By Bob Phillips
BRIDGEPORT—The
Providence College Friars’ Improbable Dream came to an end on Saturday
night
when Notre Dame’s Dylan Malmquist broke a 1-1 tie with just 27 seconds
remaining in regulation to lead the Fighting Irish over the Friars and into the
Frozen Four before 5,505 fans at the Webster Bank Arena. This year will be the
second straight trip to the Frozen Four for the Irish.
The game started much like Friday’s semifinal clash for
Providence, in which the Friars scored early, then held on for a 1-0 victory
over Clarkson, the tournament’s No. 9 seed. For the second straight night,
sophomore guard Kasper Bjorkqvist broke the ice—this time, it was a rebound off
a wrap-around by Tommy Davis that was stopped by Notre Dame goalie Cale Morris
2:02 into the contest.
However, unlike Friday’s semifinal, where it was the Friar D
that took over the game, Notre Dame, the tournament’s No. 2 seed, stayed with
the Friars and tied the game while on the power play late in the middle period.
Andrew Oglevie intercepted an attempted clearing pass at the top of the left
circle, then fired the puck through a screen that got past Providence netminder
Hayden Hawkey to knot the score at one apiece with just under two minutes left
in the second stanza.
The teams fought tooth-and-nail matching intensity
throughout the third period until, with just 27 remaining in regulation, Dylan
Malmquist took a pass from behind the net and fired a one-timer past Hawkey’s
left shoulder to ice the game for the Irish.
“It was a good game,” said Providence coach Nate Leaman at the postgame
press conference. “We played our best in the third period. One of their chances
went in, and ours didn’t. I liked our effort. We battled tonight”
Irish coach Jeff Jackson focused to the competitiveness of
the Bridgeport Region field. Michigan Tech was the fourth team that competed in
the Bridgeport Region, losing to the Irish 4-3 in overtime in Friday’s other
semifinal.
“Frankly every one of these regionals is scary good, in my opinion,” said
Jackson. “I know the teams in each one of these regionals. They’re all good.
Michigan Tech was on a roll. They played us hard as any team we played all
season long. Gave us everything that we could handle. Providence, I thought
going into this game, may have been the hottest team, or one of the better
teams playing the game. I have a lot of respect for Nate [Leaman].”
When asked about the Friars’ lack of offense in the Regional,
Leaman took exception with that observation.
“I disagree about having trouble
scoring,” said Leaman, who led the Friars to the national championship in 2015,
his fourth year in Providence after eight years at Union. “If you think you are
going to score four or five goals against the excellence the defensive teams
you see in postseason like Clarkson and Notre Dame, you’re crazy. We had our
chances but just didn’t finish,” added Leaman, who has led the Friars into the
NCAA Tournament in each of his seven years at PC.
“We just needed to get to the net and sometimes that was a problem, but
we had our chances but just didn’t bury them,” added senior forward Brian
Pinho.
While disappointed in not making it to this weekend’s Frozen
Four in St. Paul, Minn., the future is bright indeed for the PC hockey program,
which graduates just five players from this year’s team, and sports a roster
with six freshmen and seven sophomores.
“This stings,” said Leaman. “It’s no fun when you are this close. Yes we
are young, but you can only get better if you learn from these experiences once
the sting is gone.”
BLUELINE BANTER:
- The Friars made their eighth appearance all-time in NCAA Quarterfinal/Regional action. PC has posted a 5-7-0 mark all time in those games.
- In the Friars’ last NCAA Quarterfinal game, the Friars defeated Denver, 4-1, in Providence in 2015. The last time the Friars played in the NCAA Quarterfinals in Bridgeport, PC was defeated by Union, 3-1, in 2014.
- PC is now 15-19-0 all-time in 14 NCAA Tournament appearances.
- This was the Friars’ their fifth-consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance—the second-longest active streak in the nation. Overall, it wass the Friars’ 14th appearance in the national tournament.
- Nate Leaman has posted a 6-4 NCAA Tournament record while at Providence.
- Providence is 4-5-2 this season against NCAA Tournament teams. Three wins came against Hockey East schools, Boston University and Northeastern, and ECAC foe Clarkson.
- Hayden Hawkey is second among goaltenders in the NCAA Tournament field with 48 career wins. He’s also fourth in that group with 1,873 career saves.
- Providence is just one of three NCAA Division I programs all-time to send its basketball and hockey teams to the NCAA Tournament in the same season for five consecutive years (Michigan, and Michigan State).
- The Friars are the only school to accomplish the feat in each of the last five seasons.
—With Bill Pinto & Staff Reports
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