MARCH 15, 2003
Beavers and Chargers play fourth overtime game in CHA Tournament
history
KEARNEY, Neb. (Tri-City Arena) - [box
score][post-game
notes] It could not have been a more fitting ending for Bemidji
State.
Extending
its own
NCAA single-season
record by playing in its 15th overtime game this season,
the Beavers became the lowest seed to advance to the College
Hockey
America tournament championship game when sophomore forward
Myles Kuharski forced a puck past Alabama-Huntsville goaltender
Scott Munroe at the 12:30 mark of the extra period, giving
BSU an historic 2-1 victory.
Alabama-Huntsville had an excellent
opportunity to steal the win itself after BSU’s Andrew
Murray was whistled for charging Steve Charlebois behind
the BSU net at 9:25
of the
bonus period. During the power play, Jared Ross took a pass
and held the puck at the top of the crease. He feinted to
the right and got BSU goaltender Grady Hunt to dive, then
attempted
to fire a shot to Hunt’s right into an open net. On
the way down to the ice, Hunt was able to kick out his right
foot
and stop the shot with his shin pad. Hunt finished with seven
saves in the overtime. Kuharski’s lamp-lighter at 12:30
of overtime capped the second-longest game in CHA Tournament
history at 72:30.
Wayne
State and Niagra skated in a 73:55 marathon in the 2001 semifinals.
The
victory makes Bemidji State, the fourth seed in the tournament,
the lowest seed to advance to the CHA title game. Wayne
State advanced as the three seed in 2001 and Alabama-Huntsville
as the three seed in 2002. BSU will tackle third-seeded Wayne
State in tomorrow’s
CHA championship game. The Warriors scored five goals in
the third period to defeat No. 2 seed Niagara, 6-4, in tonight’s
first semifinal game. It will mark the first championship
game in CHA history that will not feature the tournament’s
No. 1 seed.
It took Bemidji State nearly 13 minutes to record
its first shot on goal, but it made that shot count as
John Haider
picked up his second marker of the campaign at 12:27 of
the first.
The Beavers would manage just three shots on goal in the
period, getting out-shot 9-3 in the frame, but skated into
the first
intermission with a 1-0 lead.
The Beavers fought away several
point-blank scoring opportunities by the Chargers in the
second period, but still the 1-0 lead
held. Alabama-Huntsville had perhaps its best extended
scoring opportunity late in the period, forcing BSU to face
a major
penalty after Jean-Guy Gervais was whistled for checking
from behind and ejected at the 17:30 mark of the second.
But the streak came to a halt quickly, as Jared Ross tipped
in a shot from Jeremy Schreiber just 19 seconds into the
third period, evening the score at a goal apiece with a shot
from
the top of the right circle which skidded through Hunt’s
legs.
Hunt earned the win in net, playing a career-high and
BSU Division I-era record 72:30. He saved 32 of 34 shots
faced
in the contest,
including all seven in overtime, marking his ninth 30-save
effort in 27 starts this year. Hunt is unbeaten in his
last six starts. During the streak, he has allowed just six
total
goals with a .965 save percentage and an 0.95 goals-against
average. He improves to 13-9-5 on the season, extending
his career high for wins in a season.
Ross’s power-play
goal snapped several school-record defensive streaks for
BSU, including consecutive periods
without allowing a goal (13) and consecutive minutes played
without
allowing a goal (274:16). The power-play goal also ended
BSU’s
streak of consecutive penalties killed at 30, and was the
first goal BSU allowed on the power-play in a span of 417:33
- the
second-longest streak in BSU’s Division I era. Still,
BSU has killed 45 of its last 47 penalties and 61 of its
last 67. Bemidji State improved to 14-13-8 overall on the
season, setting a Division I-era record for wins in a single
season, running
its unbeaten streak to seven games (6-0-1), also a Division
I-era record.
The Beavers will tackle Wayne State in tomorrow’s
College Hockey America championship, scheduled for a 5:05
p.m. opening
face off at the Tri-City Arena. The Warriors advanced with
a 6-4 win over Niagara in today’s first semifinal game,
rallying from a 3-1 second-intermission deficit with five
goals in the third period. Wayne State is making its third
appearance
in the CHA championship, while BSU will play for the CHA
title for the first time. Tomorrow’s winner recieves
the CHA automatic qualifier into the 2003 NCAA
championships.
Bemidji State and Wayne State split their season series,
2-2-0, with each team sweeping on its home ice. SCORING SUMMARY
1/12:27/B - John Haider (2, PP) (Anders Olsson/14,
Riley Riddell/14) / 1-0
3/0:19/A - Jared Ross (21, PP) (Jeremy Schreiber/16) / 1-1
OT/12:30/B - Myles Kuharski (8, GW) (Travis Barnes/2) / 2-1
BSU: Grady Hunt (72:30 / 9-11-5-7=32 saves / 1 GA / W,
13-9-5)
UAH: Scott Munroe (72:30 / 2-7-7-3=19 saves / 2 GA
/ L, 11-6-1)
Penalties/Power Plays: BSU: 8-27/1-5; UAH: 5-10/1-8
three stars: 1/Grady Hunt, BSU; 2/Myles Kuharski, BSU;
3/Jared Ross, UAH
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