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Projecting the NCAA men’s hockey tournament field

Projecting the NCAA men's hockey tournament field

With the selection of the NCAA men’s hockey tournament about a month away and the Frozen Four less than 50 days away, the field of 16 is taking shape.

Of course, things still can change over the homestretch of the regular season and particularly with the conference tournaments which begin March 3, where teams off the radar could earn automatic NCAA bids.

The NCAA field includes the winners of the six conference tournaments — Atlantic, Big Ten, CCHA, ECAC, Hockey East and NCHC — and 10 at-large teams based on the

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    What’s ahead: Home-and-home with Michigan; two games at Minnesota

    Numbers to know: The Ohio State penalty-kill unit has been remarkable. Not only does it have an 89% success rate, the Buckeyes have nine short-handed goals, the most in the country.

    Cohen’s take: For starters, OSU will always be well coached and disciplined on defense with Steve Rohlik at the helm. The Buckeyes have been very solid all season, with the nation’s top penalty kill and a top-20 power play. Mason Lohrei, a second-round pick of the Boston Bruins, is a good reason to tune in when the Buckeyes take the ice.


    T10. Cornell (16-7-2, 13-4-1 ECAC)

    Polls: 11/11/11

    Key results: 1-1 vs. Quinnipiac; 0-2 vs. Harvard; win over UConn; loss at BU

    What’s ahead: Single games vs. Clarkson, vs. St. Lawrence, at Brown, at Yale

    Numbers to know: The Big Red have the most potent power play in the country, converting at a .305 clip. Dalton Bancroft, part of Cornell’s strong freshman class, leads the way with five PPG on the season.

    Cohen’s take: It seems Cornell never gives up many goals, and this season is no exception. The one main difference this season, however, is the Big Red are a top-10 scoring team as well. When you marry the two, you have a legitimate contender.


    T10. Harvard (17-6-2, 14-4-0 ECAC)

    Polls: 9/10/10

    Key results: 0-1-1 at Michigan; 1-0-1 vs. Northeastern; overtime loss at BU; 2-0 vs. Cornell; 0-2 vs. Quinnipiac

    What’s ahead: Single games vs. Union, vs. RPI, at St. Lawrence, at Clarkson

    Numbers to know: The Crimson have experienced plenty of late-game pressure, going 6-1 in games decided in overtime. They also have two shootout contests, beating Michigan and losing to Northeastern in the Beanpot final.

    Cohen’s take: Another year, another Teddy Donato-coached team in the top 10 in the country. Harvard has more NHL draft picks (15) than any team in the country, and the Crimson’s “big three” of Sean Farrell, Matthew Coronato and Henry Thrun look to lead Harvard back to the Frozen Four for the first time since 2017.


    12. Michigan Tech (21-8-4, 14-6-4 CCHA)

    Polls: 12/13/12

    Key results: 1-0-1 vs. Minnesota State; wins over Michigan State and BU; loss to Western Michigan

    What’s ahead: Two games at Minnesota State

    Numbers to know: Senior goalie Blake Pietila is fifth in the country in both GAA (1.98) and save percentage (.928), while logging the second-most minutes (1,817).

    Cohen’s take: The CCHA’s leader of the pack is putting together a very solid season. The Huskies are as hot as anyone with a 10-2-1 record since the calendar turned to 2023. They have a few very good nonconference wins, including beating BU in Arizona, and seem to be in a good position to make the NCAA field regardless how they fare the conference tournament. But my guess is a date between them and Minnesota State in the CCHA championship game is ahead.


    13. Minnesota State (19-10-1, 14-7-1, CCHA)

    Polls: 13/12/13

    Key results: 1-1 vs. Minnesota; 0-2 vs. St. Cloud State; 0-1-1 vs. Michigan Tech

    What’s ahead: Two games at Bemidji State; two vs. Michigan Tech

    Numbers to know: With its typical rock-solid blue line, Minnesota State is No. 3 in the country in scoring defense. Sophomore Keenan Rancier (1.94 GAA) has started 20 of the Mavericks’ 30 games. The Mavs also are the nation’s best team in faceoffs (.588 win percentage).

    Cohen’s take: After last year’s disappointing loss in the national title game, the Mavs aren’t sitting back. They’re 9-0-1 in the new year, and with the masterful Mike Hastings behind the bench, this fast and physical group will be a tough out in the NCAA tournament.


    14. Michigan State (15-15-2, 9-11-2 Big Ten)

    Polls: 17/14/14

    Key results: 2-2 vs. Ohio State; 1-3 vs. Michigan; 0-4 vs. Minnesota; 2-1-1 vs. Penn State

    What’s ahead: Two games at Wisconsin

    Numbers to know: The Spartans have been prone to giving up goals in bunches, allowing four or more in 12 games this season. Even so, goalie Dylan St. Cyr has the second-most saves in the country.

    Cohen’s take: New head coach Adam Nightingale and associate head coach Jared DeMichiel have done a phenomenal job reinvigorating the Spartans this season. They’ve had their ups and downs, but they have hung around the top 15 all year in a very difficult conference. The Big Ten tournament will be key for the Spartans’ tournament chances.


    T15. Northeastern (14-10-5, 11-5-3 Hockey East)

    Polls: 16/16/15

    Key results: 2-1 vs. BU; 0-1-1 (with shootout win) vs. Harvard; losses to Western Michigan, Union, Sacred Heart and Bentley

    What’s ahead: Single game at Vermont; home-and-home with UMass; home-and-home with UMass-Lowell

    Numbers to know: Northeastern is 6-1-2 with two shootout wins since resuming Hockey East play after the holiday break.

    Cohen’s take: Two words, Devon Levi. NU and its goalie (.930 save percentage) are coming off a dominating performance in beating BU and Harvard to win the Beanpot, and they are going to need to continue to win games because of PairWise-sapping losses to Union, Sacred Heart and Bentley. The Huskies might need a solid run in the Hockey East playoffs to secure a spot in the NCAA field.


    T15. Notre Dame (14-14-4, 9-10-3 Big Ten)

    Polls: 19/18/NR

    Key results: 1-1 vs. Western Michigan; 1-2-1 vs. Michigan State; 0-2 vs. Minnesota; 1-1 vs. Michigan; 2-1-1 vs. Ohio State; 2-2 vs. Penn State

    What’s ahead: Two games at Michigan

    Numbers to know: Goaltender Ryan Bischel has 1,015 saves — 111 more than any other goalie in the country — and has saved the Irish’s season in the process. He also has played more minutes than any other goalie (1,883).

    Cohen’s take: It’s been a very up-and-down season for Notre Dame, and the veteran group is going to need a strong run in the Big Ten tournament to solidify its NCAA standing. With Landon Slaggert heating up at the right time, Jeff Jackson’s Irish might well have a late-season push in them.


    20. RIT (19-10-1, 15-6-1 Atlantic)

    Polls: NR/NR/NR

    Key results: 0-2 vs. Penn State; 2-0 vs. AIC; 2-0 vs. Sacred Heart

    What’s ahead: Two games vs. Bentley, two vs. Air Force

    Numbers to know: Since making the transition from Division III to Division I in hockey in 2005-06, RIT has never finished in the top 20 in the PairWise rankings, even in 2009-10, when the Tigers made the Frozen Four.

    Cohen’s take: The front-runner to capture the Atlantic Hockey automatic bid has a great record at 19-10-1, but strength of schedule always comes into question in the Atlantic. Led by sophomore forward Carter Wilkie, the Tigers are going to need to win the conference tournament to get into the NCAA field.


    On the bubble

    Omaha (17th in PairWise; 15-10-3, 10-6-2 NCHC)

    UConn (T18th in PairWise; 17-10-3, 11-8-2 Hockey East)

    Alaska (T18th in PairWise; 16-10-2)

    Based on the strength of the remaining schedules, Omaha, with two games against St. Cloud State plus the NCHC tournament, has the best chance in this group of sneaking into the field. (Remember, we included 17 teams above, with Northeastern and Notre Dame tied in the PairWise rankings for the final at-large bid, so at least one of them could fall back to the wrong side of the bubble as well.)

    Of course, there also will be potential bid stealers lurking as conference tournament champions are decided, with Hockey East in particular a league to keep an eye on.

    A further potential complication for Michigan State and Notre Dame: Teams below .500 are ineligible for at-large berths.