
2008-09 Atlantic Hockey Preview
This story first appeared on the Inside College Hockey
website. To view Ken McMillan's story click
here.
THE SKINNY
For two seasons running, the champions of Atlantic Hockey reside
high in the Rocky Mountains.
Air Force has proven it does not need to win the regular-season
title in order to win the tourney title and automatic berth into
the NCAA tournament. The Falcons won as a No. 4 seed in 2007 and as
a No. 3 seed in 2008, the first time a team has repeated in the
league's short history.
The Falcons are the favorites to repeat as champion, returning most
of their lineup, including stone-cold playoff netminder Andrew
Volkening, who prevailed in a double-overtime thriller over
Mercyhurst in the 2008 finale.
Mercyhurst has a stacked lineup and is the coaches' pick for
second. Rochester Institute of Technology lost some crucial
offensive pieces – including league scoring champion Simon
Lambert – but is still in good shape. Likewise for Sacred
Heart, which must first find a way to replace Alex Parent and then
find a way to win in March. Defending regular-season champion Army
must find a way to replace 12 players, but the Black Knights do
have some talent to work with.
As the league celebrates its fifth birthday (or tenth, if you count
the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference days), there isn't much
change in the power structure of the league. All 10 head coaches
return, and the league has decided to extend two major contracts:
the league tourney will be hosted by Rochester's Blue Cross Arena
through 2010, and the B2 Networks will webcast all league
games.
Ten of the league's 18 all-stars will return, including
All-American goalie Josh Kassel from Army. All-star teammates Zach
McKelvie and Owen Meyer are also back.
Other all-stars back in the fold are defensemen Dan Ringwald and
Bobby Raymond of Rochester Institute of Technology and Greg Flynn
of Air Force, forwards Bear Trapp of Sacred Heart and Brodie
Sheahan of Holy Cross and goalies Beau Erickson of Connecticut and
Joe Calvi of Bentley.
BREAKTHROUGH TEAM
Canisius finished only three points out of first place in 2004-05.
Roster losses, a bit of off-ice troubles and a coaching change
dropped the Golden Griffins into the bottom half of the league in
the years following. Head coach Dave Smith brought in some new
talent, and the Griffs used points in seven of eight contests at
mid-season to slowly climb the ranks to sixth place.
Goalie Andrew Loewen had the hot hand for stretches, and freshman
Vincent Scarsella put up nine goals and 22 assists on the way to
winning rookie of the year honors. The Griffs return nine of their
top 11 scorers from last season, and have some promising recruits
coming aboard.
Yes, Canisius tends to play a rugged game but if the Griffs can cut
down on the trips to the penalty box, they will cause problems
throughout the league.
PRIMED FOR A FALL
Army's best hope for an NCAA tourney berth came and went when
Mercyhurst eliminated the regular-season champs with a crushing
semifinal loss. The Black Knights were a senior-ladened lineup and
it showed on the ice. Twelve seniors are moving on, and coach Brian
Riley joked recently that he doesn't recognize the team he's
putting on the ice this season.
Riley saw the same thing happen to him when he took over the team
from older brother, Rob, four years ago. The Black Knights are
probably in better shape for upheaval than they were in 2004
because they still have the league's top goalie in All-American
Josh Kassel, a dominant forward in Owen Meyer, an all-star
defenseman in Zach McKelvie and a tremendous sophomore in Cody
Omilusik.
PRESSURE TO PERFORM
Sacred Heart is the only Atlantic Hockey team to finish in the top
five in all five seasons of Atlantic Hockey play. What do the
Pioneers have to show for it? Nada, bupkis, zero playoff titles.
The Pioneers lost to Holy Cross in the 2004 finals, and have been
nothing but unimpressive in the postseason ever since, losing in
the 2005 and 2006 quarterfinals, a 2007 semifinal and 2008
final-five game.
How much longer can coach Shaun Hannah keep the Pioneers in the
title hunt? At least for another season or two. Sacred Heart
graduated Alex Parent and a solid defenseman in Scott Marchesi but
the rest of the lineup remains intact. Bear Trapp is primed to
re-write the league's career scoring records, Eric Giosa is another
solid senior forward and the Pioneers have three productive junior
forwards in Dave Jarman, Erik Boisvert and Nick Johnson.
Come March, though, this team has to find a way to produce in the
playoffs.
TOUGHEST ACT TO FOLLOW
RIT pushed Army to the final weekend of the season before settling
for second place. Then both the Tigers and Black Knights got ousted
in the Atlantic Hockey semifinals. Like Army, RIT loses some big
pieces to the puzzle, not least of which are leading scorers Simon
Lambert and Matt Smith. In all, RIT loses seven seniors accounting
for 741 career games, 184 goals and 266 assists.
All is not lost, though. The Tigers return 10 players who produced
double-digit points, and RIT remains strong on the defensive end
with the likes of blue liners Dan Ringwald, Al Mazur and netminder
Louis Menard. Ritter Arena remains one of the best home-ice
advantages in the league.
BEST PLAYER
Army's Josh Kassel was the most pleasant surprise of last season
– and an embarrassment for coach Brian Riley. Riley gave
Kassel just one look as a freshman and nothing more. Kassel has
since taken his team to the Atlantic Hockey finals and to the
school's first regular-season championship. Oooops.
Kassel posted the nation's fourth-best goals against average
(1.92), the tenth-best save percentage (.925) and earned 18
victories. He's re-writing the Academy record books for netminders,
and another strong season is not out of the question, though he
will have to shoulder a bit more of the defensive burden with a
younger blue-line corps.
BEST NEWCOMERS
This is a tough call in Atlantic Hockey. There are no NHL draftees
coming aboard, and just one Division I transfer by my count. There
are some junior hockey all-stars coming aboard, but they hail from
some of the lesser-known circuits throughout North America.
Canisius has brought in goalie Dan Morrison, the MVP of the
Midwestern Junior League in Elmira. The Griffs also signed
centerman Adam Brace from Pembroke, a first-team Central Ontario
League first-teamer.
Holy Cross recruit Matt Gordon, a center, put up 40 goals and 108
points with Smiths Falls of the Central Ontario League, and is a
two-time third-team all-star. Army defenseman Marcel Alvarez was a
first-team Central Ontario all-star from Brockville. Air Force
defenseman Mark Williams was a third-team Central Ontario pick from
Cornwall.
Sacred Heart has signed center Matthew Gingera, who put up 66 goals
and 111 points for the Winnipeg Saints of the Midwestern Junior
League. Left winger Scott Knowles has signed with RIT. He produced
26 goals and 90 points for Surrey in the British Columbia
league.
UNSUNG PLAYER
Dain Prewitt of Bentley has been overshadowed just a bit in each of
his first three seasons. The forward has finished second in team
goal scoring each campaign. He has raised his production from 11
goals to 13 and then 15 last season. Prewitt has proven himself
when it counts, scoring four game-winners, 11 goals on the power
play and five in short-handed situations.
BURNING QUESTIONS
1. Will the top seed actually win the Atlantic Hockey tournament?
Three out of five seasons, the regular-season champ (or No. 1
playoff seed in 2007) has failed to win the post-season
tournament.
2. Is expansion in the future? So far, league officials say no, but
the shaky standing of College Hockey America will always leave
Atlantic Hockey as a potential liferaft.
MARK IT DOWN
Three things you can take to the bank in College Hockey America
this season
• Bear Trapp will set the Atlantic Hockey record for career
points. Trapp needs 25 goals for the all-time goals mark, so that
looks like it will be out of reach. He needs 28 assists for the
all-time assists mark and 36 points for the all-time points mark,
well within reach for the three-time 40-point scorer.
• Goal production could take a dip with the return of every
starting netminder. Nine of ten starters produced goals against
averages under 3.00 and nine of ten stopped more than nine of ten
shots fired at them.
• Sadly, American International will finish last for the sixth
season in a row. The Yellow Jackets lost a lot of senior leadership
and critical points.
Predicted Finish
No. School Of Note
1. Air Force The two-time defending tourney champs return 93
percent of their offense, and the best money goalie in the league
in Andrew Volkening. Advantage: Falcons.
2. Mercyhurst The Lakers were just one shot away from the NCAA
tournament. Ben Cottreau is gone but everyone else is back.
3. RIT As long as Rochester remains host to the Atlantic tourney
(through 2010), the Tigers remain the sentimental favorite for the
home crowd.
4. Sacred Heart The Pioneers have the offensive firepower, but need
to tighten up the D to go deep into March.
5. Army The Black Knights must replace 12 seniors and half of their
offense but there is still enough talent to stay in the top
division.
6. Holy Cross The Crusaders lose 10 seniors but return seven of
their top nine point getters and two young goaltenders.
7. Canisius The Griffins will tickle .500 in league play if they
can stay out of the penalty box and ride some young talent.
8. Bentley The Falcons return their top nine point scorers. Fill a
few holes on defense and Bentley will be formidable.
9. Connecticut The Huskies showed a bit of life at the end of the
season but this team remains very young.
10. American International AIC has improved its win total each of
the past four seasons but the Yellow Jackets will have a tough time
replacing seven seniors and 41 goals from a starving offense.















