1994: A 5-4 win over the Binghamton Rangers gives Providence four consecutive road victories.
2000: In the first rematch of the 1999 Calder Cup Finals, Chris Ferraro scores twice to bust a 2-2 tie and pace the P-Bruins to a 5-2 victory over the Rochester Americans at Blue Cross Arena.
2005: After losing each of their previous five games in regulation and all by a single goal, the P-Bruins splash their point-getting drought with a 7-5 barnburner against Bridgeport at The Dunk. Prior to the game, Andy Hilbert, who scores a hat trick in the win, is selected to the AHL’s PlanetUSA All-Stars while Patrice Bergeron is named to the Canadian team.
2006: Andrew Raycroft returns for one conditioning shift and backstops a 4-3 shootout win at Springfield.
2008: Tuukka Rask starts the AHL All-Star Game for PlanetUSA, stopping 10 out of 12 shots and preserving a 3-2 lead through one period. The Canadians eventually come back to claim a 9-8 victory at Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena in Binghamton.
2011: Trent Whitfield pilots the offense with a goal and two assists en route to a 4-2 home win over his old friends from Portland.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Friday, January 27, 2012
Comparing Careers: Alex Beaudry vs. Genevieve Lacasse
They each committed to their respective sectors of Schneider Arena for the purpose of launching a certain elevation of the Skating Friar’s status. Fate tantalized and stalled themselves and their fans throughout the first three seasons.
And now, it is the last of the early Groundhog Days for goaltenders Alex Beaudry and Genevieve Lacasse of the Providence College men’s and women’s hockey programs. Six weeks separate them from the first round of both the men’s Hockey East and women’s NCAA tournament, the boundaries to which these backstops have yet to cross.
As the last call for both parties draws closer, the paradoxical reality grows proportionately more evident. Lacasse is inherently more outstanding in her pool than Beaudry. But the men’s senior stopper -who is about two or three games away from surpassing Nolan Schaefer on the program's all-time saves leaderboard- is likely to have the more satisfying finish to his days on the Divine Campus.
From an individual legacy standpoint, Beaudry’s quest is more pressure-filled considering the consequences if fulfillment is not achieved. But his roadblocks are less qualitative and quantitative compared to what will vie to keep Lacasse from adding postseason success to her glossy resume.
Never before in Lacasse’s career have the PC women had a losing record, nationally or in the conference standings, this late in the season. Never in Beaudry’s career have the PC men been close to .500 overall or had a winning transcript in their Hockey East schedule with 11 games yet to come.
And yet, entering this weekend, both teams are on pace to finish with a passport to enemy ice for the opening round of their respective conference tournaments. Freeze the two leaderboards for the balance of the regular season and the women would pay a wild-card visit to Maine at the end of February while the men engage Boston College in a best-of-three at Conte Forum in early March.
That potentiality would be a downturn for Bob Deraney’s capstone class, which is the only program to have finished fourth or better in each of the decade-old WHEA’s first nine years of existence. It would be a mild, but welcome upgrade for first-year head coach Nate Leaman’s squad, which had its first three Hockey East playoff no-shows all in row to round out the Tim Army era.
At the same time, all things considered, it’s likely the best news crossover Friar Fanatics can request. Provided the men’s program performs respectably and does not limit itself to one win in its final 11 games, as it has done in each of Beaudry’s first three homestretches, they should see bonus action March 9, 10 and maybe 11.
If so, then mission accomplished for the mystery masked man who was hastily recruited between semesters in 2008-09 when Chris Mannix and Justin Gates were getting no better, aptitude-wise and Ryan Simpson was getting no better, health-wise.
For Lacasse and her underachieving skating mates, a postseason berth, no matter how unspectacular and unsatisfying, is not the most frightful scenario. The sole or shared holder of every PC women’s goaltending record need only backstop three straight elimination victories to secure the Hockey East pennant and automatic bid to the Elite Eight.
Easier said than done? Indubitably so. But remember that Lacasse is bolstering and piloting the graduating class of 2012, which was likened to the four-time conference champion class of 2005 upon enrollment, only to endure three straight semifinal losses so far.
Interspersed with overtaking three incumbent stoppers in Danielle Ciarletta, Christina England and Jen Smith and surpassing Jana Bugden and Sara DeCosta in the PC annals with otherworldly facility have been a ho-hum drowning in New Hampshire’s Lake Whittemore, a squandering of home-ice advantage at the hands of Connecticut and an agonizing overtime falter via Kelli Stack and Boston College.
On her fourth and final try at a title and national tournament, the lowdown is no different for Lacasse than in previous years. The Friars once again have to rely solely on the automatic bid if they are to visit a national quarterfinal host March 10 or 11.
Translation: Their uncharacteristically plebeian 9-15-3 and 6-7-1 records warrant no real regard. With one-third of their 21-game conference slate remaining, including two meetings apiece with the bottom-feeding UConn and UNH, the PC women have fewer excuses for missing the postseason than their male counterparts. Home ice for the quarterfinals is not out of the question, too.
Once there, Lacasse will have former U19 teammate Brittany Ott, Corinne Boyles, Kerrin Sperry and/or career-long rival Florence Schelling to arm-wrestle with. But it will be equally incumbent on fellow seniors Kate Bacon, Ashley Cottrell, Jen Friedman, Abby Gauthier, Christie Jensen and Laura Veharanta to incentivize themselves through all three zones.
Northeastern’s Schelling is the most daunting prospective adversary, seeing as she, too, is a celestial senior who has yet to win a pennant. The key for Deraney, Lacasse and Co. is to simply let a long-unquenched hunger outweigh stat-induced anxiety, but that will only be relevant between Feb. 25 and March 4.
Between now and then, Beaudry and his mediocre resume (career GAA and save percentage hovering around 3.00 and .900, respectively) will be asked to fulfill their end of the bargain and help the Friars outlast the likes of Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Northeastern and/or Vermont.
No sure thing there, either. But some head-to-head triumphs against the Minutemen (Feb. 11), Wildcats (Feb. 3-4) and Huskies (Feb. 17-18) will hustle the process along.
Assuming the Friars win as many, if not more games than the Huskies, the PC men could seal up the eighth and final playoff berth before the women play their quarterfinal. By then, Leaman’s pupils will have recompensed their share of slipups and stamped the beginning of their renaissance by ending a four-year postseason drought.
For Deraney, well, if you’re not used to his frank, almost trademark, assessment of a brittle “margin for error,” brace yourself when the do-or-die days commence.
Any games played after March 10 will mean brownie points for Beaudry’s Friars. Any games played on March 10 will be extra Hershey’s on a super sundae of a career and last-minute sugar on an otherwise tart, vinegary senior season for Lacasse.
But if both are in action that weekend, their original promises dating back to 2008-09 will be met.
And now, it is the last of the early Groundhog Days for goaltenders Alex Beaudry and Genevieve Lacasse of the Providence College men’s and women’s hockey programs. Six weeks separate them from the first round of both the men’s Hockey East and women’s NCAA tournament, the boundaries to which these backstops have yet to cross.
As the last call for both parties draws closer, the paradoxical reality grows proportionately more evident. Lacasse is inherently more outstanding in her pool than Beaudry. But the men’s senior stopper -who is about two or three games away from surpassing Nolan Schaefer on the program's all-time saves leaderboard- is likely to have the more satisfying finish to his days on the Divine Campus.
From an individual legacy standpoint, Beaudry’s quest is more pressure-filled considering the consequences if fulfillment is not achieved. But his roadblocks are less qualitative and quantitative compared to what will vie to keep Lacasse from adding postseason success to her glossy resume.
Never before in Lacasse’s career have the PC women had a losing record, nationally or in the conference standings, this late in the season. Never in Beaudry’s career have the PC men been close to .500 overall or had a winning transcript in their Hockey East schedule with 11 games yet to come.
And yet, entering this weekend, both teams are on pace to finish with a passport to enemy ice for the opening round of their respective conference tournaments. Freeze the two leaderboards for the balance of the regular season and the women would pay a wild-card visit to Maine at the end of February while the men engage Boston College in a best-of-three at Conte Forum in early March.
That potentiality would be a downturn for Bob Deraney’s capstone class, which is the only program to have finished fourth or better in each of the decade-old WHEA’s first nine years of existence. It would be a mild, but welcome upgrade for first-year head coach Nate Leaman’s squad, which had its first three Hockey East playoff no-shows all in row to round out the Tim Army era.
At the same time, all things considered, it’s likely the best news crossover Friar Fanatics can request. Provided the men’s program performs respectably and does not limit itself to one win in its final 11 games, as it has done in each of Beaudry’s first three homestretches, they should see bonus action March 9, 10 and maybe 11.
If so, then mission accomplished for the mystery masked man who was hastily recruited between semesters in 2008-09 when Chris Mannix and Justin Gates were getting no better, aptitude-wise and Ryan Simpson was getting no better, health-wise.
For Lacasse and her underachieving skating mates, a postseason berth, no matter how unspectacular and unsatisfying, is not the most frightful scenario. The sole or shared holder of every PC women’s goaltending record need only backstop three straight elimination victories to secure the Hockey East pennant and automatic bid to the Elite Eight.
Easier said than done? Indubitably so. But remember that Lacasse is bolstering and piloting the graduating class of 2012, which was likened to the four-time conference champion class of 2005 upon enrollment, only to endure three straight semifinal losses so far.
Interspersed with overtaking three incumbent stoppers in Danielle Ciarletta, Christina England and Jen Smith and surpassing Jana Bugden and Sara DeCosta in the PC annals with otherworldly facility have been a ho-hum drowning in New Hampshire’s Lake Whittemore, a squandering of home-ice advantage at the hands of Connecticut and an agonizing overtime falter via Kelli Stack and Boston College.
On her fourth and final try at a title and national tournament, the lowdown is no different for Lacasse than in previous years. The Friars once again have to rely solely on the automatic bid if they are to visit a national quarterfinal host March 10 or 11.
Translation: Their uncharacteristically plebeian 9-15-3 and 6-7-1 records warrant no real regard. With one-third of their 21-game conference slate remaining, including two meetings apiece with the bottom-feeding UConn and UNH, the PC women have fewer excuses for missing the postseason than their male counterparts. Home ice for the quarterfinals is not out of the question, too.
Once there, Lacasse will have former U19 teammate Brittany Ott, Corinne Boyles, Kerrin Sperry and/or career-long rival Florence Schelling to arm-wrestle with. But it will be equally incumbent on fellow seniors Kate Bacon, Ashley Cottrell, Jen Friedman, Abby Gauthier, Christie Jensen and Laura Veharanta to incentivize themselves through all three zones.
Northeastern’s Schelling is the most daunting prospective adversary, seeing as she, too, is a celestial senior who has yet to win a pennant. The key for Deraney, Lacasse and Co. is to simply let a long-unquenched hunger outweigh stat-induced anxiety, but that will only be relevant between Feb. 25 and March 4.
Between now and then, Beaudry and his mediocre resume (career GAA and save percentage hovering around 3.00 and .900, respectively) will be asked to fulfill their end of the bargain and help the Friars outlast the likes of Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Northeastern and/or Vermont.
No sure thing there, either. But some head-to-head triumphs against the Minutemen (Feb. 11), Wildcats (Feb. 3-4) and Huskies (Feb. 17-18) will hustle the process along.
Assuming the Friars win as many, if not more games than the Huskies, the PC men could seal up the eighth and final playoff berth before the women play their quarterfinal. By then, Leaman’s pupils will have recompensed their share of slipups and stamped the beginning of their renaissance by ending a four-year postseason drought.
For Deraney, well, if you’re not used to his frank, almost trademark, assessment of a brittle “margin for error,” brace yourself when the do-or-die days commence.
Any games played after March 10 will mean brownie points for Beaudry’s Friars. Any games played on March 10 will be extra Hershey’s on a super sundae of a career and last-minute sugar on an otherwise tart, vinegary senior season for Lacasse.
But if both are in action that weekend, their original promises dating back to 2008-09 will be met.
This Date In Providence Bruins History: January 27
1999: The visiting Worcester IceCats delete a 4-1 deficit after the second intermission, but Landon Wilson inserts the eventual winner in a 5-4 decision at the Providence Civic Center.
2006: A balanced attack, featuring 10 individual point-getters, paces the P-Bruins past the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, 4-1. With that, they extend their home winning streak to 10 consecutive games.
2007: After scoring five unanswered goals within the first two periods, the P-Bruins subsist through Worcester’s 16-5 shooting romp in the third to preserve a 5-2 win at the DCU Center.
2006: A balanced attack, featuring 10 individual point-getters, paces the P-Bruins past the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, 4-1. With that, they extend their home winning streak to 10 consecutive games.
2007: After scoring five unanswered goals within the first two periods, the P-Bruins subsist through Worcester’s 16-5 shooting romp in the third to preserve a 5-2 win at the DCU Center.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
This Date In Providence Bruins History: January 26
2000: John Grahame weathers a 21-shot tempest within the second period alone and finishes the night with a pristine 43-save effort while goals by Sean Pronger, Eric Manlow and Nick Boynton spell the difference in a 3-0 home win over the Quebec Citadelles.
2001: Lee Goren and Eric Nickulas tune the mesh to delete a 2-0 deficit and tie the expansion Norfolk Admirals, 2-2, in the P-Bruins first trip to the Norfolk Scope.
2002: Sean Haggerty tallies a hat trick to help the P-Bruins surmount a 2-0 deficit en route to a 5-4 win over the Quebec Citadelles at Le Colisee. It is the Baby Bs’ last visit to Quebec, where they went 6-1-0, including a playoff sweep, during the Citadelles’ three years of existence.
2007: Ben Walter pilots a 6-2 rout of the Pirates at the Cumberland County Civic Center with two goals and three assists.
2001: Lee Goren and Eric Nickulas tune the mesh to delete a 2-0 deficit and tie the expansion Norfolk Admirals, 2-2, in the P-Bruins first trip to the Norfolk Scope.
2002: Sean Haggerty tallies a hat trick to help the P-Bruins surmount a 2-0 deficit en route to a 5-4 win over the Quebec Citadelles at Le Colisee. It is the Baby Bs’ last visit to Quebec, where they went 6-1-0, including a playoff sweep, during the Citadelles’ three years of existence.
2007: Ben Walter pilots a 6-2 rout of the Pirates at the Cumberland County Civic Center with two goals and three assists.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
This Date In Providence Bruins History: January 25
1999: Randy Robitaille and Andre Savage each score an assist for the Canadian All-Stars while Landon Wilson notches his own helper and goaltender Jim Carey stops all seven shots he faces in the second period for PlanetUSA. Wilson and Carey are ultimately on the winning side of a 5-4 shootout decision at Philadelphia’s First Union Center.
2008: For the fourth time in a span of two months and 25 games, the P-Bruins compile a five-game winning streak. Jordan Sigalet relieves Tuukka Rask to stop each of 14 shots-faced and Wacey Rabbit singlehandedly deletes a 3-1 deficit with two goals within 2:50 of clock time. And then Matt Hendricks, Brett Skinner and Jeff Hoggan all convert in a shootout to beat the visiting Springfield Falcons, 4-3.
2011: Max Sauve converts on back-to-back third-period power plays to singlehandedly surmount a 2-1 deficit and pace the P-Bruins to a 4-2 road win over the Connecticut Whale. Earlier in the day, Jamie Arniel is selected to represent the Eastern Conference in the AHL All-Star Game.
2008: For the fourth time in a span of two months and 25 games, the P-Bruins compile a five-game winning streak. Jordan Sigalet relieves Tuukka Rask to stop each of 14 shots-faced and Wacey Rabbit singlehandedly deletes a 3-1 deficit with two goals within 2:50 of clock time. And then Matt Hendricks, Brett Skinner and Jeff Hoggan all convert in a shootout to beat the visiting Springfield Falcons, 4-3.
2011: Max Sauve converts on back-to-back third-period power plays to singlehandedly surmount a 2-1 deficit and pace the P-Bruins to a 4-2 road win over the Connecticut Whale. Earlier in the day, Jamie Arniel is selected to represent the Eastern Conference in the AHL All-Star Game.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
This Date In Providence Bruins History: January 24
1996: Tim Sweeney strikes twice and goaltender Scott Bailey surpasses Mike Bales on the team’s all-time saves list as part of a 3-2 home win over Fredericton.
1998: One night after their first visit to the Cincinnati Gardens, the P-Bruins lock twigs with the Kentucky Thoroughblades for the first time at Rupp Arena in Lexington. Cameron Mann scores late in regulation to finalize a 2-1 win.
2003: Two goals within the first four minutes are all the P-Bruins need to repress the Lowell Lock Monsters, 4-1, at Tsongas Arena.
2004: Zdenek Kutlak (two goals) and Andre Savage (playmaker hat trick) each enjoy a four-point night as part of a 6-2 thrashing of Worcester at the Centrum.
2009: Zach Hamill (goal, assist) and John Lammers (two assists) each log a multipoint performance as part of a 3-0 shutout of Springfield at The Dunk.
1998: One night after their first visit to the Cincinnati Gardens, the P-Bruins lock twigs with the Kentucky Thoroughblades for the first time at Rupp Arena in Lexington. Cameron Mann scores late in regulation to finalize a 2-1 win.
2003: Two goals within the first four minutes are all the P-Bruins need to repress the Lowell Lock Monsters, 4-1, at Tsongas Arena.
2004: Zdenek Kutlak (two goals) and Andre Savage (playmaker hat trick) each enjoy a four-point night as part of a 6-2 thrashing of Worcester at the Centrum.
2009: Zach Hamill (goal, assist) and John Lammers (two assists) each log a multipoint performance as part of a 3-0 shutout of Springfield at The Dunk.
Monday, January 23, 2012
This Date In Providence Bruins History: January 23
1998: Assistant coach Rod Langway, an eventual Hall of Fame inductee for his years with the Washington Capitals, comes out of retirement to play his first of 10 P-Bruins games in a 6-3 road win over the Cincinnati Mighty Ducks.
2004: Initially trailing, 3-0, near the halfway mark of regulation, the P-Bruins ultimately salvage a point courtesy of three unanswered goals via Brendan Walsh, Ivan Huml and Andre Savage. Although, the visiting Manchester Monarchs claim the extra point in overtime when future Montreal Canadien Mike Cammalleri scores to cement a 4-3 decision at The Dunk.
2011: Nolan Schaefer stops 36 Manchester Monarchs shots in regulation, five in overtime and four in a six-round shootout. Zach Hamill, Max Sauve and Trent Whitfield all convert to give the P-Bruins the extra point in a 2-1 decision at The Dunk.
2004: Initially trailing, 3-0, near the halfway mark of regulation, the P-Bruins ultimately salvage a point courtesy of three unanswered goals via Brendan Walsh, Ivan Huml and Andre Savage. Although, the visiting Manchester Monarchs claim the extra point in overtime when future Montreal Canadien Mike Cammalleri scores to cement a 4-3 decision at The Dunk.
2011: Nolan Schaefer stops 36 Manchester Monarchs shots in regulation, five in overtime and four in a six-round shootout. Zach Hamill, Max Sauve and Trent Whitfield all convert to give the P-Bruins the extra point in a 2-1 decision at The Dunk.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
This Date In Providence Bruins History: January 22
1995: Clayton Beddoes busts a 2-2 tie late in the third period to give Providence a 3-2 home win over Worcester.
1997: Cranston native and former Boston College standout David Emma scores in overtime for a 4-3 home win over the Springfield Falcons.
2000: One night after booting out 43 shots against Syracuse, John Grahame charges up 44 saves as part of a 4-3 win in Hartford.
2006: Jay Leach and David Lundbohm each score a playmaker hat trick, Pascal Pelletier and Ben Guite each have a 1-2-3 night, Eric Healey inserts two goals, Nate Robinson and Mike Schutte collect a goal and an assist apiece and four other skaters have one point in an 8-2 rout of Springfield. The victory gives the P-Bruins nine straight wins at The Dunk.
1997: Cranston native and former Boston College standout David Emma scores in overtime for a 4-3 home win over the Springfield Falcons.
2000: One night after booting out 43 shots against Syracuse, John Grahame charges up 44 saves as part of a 4-3 win in Hartford.
2006: Jay Leach and David Lundbohm each score a playmaker hat trick, Pascal Pelletier and Ben Guite each have a 1-2-3 night, Eric Healey inserts two goals, Nate Robinson and Mike Schutte collect a goal and an assist apiece and four other skaters have one point in an 8-2 rout of Springfield. The victory gives the P-Bruins nine straight wins at The Dunk.
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