 career points, one more than ex-Harvard forward Julie Chiu's record of 285 set in 2006-07. Agosta, who also owns the record for most short-handed goals and game-winning goals, added three assists in the Lakers' 3-1 win over Wayne State on February 5.[48]
  • February 25, 2011: Meghan Agosta scored her 151st career goal to become all-time leading goal scorer in NCAA history. She accomplished this in a 6-2 victory over the Robert Morris Colonials women's ice hockey program at the Mercyhurst Ice Center. She surpassed Harvard's Nicole Corriero, who set the record at 150 during the 2004-05 season. The goal was scored on the power play at 15:18 of the second period with the assist going to Bailey Bram. She later added her 152nd goal in the third period.[49]

Sports Illustrated

  • Kelly Babstock was featured in Sports Illustrated's Faces in the Crowd feature in the January 17, 2011 issue (as recognition of breaking several Quinnipiac scoring records).[50]
  • Meghan Agosta was also featured in the Faces in the Crowd feature in the February 21, 2011 issue (as recognition of becoming the all-time NCAA scorer).[51]

Regular season

Standings

2010–11 College Hockey America standings
Overall Conference
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#5 Mercyhurst†*27225044144541111006115
Niagara289145234168126422326
Syracuse2811134267179105412323
Robert Morris2951951559117132832649
Wayne State268162185170121921939
Championship:
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Current rankings: USCHO.com Division I women's poll
  • Rankings based on number of wins in the conference
Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#2 Cornell†*22201141353131
Harvard221453313217114
Dartmouth221570308530
Princeton221381273116141
Quinnipiac221291253722123
Clarkson221084243714176
St. Lawrence2211110227430
Rensselaer228122189431
Colgate228122183311193
Yale22812218299173
Brown2211746292234
Union2211924342293
Championship: Cornell
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Current rankings: USCHO.com Division I women's poll

[52]

Overall Conference
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#4 Boston University32284460117562115336633
#7 Boston College*3120654592562113445532
#9 Providence35221214553432112815343
Connecticut187101153551219933639
Northeastern1810442448352161054248
Maine198741954422161233754
New Hampshire1991001833402171313550
Vermont3371792344772141342449
Championship: Boston College
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Current rankings: USCHO.com Division I women's poll

*Rankings based on number of wins in the conference

Conference Overall
GP W L T SW PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#1 Wisconsin†* 28242227614050 38342220366
#3 Minnesota 28188215710052 37269213165
#6 Minnesota-Duluth 28187305710949 33228313153
#8 North Dakota 28161020509679 3620133116103
Bemidji State 28111342395371 35141747088
Ohio State 28817333069100 361419399116
Minnesota State 28720102247101 36825353122
St. Cloud State 2812611523135 35133131177
Championship: Wisconsin
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Current rankings: USCHO.com Division I women's poll

Outdoor Games

  • The University of Connecticut men's and women's ice hockey teams will play outdoor games at Rentschler Field on Sunday, Feb. 13. This event will be part of the "Whalers Hockey Fest". The UConn men's team will take on Sacred Heart. The women's team will face the Providence Friars women's ice hockey program in a Hockey East game.[3]

Nutmeg Classic

The Nutmeg Classic will be contested on November 26 and 27. The tournament is hosted by the Quinnipiac Bobcats program. The other competing schools include the Connecticut Huskies women's ice hockey, Sacred Heart Pioneers, and Yale Bulldogs.

DateSchoolsScoreNotes
Nov. 26Quinnipiac vs. Sacred HeartQuinnipiac, 9-1Kelly Babstock scored two goals[53]
Nov. 26Yale vs. ConnecticutYale, 5-2
Nov. 27Connecticut vs. Sacred HeartConnecticut, 11-0
Nov. 27Quinnipiac vs. YaleQuinnipiac, 2-1Brittany Lyons scored game winner[54]

Easton Holiday Classic

The Easton Holiday Classic will be played in St. Cloud, Minnesota.

DateSchoolsScore
Jan. 1Wisconsin vs. NortheasternWisconsin, 7-2[55]
Jan. 1Mercyhurst vs. St. Cloud State
Jan. 2Wisconsin vs. Mercyhurst
Jan. 2Northeastern vs. St. Cloud StateNortheastern, 2-1[56]

Beanpot

The Beanpot will involve Boston College, Boston University, Northeastern and Harvard. Mary Restuccia was named MVP while Molly Schaus received the Bertagna Goaltending Award.

DateSchoolsScoreNotes
Feb. 8Northeastern vs. HarvardTie, 3-3Harvard wins in Shootout[57]
Feb. 8Boston College vs. Boston UniversityBC, 2-1Kelli Stack gets a goal and assist to become BC's all-time points leader[58]
Feb. 11Northeastern @ Boston UniversityBU, 4-3[59]Lauren Cherewyk scores game-winning goal
Feb. 12Boston University @ NortheasternBU, 5-1[60]Jennifer Wakefield scores two goals
Feb. 15Boston University @ NortheasternTie, 3-3[61]Consolation game
Feb. 15Boston College vs. HarvardBC, 3-1[62]BC wins fourth Beanpot

Scoring leaders

Hockey East

  • (Through March 10)
PlayerSchoolGPGAPPPGPIMPPSHGWHT+/-
Kelli StackBC343422561.65348483+27
Jenn WakefieldBU313021511.65307260+23
Marie-Philip PoulinBU252222441.76227332+23
Mary RestucciaBC351127381.09563040+18
Rachel LlanesNortheastern371219310.84124120+11

Awards and honors

Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award Nominees

  • February 21: Twenty-six players are among the list of nominees for the 2011 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, presented by Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine.[65] The list of 26 nominated players includes 17 forwards, five goaltenders and four defenders (from 12 different schools). Mercyhurst College, host of the 2011 NCAA Women's Frozen Four, leads all schools with five nominees.
NamePos.YrSchoolDivision
Meghan AgostaFSr.MercyhurstCHA
Kelly BabstockFFr.QuinnipiacECAC
Jenni BauerFSr.NiagaraCHA
Vicki BendusFSr.MercyhurstCHA
Bailey BramFJr.MercyhurstCHA
Brianna DeckerFSo.WisconsinWCHA
Meghan DugganFSr.WisconsinWCHA
Laura FortinoDSo.CornellECAC
Haley IrwinFJr.Minnesota-DuluthWCHA
Brianne JennerFFr.CornellECAC
Rebecca JohnstonFJr.CornellECAC
Hilary KnightFJr.WisconsinWCHA
Jocelyne LamoureuxFSo.North DakotaWCHA
Monique Lamoureux-KollsD/FSo.North DakotaWCHA
Jocelyne LarocqueDSr.Minnesota DuluthWCHA
Isabel MenardFSo.SyracuseCHA
Hillary PattendenGJr.MercyhurstCHA
Marie-Philip PoulinFFr.Boston UniversityHockey East
Noora RatyGSo.MinnesotaWCHA
Lauriane RougeauDSo.CornellECAC
Jesse ScanzanoFSr.MercyhurstCHA
Molly SchausGSr.Boston CollegeHockey East
Jackee SnikerisGSr.YaleECAC
Kelli StackFSr.Boston CollegeHockey East
Jenn WakefieldFJr.Boston UniversityHockey East
Catherine WardDefenseFr.Boston UniversityHockey East

Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award Finalists

March 3: The USA Hockey Foundation today announced the 10 finalists for the 2011 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award.

  • Meghan Agosta
  • Vicki Bendus
  • Meghan Duggan
  • Laura Fortino
  • Haley Irwin
  • Rebecca Johnston
  • Hilary Knight
  • Noora Raty
  • Molly Schaus
  • Kelli Stack

Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award Top 3

  • Meghan Agosta
  • Meghan Duggan (Winner)[66]
  • Kelli Stack

First team

Player  Position  School
Molly Schaus G Boston College
Laura Fortino D Cornell
Jocelyne Larocque D Minnesota-Duluth
Meghan Agosta F Mercyhurst
Meghan Duggan F Wisconsin
Hilary Knight F Wisconsin

[67]

Second team

Player  Position  School
Noora Raty G Minnesota
Lauriane Rougeau D Cornell
Catherine Ward D Boston University
Brianna Decker F Wisconsin
Rebecca Johnston F Cornell
Kelli Stack F Boston College

All Ivy League honors

  • Laura Fortino, Cornell, Ivy League Player of the Year
  • Brianne Jenner, Cornell, Ivy League Rookie of the Year

First Team All-Ivy

  • Brianne Jenner, Forward, Cornell
  • Rebecca Johnston, Forward, Cornell
  • Chelsea Karpenko, Forward, Cornell
  • Kelly Foley, Forward, Dartmouth
  • Laura Fortino, Defense, Cornell
  • Josephine Pucci, Defense, Harvard
  • Jackee Snikeris, Goaltender, Yale

Second Team All-Ivy

  • Catherine White, Forward, Cornell
  • Amanda Trunzo, Forward, Dartmouth
  • Liza Ryabkina, Forward, Harvard
  • Jillian Dempsey, Forward, Harvard
  • Lauriane Rougeau, Defense, Cornell
  • Sasha Sherry, Defense, Princeton
  • Rachel Weber, Goaltender, Princeton

Honorable Mention

  • Leanna Coskren, Defense, Harvard
  • Sasha Nanji, Defense, Dartmouth
  • Lindsay Holdcroft, Goaltender, Dartmouth

[68]

2010-11 New England Hockey Awards

  • Kelli Stack, Senior, Forward, Boston College, Player of the Year [69]
  • Mark Hudak, Dartmouth, Coach of the Year
Goalies
  • Molly Schaus, Senior, Boston College
  • Jackee Snikeris, Senior, Yale
Defense
Forwards
  • Kelly Babstock, Freshman, Quinnipiac
  • Marie-Philip Poulin, Freshman, Boston University
  • Mary Restuccia, Junior, Boston College
  • Jenn Wakefield, Junior, Boston University
  • Kelli Stack, Senior, Boston College
  • Kelly Foley, Junior, Dartmouth

Other

  • Amy Bourbeau, 2011 AHCA Assistant Coach Award (inaugural winner)[70]

Postseason tournaments

CHA championship game

March 5, 2011: In the CHA championship game, Meghan Agosta scored three goals to top 300 points for her career. The Lakers defeated Syracuse 5-4 and captured its ninth straight College Hockey America title.[71] Despite getting outshot 13-3 in the first period, Syracuse scored two goals on its first two attempts on the power play. Stefanie Marty gave the Orange an early 1-0 lead and Margot Scharfe scored the second goal.

  • Mercyhurst 5, Syracuse 4

ECAC championship game

  • Cornell 3, Dartmouth 0[72]

Hockey East championship game

  • Boston College 3, Northeastern 1[73]

WCHA championship game

  • Wisconsin 5, Minnesota 4 (OT)[74]

See also

References

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  2. "Thatcher Joins Colgate Staff". ECAC Hockey. May 26, 2010. Retrieved 12 June 2010.
  3. "Husky Hockey To Play Doubleheader At Rentschler Field". Connecticut Huskies athletics. June 2, 2010. Retrieved 12 June 2010.
  4. "BU Adding Three Olympians to 2010–11 Roster". USCHO.com. 2 June 2010. Archived from the original on 6 June 2010. Retrieved 12 June 2010.
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