Petizian, Special Teams Power Saints
NIAGARA UNIVERSITY, N.Y. -- St. Lawrence University cashed in on
its special teams and an outstanding goaltending performance by
junior Alex Petizian to turn back Niagara University 5-1 for the
Saints' first win of the 2008-09 season.
The Saints won at one of the toughest arenas in the nation over
the last three years for visiting teams as Niagara had a 34-7-6
record in its last 47 games at home and had the added energy of
raising a College Hockey America tournament championship and NCAA
participation banner prior to the start of the game.
"I thought we weathered their early emotion well," said Saint
coach Joe Marsh. "Alex made some big saves and then Aaron Bogosian
made a huge play on the penalty kill and that got things turned
around for us. It was also good to see us cash in on the power play
and have three basically different units each score a goal with the
man advantage."
The Eagles took the play to the Saints early in the game, but
Petizian was up to the task with a number of early saves. The
Saints, who did not allow a Niagara shot on goal on the first of
two Purple Eagle power plays, went one better on the second one,
scoring the game's first goal. Bogosian started the scoring play,
picking off a Niagara pass just inside the Saint blue line and
skating through the neutral zone. Bogosian skated to the top of the
faceoff circle in the Niagara end and then circled back as a
defenseman challenged him. Travis Vermeulen came into the zone on
Bogosian's left and one-timed a pass from Bogosian just under the
crossbar at 13:04 for the shorthanded goal.
Petizian kept it a 1-0 game when he stuffed Hogansburg's Ted Cook,
a Niagara senior who has had a lot of scoring success against the
Saints, in a one-on-one confrontation just inside the final minute
of the period.
Saint special teams struck again just 45 seconds into the second
period as Brock McBride took a pass from Mike McKenzie at the side
of the net on the power play and skated across the front of the
crease. McBride, showing great patience, drew Niagara starting
goalie Juliano Pagliero with him and then tucked it back behind the
goalie for his second of the season. Shawn Fensel also assisted on
McBride's second goal of the season.
Niagara killed off a five-on-three power play by the Saints, but
took a third straight penalty just 11 seconds after returning to
full strength, and this time the Saints made them pay. Rookie
Brandon Bollig scored his second Saint goal as he tucked his own
rebound behind Pagliaro from Bogosian and Jeff Caister at 4:33.
The Purple Eagles finally cracked the scoreboard at 8:21 of the
second period when Paul Zanette jammed home his first of the season
from point blank range after Brian Dowd worked the puck away from
the Saint defense behind the net, but the Saints answered that when
McKenzie did a great job taking the puck away from Niagara backup
goalie Adam Avaramenko behind the net to set up an empty net goal
for Casey Parenteau. McBride sent the puck in deep and Avaramenko
went to play it, but McKenzie beat the goalie to it and Parenteau
crashed the net to bury his first of the year and give the Saints a
4-1 lead at 14:45 of the second.
The Saints killed off a stretch of five on three to start the
third period and then cashed in for the third time on the power
play with transfer Augie DiMarzo hitting a wide open net on a
rebound of a shot by Vermeulen. It was DiMarzo's first official
goal in a Saint uniform with Alex Curran also assisting on the play
at 6:55 to make it a 5-1 game.
Petizian finished with 22 saves for the Saints, who outshot
Niagara 31-23. The two Purple Eagle goalies combined for 26
saves.
"We saw a lot of good things tonight, and we will be out to finish
off a solid road weekend in Rochester tomorrow. We"ll get some
different guys in there, but if we get the same kind of effort and
intensity, it could be another good night," said Marsh.












