Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Kolias makes "right decision" in Union

by Ryan Fay

Vas Kolias, a defenseman for the U.S. Hockey League's Youngstown Phantoms, announced on Monday that he committed to Union for next season.

It was a decision the 19-year-old wishes he made long ago.

Kolias in action with the Youngstown Phantoms.
(photo courtesy Youngstown Phantoms)
Kolias originally committed to Boston University in the fall of 2013. The Dutchmen were also among the programs interested in his services at the time, but he looked at things differently than he does now.

"I was a little more immature at a younger age. I committed at 16-years-old," Kolias said during a phone interview Tuesday. "The name of a school and all that can kind of get you wrapped up. Boston University was a powerhouse and a bigger name."

The allure of playing for a storied program like Boston University – the Terriers have made 22 Frozen Four appearances with five national titles – was so enticing that Kolias didn't even visit Union at the time.

But he started to have second thoughts about joining the Terriers after assistant coach Steve Greeley left in August to become the assistant director of player personnel for the New York Rangers. Greeley recruited Kolias into the program.

"It was the right move for me at that point in time to move on and find a better fit," Kolias said.

Once he returned to the open market, Union was interested again, as were a few other schools. In the end, he said his decision came down to Union and Harvard.

After making the visit to Union that he didn't make the first time around, he knew the Dutchmen were the best program to continue his career with.

"The visit was incredible," Kolias said. "If I could go back and do it again, I would have gone on that visit and made the right decision the first time. The campus is perfect for me. It's a bit smaller, and everyone's tight knit. The coaching staff is incredible. I stayed with a couple of the guys, and the camaraderie in the locker room is great. It was just a great environment, and somewhere I knew right out of the gate that I'd love to be at."

At 5-foot-10 and 165 pounds, Kolias will never be the most physically imposing player on the ice. But the Dutchmen's track record of developing smaller defensemen like Shayne Gostisbehere and Mat Bodie also helped sway him to Schenectady.

"The way they develop smaller defensemen is amazing," Kolias said. "I don't think there's a better spot in the country if you're a small defenseman and want to develop. The focus the coaching staff puts on you is incredible."

Kolias is in his second season with the Phantoms. The Schaumburg, Ill. native had three goals and 14 assists in 48 games a year ago. This season, he has four goals and 14 assists in 45 contests.

Phantoms head coach John Wroblewski praised Kolias for his vision in the offensive zone and his ability to find the open man. But he said his calling card is his skating ability.

"He's the most dynamic skater in the entire USHL," said Wroblewski. "It's something when you see him going from his defensive zone. He either gets it and wheels with it or gets a breakout pass from his partner or supports underneath.

"He beats defensemen to the outside a minimum of three or four times per game. It doesn't always end up in the net, but he puts a ton of pressure on the opposition and adds a dynamic that very few guys in the league have."

With the departure of junior defenseman Noah Henry (family reasons) and the pending graduation of senior defenseman Sebastien Gingras, there could be chances for Kolias to showcase his skills early in his collegiate career.

He envisions settling in as an offensive defenseman, but one who also contributes on the defensive end, an area where Wroblewski said he has improved this season.

But Kolias knows nothing will be given to him.

"Everything that I want to do will be earned," he said. "That's probably my favorite part about [Union's] coaching staff. There's no such thing as being handed something. Everything is earned."


Dutchmen, Bobcats skate to tie

Box Score

by Ryan Fay

If there was ever a game destined to go into overtime, Saturday's ECAC Hockey clash between Union and top-ranked Quinnipiac was it.

Union's J.C. Brassard had a goal and an assist in
Saturday's 3-3 tie against top-ranked Quinnipiac
at Messa Rink.
(photo: Union College athletics)
The Dutchmen entered play tied for the most overtime appearances in the country with 12. Quinnipiac was tied for second in the nation with 11 overtime contests.

Fittingly, Union (5-8-7 ECACH, 12-11-9 overall) and Quinnipiac went into overtime before settling for a 3-3 draw at Messa Rink.

"I thought we played an excellent hockey game against obviously the No. 1 team in the country," Union head coach Rick Bennett said. "We battled them for 65 minutes. I thought we had some excellent chances."

The tie keeps alive Union's faint hopes of having home ice in the first round of the league tournament. The ninth-place Dutchmen trail eighth-place Clarkson by three points for the last home ice spot with two regular season games left.

"I haven't really looked at standings or win/loss the whole year, but I did reflect on it a little bit this weekend," Bennett said. "I see a lot of to-do about a lot of teams, and they have the same amount of losses and some have one more than us, or two more. I kind of like that we've been low profile this year, especially with a youthful group."

Eli Lichtenwald helped Union force overtime when he tied the game at 3-3 at 13:35 of the third period. After Michael Pontarelli stripped the puck from a Quinnipiac player at the Bobcats blue line, he created a two-on-one chance with Lichtenwald.

By being patient with the puck, Pontarelli drew in a Quinnipiac defender, leaving Lichtenwald alone as he was skating down the right side. Lichtenwald took a cross-ice feed and sent it past Quinnipiac (14-1-5, 23-2-7) goaltender Michael Garteig.

"I had the easy job to shoot it into the net. It was all Mike," Lichtenwald said. "He did a great job causing that turnover. We've been roommates for three years, so I knew it was coming over. We practice it all the time."

Quinnipiac opened the scoring on a tally from Travis St. Denis at 14:02 of the second. Union squared the game at 1-1 with a power play goal at 17:27 after Matt Wilkins fed Mike Vecchione in the right faceoff circle for a one-timer that eluded Garteig.

The Bobcats answered 54 seconds later, grabbing a 2-1 lead on a goal from Connor Clifton. But J.C. Brassard brought Union even again at 4:29 of the third. He collected a loose puck just outside the Quinnipiac blue line before skating in and firing it past a screened Garteig.

"We had great back pressure and were getting all over their guy," Brassard said. "He just coughed up the puck, and I saw there was a chance to jump up into the play. There was a screen by their defenseman. I tried to shoot around him and use him as a screen, and luckily enough the goalie didn't see it."

Quinnipiac was fast to respond again as Soren Jonzzon gave the Bobcats a 3-2 edge at 6:07. Despite another deflating goal by the Bobcats, Union didn't surrender, setting the stage for Lichtenwald's game-tying goal later in the frame.

"We kept up with them the whole game," Brassard said. "We were all over them for some points of the game. We never gave up, and that's been the staple for awhile now."

POSTGAME REACTION

Brassard, Lichtenwald and Vecchione



Bennett



Ex-Union's Gostisbehere has big night

by Ryan Fay

Former Union defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere had another big night for the Philadelphia Flyers on Monday.

Former Union star Shayne Gostisbehere
had a big night in Philadelphia's 4-2 win
over Tampa Bay on Monday.
Gostisbehere broke Philadelphia's rookie defenseman record for goals in a season when he scored twice in a 4-2 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The two goals gave Gostisbehere 14 on the season, breaking the old mark of 13 set by Behn Wilson in the 1978-79 campaign.

The pair of tallies also gave Gostisbehere his first career multi-goal game in the NHL.

Gostisbehere's first goal tied the game at 1-1 at 16:51 of the second period. His second goal, a power play tally, gave the Flyers a 2-1 lead at 7:21 of third.

Earlier this year, Gostisbehere had a 15-game point streak, a record for a rookie NHL defenseman and a rookie record by any Flyers player.

Gostisbehere leads NHL rookie defensemen in scoring with 14 goals and 23 assists in 47 games. He ranks fifth among all rookies in scoring.

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Big Red ends Union's season in OT

Box Score

by Ryan Fay

Matt Buckles scored in overtime to lift Cornell to a 2-1 win and a series sweep of Union in their best-of-three ECAC Hockey opening round playoff series Saturday at Lynah Rink.

Matt Wilkins scored Union's lone goal in
its season-ending loss to Cornell Saturday
at Lynah Rink.
(photo: Union College athletics)
With the loss, Union finishes the season at 13-14-9. It marks the program's first season with a losing record since 2006-07, when it went 14-19-3. That was also the last season the Dutchmen didn't make it to the second round of the ECACH tournament.

Cornell (15-9-7) advances to the second round of the league tournament next weekend against a to be determined opponent.

Buckles broke a 1-1 tie and scored the game-winner at 3:18 of overtime. He drove in on goal from the right wing before sliding a backhander inside the far post to give the Big Red the series-clinching victory.

The Big Red opened the scoring at 10:25 of the second period after Ryan Bliss' shot from the point bounced off a Union defender and went past goaltender Alex Sakellaropoulos.

Matt Wilkins' power play goal tied the score at 1-1 midway through the third. Cornell goalie Mitch Gillam made a stop on a wrister from Brett Supinski, but the rebound found its way to Wilkins in the slot and he sent it into the back of the net.

The tally was the only bright spot for Union's power play, which went 1-for-5 on the night including a 5-on-3 chance in the first. The Dutchmen's power play went 1-for-8 in the series.

Wilkins' goal snapped Gillam's postseason shutout streak at 109:04. Gillam finished the series with 59 saves on 60 shots, including 32 stops in game two.

Sakellaropoulos nearly matched Gillam between the pipes. He made 26 saves in game two and 47 on 50 shots in the series.

The contest was Union's 14th overtime game of the season, a program record. The Dutchmen went 2-3-9 in extra session games this season.

GAME HIGHLIGHTS (courtesy Cornell athletics)