Saints Advance to Ledyard Bank Final with Shootout Win
Kyle Flanagan and George Hughes combined for three goals and
three assists in their return to action following injury and St.
Lawrence University's men's hockey team advanced to the
championship game of the Ledyard Bank Classic at Dartmouth College
with a nine-round shootout win after skating to a 6-6 tie with
nationally seventh-ranked Merrimack in the tournament opener Friday
night.
The game, the tenth of a year against a nationally ranked team for
the Saints, was a wild one as SLU fell behind 3-0, came back to
take a 5-3 lead with five unanswered second period goals, regained
the lead at 6-5 after Merrimack tied it with two in the first 11
minutes of the third and finally headed into overtime when the
Warriors scored an extra attacker goal to force the extra period
with 42 seconds to play.
"That would have been a great one to win against a quality
opponent, but we'll certainly take the tie," said Saint associate
head coach Mike Hurlbut. "Having Kyle and George back in the lineup
obviously made a big difference for us, and we had some other guys
step up offensively as well. We would have preferred a little more
defense, but Merrimack took advantage of its opportunities."
Officially a tie after a scoreless five minute overtime, the
shootout had nearly as much drama as the first 65 minutes as it
took 16 shots to decide who would move on to play the winner of the
Dartmouth-Holy Cross game in Saturday's 7 p.m. tournament
championship. Jesse Todd connected for Merrimack on the first shot
of the shootout, and the Saints were on the verge of being
eliminated when shots by Flanagan and Greg Carey were saved by
Cannata. But, Jeremy Wick, the Saints third shooter, put one behind
Cannata off the post to extend the shootout. Matt Weninger
and Merrimack goaltender Joe Cannata each saved the next four
shooters and after Merrimack had two shots go off the crossbar,
Chris Martin ended it for the Saints, scoring on the 16th shot of
the shootout.
The Saints will take a 7-10-1 record into Saturday's championship
game with eight of the 10 losses and a tie coming against
nationally ranked teams.
Merrimack took advantage of a pair of odd-man rushes in the first
period to take a 2-0 lead. Junior wing Brandon Brodhag opened the
scoring with his second of the year, taking a lead pass from
linemate Kyle Singleton and getting behind the Saint defense for a
breakaway. While Weninger was able to get a pad on Brodhag's
shot from in tight, the puck trickled under the pads at 3:26. The
Warriors made it 2-0 just over three minutes later as Todd sped
into the Saint zone on a two-on-one with Clayton Jardine, made a
move as if to pass and then snapped a hard wrist shot which beat
Weninger just under the crossbar for his sixth of the year at
7:01.
While the Saints were down 2-0 after the first 20 minutes, they did
have their chances with Merrimack goalie Joe Cannata making six
saves including a big power play stop on George Hughes. Saint
defender Justin Baker also had a shot from the center slot glance
off the goalie's pads and off the post with just over 3:20 to play
in the period.
Merrimack made it a 3-0 game just two seconds after the expiration
of a power play when Mike Collins scored his sixth of the year on a
rebound 1:17 into the second period, but the Saints came up with a
big response to that goal, scoring five straight, two of them just
27 seconds apart, to take a 5-3 lead after two periods.
Hughes put the Saints on the board when he intercepted a Merrimack
clear just outside the Saint blue line. The Saint defenseman walked
in and gunned a shot just under the blocker of Cannata for his
second of the year at 3:20. SLU then cashed in on a five-on-three
power play, scoring with both the two-man and one-man advantages.
Chris Martin got his seventh of the year when he tipped a shot by
Hughes into the net with Kyle Flanagan also assisting at 10:20 and
27 seconds later Flanagan scored his seventh from Greg Carey and
Patrick Doherty to tie the game.
Freshman defenseman Nelson Armstrong scored his first collegiate
goal as he cut to the bottom of the faceoff circle, took a pass
from Rick Carden and put the puck in off the goaltender's pads at
15:36 with Sean Logue also assisting, and Riley Austin completed
the big second period with his first of the year, putting away a
rebound from close range after a shot by Flanagan with Doherty
picking up his second assist of the period.
Merrimack came charging back to start the third period and cut the
Saint lead to 5-4 8:40 into the period when Kyle Singleton put the
puck into the net off the post after a failed Saint clear. The
Warriors tied it just over two minutes later when Bates was all
alone at the left post on a three on two and slammed third of the
season at 10:53 to tie it at 5-5.
The Saints came back to take a 6-5 lead when George Hughes scored
his second of the night on a power play at 12:25 as Flanagan's shot
bounced off a leg and right to Hughes who strode in and snapped the
puck behind Cannata with Carey also assisting. The Saints had a
chance to ice it with just over 1:20 to go, but Gunnar Hughes shot
just wide on an empty net, and Merrimack finally tied it with 42.4
seconds to play in regulation as Bates scored his second on the
night when the Saints missed a clearing opportunity deep in their
own end.
Neither team scored in overtime despite a power play each with the
Saints getting the only two shots on goal as the game officially
ended in a 6-6 tie.












