Box score
Postgame comments (
Jim Madigan &
Mike McLaughlin -
YouTube.com)
The Northeastern men's hockey team will play in the championship game of the Mariucci Classic on New Year's Eve after the Huskies tied Princeton in the tournament's first semifinal bout, 3-3, but eventually skated to the finals after
Justin Daniels ended the shootout in the eighth round.
Northeastern's six-game winning streak was halted but the unbeaten spell stretches to seven after the Huskies surrendered three one-goal leads on Friday night at Mariucci Arena. Princeton's power play unit registered three power play goals to tie the contest up on three separate occasions.
Sophomore
Braden Pimm accounted for his second-career two-goal outing while junior
Vinny Saponari tallied his second goal as a Husky and first since Oct. 9 (at Maine).
Junior
Steve Quailer extended his point streak to a team and career-best eight games after assisting on Pimm's second marker of the night.
Junior
Chris Rawlings made 23 saves in the draw while Tigers' netminder Mike Condon steered away 38 Northeastern blasts. The Huskies outshot Princeton, 41-26, marking the second time this season NU has outshot its opponent (PC – Nov. 18).
Quailer committed the first penalty of the game at 1:50 and gave Princeton the first man advantage of the contest. The Tigers were snuffed out by the Huskies' penalty kill and managed to discharge only one shot on Rawlings.
The Huskies' first grade-A chance of the contest arrived at 5:40 of the first period after junior
Drew Daniels set up rookie
Ludwig Karlsson in between the circles from the far boards. Karlsson made one move to his right, but Condon maintained his stance and tamed the wrist shot.
Northeastern's first power play came after an Eric Meland interference whistle at 6:44, but the Huskies' chance mimicked Princeton's and only tested Condon a couple times.
Sophomores
Cody Ferriero and
Anthony Bitetto were sent off for respective infractions of hooking and interference at 9:31 and 10:17 to set up a Princeton two-man advantage of 1:14. The Huskies did a great job of clogging the middle but the Tigers missed a couple wide-open opportunities in the slot to aid NU's huge kill.
The march to the penalty box continued after Tucker Brockett was assessed a trip at 13:40. Saponari had an unattested opportunity on the near post but could not convert.
The scoring picked up in the waning moments thanks to some special teams' action. Ferriero took his second penalty of the first period (charging – 19:03), but the Huskies won a draw deep in their zone and the Pimm-McLaughlin connection drew first blood at 19:15. Princeton touched the puck after the draw, but Pimm poked it out to himself on the near boards and connected with a wide-open McLaughlin in the neutral zone. McLaughlin skated in alone and bounced it off of Condon, allowing Pimm the chance to swoop in and pounce on the loose carom for the short-handed tally and a 1-0 lead.
Princeton deflated Northeastern's momentum with just four seconds left in the first period and cashed in on Ferriero's penalty. Michael Sdao created the play and discovered Jack Berger unmanned in between the circles. Sdao deferred to Berger at 19:56 and Berger knocked in the wrister to tie the game with the power play marker, 1-1.
Jeremy Goodwin took a holding call at 2:40 of the second and junior
Garrett Vermeersch nearly regained the lead for Northeastern on a tic-tac-toe play from behind the net. Condon was in position to turn away another Husky power play bid.
Northeastern gained its fourth power play of the day after Rob Kleebaum was cited for boarding at 5:04. Princeton's aggressive kill along the boards kept the Huskies at bay despite a couple strong blasts from Bitetto at the top of the zone.
A 4-on-4 situation dissipated near the midway point of the second session and the Huskies' upped their pressure in the Tigers' zone, but could not penetrate. Condon kept PU in the game as his club registered only three shots in the second period.
Saponari broke the scoreless stretch thanks to some fancy stick work in front of the net at 4:35 of the third period. Vermeersch won a scrum along the boards out to Saponari in the near corner. A Tiger defenseman descended onto Saponari, but he juked his pursuer to the right and had a clear lane to the net. Saponari brought the puck around to his forehand right in front of the crease and stuffed the puck underneath Condon's pads to take the 2-1 advantage.
The Tigers claimed their second 5-on-3 advantage of the evening after rookie
Adam Reid (8:24) and Saponari (9:25) went away, in that order, for a 59-second window of a PU two-man advantage.
Reid' infraction expired but Tyler Magueri made the Huskies pay at 10:40 for Princeton's second power play tally of the night. Meland set the play up from the neutral zone and triggered from just within the blue line on NU's net. Rawlings could not handle the rebound and Magueri was in front to stash away the loose rebound to knot it back up, 2-2.
Pimm broke the Huskies away again 37 seconds later on a similar-style goal as Magueri's at 11:17. Quailer made a nice play along the far boards and cycled the disc up to Ferriero. Ferriero carried the puck into the corner and flipped it to the front of the net where Pimm was in position to jam it home on the doorstep to give Northeastern the 3-2 advantage.
Princeton capitalized on a sophomore
Luke Eibler penalty at 11:32 for its third power play strike of the contest. Andrew Calof bestowed Kevin Ross with a perfect pass in between the circles. Ross quickly unleashed a crisp wrist shot over Rawlings' blocker to button the game up, 3-3, at 12:20 of the third period.
Regulation ended in a 3-3 draw despite Will MacDonald nearly ending it with a rip at 19:15.
In the overtime session, Marc Hagel almost tipped in a centering pass in front 20 seconds in, but his stick nudged the puck just wide of the net. Northeastern maintained possession for a majority of the five-minute window, but could not find the back of the net.
A shootout was then put in place to determine who would advance to the championship game of the Mariucci Classic Tournament.
After both Rawlings and Condon displayed some great goaltending, J. Daniels managed to trickle the puck through Condon's pads in the eighth round of the shootout to send the Huskies to the championship game of the Mariucci Classic with a sharp, low wrist shot.
Northeastern will ring in the New Year tomorrow night, Dec. 31, at Mariucci Arena to take on the winner of the Niagara / Minnesota in the championship game of the Mariucci Classic. Game time is schedule for either 3 p.m. (CST) / 4 p.m. (EST) or 6 p.m. (CST) / 7 p.m. (EST).
SHOOTOUT
P: Andrew Calof (Did not get a hard shot off)
N:
Braden Pimm (Tried to craft a 360 around Condon, but could not finish)
P: Rob Kleebaum (Wide wrist shot that sailed to the left)
N:
Vinny Saponari (Tried to go up high but Condon nipped it with the glove)
P: Jack Berger (Wrister shot blocked to the right)
N:
Ludwig Karlsson (Double deke in front of Condon that was kick-saved away)
P: Tyler Magueri (Backhand bid denied by Rawlings)
N:
Steve Quailer (Wrist shot sailed wide to the left)
P: Will MacDonald (Wrist shot to five-hole kicked aside by Rawlings)
N:
Garrett Vermeersch (Puck slipped off the backhand and could not get shot off)
P: Marc Hagel (Glove save by Rawlings on the wrist shot)
N:
Anthony Bitetto (Kick saved on the wrist shot)
P: Brodie Zuk (Backhand snuffed out to Rawlings' right side)
N:
Cody Ferriero (Hard wrist shot gloved away by Condon)
P: Aaron Kesselman (Deke to Rawlings' left goes wide)
N:
Justin Daniels (Beats Condon five-hole on the low wrist shot front for the shootout win)
Game Notes
• Northeastern's seven-game unbeaten streak is the longest since the 2007-08 season when the Huskies went 9-0-2 over an 11-game stretch from Nov. 3, 2007 to Jan. 4, 2008. In the 1966-67 season under Jim Bell and the 1981-82 season under Ferny Flaman, the Huskies won seven-consecutive games. Northeastern's best winning and unbeaten streak in program history spans 12 games to start the 1980-81 season under Flaman (Nov. 25, 1980 to Jan. 20, 1981). The Huskies have won six games straight and lost on four occasions (1947-48, 1950-51, 1951-52, 1997-98). The Dec. 30 draw against Princeton marks the first time in program history the Huskies have won six-consecutive games and then tied.
• Northeastern's 3-0-1 start to December is the first time in program history the Huskies have settled on that mark during that month. NU went 5-0-0 rom Dec. 3-20, 1980 and Dec. 6-19, 1952 before going 4-0-0 from Dec. 6-29, 2003. NU has never started December with a 3-0-1 mark.
• Junior
Steve Quailer elongated his point streak to a whopping eight games. Quailer assisted on
Braden Pimm's goal and has now accounted for five goals and eight assists (5-8-13) over that stretch. It marks the longest career point streak of any career Husky. The school record is 19 games set by Jay Heinbuck in 1985-86.
•
Braden Pimm registered his second two-goal game of the season/career, turning the trick for the first time since beating Notre Dame, 9-2, on Dec. 2, 2011. Pimm also scored his first-career short-handed goal to get the scoring started for Northeastern. Pimm's short-handed goal marked Northeastern's third of the season.
• Northeastern is 0-2-3 in overtime games this season. Friday's tie with Princeton marked NU's first draw since losing at Matthews Arena against Merrimack on Nov. 5, 3-2.
• Senior captain
Mike McLaughlin returned from injury after a five-game hiatus and assisted on
Braden Pimm's short-handed goal. It marked the captain's 106th-career outing and 16th-career assist (21-16-37).
• Tomorrow night's contest marks junior
Vinny Saponari's 100th-career collegiate contest. Saponari scored his second goal as a Husky and his first in 15 games. The Powder Springs, Ga. native last scored at Maine on Oct. 9 in short-handed fashion.
• Northeastern went 0-for-7 on the power play as Princeton went 3-for-8.