FEB. 20, 2004
John Haider scores extra-attacker goal with 57 seconds left
in regulation to force OT BEMIDJI, Minn. - [box
score] Bemidji State defenseman John Haider scored
from just inside the blue line on an extra-attacker opportunity
with 57 seconds to play in regulation, forcing overtime in
an eventual 3-3 draw with the Alabama-Huntsville Chargers.
The extra-attacker goal was the first of the season for
Bemidji State and first since Jeff McGill scored in a 4-2
loss against Wayne State (Mich.) on Feb. 7, 2003. However,
it was the first extra-attacker goal BSU has used to help
earn a draw since a 2-2 tie at Union College on Nov. 3, 2001.
Bemidji State needed the late goal to overcome a furious
third-period Charger rally, which saw the visitors net three
goals in a span of just 7:53 to erase a 2-0 Beaver advantage.
“The effort wasn’t there,” BSU head coach
Tom Serratore said. “We were lucky and fortunate to
get a point out of this game. To give up a 2-0 lead in your
own house, it’s just disappointing. Give full credit
to Huntsville. They dictated and played the style they wanted
to play.”
Jared Ross, the nation’s leading scorer coming in,
got the rally started with his 16th goal of the season at
6:10 of the third. Taking advantage of a power-play opportunity
after a slashing penalty to BSU’s Rob Sirianni, Ross
took a pass from Jeremy Schreiber and Adam MacLean and fired
a low shot on BSU goaltender Layne Sedevie. Sedevie appeared
to make the save, but the puck was tipped into the air by
Sedevie’s stick. It flipped over Sedevie’s head
and into the net to get the Chargers on the board, 2-1. Charger
goaltender Adam MacLean picked up an assist on the goal.
“Ross is a threat every time he’s on the ice,” Serratore
said. “There’s no question he’s the best
player we’ve seen this year.”
That goal turned the momentum squarely in Huntsville’s
favor. The Chargers would pick up two more goals in the next
eight minutes to erase the 2-0 deficit which had stood for
the majority of the contest. Schreiber scored even-strength,
his first of two goals during the rally, at 12:30 to even
the score off helpers from Todd Bentley and Keith Rowe, then
capped the flurry with his seventh lamp-lighter of the season
at 14:07 to give the Chargers the lead.
Schreiber’s second goal came after a beautiful cross-ice
pass from Ross, who finished with a goal and an assist.
Sedevie picked up the draw, and has been the goalie of record
in all three BSU ties this season. He saved 27 of 30 shots
faced to see his season record hold even at 4-4-3. Sedevie
was very strong in the first two periods of play, saving
all 19 shots he faced, but allowed three goals on just seven
shots in the pivotal third period.
One of Sedevie’s four saves in the period was a highlight-reel
goal-line pad save on Bruce Mulherin which every Charger
on the ice thought had scored. However, television replays
showed the puck never crossed the goal line and it was the
back of Sedevie’s stick which hit the net. Mulherin
and one other Charger player went so far as to challenge
the goal judge on the call afterwards before the officials
sent them back to their bench.
Riley Riddell picked up his 12th goal of the season, unassisted,
at 4:45 of the first to stake BSU to a 1-0 lead. It was the
third time this season and seventh of his career Riddell
has scored the game’s first goal. It was Riddell’s
second unassisted goal this season and seventh of his career.
Brendan Cook then helped BSU take advantage of a power-play
opportunity after Mulherin was whistled for tripping at 18:21
of the first period. He became the first player in BSU’s
Division I era to score 20 goals in a season, taking helpers
from Bryce Methven and Peter Jonsson to stake BSU to a 2-0
lead with his seventh power-play goal at 19:35. Cook’s
seven power-play goals are just one shy of BSU’s Division
I-era single-season record, held by Marty Goulet (2002-03)
and Stefan Bjork (1999-00).
The tie marked the first-ever draw between Bemidji State
and Ala.-Huntsville in the fifth overtime game between the
long-time rivals. Huntsville still leads the all-time series,
21-8-1, although BSU is 3-1-1 in the last five meetings -
its most-successful run in the history of the series.
The draw moves Bemidji State to 15-11-3 overall, 12-2-1
in College Hockey America play, while Huntsville moves to
10-11-4, 9-5-1 in CHA play. BSU’s lead over Niagara
for first place in CHA was cut to one point tonight when
the Purple Eagles defeated Air Force, 4-1. The Beavers and
Chargers wrap up their series tomorrow night with opening
face-off set for 7:05 p.m. Central time at BSU’s John
Glas Fieldhouse.
“We still control our own destiny,” Serratore
said. “We’ve just got to worry about beating
them tomorrow.”
NOTES: The teams combined for 16 penalties for 32 minutes
in the contest... Power play: ALH 2-4, BSU 1-6... BSU allowed
two power-play goals in a game for just the sixth time this
season... BSU has out-shot each of its last 19 home-ice opponents
(36-30 tonight)... Head coach Tom Serratore coached his 100th
game at BSU tonight... Brendan Cook has scored a goal in
seven of his last nine games played... Cook needs seven points
to tie Marty Goulet’s BSU Division I-era season scoring
record (39)... Bryce Methven’s assist was his 50th
career point... He became BSU’s career leader in games
played by a defenseman tonight (133)... Andrew Murray’s
four-game scoring streak was snapped.
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