r 2017-18 wcha s in rolympics in pyeongchang, south korea. the group represented seven universities,...

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OPENING FACEOFF No. 19 in the Books: The Women's League of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) proudly completed its 19th season in 2017-18, another fantastic campaign of on-and off-ice accomplishments by its student-athletes, coaches and member programs. The WCHA led the country with three teams in the top-six of the final opinion polls, topped all conferences with three programs in the NCAA tournament, comprised half of the Frozen Four field, honored a pair of top-10 finalists for the Patty Kazmaier Award and three AHCA/CCM Hockey All-Americans, celebrated 37 Olympians and 30 medalists (including 14 on the gold-medalist Team USA squad), was inspired by the Hockey Humanitarian Award recipient and her fellow top-five finalist, and, applauded 32 alumnae that starred in North American professional leagues with either the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) or the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL). Polling Place: Nationally third-ranked Wisconsin, No. 4 Ohio State (highest season-ending ranking in program history) and No. 6 Minnesota gave the WCHA an NCAA-best three of the top-six teams in the final USCHO.com and USA Today / USA Hockey Magazine polls. Minnesota Duluth was ranked for multiple weeks early in the season, while both the Bulldogs and Bemidji State were receiving votes into late-February. NCAA Tournament and the Frozen Four: The WCHA also led all conferences with three teams in the NCAA tournament, marking the second-consecutive year a trio of league programs advanced. WCHA regular season champion Wisconsin was the tournament's overall No. 2 seed, Minnesota captured the WCHA Final Faceoff and the league's automatic bid and Ohio State earned an at-large berth for the program's first-ever appearance. For the fifth-straight year and the 13th time in the event's 18-year history, at least half of the Frozen Four was comprised of WCHA teams, with the Badgers and Buckeyes each competing in a national semifinal game. Every Rink, Every Night: Between a challenging nonconference slate and the regular season gauntlet provided by arguably the nation's premier conference, WCHA teams again played some of the toughest schedules in NCAA Division I hockey, per the RPI Strength-of-Schedule ledger. Six of the top-10 toughest 2017-18 schedules nationally belonged to WCHA teams, while all seven were in the top-14. St. Cloud State played D-I's second-toughest schedule overall, while Wisconsin ranked third, Minnesota Duluth was fifth, Minnesota was sixth, Bemidji State was seventh, Ohio State was 10th and Minnesota State was 14th. Olympic Year: The WCHA was proud and honored to have 37 current and former players competing at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought home medals, including 14 that helped Team USA win its first gold since 1998. Canada's silver medalists featured nine WCHA players, while seven alumnae earned bronze with Finland. Peters Receives Hockey Humanitarian Award: Minnesota redshirt-senior goaltender Sidney Peters, whose contributions on the ice and in the classroom are topped only by her impact in the community, was named the 2018 Hockey Humanitarian Award recipient. The award is given each year to college hockey’s finest citizen -- a student-athlete who makes significant contributions not only to his or her team, but also to the community at-large through leadership in volunteerism. Ohio State senior Lauren Spring, a two-time nominee, was also a top-five finalist for the prestigious honor. National Accolades: Three WCHA players were named 2018 CCM/AHCA All-Americans, as Minnesota senior defenseman Sydney Baldwin (the WCHA's Overall and Defensive Player of the Year) earned first-team honors, while Wisconsin sophomore (and WCHA Goaltender of the Year) Kristen Campbell joined Ohio State redshirt-sophomore blueliner Jincy Dunne in garnering second-team accolades. The WCHA was also well-represented on All-USCHO teams, with seven players earning recognition. Wisconsin senior defenseman Maddie Rolfes was a first-team honoree, Campbell was the second-team goaltender, third-team selections included UW sophomore forward Abby Roque (the WCHA Offensive Player of the Year), Dunne and Ohio State redshirt-junior goaltender Kassidy Sauvé, while OSU's Emma Maltais (the WCHA Rookie of the Year) joined Minnesota’s Olivia Knowles on the Rookie Team. #WeAreWCHA: For the seventh-straight season, WCHA programs ranked 1-3 nationally by total and average attendance. Wisconsin drew 38,505 fans (2,265 per game) for 17 games at LaBahn Arena, Minnesota welcomed 32,573 (1,629) over 20 dates at Ridder Arena and 19,769 fans (1,163) saw 17 contests at Minnesota Duluth's AMSOIL Arena. WESTERN COLLEGIATE HOCKEY ASSOCIATION FOUNDED 1999 • 2950 Metro Drive, Suite 102 Bloomington, MN 55425 952-681-7947 MEMBER TEAMS Bemidji State University University of Minnesota University of Minnesota Duluth Minnesota State University Ohio State University St. Cloud State University University of Wisconsin 16 Naonal Championships 98 All-Americans 100+ Olympians and Naonal Team Members 2017-18 WCHA SEASON IN REVIEW AUG. 14, 2018 / wcha.com @wcha_whockey /WCHAWomensHockey FINAL 2017-18 WCHA STANDINGS R Conference Overall Rk (Natl Rank) Team Pts GP W L T SW % GF GA GP W L T % GF GA 1 (3) Wisconsin 64 24 20 2 2 2 .875 81 29 38 31 5 2 .842 126 48 2 (4) Ohio State 49 24 14 6 4 3 .667 63 51 39 24 11 4 .667 112 77 3 (6) Minnesota 42 24 13 8 3 0 .604 74 54 38 24 11 3 .671 119 79 4 Minnesota Duluth 35 24 10 11 3 2 .479 49 62 35 15 16 4 .486 71 82 5 Bemidji State 30 24 9 13 2 1 .417 60 68 38 16 19 3 .461 90 96 6 St. Cloud State 23 24 6 14 4 1 .333 41 59 33 8 20 5 .318 52 82 7 Minnesota State 9 24 3 21 0 0 .125 37 82 34 5 28 1 .162 57 123 (shootout win = 1 addional point; rankings listed by USCHO.com first, followed by USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine) HOME OF A RECORD 16 NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP TEAMS 2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 •2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 • 2015 • 2016 TRADITION STARTS HERE @wcha_whockey Ma Hodson ● o: 952-681-7668 ● c: 612-801-2808 ● mh[email protected] 2018-19 IMPORTANT DATES Date Event Sept. 22-23 Exhibion games Sept. 28-30 Regular season begins Oct. 5-6 First WCHA league series Oct. 12-14 First weekend of three (3) WCHA league series Dec. 17-28 Holiday Break Jan. 5-6 2019 Minnesota Cup Ridder Arena Minneapolis, MN Feb. 22-24 Final weekend of the regular season March 1-3 2019 WCHA Quarterfinals Host sites; seeds 2-4 Top seed receives bye March 9-10 2019 WCHA Final Faceoff Ridder Arena Minneapolis, MN March 15-17 2019 NCAA Quarterfinals Host sites; top four seeds March 22-24 2019 NCAA Frozen Four TD Bank Sports Center Hamden, CT FloHockey.tv

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Page 1: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

Opening FaceOFF• No. 19 in the Books: The Women's League of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) proudly completed its

19th season in 2017-18, another fantastic campaign of on-and off-ice accomplishments by its student-athletes, coaches and member programs.

• The WCHA led the country with three teams in the top-six of the final opinion polls, topped all conferences with three programs in the NCAA tournament, comprised half of the Frozen Four field, honored a pair of top-10 finalists for the Patty Kazmaier Award and three AHCA/CCM Hockey All-Americans, celebrated 37 Olympians and 30 medalists (including 14 on the gold-medalist Team USA squad), was inspired by the Hockey Humanitarian Award recipient and her fellow top-five finalist, and, applauded 32 alumnae that starred in North American professional leagues with either the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) or the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL).

• Polling Place: Nationally third-ranked Wisconsin, No. 4 Ohio State (highest season-ending ranking in program history) and No. 6 Minnesota gave the WCHA an NCAA-best three of the top-six teams in the final USCHO.com and USA Today / USA Hockey Magazine polls.

• Minnesota Duluth was ranked for multiple weeks early in the season, while both the Bulldogs and Bemidji State were receiving votes into late-February.

• NCAA Tournament and the Frozen Four: The WCHA also led all conferences with three teams in the NCAA tournament, marking the second-consecutive year a trio of league programs advanced. WCHA regular season champion Wisconsin was the tournament's overall No. 2 seed, Minnesota captured the WCHA Final Faceoff and the league's automatic bid and Ohio State earned an at-large berth for the program's first-ever appearance.

• For the fifth-straight year and the 13th time in the event's 18-year history, at least half of the Frozen Four was comprised of WCHA teams, with the Badgers and Buckeyes each competing in a national semifinal game.

• Every Rink, Every Night: Between a challenging nonconference slate and the regular season gauntlet provided by arguably the nation's premier conference, WCHA teams again played some of the toughest schedules in NCAA Division I hockey, per the RPI Strength-of-Schedule ledger.

• Six of the top-10 toughest 2017-18 schedules nationally belonged to WCHA teams, while all seven were in the top-14.• St. Cloud State played D-I's second-toughest schedule overall, while Wisconsin ranked third, Minnesota Duluth was

fifth, Minnesota was sixth, Bemidji State was seventh, Ohio State was 10th and Minnesota State was 14th.• Olympic Year: The WCHA was proud and honored to have 37 current and former players competing at the 2018 Winter

Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries.• Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought home medals, including 14 that helped Team USA win its first gold since

1998. Canada's silver medalists featured nine WCHA players, while seven alumnae earned bronze with Finland.• Peters Receives Hockey Humanitarian Award: Minnesota redshirt-senior goaltender Sidney Peters, whose contributions on

the ice and in the classroom are topped only by her impact in the community, was named the 2018 Hockey Humanitarian Award recipient. The award is given each year to college hockey’s finest citizen -- a student-athlete who makes significant contributions not only to his or her team, but also to the community at-large through leadership in volunteerism.

• Ohio State senior Lauren Spring, a two-time nominee, was also a top-five finalist for the prestigious honor.• National Accolades: Three WCHA players were named 2018 CCM/AHCA All-Americans, as Minnesota senior defenseman

Sydney Baldwin (the WCHA's Overall and Defensive Player of the Year) earned first-team honors, while Wisconsin sophomore (and WCHA Goaltender of the Year) Kristen Campbell joined Ohio State redshirt-sophomore blueliner Jincy Dunne in garnering second-team accolades.

• The WCHA was also well-represented on All-USCHO teams, with seven players earning recognition. Wisconsin senior defenseman Maddie Rolfes was a first-team honoree, Campbell was the second-team goaltender, third-team selections included UW sophomore forward Abby Roque (the WCHA Offensive Player of the Year), Dunne and Ohio State redshirt-junior goaltender Kassidy Sauvé, while OSU's Emma Maltais (the WCHA Rookie of the Year) joined Minnesota’s Olivia Knowles on the Rookie Team.

• #WeAreWCHA: For the seventh-straight season, WCHA programs ranked 1-3 nationally by total and average attendance.• Wisconsin drew 38,505 fans (2,265 per game) for 17 games at LaBahn Arena, Minnesota welcomed 32,573 (1,629)

over 20 dates at Ridder Arena and 19,769 fans (1,163) saw 17 contests at Minnesota Duluth's AMSOIL Arena.

WESTERN COLLEGIATEHOCKEY ASSOCIATION

• FOunded 1999 •2950 Metro Drive, Suite 102

Bloomington, MN 55425952-681-7947

MEMBER TEAMSBemidji State UniversityUniversity of Minnesota

University of Minnesota DuluthMinnesota State University

Ohio State UniversitySt. Cloud State UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin

16 National Championships98 All-Americans

100+ Olympians and National Team Members

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieWaug. 14, 2018 / wcha.com

@wcha_whockey /WCHAWomensHockey

Final 2017-18 WCHA StandingS

R

Conference OverallRk (Natl Rank) Team Pts GP W L T SW % GF GA GP W L T % GF GA 1 (3) Wisconsin 64 24 20 2 2 2 .875 81 29 38 31 5 2 .842 126 48 2 (4) Ohio State 49 24 14 6 4 3 .667 63 51 39 24 11 4 .667 112 77 3 (6) Minnesota 42 24 13 8 3 0 .604 74 54 38 24 11 3 .671 119 79 4 Minnesota Duluth 35 24 10 11 3 2 .479 49 62 35 15 16 4 .486 71 82 5 Bemidji State 30 24 9 13 2 1 .417 60 68 38 16 19 3 .461 90 96 6 St. Cloud State 23 24 6 14 4 1 .333 41 59 33 8 20 5 .318 52 82 7 Minnesota State 9 24 3 21 0 0 .125 37 82 34 5 28 1 .162 57 123

(shootout win = 1 additional point; rankings listed by USCHO.com first, followed by USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine)

HOME OF A RECORD 16 NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP TEAMS2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 •2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 • 2015 • 2016

TRADITION STARTS HERE

@wcha_whockey

Matt Hodson ● o: 952-681-7668 ● c: 612-801-2808 ● [email protected]

2018-19 impORtant dateS

Date EventSept. 22-23 Exhibition gamesSept. 28-30 Regular season beginsOct. 5-6 First WCHA league seriesOct. 12-14 First weekend of three (3) WCHA league seriesDec. 17-28 Holiday BreakJan. 5-6 2019 Minnesota Cup Ridder Arena Minneapolis, MNFeb. 22-24 Final weekend of the regular seasonMarch 1-3 2019 WCHA Quarterfinals Host sites; seeds 2-4 Top seed receives byeMarch 9-10 2019 WCHA Final Faceoff Ridder Arena Minneapolis, MNMarch 15-17 2019 NCAA Quarterfinals Host sites; top four seedsMarch 22-24 2019 NCAA Frozen Four TD Bank Sports Center Hamden, CT

FloHockey.tv

Page 2: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

2017-18 SeaSon in Review #LeadeRSandChampionS@wcha___whockey /WCHAWomensHockey wcha.com

#weaReWCHA

@wcha___whockey FloHockey.tv

FROm tHe league OFFice• Fundraising and Sponsorship Increase: By welcoming several new partners to the

fold, including an unprecedented collaboration with RallyMe on a crowdfunding platform, sponsorship and value-in-kind contributions to the WCHA Women's League soared to more than $70,000 during the 2017-18 fiscal year.

• GoodWood Hockey, a family owned and operated, Twin Cities-based hockey apparel company, powered all WCHA awards throughout the season and provided additional support for the Final Faceoff.

• John Buccigross, the longtime ESPN anchor and renowned benefactor of hockey at all levels, provided -- through his #bucciovertimechallenge and #cawlidgehawkey initiative -- the funds for a new, custom-designed, perpetual WCHA Final Faceoff championship trophy.

• Howies Hockey Tape became the official gift supplier for college hockey's most passionate fans with the "WCHA Women's League Fan of the Month," while also providing supplies for the Final Faceoff.

• Sports Minneapolis' generous contributions allowed the league to host its third-annual, free WCHA Youth Clinic in conjunction with the Final Faceoff.

• FOX Sports North again was a premier partner in promoting and supporting the Final Faceoff.

• A pair of new supporting partners -- Hockey WrapAround and Krampade® -- joined to boost the Final Faceoff.

• The WCHA also enjoyed new partnerships with Frauenshuh Commercial Real Estate, Art by ASI and Ostrom Creative.

• WCHA Partners with FloSports: On Aug. 1, the WCHA announced a multiyear partnership with FloSports, the innovator in live digital sports and original content, to stream every game hosted by Bemidji State, Minnesota Duluth, Minnesota State and St. Cloud State, along with the annual WCHA Final Faceoff tournament, live and on-demand exclusively on FloHockey.tv.

• With FloSports' existing distribution deal with the Big Ten Network covering select games hosted by Minnesota, Ohio State and Wisconsin, the WCHA becomes the first women's college hockey league to have a streaming platform that includes all of its member institutions.

• By adding the WCHA Women's League to its current deals with the WCHA Men's League and the Big Ten Network, FloHockey.tv will now be home to approximately 400 college hockey games each season.

• WCHA Brand Continues to Grow: Association-wide digital impressions (across all WCHA owned channels) were up by 1.1 percent during the season (including a 21.5-percent growth for the Women's League). The WCHA continued its four-year trend of increased traffic, with its 2017-18 digital network impressions up 162.5 percent from 2013-14. Likewise, Association social media followers (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube) have increased 114.1 percent over that period.

• The WCHA partnered with St. Cloud State's award-winning Husky Productions on the "WCHA Highlight Reel," as each Tuesday throughout the season, host Kirsten Krull brought fans the top goals, plays and saves from the previous weekend's games.

• Thanks to the continued efforts of Kelly Schultz and the Beaver Radio Network, the 2017-18 season featured 24 episodes of "This Week in the WCHA," a six- to eight-minute weekly audio show featuring highlights, interviews and more from around the league.

• With a continued partnership between the WCHA and FOX Sports North and FOX Sports Wisconsin, along with efforts by Minnesota Duluth, Minnesota State, St. Cloud State and Wisconsin, nine WCHA Women's League games were televised live during the 2017-18 season. The package, which featured all seven WCHA member institutions, included eight regular season contests and the Final Faceoff championship game.

• From fan contests and in-game commentary, to feature stories and highlights of professional success, #WeAreWCHA has become a staple for engagement with the league on any platform, connecting all who make the WCHA a truly special league -- from current players and alumni to future student-athletes; from administrators to coaches; and, most importantly, all our fans. We are all the WCHA.

FROm tHe league OFFice (cOnt.)• WCHA Leadership: Following the 2018 WCHA Management Council meetings

(held April 24-25 in Naples, Fla.) and the Board of Directors meetings (held June 4 in Bloomington, Minn.), the Association formally approved its updated articles of incorporation, bylaws and policies and procedures.

• The WCHA Women's League Board of Directors is filled by a designee of each institution's president or chancellor, while the Management Council is comprised of the Athletic Director, Faculty Athletics Representative (FAR) and Head Coach of each institution.

• The 2018-19 WCHA Women's League Advisory Council, which is responsible for general counsel to Commissioner Katie Million, along with providing oversight of the League's day-to-day operations, consists of Dr. Perry Leo (Faculty Athletics Representative, Minnesota and Board Chair), Dr. Shannon Norman (Faculty Athletics Representative, Bemidji State and FAR Chair), Josh Berlo (Athletic Director, Minnesota Duluth and AD Chair) and John Harrington (Head Coach, Minnesota State and Coaches' Chair).

Once aROund tHe Rink• BSU: The Beavers returned to the Final Faceoff for the first time since 2015, had

a trio of All-WCHA performers (senior Alexis Joyce, and freshmen Clair DeGeorge and Mak Langei), and earned wins over Minnesota and Ohio State (along with playing Wisconsin to a tie, snapping the Badgers' season-opening, 15-game WCHA winning streak).

• UMN: Behind WCHA Overall and Defensive Player of the Year Sydney Baldwin, the Gophers won at least 20 games for the 21st consecutive season and, after upsetting Ohio State and Wisconsin to win the 2018 WCHA Final Faceoff, made the program's NCAA-record 11th-straight tournament appearance.

• UMD: Despite skating one of the youngest rosters in team history and playing the nation's fifth-toughest schedule, the Bulldogs won the in-season Windjammer Classic tournament, went 13-10-4 over their final 27 games and earned home ice for the WCHA Quarterfinals.

• MSU: The Mavericks, who defeated Bemidji State and Ohio State down the stretch, saw their overall record skewed by seven one-goal losses. Forward Brittyn Fleming (4g-15a--19pts) tied for 10th in the WCHA overall rookie scoring race.

• OSU: Under second-year bench boss and WCHA Coach of the Year Nadine Muzerall, the Buckeyes set program records with 24 overall wins (24-11-4) and 14 WCHA victories (14-6-4-3), while OSU's first-ever NCAA tournament appearance resulted in a 2-0 win at No. 4 seed Boston College and a trip to the Frozen Four. OSU's second-place WCHA finish was its best-ever, as was its final No. 4 national ranking.

• SCSU: After starting the season 2-12-0 (1-9-0), the Huskies finished the season 6-6-5 (5-5-4). SCSU played winning hockey after Jan. 1, going 5-4-3 and -- behind the stellar goaltending of All-WCHA Third Team and Rookie Team selection Emma Polusny, along with Olympian Janine Alder -- allowed just 1.92 goals-per-game after the New Year.

• UW: The Badgers won their third-straight WCHA regular season championship, joining Minnesota (2013-15) as the only teams in league history to go back-to-back-to-back. Wisconsin ranked third nationally with 31 wins and advanced to its fifth-straight Frozen Four, the longest active stretch in the country.

mORe FROm tHe 2017-18 SeaSOn• Continued Nonconference Success: The WCHA one again boasted the country's

top nonconference winning percentage, going 34-21-2 (.614).• Five of seven WCHA schools finished above .500 against competition from

College Hockey America, ECAC Hockey and Hockey East.• Youth is Served: Eight of the top-20 scoring freshmen in all of NCAA Division I

hockey skated in the WCHA, representing five different teams.• WCHA Rookie of the Year Emma Maltais excelled in her debut season at

Ohio State, ranking fourth among D-I freshmen with 1.08 points per game (16g-24a for 50 points in 37 contests). Her 40 points overall were the most by any Buckeyes skater since two-time Olympic medalist Natalie Spooner collected 50 in 2011-12.

• Minnesota's Grace Zumwinkle tied for fifth at 1.00 points per game (17g-21a--38pts), Ohio State's Tatum Skaggs ranked eighth at 0.95 (23g-14a--37pts), St. Cloud State's Laura Kluge was 11th at 0.80 (7g-17a--24pts), Minnesota Duluth's Naomi Rogge was 16th at 0.69 (16g-8a--24pts), UMN's Taylor Wente was 17th at 0.66 (11g-14a--25pts), UMD's Ashton Bell was 18th at 0.66 (11g-12a--23pts) and Bemidji State's Clair DeGeorge was 20th at 0.62 (7g-16a--23pts).

• Rookie Scoring Champ: Fittingly, Minnesota freshman Grace Zumwinkle became the WCHA's first rookie Scoring Champion (defined as the most points in league play) since Ohio State's Hokey Langan in the 2009-10 season.

• Zumwinkle collected 27 of points (11g-16a) in her 24 WCHA games, three more than Ohio State's Emma Maltais (10g-14a--24pts).

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - neWS and nOteS

Page 3: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

2017-18 SeaSon in Review #LeadeRSandChampionS@wcha___whockey /WCHAWomensHockey wcha.com

#weaReWCHA

@wcha___whockey FloHockey.tv

mORe FROm tHe 2017-18 SeaSOn (cOnt.)• The Puck Stops Here: WCHA goaltenders ranked among the NCAA Division I

leaders in goals-against average (GAA), save percentage, winning percentage, wins, saves and shutouts.

• In her first season wearing the Cardinal and White, Wisconsin sophomore Kristen Campbell topped D-I netminders with a 1.19 GAA. She was followed by Ohio State redshirt-junior Kassidy Sauvé (ninth at 1.88), Minnesota redshirt-senior Sidney Peters (13th at 1.93), St. Cloud State freshman Emma Polusny (19th at 2.20), Minnesota Duluth senior Jessica Convery (21st at 2.23) and SCSU sophomore Janine Alder (25th at 2.42).

• Campbell ranked second with a .939 save percentage, while Sauvé was third (.938), Alder was fifth (.935) and Polusny was eighth (.934).

• Campbell was also second with an .842 winning percentage (31-5-2), while Sauvé ranked seventh (.656, 19-9-4), Peters was eighth (.648, 17-9-1) and Convery was 16th (15-14-3, .516).

• Continuing a pattern of excellence, Campbell ranked second with 31 wins, Sauvé was seventh with 19, Peters (17) tied for eighth and Convery (15) was 11th.

• Sauvé paced the WCHA and ranked second nationally with 920 saves, followed by Convery (11th with 816) and Campbell (16th at 706).

• Campbell's 12 shutouts tied for most among D-I goaltenders, while Sauvé ranked third with 10, Peters and Polusny tied for eighth with four apiece, while Bemidji State senior Erin Deters and Convery each had three apiece to tie for 17th.

• Campbell's Historic Start: Kristen Campbell set the tone for her All-America campaign early, as the eventual WCHA Goaltender of the Year became the first Wisconsin goaltender to win her first nine starts in the Cardinal and White, opening 16-0-0.

• Polusny Sets Standard: Emma Polusny enjoyed a fantastic debut season, as her four shutouts set the all-time St. Cloud State single-season record.

• All four of Polusny's clean sheets came after Nov. 22, as she posted five wins, 465 saves, a 1.84 GAA and a .945 save mark over final 15 starts.

• Fabulous Final Faceoff: Annually the nation's top conference championship tournament, the 2018 WCHA Final Faceoff -- featuring Wisconsin, Ohio State, Minnesota and Bemidji State -- did not disappoint. The three-game tournament featured three All-Americans, a pair of Patty Kaz top-10 finalists and 20 players who are participating this summer at development camp for either USA Hockey or Hockey Canada.

• The No. 3 seed Gophers, needing two wins to keep their season alive, outlasted eventual NCAA Frozen Four participants Ohio State and Wisconsin to win their seventh WCHA playoff championship -- matching the Badgers for most in league history.

• Final Faceoff Most Outstanding Player Sidney Peters, Minnesota's redshirt-senior goaltender, stopped a combined 64-of-65 shots in the Gophers' 2-0, semifinal victory over Ohio State and their 3-1, championship game triumph over UW.

• UW senior co-captain Baylee Wellhausen notched the first Final Faceoff hat trick since 2012, including a second-period, shorthanded tally that stood as the game-winner, to lead the Badgers past Bemidji State, 4-1 in the semifinals.

• Coaching Milestones: A pair of WCHA coaching legends in Wisconsin's Mark Johnson and Minnesota's Brad Frost again enjoyed milestone victories.

• Johnson, who ranks third in NCAA National Collegiate (D-I) women's hockey annals with 459 career victories, recorded win No. 450 on Jan. 13 with a 6-0 triumph over visiting Minnesota State. Johnson enters the 2018-19 season, his 16th season behind the Badgers' bench, with a career .822 winning percentage (459-83-41).

• Frost moved past his predecessor, the iconic Laura Halldorson, and into sixth place on the NCAA National Collegiate women's annals with his 338th career coaching win, a 2-0 victory over visiting Minnesota State on Jan. 27. Frost enters the 2018-19 season, his 12th as the Gophers' head coach, with a career 343-64-30 record (.819).

in tHe claSSROOm and in tHe cOmmunity• Hockey Humanitarian Award: As previously mentioned, Minnesota redshirt-senior

goaltender Sidney Peters was named the 2018 Hockey Humanitarian Award recipient as college hockey's finest citizen, while Ohio State senior forward Lauren Spring, a two-time nominee, was also a top-five finalist for the prestigious honor.

• Peters, who was honored for making significant contributions not only to her team, but also to the community at-large through leadership in volunteerism, logged over 830 volunteer hours with various community outreach activities during her time with the Gophers. The certified Emergency Media Technician (EMT) volunteered with the University of Minnesota EMS and the Rush-Copley Emergency Department in Aurora, Ill (near her hometown of Geneva, Ill.), along with HopeKids, Special Olympics Minnesota, the University of Minnesota Masonic Children's Hospital, and local elementary and middle schools and youth hockey associations. Peters also traveled to Haiti during the summer of 2016 with Project Medishare, volunteering at the country's only critical care and trauma hospital, while she has combined her love of hockey with her faith as the head goalie coach for the Hockey Ministries International camp.

• Spring, who was honored by SHAPE America (Society of Health and Physical Educators) as a Major of the Year award recipient, was a frequent presence in the Columbus community -- and beyond. She organized local community service projects for her and her team, including physical education projects, trips to Meals on Wheels food bank events and helping to run scoring tables at wheelchair rugby events. A student-teacher at a Columbus-area elementary school, Spring also joined 10 other OSU student-athletes on a May 2017 trip to Ecuador with Soles4Souls to help provide shoes and clothes to needy children.

• NCAA Woman of the Year: Minnesota's Sidney Peters is also the lone WCHA student-athlete to be nominated by a member schools for the 2018 NCAA Woman of the Year award. In fact, among the record 581 women nominated, only 11 are hockey players (including just four from the D-I ranks).

• Google Cloud Academic All-Americans: St. Cloud State sophomore goaltender Janine Alder, Minnesota senior defenseman Sydney Baldwin and Gophers' redshirt-senior goaltender Sidney Peters -- the only three hockey players among the 45 women honored -- were named to the Google Cloud Academic All-America Division Women's At Large Third Team, as announced by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).

• Krampade All American Scholars: Fifty-seven (57) student athletes, representing all seven WCHA Women's League member institutions, were honored as Krampade All American Scholars, as announced by the American Hockey Coaches Association (AHCA). These outstanding players attained a 3.6 GPA each semester and participated in 40 percent of their school's games during the 2017-18 season.

• Scholar-Athletes: Sixty (60) student-athletes, representing all seven Women's League member institutions, earned WCHA Scholar-Athlete Awards for maintaining a GPA of 3.50 or above.

• All-Academic Team: Ninety-five (95) student-athletes, representing all seven Women's League member institutions, earned a spot on the WCHA All-Academic Team for maintaining a GPA of 3.00 or above.

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - neWS and nOteS

all-time cOacHing WinS leadeRS, ncaa natiOnal cOllegiate WOmen

Minimum 10 years as a head coach at an NCAA National Collegiate school; includes all victories as coach at a four-year institution.

Coach, School(s) Years Won Lost Tied Pct.*Katey Stone (Harvard 1995-2018) 23 464 224 48 .663*Michael Sisti (Mercyhurst 2000-18) 19 462 161 48 .724*Mark Johnson (Wisconsin 2003-09, 2001-18) 15 459 83 41 .822Shannon Miller (Minnesota Duluth 2000-15) 16 383 144 50 .707*Paul Flanagan (SLU 2000-08, SU 2009-18) 19 380 246 61 .598*Brad Frost (Minnesota 2008-18) 11 343 64 30 .819Laura Halldorson (Colby 1990-96, UMN 1998-2007) 17 337 142 31 .691 *Jeff Kampersal (Princeton 1997-2017, PSU 2018) 22 337 276 69 .545Heather Linstad (NU 1993-2000, UConn 2001-13) 21 322 289 81 .524*Bob Deraney (Providence 2000-18) 19 319 288 73 .523

* denotes coached in 2017-18Bold denotes coaches/coached in the WCHA

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tHe next level• 2018 Winter Olympic Games: The WCHA was proud and honored to have 37

current or former players competing at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities (Minnesota, Minnesota Duluth, Minnesota State, North Dakota, Ohio State, St. Cloud State and Wisconsin, while playing for five countries (the United States of America, Canada, Finland, Sweden and Switzerland).

• Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought home medals, including 14 that helped Team USA win its first gold since 1998. Canada’s silver medalists featured nine WCHA players, while seven alumnae earned bronze with Finland.

• When the puck drops on the 2018-19 season, the WCHA will welcome back 2018 Olympians Janine Alder (St. Cloud State / Switzerland), Emily Clark (Wisconsin / Canada), Kelly Pannek (Minnesota / USA) and Maddie Rooney (Minnesota Duluth / USA). Additionally, Wisconsin’s Annie Pankowski (USA) and Minnesota’s Amy and Sarah Potomak (Canada), all of whom were centralized with their national teams, will be back on WCHA ice (with Amy Potomak making her collegiate debut).

• There was perhaps no more compelling moment in the entire 2018 Winter Olympics than the epic gold medal game between the United States and Canada, won by the Americans in a shootout.

• The contest was tied 2-2 after regulation and overtime, with U.S. goals coming from former UW All-American Hilary Knight (assisted by fellow Badger great Brianna Decker and former UMD standout Sidney Morin) and UND legend Monique Lamoureux-Morando (assisted by current UMN forward Kelly Pannek). The first Canadian tally was scored by former UMD great Haley Irwin (assisted by UW alumna Blayre Turnbull).

• The WCHA took center stage in the shootout, with the winning goal coming off the stick of Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson (famously known as the "Oops I Did It Again" move), which will go down as one of the epochal moments in U.S. Olympic history. Goaltender Maddie Rooney will return to Minnesota Duluth for her junior season in 2018-19 as an Olympic hero, as her tournament-long brilliance was capped by her stop of Meghan Agosta on the tournament's final shot, lifting Team USA to gold.

• 2017 Four Nations Cup: Preparation for the Olympics kicked into high gear with the 2017 Four Nations Cup, with 39 current, former or incoming WCHA players competing in Tampa, Fla. (representing Minnesota, Minnesota Duluth, Minnesota State, North Dakota, Ohio State and Wisconsin.)

• The U.S. won its third-consecutive Four Nations Cup gold medal with a roster featuring 15 WCHA players. A 5-1, gold medal game victory over Canada featured two goals by former Minnesota star Hannah Brandt, a goal and assist apiece from former Gopher Amanda Kessel and Wisconsin legend Hilary Knight, while another UMN alumna, Dani Cameranesi, had four assists.

• CWHL and NWHL Impact: WCHA alumni dotted rosters across the two North America-based women's professional leagues, with the league (and all eight of its current and past institutions) represented on 10 of the 11 combined rosters for the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) and the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL).

• Twenty (20) former WCHA players competed across each of the seven CWHL clubs: Kunlun Red Star (4), Les Canadiennes de Montréal (4), Markham Thunder (4), Calgary Inferno (3), Toronto Furies (3), Boston Blades (1) and Vanke Rays (1).

• Twelve (12) league alumni played across three of the four NWHL franchises: Metropolitan Riveters (6), Buffalo Beauts (3) and Connecticut Whale (3).

• Both league champions were well-stocked with WCHA products. A year after winning the NWHL title, former Minnesota blueliner Megan Bozek joined Minnesota Duluth alumnae Jocelyne Larocque and Jenna McParland, along with Ohio State product Laura McIntosh, in hoisting the Clarkson Cup with the Markham Thunder. Behind the goaltending excellence of Playoffs MVP Katie Fitzgerald (St. Cloud State) and a quintet of Wisconsin alumnae (Courtney Burke, Erika Lawler, Kelly Nash, Madison Packer and Jenny Ryan), the Metropolitan Riveters captured the Isobel Cup.

• Minnesota Whitecaps and the WCHA: In their final pre-NWHL season, the Minnesota Whitecaps (then an elite women's hockey team made up of post-collegiate players), also had 27 former WCHA players – from six league schools – on its Minneapolis-based roster.

tHe next level (cOnt.)• Award Winners: The following WCHA alumnae earned recognition for their

achievements in 2017-18:• USA Hockey honored North Dakota great Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson

as its Bob Johnson Award winner, while naming Minnesota Duluth rising junior Maddie Rooney as the Bob Allen Women's Player of the Year.

• After backstopping Finland to a bronze medal at the 2018 Winter Olympics, former Minnesota All-American Noora Räty was named CWHL Goaltender of the Year. She led the league during the regular season with a 1.60 GAA, a .944 save percentage and six shutouts, then guided Kunlun Red Star to the Clarkson Cup Final.

• Wisconsin commit Sophie Shirley, who is slated to skate for the Badgers beginning this fall, earned CWHL Rookie of the Year honors after tallying 19 points (8g-11a) in 26 games with the Calgary Inferno.

• UW's Courtney Burke made it three-for-three in WCHA alumnae earning NWHL Best Defender honors (following Minnesota's Gigi Marvin in 2016 and Megan Bozek in 2017). Burke led all NWHL skaters with 17 regular season assists and was second with 19 points.

• Like Räty in the CWHL, former Gopher Amanda Leveille was the NWHL's Goaltender of the Year after leading the league with 12 regular season wins (tied) and 457 saves, to go along with a 2.53 GAA and .918 save percentage.

• Of the 12 WCHA alumnae who played in the NWHL, six were All-Stars: Burke, Jordyn Burns (UMN), Lisa Chesson (OSU), Leveille, Katie Fitzgerald (SCSU) and Jenny Ryan (UW). The NWHL also included a pair of Minnesota Whitecaps in Bemidji State alumna Sadie Lundquist and former Minnesota player Kate Schipper. (The CWHL did not hold an All-Star Game due to the 2018 Winter Olympics.)

• 2018 USA vs. Canada U22 Series: Nineteen (19) WCHA players were chosen to compete in the annual three-game USA vs. Canada U22 series, set for Aug. 16-19, 2018 in Calgary, Alberta.

• All 19 WCHA players, representing Bemidji State, Minnesota, Minnesota Duluth, Ohio State and Wisconsin, will skate during the 2018-19 collegiate season.

• Thirteen (13) players are on the U.S. U22 Women's Select Team roster, which is led by Joel Johnson (Minnesota's associate head coach). Six (6) players are joining head coach Nadine Muzerall (Ohio State's bench boss) with Canada's National Women's Development Team.

• The U.S. U18 Women's Select Team is led by Minnesota Duluth Head Coach Maura Crowell and assistant coach Brianna Decker (Wisconsin).

20 yeaRS OF excellence• Leaders and Champions: With 16 national championships in its 19 years of

existence - including 15 of a possible 18 NCAA crowns - along with seven Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award Winners, 98 All-Americans, hundreds of Olympic and national team members, and countless women inspired, the WCHA Women's League has become the nation's premier college hockey conference. The 2018-19 season marks the league's 20th Anniversary campaign, during which the WCHA will celebrate 20 Years of Excellence.

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - neWS and nOteS

HONOREES Honor Player (Yr., Pos., Team) Hockey Humanitarian Award Sidney Peters (RS-Sr., G, Minnesota) AHCA/CCM Hockey Alll-America First Team Sydney Baldwin (Sr., D, Minnesota) AHCA/CCM Hockey All-America Second Team Kristen Campbell (So., G, Wisconsin) Jincy Dunne (RS-So., D, Ohio State) All-USCHO First Team Maddie Rolfes (Sr., D, Wisconsin) All-USCHO Second Team Kristen Campbell (So., G, Wisconsin) All-USCHO Third Team Kassidy Sauvé (RS-Jr., G, Ohio State) Jincy Dunne (RS-So., D, Ohio State) Abby Roque (So., F, Wisconsin) All-USCHO Rookie Team Olivia Knowles (Fr., D, Minnesota) Emma Maltais (Fr., F, Ohio State) Google Cloud Academic All-America Third Team Janine Alder (So., G, St. Cloud State) Sydney Baldwin (Sr., D, Minnesota) Sidney Peters (RS-Sr., G, Minnesota)

NOMINEES / CANDIDATES / FINALISTS Honor Player (Yr., Pos., Team) Hockey Humanitarian Award Top-5 Finalist Lauren Spring (Sr., F, Ohio State) Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award Top-10 Finalist Sydney Baldwin (Sr., D, Minnesota) Kristen Campbell (So., G, Wisconsin) NCAA Woman of the Year Nominee Sidney Peters (RS-Sr., G, Minnesota)

2017-18 natiOnal accOladeS

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• The nation's premier conference tournament again staged a competitive and entertaining championship weekend, as nationally-ranked Wisconsin, Ohio State and Minnesota, along with upstart Bemidji State, played three memorable games at the 2018 WCHA Final Faceoff.

• Minnesota, playing to extend its season, won their seventh WCHA playoff championship after defeating Ohio State, 2-0 in the semifinals and Wisconsin, 3-1 in the 2018 WCHA Final Faceoff championship game.

• The Badgers' Baylee Wellhausen notched the first Final Faceoff hat trick since 2012, helping UW past BSU, 4-1 in the first semifinal.

• Final Faceoff Most Outstanding Player Sidney Peters, Minnesota's redshirt-senior goaltender, stopped 64-of-65 shots.

• Full recaps, box scores, photo galleries and video highlights are available at wcha.com.

2018 WCHA Final Faceoff Semifinal #1(1) Wisconsin 4, vs. (4) Bemidji State 1(March 3 at Ridder Arena; Minneapolis, Minn.) A competitive and entertaining 2018 WCHA Final Faceoff got underway with a game tighter than the final score indicated, as top-seeded Wisconsin got a Baylee Wellhausen hat trick for a 4-1 win over No. 4 seed Bemidji State. Wellhausen lit the lamp just 41 seconds into the game for a quick, 1-0 Badgers lead. But, the Beavers settled in and found the equalizer from senior Emma Terres with 34 seconds remaining in the opening period. Wellhausen's shorthanded tally at 11:06 of the second stanza broke the 1-1 tie and stood as the game-winner, while Maddie Rolfes provided an insurance marker with 9:15 remaining in regulation. Wellhausen, UW's co-captain, then completed the first Final Faceoff hat trick since 2012 with an empty net tally. Kristen Campbell made 22 saves for the Badgers, while BSU freshman Kerigan Dowhy had 27 stops.

2018 WCHA Final Faceoff Semifinal #2(3) Minnesota 2, vs. (2) Ohio State 0(March 3 at Ridder Arena; Minneapolis, Minn.) After UConn upset Boston College earlier in the day in the Hockey East semifinals, the mission became clear for Minnesota: Win the Final Faceoff or risk seeing its season end. The third-seeded Gophers and redshirt-senior goaltender Sidney Peters responded, blanking No. 2 seed Ohio State, 2-0. Peters was fantastic en route to her fourth shutout of the season and 16th of her career, making 33 saves. She turned aside 10 shots in the first period, seven in the second and 16 in the third as the Gophers were clinging to a 1-0 lead for the first 19 minutes of the frame. Freshman forward Grace Zumwinkle, the regular season WCHA Scoring Champion, netted both Minnesota goals, scoring an even-strength marker at 2:26 of the second period and the game-clinching, empty-net tally with less than a minute remaining. Ohio State freshman goaltender Amanda Zeglen was also fantastic, stopping 25-of-26 shots.

2018 WCHA Final Faceoff Championship Game(3) Minnesota 3, vs. (1) Wisconsin 1(March 4 at Ridder Arena; Minneapolis, Minn.) Again playing for their NCAA lives, the Gophers (and Sidney Peters) again rose to the occasion, defeating the Badgers, 3-1 to win the 2018 WCHA Final Faceoff and earn the league's automatic bid to the national tournament. In beating Wisconsin for the first time in five tries this season, Minnesota also captured its seventh WCHA playoff title, matching UW for the most in league history. Peters made 31 saves (including 24 over the final 40 minutes), the continuation of an excellent weekend that saw her stop 64-of-65 shots and earn 2018 WCHA Most Outstanding Player honors. A pair of freshmen traded first-period goals, with Minnesota's Taylor Wente scoring her 11th of the season at 1:06 and Wisconsin's Delaney Drake netting her first collegiate goal at the 4:19 mark. Taylor Williamson, who overcame a serious illness that forced her to miss 33 games this season, wrote another triumphant chapter with the game-winning goal, coming 1:40 into the second period and giving the Gophers a 2-1 lead. Nicole Schammel iced the win and the WCHA Final Faceoff crown with an empty-net goal with 14 seconds remaining.

2018 WCHA Final FaceOFF all-tOuRnament teamForward – Baylee Wellhausen, Sr., WisconsinForward – Grace Zumwinkle, Fr., MinnesotaForward – Taylor Williamson, Jr., MinnesotaDefense – Sydney Baldwin, Sr., MinnesotaDefense – Maddie Rolfes, Sr., WisconsinGoaltender – Sidney Peters, RS-Sr., Minnesota

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - Final FaceOFF

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#2 Wisconsin

Minnesota

#3 Colgate

Northeastern

#1 Clarkson

Mercyhurst

#4 Boston College

Ohio State

First Round; March 10at Host Sites

#1 Clarkson

Ohio State

Clarkson wins, 1-0 (OT)

#2 Wisconsin

#3 Colgate

#1 Clarkson

#3 Colgate

2018National Champion -

Clarkson

2018 Women's Frozen FourMarch 16 and 18

Ridder Arena; Minneapolis, Minn.

Mercyhurst wins, 2-1

Ohio State wins, 2-0

Wisconsin wins, 4-0

Minnesota wins, 1-0

Colgate wins, 4-3 (2OT)

Clarkson wins, 2-1 (OT)

2018 ncaa tOuRnament nOteS• The WCHA landed three teams -- more than any other conference -- in the

eight-team, 2018 NCAA tournament field: No. 2 seed Wisconsin, Minnesota and Ohio State. It marked the second-straight season that a trio of WCHA teams competed for a national title.

• For the fifth-straight year and 13th time in the event’s 18-year history, at least half of the Frozen Four was comprised of teams from the WCHA, with the Badgers and Buckeyes each competing in a national semifinal game.

abOut WiScOnSin• Wisconsin advanced to its fifth-straight Frozen Four, the longest active streak

in the country, during the Badgers' 12th NCAA tournament appearance (matching Mercyhurst for the most by any program nationally).

• UW opened the tournament with a 4-0, "Border Battle" NCAA quarterfinal-round victory over visiting Minnesota in front of an electric, sold-out crowd at LaBahn Arena. WCHA Offensive Player of the Year Abby Roque scored twice in a 16-second span of the second period to break the game open, WCHA Goaltender of the Year Kristen Campbell made 12 saves and the Badgers ran their home unbeaten streak to 29 games.

• Despite outshooting the Raiders 48-24, Wisconsin dropped a heartbreaking, 4-3 decision in double overtime to No. 3 Colgate in a NCAA semifinal game. Baylee Wellhausen, Claudia Kepler and Mekenzie Steffen all scored for the Badgers, with Steffen drawing UW even at 3-3 with just 3:24 remaining in regulation.

abOut minneSOta• Minnesota, which earned the league's automatic bid after upsetting Ohio

State and Wisconsin to win the WCHA Final Faceoff, set an NCAA-record with its 11-straight tournament appearance (and extended its own mark with its 17th overall trip).

abOut OHiO State• Ohio State capped its historic season in impressive fashion, as the Buckeyes'

first-ever NCAA tournament appearance resulted in a trip to the Frozen Four.• OSU went on the road in the NCAA quarterfinals and, in its first tourney

game, blanked No. 4 seed Boston College, 2-0. Lauren Boyle opened the scoring, Maddy Field netted her sixth goal of the postseason and Kassidy Sauvé made 38 saves as the Buckeyes handed the host Eagles -- the nation's top-scoring team -- their only shutout of the season.

• The Buckeyes' ride ended in dramatic fashion in a NCAA semifinal game, as OSU took eventual national champion Clarkson to overtime, but could not solve Golden Knights goaltender (and eventual tournament Most Outstanding Player) Shea Tiley in a 1-0 loss.

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - ncaa tOuRnament

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2017-18 WcHa aWaRdSpOWeRed by

GOODWOODhockey never looked so good.

OFFenSive playeR OF tHe yeaR

Roque followed up her 2016-17 WCHA Rookie of the Year performance with an even better sophomore campaign, propelling top-ranked Wisconsin to its third-straight league regular season crown. The Sault Ste. Marie native compiled 21 of her team-best 35 overall points in 24 WCHA games, with six goals and 15 assists. Roque factored in eight-game winning goals for the Badgers in league play (2g-6a), had at least one point in 14 of 24 contests and posted a plus-14 rating. She also ranked second in the WCHA with 260 face-off wins and fourth with a .596 percentage. Roque enters the WCHA Final Faceoff with a league-best 26 assists overall (and is tied for third with 35 points).

ROOkie OF tHe yeaR

emma maltaiSFR., F, OHiO State

buRlingtOn, OntaRiO

How good has Maltais been in her first collegiate sea-son? Well, the freshman from Burlington, Ontario enters the WCHA Final Faceoff with a league-leading 40 points (16g-24a) overall – the most by an Ohio State skater since two-time Olympic medalist Natalie Spooner collected 50 in 2011-12. Maltais finished second in the league scoring race with 24 of her points (10g-14a) in 24 WCHA games, finding her name on the scoresheet in 17 contests. A clutch per-former, she led the WCHA with four game-winning goals in league play and five overall – tied for the most nationally by a rookie. All told, Maltais tallied at least a point in 26 of her 34 contests (including 12 multi-point efforts), helping Ohio State set program records with 23 overall wins (entering this weekend) and 14 WCHA victories.

abby ROqueSO., F, WiScOnSin

Sault Ste. maRie, micH.

Baldwin, a Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award top-10 fi-nalist, was one of the nation’s top two-way players this season. The senior from Minnetonka, Minn. was tied for third in the WCHA scoring race and paced league blueliners with 22 points (9g-13a) in conference games, along with a WCHA-best 76 blocked shots. The Gophers’ co-captain ranks second among NCAA Division I defense-men with 32 points, 12 goals (tied) and 92 blocks, while she is tied for sixth with a plus-24 rating. Baldwin tallied a point in 23 of her 35 games (14 WCHA contests), while factoring in seven game-winning goals (2g-5a).

OutStanding Student-atHleteOF tHe yeaR

catHeRine daOuStSR., d, minneSOta dulutH

l’Île-bizaRd, québec

“Catherine is the perfect example of what it truly means to be a student-athlete,” says UMD head coach Maura Crowell of her senior blueliner. “She embodies both parts of the moniker that is so often used, we some-times forget how difficult it is to truly be one.” A native of French-speaking L’Île-Bizard, Québec, Daoust has main-tained a perfect 4.0 grade-point average through seven semesters to-date as a Mechanical Engineering major. A member of Tau Beta Pi, the National Engineering Honor Society, she has made the Dean’s list every semester at UMD, is a three-time WCHA All-Academic Team member and a three-time WCHA Scholar-Athlete Award recip-ient. Before embarking on a post-graduate career that includes plans to attend a master’s program in Aero-space Engineering, Daoust served as the Bulldogs’ assis-tant captain in her final season of collegiate hockey. She tallied a career-high 13 points (3g-10a) in 2017-18, led UMD with 67 blocked shots, posted a plus-2 rating and appeared on all the Bulldogs’ special teams units.

Sydney baldWinSR., d, minneSOta

minnetOnka, minn.

gOaltendeR OF tHe yeaR

Campbell was nothing short of sensational in her first season in Madison, starting all 24 league games for the WCHA champion Badgers, leading the conference with 20 wins, an .875 winning percentage (20-2-2), eight shutouts, a 1.16 goals-against average and a .941 save percentage. The Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award top-10 finalist has been in the net for each of UW’s 34 games and enters the WCHA Final Faceoff leading all NCAA Division I goaltenders in overall winning per-centage (.882, 29-3-2), shutouts (11), GAA (1.14) and save percentage (.942). A sophomore transfer from the University of North Dakota, Campbell allowed two-goals-or-fewer in 28 games (19 in WCHA play), in-cluding 23 efforts with no more than one goal against (16 in league contests). The Brandon, Manitoba native became the first Wisconsin goaltender to win her first nine starts in the Cardinal and White, opening 16-0-0.

cOacH OF tHe yeaR

nadine muzeRallOHiO State

In just her second season as a collegiate head coach, Muzerall has presided over the best season in Ohio State program history. After improving by four wins in her first campaign, the Buckeyes have won a pro-gram-record 23 games thus far in 2017-18 (three more than the previous standard) and, at 23-9-4, have risen to No. 5 in the national polls heading into the WCHA Final Faceoff. After having not finished with a winning league record since 2006-07, Muzerall guided the Buckeyes to a program-best second-place finish this season with a school-record 14 WCHA wins (14-6-4-3). Additionally, her players earned five spots on 2017-18 All-WCHA teams.

kRiSten cambellSO., g, WiScOnSin

bRandOn, manitOba

deFenSive playeR OF tHe yeaR

OveRall playeR OF tHe yeaRSydney baldWin, SR., d, minneSOta (minnetOnka, minn.)

Baldwin, a Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award top-10 finalist, was tied for third in the WCHA scoring race and paced league blueliners with 22 points (9g-13a) in conference games, along with a league-best 76 blocked shots. The native of Minnetonka, Minn. tallied a point in 14 of her 24 WCHA games, while factoring in four game-winning goals (2g-2a). The first-team All-WCHA performer also helped the Gophers to the league’s second-best power play in WCHA games.

Baldwin’s 32 points overall, from 12 goals and 20 assists, are tied for second among NCAA Division I blueliners, tops among her WCHA position peers and tied for fifth in the league overall. She has played in all 37 of Minnesota’s games, has tallied a point in 23 contests, has compiled an NCAA-best 99 blocked shots and owns a plus-26 rating. Perhaps most importantly, Baldwin is co-captain of a Gophers team that won the 2018 WCHA Final Faceoff to advance to the NCAA tournament.

Baldwin becomes just the third full-time blueliner to be named WCHA Player of the Year in the award’s 19-year history, joining two-time United States Olympian and fellow Gopher Courtney Kennedy (2001) and, most recently, an Olympic gold medalist with Canada, Ohio State alumna Tessa Bonhomme (2008). A fourth skater, Minnesota’s Ronda Curtin, was listed as a defenseman and forward when she earned WCHA Player of the Year honors in 2002.

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - aWaRdS

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All-WCHA First TeamAbby Roque, So., F, Wisconsin; Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State

Grace Zumwinkle, Fr., F, MinnesotaSydney Baldwin, Sr., D, MinnesotaJincy Dunne, RS-So., D, Ohio State

Kristen Campbell, So., G, Wisconsin

All-WCHA Second TeamClaudia Kepler, Sr., F, WisconsinSophia Shaver, Jr., F, WisconsinCaitlin Reilly, Sr., F, Minnesota

Mikaela Gardner, Jr., D, WisconsinAlexis Joyce, Sr., D, Bemidji State

Kassidy Sauvé, RS-Jr., G, Ohio State

All-WCHA Third TeamTatum Skaggs, Fr., F, Ohio State

Kateřina Mrázová, Sr., F, Minnesota DuluthClair DeGeorge, Fr., F, Bemidji State

Maddie Rolfes, Sr., F, WisconsinJalyn Elmes, So., D, Minnesota DuluthEmma Polusny, Fr., G, St. Cloud State

All-WCHA Rookie TeamEmma Maltais, F, Ohio State

Grace Zumwinkle, F, MinnesotaClair DeGeorge, F, Bemidji State

Mak Langei, D, Bemidji StateOlivia Knowles, D, Minnesota

Emma Polusny, G, St. Cloud State

2017-18 WcHa aWaRdSpOWeRed by

GOODWOODhockey never looked so good.

Date Offensive Defensive Goaltender Rookie Sept./Oct. Abby Roque, So., Wisconsin Sydney Baldwin, Sr., Minnesota Kristen Campbell, So., Wisconsin Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State November Alexis Mauermann, So., Wisconsin Sydney Baldwin, Sr., Minnesota Kristen Campbell, So., Wisconsin Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State December Grace Zumwinkle, Fr., Minnesota Alexis Joyce, Sr., Bemidji State Kristen Campbell, So., Wisconsin Mak Langei, Fr., D, Bemidji State January Tatum Skaggs, Fr., Ohio State Sydney Baldwin, Sr., Minnesota Kassidy Sauvé, RS-Jr., Ohio State Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State February Tatum Skaggs, Fr., Ohio State Sydney Baldwin, Sr., Minnesota Kerigan Dowhy, Fr., Bemidji State Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State

2017-18 WCHA playeRS OF tHe mOntH

2017-18 all-WCHA teamS

Date Offensive Defensive Rookie Oct. 3 Tatum Skaggs, Fr., F, Ohio State Jessica Convery, Sr., G, Minnesota Duluth Brette Pettet, Fr., F, Wisconsin Oct. 10 Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State Kristen Campbell, So., G, Wisconsin Tatum Skaggs, Fr., F, Ohio State Oct. 17 Sydney Baldwin, Sr., D, Minnesota Kassidy Sauvé, RS-Jr., G, Ohio State Mak Langei, Fr., D, Bemidji State Oct. 24 Maddy Field, Jr., F, Ohio State Patti Marshall, So., D, Minnesota Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State Oct. 31 Baylee Wellhausen, Sr., F, Wisconsin Kristen Campbell, So., G, Wisconsin Laura Kluge, Fr., F, St. Cloud State Nov. 7 Alexis Mauermann, So., F, Wisconsin Kristen Campbell, So., G, Wisconsin Grace Zumwinkle, Fr., F, Minnesota Nov. 14 Lauren Boyle, Jr., D, Ohio State Erin Deters, Sr., G, Bemidji State Brittyn Fleming, Fr., F, Minnesota State Nov. 21 Nicole Schammel, Jr., F, Minnesota Mak Langei, Fr., D, Bemidji State Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State Nov. 28 Sophie Skarzynski, Jr., F, Minnesota Jessica Convery, Sr., G, Minnesota Duluth Tatum Skaggs, Fr., F, Ohio State Dec. 5 Jacqueline Kaasa, So., F, Bemidji State Kassidy Sauvé, RS-Jr., G, Ohio State Emma Polusny, Fr., G, St. Cloud State Dec. 12 Haley Mack, So., F, Bemidji State Alexis Joyce, Sr., D, Bemidji State Grace Zumwinkle, Fr., F, Minnesota Dec. 19 Clair DeGeorge, Fr., F, Bemidji State Lauren Bench, RS-Fr., G, Bemidji State Paige Beebe, Fr., F, Bemidji State Liz Schepers, Fr., F, Ohio State Jan. 9 Emily Bergland, Jr., F, Bemidji State Emma Polusny, Fr., G, St. Cloud State Laura Kluge, Fr., F, St. Cloud State Jan. 16 Tatum Skaggs, Fr., F, Ohio State Kassidy Sauvé, RS-Jr., G, Ohio State Ashton Bell, Fr., F, Minnesota Duluth Jan. 23 Maddy Field, Jr., F, Ohio State Janine Alder, So., G, St. Cloud State Liz Schepers, Fr., F, Ohio State Jan. 30 Maddie Rowe, So., F/D, Wisconsin Jessica Convery, Sr., G, Minnesota Duluth Anna Klein, Fr., F, Minnesota Duluth Feb. 6 Tatum Skaggs, Fr., F, Ohio State Kassidy Sauvé, RS-Jr., G, Ohio State Emma Maltais, Fr., F, Ohio State Feb. 13 Julia Tylke, Jr., F, St. Cloud State Chloe Crosby, So., G, Minnesota State Emma Polusny, Fr., G, St. Cloud State Feb. 20 Sam Cogan, Jr., F, Wisconsin Kassidy Sauvé, RS-Jr., G, Ohio State Kerigan Dowhy, Fr., G, Bemidji State Feb. 27 Maddy Field, Jr., F, Ohio State Lauren Boyle, Jr., D, Ohio State Kerigan Dowhy, Fr., G, Bemidji State

2017-18 WCHA playeRS OF tHe Week

Scoring ChampionGrace Zumwinkle, Fr., F, Minnesota

(11 goals, 16 assists for 27 points in 24 WCHA games)

Goaltending ChampionKristen Campbell, So., G, Wisconsin

(28 goals allowed in 1450:07 for a 1.16 GAA in 24 WCHA games)

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - aWaRdS

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2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - aWaRdS

WCHA All-Academic Team, Powered by GoodWood HockeyA total of 95 student-athletes, representing all seven Women's League member institutions, earned distinction as members of the 2017-18 WCHA All-Academic Team, Powered by GoodWood Hockey. To earn recognition as a member of the WCHA All-Academic Team, student-athletes must have completed one year of eligibility at their present institution prior to the current academic year, have a grade-point average of at least 3.0 (4.0 scale) for the previous two semesters or three quarters, or may qualify if overall GPA is at least 3.0 for all terms at the present institution.

Following, by member institution, are the 2017-18 WCHA All-Academic Team honorees:

Bemidji State UniversityLauren Bench (RS-Fr., G, Eagan, Minn.); Emily Bergland (Jr., F, Thief River Falls, Minn.); Erin Deters (Sr., G, Sartell, Minn.); Reilly Fawcett (Sr., F, Proctor, Minn.); Abby Halluska (So., F, Delano, Minn.); Melissa Hunt (Jr., D, Hartney, Manitoba); Briana Jorde (So., D, Thief River Falls, Minn.); Alexis Joyce (Sr., D, Lakeville, Minn.); Jacqueline Kaasa (So., F, North Hudson, Wis.); Haley Mack (So., F, East Grand Forks, Minn.); Sylvia Marolt (Jr., F, Thief River Falls, Minn.); Heather Olson (So., D, Bemidji, Minn.); Kiki Radke (So., F, Hastings, Minn.); Emma Terres (Sr., F/D, New Hope. Minn.); Summer Thibodeau (Sr., F, Maple Grove, Minn.); Bailey Wright (Sr., F, Anchorage, Alaska)

University of MinnesotaSydney Baldwin (Sr., D, Minnetonka, Minn.); Serena D’Angelo (So., G, Oakville, Ontario); Tianna Gunderson (Jr., F, Roseau, Minn.); Patti Marshall (So., D, Thief River Falls, Minn.); Sidney Peters (RS-Sr., G, Geneva, Ill.); Cara Piazza (Sr., F, Darien, Ill.); Caitlin Reilly (Sr., F, Chanhassen, Minn.); Nicole Schammel (RS-Jr., F, Red Wing, Minn.); Sophie Skarzynski (Jr., F, Lake Forest, Ill.); Sierra Smith (Jr., F, Stillwater, Minn.); Taylor Williamson (Jr., F, Edina, Minn.); Alex Woken (So., F, Fargo, N.D.)

University of Minnesota DuluthLynn Astrup (Sr., D, Warroad, Minn.); Sydney Brodt (So., F, North Oaks, Minn.); Catherine Daoust (Sr., D, L'Île-Bizard, Québec); Reagan Haley (Jr., F, Red Wing, Minn.); Jessica Healey (Edmonton, Alberta); Linnea Hedin (Sr., D, Huddinge, Sweden); Ryleigh Houston (So., F, Winnipeg, Manitoba); Catherine Johnson (So., G, Lakeville, Minn.); Michelle Löwenhielm (Sr., F, Sollentuna, Sweden); Kateřina Mrázová (Prague, Czech Republic); Brooklynn Schugel (So., F, New Ulm, Minn.); Emma Yanko (Jr., F, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)

Minnesota State UniversityEmily Antony (Jr., F, Plymouth, Minn.); Katie Bidulka (Jr., G, Oakville, Ontario); Corbin Boyd (Jr., F, Minnetonka, Minn.); Lindsey Coleman (Sr., F, Burnsville, Minn.); Amanda Conway (Sr., F, Naperville, Ill.); Chloe Crosby (So., G, Lakeville, Minn.); Hannah Davidson (Sr., F, Kincardine, Ontario); Lena Düesterhöft (Jr., D, Munich, Germany); Taylor Gulenchyn (So., F, Stillwater, Minn.); Megan Hinze (Jr., D, Carver, Minn.); Jordan Jackson (So., D, Maplewood, Minn.); Anna Keys (Sr., D, Cottage Grove, Minn.); Rebekah Kolstad (Jr., F, Mankato, Minn.); Amanda Martin (Sr., F, Peoria, Ariz.); Jordan McLaughlin (Grand Rapids, Minn.); Sofia Poinar (So., F, Chanhassen, Minn.); McKenzie Sederberg (So., D, Andover, Minn.); Emma Wittchow (Sr., D, Burnsville, Minn.)

Ohio State University Samantha Bouley (So., F, Stittsville, Ontario); Lauren Boyle (Jr., D, Eden Praire, Minn.); Charly Dahlquist (Jr., F, Eden Prairie, Minn.); Jincy Dunne (RS-So., D, O’Fallon, Mo.); Maddy Field (Jr., F, Oakville, Ontario); Rebecca Freiburger (So., F, Rochester, Minn.); Julianna Iafallo (Sr., F, Eden, N.Y.); Jacyn Reeves (Jr., F/D, Holmen, Wis.); Elise Riemenschneider (So., D, Rocky River, Ohio); Dani Sadek (Lakeville, Minn.); Kassidy Sauvé (RS-Jr., G, Whitby, Ontario); Olivia Soares (So., F, Hanover, Mass.); Lauren Spring (Sr., F, Kelowna, British Columbia)

St. Cloud State UniversityJanine Alder (So., G, Zürich, Switzerland); Brittney Anderson (Sr., D, Hudson, Wis.); Taylor Crosby (Cole Harbour Nova Scotia); Katie Detert (So., F, Rhinelander, Wis.); Ivy Dynek (Jr., F, Northfield, Ill.); Alyssa Erickson (Sr., F, Mission, British Columbia); Janna Haeg (So., F, Lakeville, Minn.); Brooke Kudirka (So., F, Omaha, Neb.); Suvi Ollikainen (Klaukkala, Finland); Hannah Potrykus (Brighton, Mich.); Emma Turbyville (Sr., D, Chicago, Ill.); Julia Tylke (Delafield, Wis.)

University of Wisconsin Kristen Campbell (So., G, Brandon, Manitoba); Sam Cogan (Jr., F, Ottawa, Ontario); Mikaela Gardner (Jr., D, Plainfield, Ill.); Claudia Kepler (Sr., F, Verona, Wis.); Alexis Mauermann (So., F, Janesville, Wis).; Presley Norby (So., F, Minnetonka, Minn.); Annie Pankowski (RS-Sr., F, Laguna Hills, Calif.); Abby Roque (So., F, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.); Maddie Rowe (So., F/D, River Falls, Wis.); Sophia Shaver (Jr., F, Wayzata, Minn.); Mekenzie Steffen (So., D, Centerville, Minn.); Baylee Wellhausen (Sr., F, Williams Bay, Wis.); Lauren Williams (Sr., D, Windsor, Ontario)

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WCHA Scholar-AthletesA total of 60 student-athletes, representing all seven Women's League member institutions, earned distinction as 2017-18 WCHA Scholar-Athlete Award winners. The WCHA Scholar-Athlete Award was developed through member team Faculty Representatives and approved by the conference membership for the 2005-06 season. To earn recognition as a WCHA Scholar-Athlete, conference-member student-athletes must have completed at least one year of residency at their present institution prior to the current academic year and must also have a grade-point average of at least 3.50 on a 4.0 scale for the previous two semesters or three quarters, or may qualify if his/her overall GPA is at least 3.50 for all terms at his or her present institution.

The full list of 2017-18 WCHA Scholar-Athletes, by institution (**** indicates four-time recipient; *** indicates three-time recipient; ** indicates two-time recipient):

Bemidji State UniversityLauren Bench (RS-Fr., G, Eagan, Minn.); Emily Bergland** (Jr., F, Thief River Falls, Minn.); Erin Deters (Sr., G, Sartell, Minn.); Reilly Fawcett*** (Sr., F, Proctor, Minn.); Abby Halluska (So., F, Delano, Minn.); Alexis Joyce*** (Sr., D, Lakeville, Minn.); Jacqueline Kaasa (So., F, North Hudson, Wis.); Haley Mack (So., F, East Grand Forks, Minn.); Sylvia Marolt (Jr., F, Thief River Falls, Minn.); Kiki Radke (So., F, Hastings, Minn.); Emma Terres*** (Sr., F/D, New Hope. Minn.); Summer Thibodeau*** (Sr., F, Maple Grove, Minn.)

University of MinnesotaSydney Baldwin** (Sr., D, Minnetonka, Minn.); Serena D’Angelo (So., G, Oakville, Ontario); Tianna Gunderson (Jr., F, Roseau, Minn.); Patti Marshall (So., D, Thief River Falls, Minn.); Sidney Peters**** (RS-Sr., G, Geneva, Ill.); Cara Piazza*** (Sr., F, Darien, Ill.); Nicole Schammel** (RS-Jr., F, Red Wing, Minn.); Taylor Williamson** (Jr., F, Edina, Minn.); Alex Woken (So., F, Fargo, N.D.)

University of Minnesota DuluthLynn Astrup *** (Sr., D, Warroad, Minn.); Sydney Brodt (So., F, North Oaks, Minn.); Catherine Daoust*** (Sr., D, L'Île-Bizard, Québec); Reagan Haley** (Jr., F, Red Wing, Minn.); Linnea Hedin*** (Sr., D, Huddinge, Sweden); Ryleigh Houston (So., F, Winnipeg, Manitoba); Catherine Johnson (So., G, Lakeville, Minn.); Michelle Löwenhielm** (Sr., F, Sollentuna, Sweden); Emma Yanko (Jr., F, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)

2017-18 WcHa SeaSOn in RevieW - aWaRdS

Minnesota State UniversityEmily Antony** (Jr., F, Plymouth, Minn.); Katie Bidulka** (Jr., G, Oakville, Ontario); Corbin Boyd** (Jr., F, Minnetonka, Minn.); Lindsey Coleman** (Sr., F, Burnsville, Minn.); Amanda Conway** (Sr., F, Naperville, Ill.); Chloe Crosby (So., G, Lakeville, Minn.); Hannah Davidson** (Sr., F, Kincardine, Ontario); Lena Düesterhöft** (Jr., D, Munich, Germany); Jordan Jackson (So., D, Maplewood, Minn.); Amanda Martin*** (Sr., F, Peoria, Ariz.); Sofia Poinar (So., F, Chanhassen, Minn.); McKenzie Sederberg (So., D, Andover, Minn.); Emma Wittchow (Sr., D, Burnsville, Minn.)

Ohio State University Samantha Bouley (So., F, Stittsville, Ontario); Rebecca Freiburger (So., F, Rochester, Minn.); Julianna Iafallo (Sr., F, Eden, N.Y.); Jacyn Reeves (Jr., F/D, Holmen, Wis.); Kassidy Sauvé (RS-Jr., G, Whitby, Ontario); Olivia Soares (So., F, Hanover, Mass.); Lauren Spring** (Sr., F, Kelowna, British Columbia)

St. Cloud State UniversityJanine Alder (So., G, Zürich, Switzerland); Katie Detert (So., F, Rhinelander, Wis.); Ivy Dynek (Jr., F, Northfield, Ill.); Janna Haeg (So., F, Lakeville, Minn.); Brooke Kudirka (So., F, Omaha, Neb.); Emma Turbyville** (Sr., D, Chicago, Ill.)

University of Wisconsin Kristen Campbell (So., G, Brandon, Manitoba); Alexis Mauermann (So., F, Janesville, Wis).; Annie Pankowski*** (RS-Sr., F, Laguna Hills, Calif.); Lauren Williams** (Sr., D, Windsor, Ontario)

FOuR-time WcHa ScHOlaR-atHlete aWaRd RecipientS

In the 13-year history of the WCHA Scholar-Athlete Award, 15 student-athletes have the distinguished honor of being four-time recipients.

Name School (Years)Scott McCulloch Colorado College (2006-09)Jenna Hewitt Minnesota State (2007-10)Chay Genoway North Dakota (2008-11)Austin Lee Minnesota State (2009-12)Kenny Reiter Minnesota Duluth (2009-12)Anna Donlan St. Cloud State (2010-13)Emily Erickson Bemidji State (2010-13)Drew LeBlanc St. Cloud State (2010-13)Kathleen Rogan Minnesota State (2012-15)Shannon Kaiser North Dakota (2013-16)Shelby Amsley-Benzie North Dakota (2013-16)Whitney Wivoda Bemidji State (2013-16)Reid Mimmack Bemidji State (2014-17)Brent Baltus Michigan Tech (2015-18)Sidney Peters Minnesota (2015-18)

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natiOnal pOllS, nOncOnFeRence and Head-tO-Head

March 19, 2018 (FINAL) Rk Team (1st Place Votes) Record Points Last Poll 1 Clarkson (15) 36-4-1 150 1 2 Colgate 34-6-1 133 3 3 Wisconsin 31-5-2 122 2 4 Ohio State 24-11-4 104 6 5 Boston College 30-5-3 89 4 6 Minnesota 24-11-3 76 5 7 Cornell 21-9-3 51 7 8 Northeastern 19-17-3 36 9 8 St. Lawrence 20-11-4 36 8 10 Mercyhurst 18-15-4 27 NROthers receiving votes: Robert Morris 1.

March 20, 2018 (FINAL)Rank Team, Points (1st place) Last Wk Record Top 10 1. Clarkson, 190 (19) 1 36-4-1 24 2. Colgate, 169 3 34-6-1 22 3. Wisconsin, 152 2 31-5-2 24 4. Ohio State, 132 4 24-11-4 21 5. Boston College, 113 5 30-5-3 24 6. Minnesota, 99 6 24-11-3 24 7. Cornell, 58 7 21-9-3 23 8. Northeastern, 55 8 19-7-3 9 9. St. Lawrence, 37 9 20-11-4 22 10. Mercyhurst, 36 10 18-15-4 2Others receiving votes: Robert Morris, 4.

By Team vs CHA vs ECAC vs HEA vs Ind TotalBemidji State 4-1-1 0-2-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 4-3-1Minnesota 4-0-0 0-0-0 2-2-0 0-0-0 6-2-0Minnesota Duluth 2-0-0 1-0-0 1-2-0 0-0-0 4-2-0Minnesota State 2-3-1 0-0-0 0-2-0 0-0-0 2-5-1Ohio State 5-3-0 2-1-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 8-4-0St. Cloud State 0-0-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 1-3-0Wisconsin 6-0-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 9-2-0TOTALS: 23-7-2 5-6-0 6-8-0 0-0-0 34-21-2 (.750) (.455) (.429) (.---) (.614) By Site vs CHA vs ECAC vs HEA vs Ind TotalHome 14-5-1 2-0-0 3-3-0 0-0-0 19-8-1Away 9-2-1 2-4-0 2-2-0 0-0-0 13-8-1Neutral 0-0-0 1-2-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 2-5-0TOTALS: 23-7-2 5-6-0 6-8-0 0-0-0 34-21-2 (.750) (.455) (.429) (.---) (.614)

USCHO.cOm USA TOday/USA HOckey magazine

WCHA againSt tHe ReSt (Final)

BSU UMN UMD MSU OSU SCSU UW W-L-T-SW PtsBSU --- 1-3-0 2-2-0 3-1-0 1-2-1 2-2-0 0-3-1 9-13-2-1 30UMN 3-1-0 --- 3-0-1 4-0-0 0-3-1 3-0-1 0-4-0 13-8-3-0 42UMD 2-2-0 0-3-1 --- 4-0-0 2-2-0 2-1-1 0-3-1 10-11-3-2 35MSU 1-3-0 0-4-0 0-2-0 --- 1-3-0 1-3-0 0-4-0 3-19-0-0 9OSU 2-1-1 3-0-1 2-2-0 3-1-0 --- 2-0-2 2-2-0 14-6-4-3 49SCSU 2-2-0 0-3-1 1-2-1 3-1-0 0-2-2 --- 0-4-0 6-14-4-1 23UW 3-0-1 4-0-0 3-0-1 4-0-0 2-2-0 4-0-0 --- 20-2-2-2 64

WCHA Head-tO-Head (Final RegulaR SeaSOn, league gameS)

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Conference Scoring Leaders

ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 24 11-16-27 1.12 2/4 3 0 1 0 +102 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 24 10-14-24 1.00 0/0 2 0 4 0 +83 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 24 9-13-22 0.92 6/12 1 0 2 0 +10

Caitlin Reilly MIN SR F 24 9-13-22 0.92 7/14 2 0 1 0 +95 Abby Roque WIS SO F 24 6-15-21 0.88 11/22 1 0 2 0 +146 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 24 12-8-20 0.83 10/20 0 0 1 0 +67 Maddy Field OSU JR F 24 9-10-19 0.79 6/12 3 0 3 0 +58 Sophia Shaver WIS JR F 23 9-9-18 0.78 1/2 2 0 2 0 +12

Julianna Iafallo OSU SR F 24 10-8-18 0.75 3/6 1 1 0 0 +14 Sam Cogan WIS JR F 24 6-12-18 0.75 8/16 2 0 2 0 +16

11 Laura Kluge STC FR F 21 5-12-17 0.81 4/8 1 0 1 0 +7 Presley Norby WIS SO F 22 6-11-17 0.77 3/6 0 0 2 0 +17 Naomi Rogge MND FR F 24 11-6-17 0.71 5/10 2 0 2 0 -3 Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 24 8-9-17 0.71 3/6 3 0 1 0 +5 Sophie Skarzynski MIN JR F/D 24 6-11-17 0.71 2/4 1 0 0 0 +8 Clair DeGeorge BMJ FR F 24 5-12-17 0.71 2/4 2 0 1 0 -2

17 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 24 15-1-16 0.67 1/2 5 0 2 0 +19 Ashton Bell MND FR F 24 8-8-16 0.67 3/6 4 0 1 0 -12 Jalyn Elmes MND SO D 24 4-12-16 0.67 14/31 2 0 1 0 -3 Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 24 3-13-16 0.67 7/14 0 0 1 0 +3

21 Kateřina Mrázová MND SR F 24 7-8-15 0.62 4/8 1 0 2 0 +4 Maddie Rowe WIS SO F/D 24 7-8-15 0.62 1/2 0 0 0 0 +11 Jacqueline Kaasa BMJ SO F 24 6-9-15 0.62 5/10 2 0 2 0 -1 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 24 6-9-15 0.62 1/2 0 0 2 0 +15 Maddie Rolfes WIS SR D 24 4-11-15 0.62 7/14 0 0 3 0 +16 Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 24 0-15-15 0.62 3/6 0 0 0 0 +13

Defenseman ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 24 9-13-22 0.92 6/12 1 0 2 0 +102 Jalyn Elmes MND SO D 24 4-12-16 0.67 14/31 2 0 1 0 -3

Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 24 3-13-16 0.67 7/14 0 0 1 0 +34 Maddie Rolfes WIS SR D 24 4-11-15 0.62 7/14 0 0 3 0 +16

Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 24 0-15-15 0.62 3/6 0 0 0 0 +136 Mikaela Gardner WIS JR D 21 3-11-14 0.67 6/12 0 0 1 0 +22

Mak Langei BMJ FR D 24 4-10-14 0.58 7/14 0 0 2 0 +58 Patti Marshall MIN SO D 24 1-11-12 0.50 1/2 0 0 0 0 +79 Mekenzie Steffen WIS SO D 24 1-10-11 0.46 3/6 0 0 0 0 +16

10 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 24 2-8-10 0.42 3/6 0 0 0 0 +6 Catherine Daoust MND SR D 24 1-9-10 0.42 7/14 1 0 0 0 +1

12 Jessica Healey MND SR D 24 5-4-9 0.38 2/4 4 0 1 0 -12 Emma Turbyville STC SR D 24 0-9-9 0.38 7/14 0 0 0 0 -4

14 Emily Brown MIN FR D 24 3-5-8 0.33 3/6 0 0 1 0 +10 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 24 2-6-8 0.33 8/16 1 0 0 0 +8 Abby Thiessen STC SO D 24 2-6-8 0.33 4/8 0 0 0 0 -1 Lauren Williams WIS SR D 24 2-6-8 0.33 3/6 0 0 0 0 +17 Grace Bowlby WIS FR D 24 0-8-8 0.33 4/8 0 0 0 0 +15

Freshman ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 24 11-16-27 1.12 2/4 3 0 1 0 +102 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 24 10-14-24 1.00 0/0 2 0 4 0 +83 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 24 12-8-20 0.83 10/20 0 0 1 0 +64 Laura Kluge STC FR F 21 5-12-17 0.81 4/8 1 0 1 0 +7

Naomi Rogge MND FR F 24 11-6-17 0.71 5/10 2 0 2 0 -3 Clair DeGeorge BMJ FR F 24 5-12-17 0.71 2/4 2 0 1 0 -2

7 Ashton Bell MND FR F 24 8-8-16 0.67 3/6 4 0 1 0 -128 Taylor Wente MIN FR F 24 6-8-14 0.58 2/4 0 0 1 0 +7

Mak Langei BMJ FR D 24 4-10-14 0.58 7/14 0 0 2 0 +510 Paige Beebe BMJ FR F 24 6-7-13 0.54 5/10 1 0 0 0 +2

Brette Pettet WIS FR F 24 5-8-13 0.54 0/0 1 0 1 0 +912 Brittyn Fleming MNS FR F 24 3-9-12 0.50 4/8 1 0 0 0 -1013 Caitlin Schneider WIS FR F 24 3-6-9 0.38 2/4 0 0 1 0 +1214 Emily Brown MIN FR D 24 3-5-8 0.33 3/6 0 0 1 0 +10

Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 24 2-6-8 0.33 8/16 1 0 0 0 +8 Grace Bowlby WIS FR D 24 0-8-8 0.33 4/8 0 0 0 0 +15

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Conference Scoring LeadersGoal Scoring GP G GPG

1 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 24 15 0.622 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 24 12 0.503 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 24 11 0.46

Naomi Rogge MND FR F 24 11 0.465 Julianna Iafallo OSU SR F 24 10 0.42

Emma Maltais OSU FR F 24 10 0.427 Sophia Shaver WIS JR F 23 9 0.39

Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 24 9 0.38 Caitlin Reilly MIN SR F 24 9 0.38 Maddy Field OSU JR F 24 9 0.38

11 Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 24 8 0.33 Ashton Bell MND FR F 24 8 0.33

Assist Scoring GP A APG1 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 24 16 0.672 Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 24 15 0.62

Abby Roque WIS SO F 24 15 0.624 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 24 14 0.585 Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 24 13 0.54

Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 24 13 0.54 Caitlin Reilly MIN SR F 24 13 0.54

8 Laura Kluge STC FR F 21 12 0.57 Clair DeGeorge BMJ FR F 24 12 0.50 Jalyn Elmes MND SO D 24 12 0.50 Sam Cogan WIS JR F 24 12 0.50

12 5 Players Tied With 11

Power Play Goals GP G GPG1 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 24 5 0.212 Jessica Healey MND SR D 24 4 0.17

Ashton Bell MND FR F 24 4 0.174 Abby Halluska BMJ SO F 24 3 0.12

Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 24 3 0.12 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 24 3 0.12 Maddy Field OSU JR F 24 3 0.12

8 12 Players Tied With 2

Power Play Points GP G-A-P PPG1 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 24 3-4-7 0.29

Jalyn Elmes MND SO D 24 2-5-7 0.293 Kateřina Mrázová MND SR F 24 1-5-6 0.254 12 Players Tied With 5 Points

Shorthanded Goals GP G GPG1 Haley Mack BMJ SO F 24 2 0.082 Lindsey Coleman MNS SR F 24 1 0.04

Julianna Iafallo OSU SR F 24 1 0.04 Brittney Anderson STC SR D 24 1 0.04

Game-Winning Goals GP G GPG1 Cara Piazza MIN SR F 24 4 0.17

Emma Maltais OSU FR F 24 4 0.173 Maddy Field OSU JR F 24 3 0.12

Maddie Rolfes WIS SR D 24 3 0.125 15 Players Tied With 2

Plus-Minus GP +/-1 Mikaela Gardner WIS JR D 21 +222 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 24 +193 Presley Norby WIS SO F 22 +17

Lauren Williams WIS SR D 24 +175 Maddie Rolfes WIS SR D 24 +16

Sam Cogan WIS JR F 24 +16 Mekenzie Steffen WIS SO D 24 +16

8 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 24 +15 Grace Bowlby WIS FR D 24 +15

10 Julianna Iafallo OSU SR F 24 +14 Abby Roque WIS SO F 24 +14

Hat Tricks GP HT

Blocked Shots GP BLK BLK/G1 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 24 76 3.172 Brittney Anderson STC SR D 24 60 2.503 Mak Langei BMJ FR D 24 56 2.334 Anna Keys MNS SR D 24 54 2.255 Dani Sadek OSU SR D 24 52 2.176 Jessica Kondas MNS FR D 23 50 2.177 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 24 48 2.008 Catherine Daoust MND SR D 24 47 1.96

Abby Thiessen STC SO D 24 47 1.9610 Emma Turbyville STC SR D 24 44 1.83

Face-Off Percentage FW FL FO %1 Rebekah Kolstad MNS JR F 55 34 .6182 Cara Piazza MIN SR F 293 195 .6003 Lindsey Coleman MNS SR F 64 43 .5984 Abby Roque WIS SO F 260 176 .5965 Sam Cogan WIS JR F 207 147 .5856 Janna Haeg STC SO F 83 62 .5727 Charly Dahlquist OSU JR F 244 191 .5618 Sophie Skarzynski MIN JR F/D 123 97 .5599 Sophia Shaver WIS JR F 181 158 .534

10 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 87 76 .534

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Conference Goaltending Leaders

Goals Against AverageGP Minutes GA GAA Record SO Saves Save %

1 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 24 1450:07 28 1.16 20-2-2 8 443 .9412 Sidney Peters MIN SR 18 1055:43 33 1.88 10-6-1 3 399 .9243 Emma Polusny STC FR 13 788:37 26 1.98 4-6-3 3 407 .9404 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 20 1212:05 41 2.03 11-5-4 6 571 .9335 Erin Deters BMJ SR 9 486:32 20 2.47 3-5-1 2 202 .9106 Jessica Convery MND SR 23 1374:48 57 2.49 10-10-3 1 603 .9147 Janine Alder STC SO 11 664:15 29 2.62 2-8-1 0 396 .9328 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 15 822:55 40 2.92 5-8-0 1 349 .8979 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 13 746:04 38 3.06 3-9-0 0 353 .903

10 Kathryn Bidulka MNS JR 12 682:56 41 3.60 0-12-0 0 322 .887

Save PercentageGP Minutes GA GAA Record SO Saves Save %

1 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 24 1450:07 28 1.16 20-2-2 8 443 .9412 Emma Polusny STC FR 13 788:37 26 1.98 4-6-3 3 407 .9403 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 20 1212:05 41 2.03 11-5-4 6 571 .9334 Janine Alder STC SO 11 664:15 29 2.62 2-8-1 0 396 .9325 Sidney Peters MIN SR 18 1055:43 33 1.88 10-6-1 3 399 .9246 Jessica Convery MND SR 23 1374:48 57 2.49 10-10-3 1 603 .9147 Erin Deters BMJ SR 9 486:32 20 2.47 3-5-1 2 202 .9108 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 13 746:04 38 3.06 3-9-0 0 353 .9039 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 15 822:55 40 2.92 5-8-0 1 349 .897

10 Kathryn Bidulka MNS JR 12 682:56 41 3.60 0-12-0 0 322 .887

Saves GP SVS/G Saves1 Jessica Convery MND SR 23 26.2 6032 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 20 28.6 5713 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 24 18.5 4434 Emma Polusny STC FR 13 31.3 4075 Sidney Peters MIN SR 18 22.2 3996 Janine Alder STC SO 11 36.0 3967 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 13 27.2 3538 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 15 23.3 3499 Kathryn Bidulka MNS JR 12 26.8 322

10 Erin Deters BMJ SR 9 22.4 20211 Alex Gulstene MIN FR 7 22.4 15712 Kerigan Dowhy BMJ FR 3 22.7 6813 Amanda Zeglen OSU FR 4 14.8 5914 Catherine Johnson MND SO 2 14.0 28

Shutouts GP Shutouts1 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 24 82 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 20 63 Emma Polusny STC FR 13 3

Sidney Peters MIN SR 18 35 Erin Deters BMJ SR 9 26 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 15 1

Jessica Convery MND SR 23 1

Page 15: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

WCHA Women Team Conference StatisticsTEAM OFFENSE TEAM DEFENSE

Team Games Goals G/GM

1 Wisconsin 24 81 3.38

2 Minnesota 24 74 3.08

3 Ohio State 24 63 2.62

4 Bemidji State 24 60 2.50

5 Minnesota Duluth 24 49 2.04

6 St. Cloud State 24 41 1.71

7 Minnesota State 24 37 1.54

Team Games Goals G/GM

1 Wisconsin 24 29 1.21

2 Ohio State 24 51 2.12

3 Minnesota 24 54 2.25

4 St. Cloud State 24 59 2.46

5 Minnesota Duluth 24 62 2.58

6 Bemidji State 24 68 2.83

7 Minnesota State 24 82 3.42

POWER PLAY PENALTY KILLTeam Totals SHA PP %

1 Minnesota Duluth 15/59 1 25.4

2 Minnesota 13/66 0 19.7

3 Bemidji State 11/60 2 18.3

4 Wisconsin 11/62 0 17.7

5 St. Cloud State 7/44 0 15.9

6 Ohio State 8/62 1 12.9

7 Minnesota State 6/66 1 9.1

Team Totals SHF PK %

1 St. Cloud State 55/61 1 90.2

2 Wisconsin 45/51 0 88.2

3 Minnesota Duluth 47/55 0 85.5

4 Minnesota 51/62 0 82.3

5 Ohio State 52/64 1 81.2

6 Bemidji State 47/60 2 78.3

7 Minnesota State 51/66 1 77.3

PENALTY MINUTES SHOTS ON GOALTeam Games PIM PIM/G

1 Minnesota State 24 153 6.4

2 Minnesota 24 149 6.2

3 Ohio State 24 144 6.0

4 St. Cloud State 24 134 5.6

5 Bemidji State 24 126 5.2

6 Minnesota Duluth 24 125 5.2

7 Wisconsin 24 116 4.8

Team Games SOG SOG/G

1 Wisconsin 24 844 35.2

2 Ohio State 24 774 32.2

3 Bemidji State 24 723 30.1

4 Minnesota Duluth 24 682 28.4

5 Minnesota 24 679 28.3

6 Minnesota State 24 538 22.4

7 St. Cloud State 24 522 21.8

SCORING BY PERIOD GOALS ALLOWED BY PERIODTeam 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total

1 Wisconsin 31 24 24 2 81

2 Minnesota 23 28 21 2 74

3 Ohio State 14 30 19 0 63

4 Bemidji State 17 19 24 0 60

5 Minnesota Duluth 15 18 15 1 49

6 St. Cloud State 10 8 23 0 41

7 Minnesota State 11 13 13 - 37

Team 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total

1 Wisconsin 7 11 11 0 29

2 Ohio State 21 17 13 0 51

3 Minnesota 18 10 25 1 54

4 St. Cloud State 18 23 17 1 59

5 Minnesota Duluth 22 17 23 0 62

6 Bemidji State 18 30 17 3 68

7 Minnesota State 17 32 33 - 82

SPECIAL TEAMS NETTeam PPF SHA PP NET PPA SHF SH NET ST NET

1 Minnesota Duluth 15 1 +14 8 0 -8 +6

2 Wisconsin 11 0 +11 6 0 -6 +5

3 Minnesota 13 0 +13 11 0 -11 +2

St. Cloud State 7 0 +7 6 1 -5 +2

5 Bemidji State 11 2 +9 13 2 -11 -2

6 Ohio State 8 1 +7 12 1 -11 -4

7 Minnesota State 6 1 +5 15 1 -14 -9

Page 16: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

Overall Scoring Leaders

ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Abby Roque WIS SO F 38 11-30-41 1.08 20/40 2 0 4 0 +302 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 37 16-24-40 1.08 7/14 2 0 5 0 +203 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 38 17-21-38 1.00 2/4 5 0 3 0 +174 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 39 23-14-37 0.95 18/36 3 0 3 1 +185 Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 38 17-15-32 0.84 3/6 4 0 1 0 +16

Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 38 12-20-32 0.84 8/16 2 0 2 0 +247 Maddy Field OSU JR F 39 19-11-30 0.77 8/16 3 0 4 1 +88 Presley Norby WIS SO F 36 10-19-29 0.81 6/20 0 0 4 0 +289 Sam Cogan WIS JR F 38 9-19-28 0.74 11/22 3 0 2 0 +21

10 Sophie Skarzynski MIN JR F/D 38 8-19-27 0.71 4/8 1 0 0 0 +8 Julianna Iafallo OSU SR F 39 12-15-27 0.69 7/14 2 1 0 0 +19

12 Caitlin Reilly MIN SR F 37 9-17-26 0.70 12/24 2 0 1 0 +8 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 39 5-21-26 0.67 7/14 2 0 1 0 +12 Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 39 2-24-26 0.67 4/8 2 0 0 0 +22

15 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 38 22-3-25 0.66 5/10 9 0 3 0 +26 Haley Mack BMJ SO F 38 11-14-25 0.66 0/0 2 3 1 0 E Taylor Wente MIN FR F 38 11-14-25 0.66 4/8 1 0 3 0 +20

18 Laura Kluge STC FR F 30 7-17-24 0.80 5/10 1 0 2 0 +4 Naomi Rogge MND FR F 35 16-8-24 0.69 5/10 2 0 2 0 +1 Sophia Shaver WIS JR F 35 12-12-24 0.69 3/6 3 0 3 0 +18 Emily Bergland BMJ JR F 38 11-13-24 0.63 9/29 2 0 3 0 E

22 Ashton Bell MND FR F 35 11-12-23 0.66 3/6 7 0 1 0 -11 Clair DeGeorge BMJ FR F 37 7-16-23 0.62 4/8 3 0 1 0 -6 Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 38 6-17-23 0.61 13/26 0 0 2 0 +1 Charly Dahlquist OSU JR F 39 8-15-23 0.59 20/40 2 0 3 0 +7

Defenseman ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 38 12-20-32 0.84 8/16 2 0 2 0 +242 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 39 5-21-26 0.67 7/14 2 0 1 0 +12

Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 39 2-24-26 0.67 4/8 2 0 0 0 +224 Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 38 6-17-23 0.61 13/26 0 0 2 0 +15 Jalyn Elmes MND SO D 35 6-16-22 0.63 16/35 3 0 3 0 -1

Mikaela Gardner WIS JR D 35 6-16-22 0.63 13/26 0 0 1 0 +357 Maddie Rolfes WIS SR D 38 5-16-21 0.55 11/22 0 0 3 0 +288 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 38 7-13-20 0.53 10/20 2 1 1 0 +169 Mak Langei BMJ FR D 38 4-14-18 0.47 10/20 0 0 2 0 +8

10 Mekenzie Steffen WIS SO D 38 3-14-17 0.45 11/22 0 0 0 0 +26 Patti Marshall MIN SO D 38 2-15-17 0.45 3/6 0 0 1 0 +15 Dani Sadek OSU SR D 39 3-14-17 0.44 8/16 1 0 0 0 +15

13 Jessica Healey MND SR D 35 5-9-14 0.40 5/10 4 0 1 0 -1514 Catherine Daoust MND SR D 35 3-10-13 0.37 8/16 2 0 0 0 +2

Grace Bowlby WIS FR D 38 0-13-13 0.34 7/14 0 0 0 0 +21

Freshman ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 37 16-24-40 1.08 7/14 2 0 5 0 +202 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 38 17-21-38 1.00 2/4 5 0 3 0 +173 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 39 23-14-37 0.95 18/36 3 0 3 1 +184 Taylor Wente MIN FR F 38 11-14-25 0.66 4/8 1 0 3 0 +205 Laura Kluge STC FR F 30 7-17-24 0.80 5/10 1 0 2 0 +4

Naomi Rogge MND FR F 35 16-8-24 0.69 5/10 2 0 2 0 +17 Ashton Bell MND FR F 35 11-12-23 0.66 3/6 7 0 1 0 -11

Clair DeGeorge BMJ FR F 37 7-16-23 0.62 4/8 3 0 1 0 -69 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 38 7-13-20 0.53 10/20 2 1 1 0 +16

10 Brittyn Fleming MNS FR F 34 4-15-19 0.56 7/14 1 0 1 0 -14 Brette Pettet WIS FR F 38 9-10-19 0.50 2/4 2 0 2 1 +9

12 Mak Langei BMJ FR D 38 4-14-18 0.47 10/20 0 0 2 0 +813 Paige Beebe BMJ FR F 36 7-10-17 0.47 9/18 1 0 0 0 -414 Liz Schepers OSU FR F 39 7-9-16 0.41 7/14 0 0 4 0 +1015 Grace Bowlby WIS FR D 38 0-13-13 0.34 7/14 0 0 0 0 +21

Page 17: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

Overall Scoring LeadersGoal Scoring GP G GPG

1 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 39 23 0.592 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 38 22 0.583 Maddy Field OSU JR F 39 19 0.494 Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 38 17 0.45

Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 38 17 0.456 Naomi Rogge MND FR F 35 16 0.46

Emma Maltais OSU FR F 37 16 0.438 Sophia Shaver WIS JR F 35 12 0.34

Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 38 12 0.32 Julianna Iafallo OSU SR F 39 12 0.31

11 8 Players Tied With 11

Assist Scoring GP A APG1 Abby Roque WIS SO F 38 30 0.792 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 37 24 0.65

Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 39 24 0.624 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 38 21 0.55

Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 39 21 0.546 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 38 20 0.537 Presley Norby WIS SO F 36 19 0.53

Sophie Skarzynski MIN JR F/D 38 19 0.50 Sam Cogan WIS JR F 38 19 0.50

10 Laura Kluge STC FR F 30 17 0.57 Caitlin Reilly MIN SR F 37 17 0.46 Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 38 17 0.45

Power Play Goals GP G GPG1 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 38 9 0.242 Ashton Bell MND FR F 35 7 0.203 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 38 5 0.134 Jessica Healey MND SR D 35 4 0.11

Emma Terres BMJ SR F/D 38 4 0.11 Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 38 4 0.11

7 9 Players Tied With 3

Power Play Points GP G-A-P PPG1 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 38 5-6-11 0.292 Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 38 9-1-10 0.26

Sam Cogan WIS JR F 38 3-7-10 0.26 Abby Roque WIS SO F 38 2-8-10 0.26

5 Jalyn Elmes MND SO D 35 3-6-9 0.26 Kateřina Mrázová MND SR F 35 1-8-9 0.26 Emily Bergland BMJ JR F 38 2-7-9 0.24 Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 39 2-7-9 0.23

9 4 Players Tied With 8 Points

Shorthanded Goals GP G GPG1 Haley Mack BMJ SO F 38 3 0.082 Cara Piazza MIN SR F 38 2 0.053 Katie Robinson MIN SO D 32 1 0.03

Brittney Anderson STC SR D 33 1 0.03 Lindsey Coleman MNS SR F 34 1 0.03 Jordan McLaughlin MNS JR F 34 1 0.03 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 35 1 0.03 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 38 1 0.03 Julianna Iafallo OSU SR F 39 1 0.03

Game-Winning Goals GP G GPG1 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 37 5 0.14

Cara Piazza MIN SR F 38 5 0.133 Presley Norby WIS SO F 36 4 0.11

Abby Roque WIS SO F 38 4 0.11 Maddy Field OSU JR F 39 4 0.10 Liz Schepers OSU FR F 39 4 0.10

7 13 Players Tied With 3

Plus-Minus GP +/-1 Mikaela Gardner WIS JR D 35 +352 Abby Roque WIS SO F 38 +303 Presley Norby WIS SO F 36 +28

Maddie Rolfes WIS SR D 38 +285 Mekenzie Steffen WIS SO D 38 +26

Claudia Kepler WIS SR F 38 +267 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 38 +248 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 35 +239 Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 39 +22

10 3 Players Tied With +21

Hat Tricks GP HT1 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 35 1

Brette Pettet WIS FR F 38 1 Maddy Field OSU JR F 39 1 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 39 1

Blocked Shots GP BLK BLK/G1 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 38 104 2.742 Anna Keys MNS SR D 34 83 2.443 Dani Sadek OSU SR D 39 82 2.104 Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 38 79 2.085 Mak Langei BMJ FR D 38 76 2.006 Brittney Anderson STC SR D 33 75 2.27

Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 39 75 1.928 Jessica Kondas MNS FR D 33 67 2.03

Catherine Daoust MND SR D 35 67 1.9110 Tina Kampa BMJ FR D 34 64 1.88

Face-Off Percentage FW FL FO %1 Michelle Löwenhielm MND SR F 49 30 .6202 Rebekah Kolstad MNS JR F 84 52 .6183 Cara Piazza MIN SR F 483 309 .6104 Abby Roque WIS SO F 436 292 .5995 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 162 112 .5916 Janna Haeg STC SO F 116 89 .5667 Charly Dahlquist OSU JR F 376 307 .5518 Lindsey Coleman MNS SR F 82 68 .5479 Sofia Poinar MNS SO F 39 33 .542

10 Sydney Brodt MND SO F 146 124 .541

Page 18: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

Overall Goaltending Leaders

Goals Against AverageGP Minutes GA GAA Record SO Saves Save %

1 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 38 2319:49 46 1.19 31-5-2 12 706 .9392 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 32 1948:47 61 1.88 19-9-4 10 920 .9383 Sidney Peters MIN SR 28 1587:01 51 1.93 17-9-1 4 602 .9224 Emma Polusny STC FR 20 1174:49 43 2.20 6-10-4 4 605 .9345 Jessica Convery MND SR 32 1910:02 71 2.23 15-14-3 3 816 .9206 Janine Alder STC SO 14 818:58 33 2.42 2-10-1 0 473 .9357 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 19 1063:26 48 2.71 8-9-0 2 447 .9038 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 20 1091:59 62 3.41 4-13-1 0 481 .8869 Kathryn Bidulka MNS JR 18 939:27 57 3.64 1-15-0 0 430 .883

Save PercentageGP Minutes GA GAA Record SO Saves Save %

1 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 38 2319:49 46 1.19 31-5-2 12 706 .9392 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 32 1948:47 61 1.88 19-9-4 10 920 .9383 Janine Alder STC SO 14 818:58 33 2.42 2-10-1 0 473 .9354 Emma Polusny STC FR 20 1174:49 43 2.20 6-10-4 4 605 .9345 Sidney Peters MIN SR 28 1587:01 51 1.93 17-9-1 4 602 .9226 Jessica Convery MND SR 32 1910:02 71 2.23 15-14-3 3 816 .9207 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 19 1063:26 48 2.71 8-9-0 2 447 .9038 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 20 1091:59 62 3.41 4-13-1 0 481 .8869 Kathryn Bidulka MNS JR 18 939:27 57 3.64 1-15-0 0 430 .883

Saves GP SVS/G Saves1 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 32 28.8 9202 Jessica Convery MND SR 32 25.5 8163 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 38 18.6 7064 Emma Polusny STC FR 20 30.2 6055 Sidney Peters MIN SR 28 21.5 6026 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 20 24.1 4817 Janine Alder STC SO 14 33.8 4738 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 19 23.5 4479 Kathryn Bidulka MNS JR 18 23.9 430

10 Erin Deters BMJ SR 14 21.8 30511 Alex Gulstene MIN FR 13 17.9 23312 Kerigan Dowhy BMJ FR 9 24.2 21813 Amanda Zeglen OSU FR 7 19.1 13414 Catherine Johnson MND SO 4 16.5 66

Shutouts GP Shutouts1 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 38 122 Kassidy Sauvé OSU JR 32 103 Emma Polusny STC FR 20 4

Sidney Peters MIN SR 28 45 Erin Deters BMJ SR 14 3

Jessica Convery MND SR 32 37 Lauren Bench BMJ FR 19 28 Amanda Zeglen OSU FR 7 1

Kerigan Dowhy BMJ FR 9 1

Page 19: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

WCHA Women Team Overall StatisticsTEAM OFFENSE TEAM DEFENSE

Team Games Goals G/GM

1 Wisconsin 38 126 3.32

2 Minnesota 38 119 3.13

3 Ohio State 39 112 2.87

4 Bemidji State 38 90 2.37

5 Minnesota Duluth 35 71 2.03

6 Minnesota State 34 57 1.68

7 St. Cloud State 33 52 1.58

Team Games Goals G/GM

1 Wisconsin 38 48 1.26

2 Ohio State 39 77 1.97

3 Minnesota 38 79 2.08

4 Minnesota Duluth 35 82 2.34

5 St. Cloud State 33 82 2.48

6 Bemidji State 38 96 2.53

7 Minnesota State 34 123 3.62

POWER PLAY PENALTY KILLTeam Totals SHA PP %

1 Minnesota Duluth 22/94 2 23.4

2 Minnesota 21/106 0 19.8

3 Bemidji State 19/103 3 18.4

4 Wisconsin 21/117 0 17.9

5 Ohio State 19/118 4 16.1

6 St. Cloud State 10/64 1 15.6

7 Minnesota State 9/103 1 8.7

Team Totals SHF PK %

1 St. Cloud State 80/89 1 89.9

2 Ohio State 106/121 1 87.6

3 Wisconsin 89/104 1 85.6

4 Minnesota 82/96 4 85.4

5 Minnesota Duluth 66/78 0 84.6

6 Bemidji State 77/95 3 81.1

7 Minnesota State 78/102 2 76.5

PENALTY MINUTES SHOTS ON GOALTeam Games PIM PIM/G

1 Ohio State 39 273 7.0

2 Minnesota State 34 229 6.7

3 Wisconsin 38 242 6.4

4 Minnesota 38 228 6.0

5 St. Cloud State 33 192 5.8

6 Bemidji State 38 215 5.7

7 Minnesota Duluth 35 175 5.0

Team Games SOG SOG/G

1 Wisconsin 38 1365 35.9

2 Ohio State 39 1274 32.7

3 Bemidji State 38 1160 30.5

4 Minnesota 38 1142 30.1

5 Minnesota Duluth 35 1007 28.8

6 Minnesota State 34 810 23.8

7 St. Cloud State 33 703 21.3

SCORING BY PERIOD GOALS ALLOWED BY PERIODTeam 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total

1 Wisconsin 44 38 42 2 126

2 Minnesota 36 42 37 4 119

3 Ohio State 33 43 36 0 112

4 Bemidji State 27 28 34 1 90

5 Minnesota Duluth 21 25 24 1 71

6 Minnesota State 18 20 19 0 57

7 St. Cloud State 11 11 30 0 52

Team 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total

1 Wisconsin 12 18 17 1 48

2 Ohio State 26 23 26 2 77

3 Minnesota 25 21 32 1 79

4 Minnesota Duluth 29 24 29 0 82

St. Cloud State 24 32 24 2 82

6 Bemidji State 22 42 29 3 96

7 Minnesota State 33 46 43 1 123

SPECIAL TEAMS NETTeam PPF SHA PP NET PPA SHF SH NET ST NET

1 Minnesota 21 0 +21 14 4 -10 +11

2 Minnesota Duluth 22 2 +20 12 0 -12 +8

3 Wisconsin 21 0 +21 15 1 -14 +7

4 Bemidji State 19 3 +16 18 3 -15 +1

Ohio State 19 4 +15 15 1 -14 +1

St. Cloud State 10 1 +9 9 1 -8 +1

7 Minnesota State 9 1 +8 24 2 -22 -14

Page 20: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

Playoff Scoring Leaders

ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Maddy Field OSU JR F 3 5-0-5 1.67 1/2 0 0 0 1 +3 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 3 1-4-5 1.67 0/0 1 0 0 0 +4 Charly Dahlquist OSU JR F 3 1-4-5 1.67 0/0 0 0 1 0 +3 Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 4 3-2-5 1.25 0/0 0 0 0 0 +7

5 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 4 3-1-4 1.00 0/0 0 0 1 0 +7 Emily Bergland BMJ JR F 4 1-3-4 1.00 1/2 0 0 1 0 -1 Taylor Wente MIN FR F 4 1-3-4 1.00 0/0 0 0 0 0 +7

8 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 2 3-0-3 1.50 0/0 0 1 1 1 +4 Dani Sadek OSU SR D 3 0-3-3 1.00 0/0 0 0 0 0 +3 Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 3 0-3-3 1.00 1/2 0 0 0 0 +3 Haley Mack BMJ SO F 4 2-1-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +2 Sophie Skarzynski MIN JR F/D 4 2-1-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +3 Taylor Williamson MIN JR F 4 2-1-3 0.75 1/2 0 0 2 0 +3 Emily Brown MIN FR D 4 1-2-3 0.75 1/2 1 0 0 0 +3 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 4 0-3-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +7 Lindsay Agnew MIN SO F 4 0-3-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +3 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 4 0-3-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +6

18 13 Players Tied With 2 Points

Defenseman ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 3 1-4-5 1.67 0/0 1 0 0 0 +42 Dani Sadek OSU SR D 3 0-3-3 1.00 0/0 0 0 0 0 +3

Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 3 0-3-3 1.00 1/2 0 0 0 0 +3 Emily Brown MIN FR D 4 1-2-3 0.75 1/2 1 0 0 0 +3 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 4 0-3-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +7 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 4 0-3-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +6

7 Linnea Hedin MND SR D 3 0-2-2 0.67 0/0 0 0 0 0 +1 Patti Marshall MIN SO D 4 1-1-2 0.50 0/0 0 0 1 0 +6 Alexis Joyce BMJ SR D 4 0-2-2 0.50 0/0 0 0 0 0 -4

10 12 Players Tied With 1 Points

Freshman ScoringGP G-A-P PPG PIM PP SH GW HT +/-

1 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 4 3-1-4 1.00 0/0 0 0 1 0 +7 Taylor Wente MIN FR F 4 1-3-4 1.00 0/0 0 0 0 0 +7

3 Emily Brown MIN FR D 4 1-2-3 0.75 1/2 1 0 0 0 +3 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 4 0-3-3 0.75 0/0 0 0 0 0 +6

5 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 3 2-0-2 0.67 1/2 0 0 1 0 +2 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 3 2-0-2 0.67 2/4 0 0 0 0 +3 Anna Klein MND FR F 3 1-1-2 0.67 0/0 0 0 0 0 +1 Liz Schepers OSU FR F 3 0-2-2 0.67 0/0 0 0 0 0 +3 Paige Beebe BMJ FR F 4 0-2-2 0.50 2/4 0 0 0 0 -4

10 Delaney Drake WIS FR F 2 1-0-1 0.50 0/0 0 0 0 0 E Laura Kluge STC FR F 2 0-1-1 0.50 0/0 0 0 0 0 -5 Natalie Buchbinder WIS FR D 2 0-1-1 0.50 0/0 0 0 0 0 +1 Naomi Rogge MND FR F 3 1-0-1 0.33 0/0 0 0 0 0 -1 McKenzie Revering MND FR D 3 0-1-1 0.33 1/2 0 0 0 0 +1 Ashton Bell MND FR F 3 0-1-1 0.33 0/0 0 0 0 0 -3 Mak Langei BMJ FR D 4 0-1-1 0.25 0/0 0 0 0 0 E Tina Kampa BMJ FR D 4 0-1-1 0.25 0/0 0 0 0 0 +1 Clair DeGeorge BMJ FR F 4 0-1-1 0.25 0/0 0 0 0 0 -5

Page 21: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

Playoff Scoring LeadersGoal Scoring GP G GPG

1 Maddy Field OSU JR F 3 5 1.672 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 2 3 1.50

Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 4 3 0.75 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 4 3 0.75

5 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 3 2 0.67 Emma Maltais OSU FR F 3 2 0.67 Emma Terres BMJ SR F/D 4 2 0.50 Bailey Wright BMJ SR F 4 2 0.50 Haley Mack BMJ SO F 4 2 0.50 Sophie Skarzynski MIN JR F/D 4 2 0.50 Taylor Williamson MIN JR F 4 2 0.50

12 18 Players Tied With 1

Assist Scoring GP A APG1 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 3 4 1.33

Charly Dahlquist OSU JR F 3 4 1.333 Dani Sadek OSU SR D 3 3 1.00

Jincy Dunne OSU SO D 3 3 1.00 Emily Bergland BMJ JR F 4 3 0.75 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 4 3 0.75 Lindsay Agnew MIN SO F 4 3 0.75 Taylor Wente MIN FR F 4 3 0.75 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 4 3 0.75

10 8 Players Tied With 2

Power Play Goals GP G GPG1 Emma Terres BMJ SR F/D 4 2 0.502 Hallie Theodosopoulos STC SO F/D 2 1 0.50

Michelle Löwenhielm MND SR F 3 1 0.33 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 3 1 0.33 Emily Brown MIN FR D 4 1 0.25

Power Play Points GP G-A-P PPG1 Emma Terres BMJ SR F/D 4 2-0-2 0.50

Emily Bergland BMJ JR F 4 0-2-2 0.50

Shorthanded Goals GP G GPG1 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 2 1 0.50

Game-Winning Goals GP G GPG1 Taylor Williamson MIN JR F 4 2 0.502 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 2 1 0.50

Michelle Löwenhielm MND SR F 3 1 0.33 Charly Dahlquist OSU JR F 3 1 0.33 Tatum Skaggs OSU FR F 3 1 0.33 Emma Terres BMJ SR F/D 4 1 0.25 Emily Bergland BMJ JR F 4 1 0.25 Patti Marshall MIN SO D 4 1 0.25 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 4 1 0.25

Plus-Minus GP +/-1 Sydney Baldwin MIN SR D 4 +7

Nicole Schammel MIN JR F 4 +7 Grace Zumwinkle MIN FR F 4 +7 Taylor Wente MIN FR F 4 +7

5 Patti Marshall MIN SO D 4 +6 Olivia Knowles MIN FR D 4 +6

7 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 2 +4 Lauren Boyle OSU JR D 3 +4

9 12 Players Tied With +3

Hat Tricks GP HT1 Baylee Wellhausen WIS SR F 2 1

Maddy Field OSU JR F 3 1

Page 22: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

Playoff Goaltending Leaders

Goals Against AverageGP Minutes GA GAA Record SO Saves Save %

1 Sidney Peters MIN SR 4 239:59 3 0.75 4-0-0 1 104 .9722 Amanda Zeglen OSU FR 3 178:44 3 1.01 2-1-0 1 75 .9623 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 2 118:12 3 1.52 1-1-0 0 43 .9354 Jessica Convery MND SR 3 177:35 5 1.69 1-2-0 0 77 .9395 Kerigan Dowhy BMJ FR 4 236:09 8 2.03 2-2-0 1 95 .9226 Emma Polusny STC FR 2 116:42 7 3.60 0-2-0 0 59 .8947 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 2 104:53 10 5.72 0-2-0 0 42 .808

Save PercentageGP Minutes GA GAA Record SO Saves Save %

1 Sidney Peters MIN SR 4 239:59 3 0.75 4-0-0 1 104 .9722 Amanda Zeglen OSU FR 3 178:44 3 1.01 2-1-0 1 75 .9623 Jessica Convery MND SR 3 177:35 5 1.69 1-2-0 0 77 .9394 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 2 118:12 3 1.52 1-1-0 0 43 .9355 Kerigan Dowhy BMJ FR 4 236:09 8 2.03 2-2-0 1 95 .9226 Emma Polusny STC FR 2 116:42 7 3.60 0-2-0 0 59 .8947 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 2 104:53 10 5.72 0-2-0 0 42 .808

Saves GP SVS/G Saves1 Sidney Peters MIN SR 4 26.0 1042 Kerigan Dowhy BMJ FR 4 23.8 953 Jessica Convery MND SR 3 25.7 774 Amanda Zeglen OSU FR 3 25.0 755 Emma Polusny STC FR 2 29.5 596 Kristen Campbell WIS SO 2 21.5 437 Chloe Crosby MNS SO 2 21.0 428 Kathryn Bidulka MNS JR 1 5.0 59 Erin Deters BMJ SR 1 0.0 0

Shutouts GP Shutouts1 Amanda Zeglen OSU FR 3 1

Kerigan Dowhy BMJ FR 4 1 Sidney Peters MIN SR 4 1

Page 23: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

WCHA Women Team Playoff StatisticsTEAM OFFENSE TEAM DEFENSE

Team Games Goals G/GM

1 Ohio State 3 11 3.67

2 Minnesota 4 14 3.50

3 Wisconsin 2 5 2.50

4 Bemidji State 4 7 1.75

5 Minnesota Duluth 3 5 1.67

6 Minnesota State 2 2 1.00

St. Cloud State 2 2 1.00

Team Games Goals G/GM

1 Minnesota 4 3 0.75

2 Ohio State 3 4 1.33

3 Minnesota Duluth 3 6 2.00

Wisconsin 2 4 2.00

5 Bemidji State 4 9 2.25

6 St. Cloud State 2 9 4.50

7 Minnesota State 2 11 5.50

POWER PLAY PENALTY KILLTeam Totals SHA PP %

1 St. Cloud State 1/2 0 50.0

2 Bemidji State 2/7 1 28.6

3 Minnesota 1/5 0 20.0

Ohio State 1/5 0 20.0

5 Minnesota Duluth 1/6 0 16.7

6 Minnesota State 0/6 0 0.0

Wisconsin 0/2 0 0.0

Team Totals SHF PK %

1 Ohio State 6/6 0 100.0

2 Bemidji State 7/8 0 87.5

3 Minnesota State 4/5 0 80.0

Wisconsin 4/5 1 80.0

5 Minnesota Duluth 3/4 0 75.0

6 St. Cloud State 2/3 0 66.7

7 Minnesota 1/2 0 50.0

PENALTY MINUTES SHOTS ON GOALTeam Games PIM PIM/G

1 Wisconsin 2 14 7.0

2 Bemidji State 4 20 5.0

Minnesota State 2 10 5.0

4 Ohio State 3 12 4.0

St. Cloud State 2 8 4.0

6 Minnesota Duluth 3 10 3.3

7 Minnesota 4 8 2.0

Team Games SOG SOG/G

1 Wisconsin 2 63 31.5

2 Ohio State 3 91 30.3

3 Minnesota 4 119 29.8

4 Bemidji State 4 106 26.5

5 Minnesota State 2 52 26.0

6 Minnesota Duluth 3 73 24.3

7 St. Cloud State 2 42 21.0

SCORING BY PERIOD GOALS ALLOWED BY PERIODTeam 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total

1 Minnesota 2 7 5 - 14

2 Ohio State 5 2 4 - 11

3 Bemidji State 3 1 3 - 7

4 Minnesota Duluth 1 3 1 - 5

Wisconsin 2 1 2 - 5

6 Minnesota State 0 1 1 - 2

St. Cloud State 0 1 1 - 2

Team 1st 2nd 3rd OT Total

1 Minnesota 1 1 1 - 3

2 Ohio State 0 2 2 - 4

Wisconsin 2 1 1 - 4

4 Minnesota Duluth 2 1 3 - 6

5 Bemidji State 2 4 3 - 9

St. Cloud State 1 5 3 - 9

7 Minnesota State 5 2 4 - 11

SPECIAL TEAMS NETTeam PPF SHA PP NET PPA SHF SH NET ST NET

1 Ohio State 1 0 +1 0 0 0 +1

2 Bemidji State 2 1 +1 1 0 -1 0

Minnesota 1 0 +1 1 0 -1 0

Minnesota Duluth 1 0 +1 1 0 -1 0

St. Cloud State 1 0 +1 1 0 -1 0

Wisconsin 0 0 0 1 1 0 0

7 Minnesota State 0 0 0 1 0 -1 -1

Page 24: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

National Category Leaders

Points Per Game GP G-A-P P/GM

1 Daryl Watts Boston College FR F 38 42-40-82 2.16

2 Victoria Bach Boston University SR F 33 39-28-67 2.03

3 Caitrin Lonergan Boston College SO F 38 30-45-75 1.97

4 Taylor Moreland Sacred Heart SR F 35 30-36-66 1.89

5 Loren Gabel Clarkson JR F 41 36-39-75 1.83

6 Elizabeth Giguère Clarkson FR F 41 27-44-71 1.73

7 Rebecca Leslie Boston University SR F 33 24-33-57 1.73

8 Makenna Newkirk Boston College JR F 38 24-37-61 1.61

9 Brittany Howard Robert Morris SR F 31 25-24-49 1.58

10 Kara Violette Holy Cross SR F 28 16-24-40 1.43

11 Michaela Pejzlová Clarkson SO F 41 26-29-55 1.34

12 Kristin O'Neill Cornell SO F 31 20-21-41 1.32

13 Nicole Amato Franklin Pierce FR F 30 19-19-38 1.27

14 Jayne Lewis Sacred Heart SO F 34 19-24-43 1.26

15 Tereza Vanišová Maine SO F 37 16-30-46 1.24

16 Kaley Campbell Saint Anselm SO F 26 12-20-32 1.23

17 Hannah Miller St. Lawrence SR F 32 13-26-39 1.22

18 Jaycee Gebhard Robert Morris SO F 32 13-25-38 1.19

19 Kennedy Marchment St. Lawrence SR F 34 16-24-40 1.18

20 Justine Reyes St. Lawrence JR F 35 17-23-40 1.14

21 Marissa Massaro Franklin Pierce FR F 30 16-18-34 1.13

22 Toni Ann Miano Boston College SR D 38 18-25-43 1.13

23 Becca Gilmore Harvard FR F 31 16-19-35 1.13

24 Kaitlyn Spillane Saint Anselm SR F 24 12-15-27 1.12

25 Jessie Eldridge Colgate JR F 41 22-23-45 1.10

Goals Against Average Minutes GA GAA

1 Maddie Scavotto Saint Anselm JR 912:48 15 0.99

2 Michaela Kane Saint Anselm SO 660:07 12 1.09

3 Kristen Campbell Wisconsin SO 2319:49 46 1.19

4 Shea Tiley Clarkson SR 2405:32 48 1.20

5 Julia Pelletier Holy Cross FR 694:07 17 1.47

6 Sarah Erban Sacred Heart JR 1346:37 33 1.47

7 Kennedy Blair Mercyhurst FR 1263:44 33 1.57

8 Marlene Boissonnault Cornell JR 1842:58 54 1.76

9 Elijah Milne-Price Robert Morris SR 1730:24 51 1.77

10 Julia Vandyk Colgate JR 1898:53 56 1.77

11 Abbie Ives Quinnipiac SO 1719:59 51 1.78

12 Annie Belanger UConn SR 1822:17 56 1.84

13 Kassidy Sauvé Ohio State JR 1948:47 61 1.88

14 Sonjia Shelly St. Lawrence JR 958:12 30 1.88

15 Steph Neatby Princeton SO 1536:54 49 1.91

16 Hannah Ehresmann Penn State SR 1662:02 53 1.91

17 Aerin Frankel Northeastern FR 1188:25 38 1.92

18 Sidney Peters Minnesota SR 1587:01 51 1.93

19 Grace Harrison St. Lawrence JR 1144:19 37 1.94

20 Carly Jackson Maine SO 2090:59 68 1.95

21 Katie Burt Boston College SR 2305:23 75 1.95

22 Madison Myers Providence JR 2118:17 70 1.98

23 Gianna Meloni Yale FR 755:38 26 2.06

24 Ava Boutilier New Hampshire FR 1913:11 68 2.13

25 Emma Polusny St. Cloud State FR 1174:49 43 2.20

Points Per Game (Defensemen) GP G-A-P P/GM

1 Toni Ann Miano Boston College SR D 38 18-25-43 1.13

2 Kirsten Welsh Robert Morris JR D 32 12-18-30 0.94

3 Sydney Baldwin Minnesota SR D 38 12-20-32 0.84

4 Savannah Harmon Clarkson SR D 41 8-26-34 0.83

5 Olivia Zafuto Colgate JR D 41 11-22-33 0.80

6 Tori Messina Holy Cross JR D 25 8-12-20 0.80

7 Megan Klaus Saint Anselm SO D 29 5-18-23 0.79

8 Maggie Lague Robert Morris JR D 32 3-22-25 0.78

9 Jaime Bourbonnais Cornell SO D 31 3-21-24 0.77

Mallory Souliotis Yale SR D 31 4-20-24 0.77

11 Lauren Wildfang Colgate SR D 40 6-24-30 0.75

12 Haley Marshall Saint Anselm SO D 28 9-11-20 0.71

13 Abby Cook Boston University SO D 37 2-24-26 0.70

14 Sarah Knee Cornell SR D 33 5-17-22 0.67

Lauren Boyle Ohio State JR D 39 5-21-26 0.67

Jincy Dunne Ohio State SO D 39 2-24-26 0.67

17 Stephanie Sucharda Princeton JR D 32 3-18-21 0.66

18 Carolyn Drowne Franklin Pierce FR D 28 4-14-18 0.64

Antonia Matzka Holy Cross FR D 28 4-14-18 0.64

20 Ella Shelton Clarkson SO D 39 5-20-25 0.64

Save Percentage Saves GA Save %

1 Shea Tiley Clarkson SR 825 48 .945

2 Michaela Kane Saint Anselm SO 205 12 .945

3 Maddie Scavotto Saint Anselm JR 243 15 .942

4 Kristen Campbell Wisconsin SO 706 46 .939

5 Kassidy Sauvé Ohio State JR 920 61 .938

6 Annie Belanger UConn SR 840 56 .938

7 Janine Alder St. Cloud State SO 473 33 .935

8 Aerin Frankel Northeastern FR 541 38 .934

9 Sarah Erban Sacred Heart JR 468 33 .934

10 Kennedy Blair Mercyhurst FR 466 33 .934

11 Emma Polusny St. Cloud State FR 605 43 .934

12 Katie Burt Boston College SR 1038 75 .933

13 Lovisa Selander Rensselaer JR 871 64 .932

14 Ava Boutilier New Hampshire FR 886 68 .929

15 Steph Neatby Princeton SO 638 49 .929

16 Julia Vandyk Colgate JR 728 56 .929

17 Julia Pelletier Holy Cross FR 218 17 .928

18 Elijah Milne-Price Robert Morris SR 648 51 .927

19 Madison Myers Providence JR 885 70 .927

20 Jolene deBruyn Lindenwood JR 787 63 .926

Points Per Game (Freshmen) GP G-A-P P/GM

1 Daryl Watts Boston College F 38 42-40-82 2.16

2 Elizabeth Giguère Clarkson F 41 27-44-71 1.73

3 Nicole Amato Franklin Pierce F 30 19-19-38 1.27

4 Marissa Massaro Franklin Pierce F 30 16-18-34 1.13

5 Becca Gilmore Harvard F 31 16-19-35 1.13

6 Emma Maltais Ohio State F 37 16-24-40 1.08

7 Katy Meehan Saint Anselm F 28 16-14-30 1.07

8 Natalie Snodgrass UConn F 38 21-17-38 1.00

Madlynne Mills Cornell F 33 18-15-33 1.00

Grace Zumwinkle Minnesota F 38 17-21-38 1.00

11 Tatum Skaggs Ohio State F 39 23-14-37 0.95

12 Greta Skarzynski Yale F 31 14-12-26 0.84

13 Haley Parker Franklin Pierce F 28 9-14-23 0.82

14 Brooke Jovanovich Harvard F 31 9-16-25 0.81

15 Laura Kluge St. Cloud State F 30 7-17-24 0.80

16 Maureen Murphy Providence F 36 19-9-28 0.78

Natalie Heising Penn State F 36 19-9-28 0.78

18 Jesse Compher Boston University F 37 9-17-26 0.70

19 Veronika Pettey Northeastern F 39 10-17-27 0.69

20 Naomi Rogge Minnesota Duluth F 35 16-8-24 0.69

Winning Percentage W-L-T Win %

1 Shea Tiley Clarkson SR 35-4-1 .888

2 Kristen Campbell Wisconsin SO 31-5-2 .842

3 Katie Burt Boston College SR 30-5-3 .829

4 Julia Vandyk Colgate JR 25-5-1 .823

5 Sarah Erban Sacred Heart JR 17-4-2 .783

6 Michaela Kane Saint Anselm SO 8-2-1 .773

7 Maddie Scavotto Saint Anselm JR 10-2-3 .767

8 Elijah Milne-Price Robert Morris SR 20-6-4 .733

9 Marlene Boissonnault Cornell JR 21-7-3 .726

10 Julia Pelletier Holy Cross FR 7-2-3 .708

11 Kassidy Sauvé Ohio State JR 19-9-4 .656

Sonjia Shelly St. Lawrence JR 10-5-1 .656

13 Sidney Peters Minnesota SR 17-9-1 .648

14 Madison Murray Franklin Pierce SR 11-6-1 .639

15 Grace Harrison St. Lawrence JR 10-6-3 .605

16 Corinne Schroeder Boston University FR 12-8-4 .583

17 Kennedy Blair Mercyhurst FR 11-8-1 .575

18 Carly Jackson Maine SO 17-12-5 .574

19 Madison Myers Providence JR 16-12-7 .557

20 Aerin Frankel Northeastern FR 10-8-2 .550

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Page 25: R 2017-18 WcHa S in ROlympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The group represented seven universities, while playing for five countries. • Thirty (30) players with WCHA ties brought

National Category Leaders

Goals Per Game GP G G/GM

1 Victoria Bach Boston University SR F 33 39 1.18

2 Daryl Watts Boston College FR F 38 42 1.11

3 Loren Gabel Clarkson JR F 41 36 0.88

4 Taylor Moreland Sacred Heart SR F 35 30 0.86

5 Brittany Howard Robert Morris SR F 31 25 0.81

6 Caitrin Lonergan Boston College SO F 38 30 0.79

7 Carly Bullock Princeton SO F 32 24 0.75

8 Rebecca Leslie Boston University SR F 33 24 0.73

9 Elizabeth Giguère Clarkson FR F 41 27 0.66

10 Kristin O'Neill Cornell SO F 31 20 0.65

11 Michaela Pejzlová Clarkson SO F 41 26 0.63

12 Nicole Amato Franklin Pierce FR F 30 19 0.63

13 Makenna Newkirk Boston College JR F 38 24 0.63

14 Tatum Skaggs Ohio State FR F 39 23 0.59

15 Katelyn Rae Merrimack JR F 34 20 0.59

16 Claudia Kepler Wisconsin SR F 38 22 0.58

17 Kara Violette Holy Cross SR F 28 16 0.57

Katy Meehan Saint Anselm FR F 28 16 0.57

19 Alex Brolsma Franklin Pierce SR F 30 17 0.57

20 Jayne Lewis Sacred Heart SO F 34 19 0.56

21 Natalie Snodgrass UConn FR F 38 21 0.55

22 Madlynne Mills Cornell FR F 33 18 0.55

23 Jessie Eldridge Colgate JR F 41 22 0.54

24 Marissa Massaro Franklin Pierce FR F 30 16 0.53

25 Maureen Murphy Providence FR F 36 19 0.53

Natalie Heising Penn State FR F 36 19 0.53

Assists Per Game GP A A/GM

1 Caitrin Lonergan Boston College SO F 38 45 1.18

2 Elizabeth Giguère Clarkson FR F 41 44 1.07

3 Daryl Watts Boston College FR F 38 40 1.05

4 Taylor Moreland Sacred Heart SR F 35 36 1.03

5 Rebecca Leslie Boston University SR F 33 33 1.00

6 Makenna Newkirk Boston College JR F 38 37 0.97

7 Loren Gabel Clarkson JR F 41 39 0.95

8 Kara Violette Holy Cross SR F 28 24 0.86

9 Victoria Bach Boston University SR F 33 28 0.85

10 Hannah Miller St. Lawrence SR F 32 26 0.81

11 Tereza Vanišová Maine SO F 37 30 0.81

12 Abby Roque Wisconsin SO F 38 30 0.79

13 Jaycee Gebhard Robert Morris SO F 32 25 0.78

14 Brittany Howard Robert Morris SR F 31 24 0.77

15 Kaley Campbell Saint Anselm SO F 26 20 0.77

16 Maeve Reilly Holy Cross JR F 27 20 0.74

17 Michaela Pejzlová Clarkson SO F 41 29 0.71

18 Jayne Lewis Sacred Heart SO F 34 24 0.71

Kennedy Marchment St. Lawrence SR F 34 24 0.71

20 Maggie Lague Robert Morris JR D 32 22 0.69

21 Jaime Bourbonnais Cornell SO D 31 21 0.68

Kristin O'Neill Cornell SO F 31 21 0.68

23 Toni Ann Miano Boston College SR D 38 25 0.66

24 Justine Reyes St. Lawrence JR F 35 23 0.66

25 Meg Gilbride Franklin Pierce SO F 29 19 0.66

Power Play Goals GP PPG/G PPG

1 Natalie Heising Penn State FR F 36 0.28 10

Daryl Watts Boston College FR F 38 0.26 10

3 Caitrin Lonergan Boston College SO F 38 0.24 9

Claudia Kepler Wisconsin SR F 38 0.24 9

5 Madlynne Mills Cornell FR F 33 0.24 8

Lauren Kelly Northeastern SR D 33 0.24 8

Kennedy Marchment St. Lawrence SR F 34 0.24 8

Makenna Newkirk Boston College JR F 38 0.21 8

Michaela Pejzlová Clarkson SO F 41 0.20 8

10 Alex Brolsma Franklin Pierce SR F 30 0.23 7

Amy Schlagel New Hampshire SR D 31 0.23 7

Ashton Bell Minnesota Duluth FR F 35 0.20 7

Natalie Snodgrass UConn FR F 38 0.18 7

Rhyen McGill Clarkson JR F 40 0.17 7

Loren Gabel Clarkson JR F 41 0.17 7

Game-Winning Goals GP GWG

1 Caitrin Lonergan Boston College SO F 38 8

Loren Gabel Clarkson JR F 41 8

Jessie Eldridge Colgate JR F 41 8

4 Kristin O'Neill Cornell SO F 31 7

Brittany Howard Robert Morris SR F 31 7

6 Taylor Moreland Sacred Heart SR F 35 6

Makenna Newkirk Boston College JR F 38 6

Rhyen McGill Clarkson JR F 40 6

Michaela Pejzlová Clarkson SO F 41 6

Elizabeth Giguère Clarkson FR F 41 6

11 10 Players Tied With 5

Shorthanded Goals GP SHG/G SHG

1 Kristin O'Neill Cornell SO F 31 0.13 4

Maureen Murphy Providence FR F 36 0.11 4

3 Brittany Howard Robert Morris SR F 31 0.10 3

Victoria Bach Boston University SR F 33 0.09 3

Katelyn Rae Merrimack JR F 34 0.09 3

Taylor Moreland Sacred Heart SR F 35 0.09 3

Haley Mack Bemidji State SO F 38 0.08 3

Makenna Newkirk Boston College JR F 38 0.08 3

Daryl Watts Boston College FR F 38 0.08 3

10 Kaitlyn Wurzer Saint Michael's SR F 27 0.07 2

Christina Putigna Providence JR F 29 0.07 2

Kirsten Welsh Robert Morris JR D 32 0.06 2

Vilma Tanskanen Mercyhurst JR F 33 0.06 2

Brittany Smith Sacred Heart SR F 35 0.06 2

Caitrin Lonergan Boston College SO F 38 0.05 2

Cara Piazza Minnesota SR F 38 0.05 2

Jessie Eldridge Colgate JR F 41 0.05 2

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National Team LeadersSCORING OFFENSE GP Goals G/GM

1 Sacred Heart 35 157 4.49

2 Boston College 38 155 4.08

3 Holy Cross 28 114 4.07

4 Clarkson 41 158 3.85

5 Robert Morris 33 122 3.70

6 Colgate 41 150 3.66

7 Saint Anselm 29 106 3.66

8 Wisconsin 38 126 3.32

9 Franklin Pierce 30 99 3.30

10 Minnesota 38 119 3.13

11 Boston University 37 113 3.05

12 Cornell 33 100 3.03

13 Ohio State 39 112 2.87

14 Northeastern 39 107 2.74

15 St. Lawrence 35 96 2.74

16 Providence 37 96 2.59

17 Harvard 31 79 2.55

18 Mercyhurst 37 94 2.54

19 Princeton 32 79 2.47

20 Maine 38 91 2.39

21 Bemidji State 38 90 2.37

22 UConn 39 88 2.26

23 New Hampshire 36 79 2.19

24 Syracuse 36 76 2.11

25 Minnesota Duluth 35 71 2.03

26 Lindenwood 31 61 1.97

27 Vermont 35 67 1.91

28 Union 34 65 1.91

29 Yale 31 59 1.90

30 Merrimack 34 62 1.82

31 Penn State 36 65 1.81

Quinnipiac 36 65 1.81

33 Minnesota State 34 57 1.68

34 Rensselaer 34 54 1.59

35 Brown 29 46 1.59

36 St. Cloud State 33 52 1.58

37 Dartmouth 27 37 1.37

Saint Michael's 27 37 1.37

39 RIT 35 42 1.20

40 Post 31 30 0.97

SCORING DEFENSE GP Goals G/GM

1 Saint Anselm 29 31 1.07

2 Clarkson 41 48 1.17

3 Wisconsin 38 48 1.26

4 Sacred Heart 35 46 1.31

5 Colgate 41 70 1.71

6 Holy Cross 28 50 1.79

7 Penn State 36 69 1.92

8 UConn 39 76 1.95

9 Cornell 33 65 1.97

10 Quinnipiac 36 71 1.97

11 Ohio State 39 77 1.97

12 Boston College 38 76 2.00

Mercyhurst 37 74 2.00

Princeton 32 64 2.00

15 Minnesota 38 79 2.08

16 St. Lawrence 35 73 2.09

17 Robert Morris 33 70 2.12

18 Providence 37 80 2.16

19 Maine 38 83 2.18

20 Rensselaer 34 78 2.29

21 Minnesota Duluth 35 82 2.34

22 New Hampshire 36 85 2.36

23 St. Cloud State 33 82 2.48

24 Bemidji State 38 96 2.53

25 Franklin Pierce 30 76 2.53

26 Northeastern 39 100 2.56

27 Yale 31 83 2.68

28 Boston University 37 100 2.70

29 Syracuse 36 98 2.72

30 Merrimack 34 96 2.82

31 Vermont 35 99 2.83

32 Harvard 31 88 2.84

33 Lindenwood 31 92 2.97

34 Union 34 121 3.56

35 Minnesota State 34 123 3.62

36 Dartmouth 27 98 3.63

37 RIT 35 141 4.03

38 Saint Michael's 27 111 4.11

39 Brown 29 134 4.62

40 Post 31 187 6.03

POWER PLAY Totals SHA PP%

1 Holy Cross 23/83 0 27.7

2 Saint Anselm 34/125 1 27.2

3 Boston College 39/157 3 24.8

4 Clarkson 36/149 0 24.2

5 Minnesota Duluth 22/94 2 23.4

6 Yale 21/92 0 22.8

7 Boston University 31/136 3 22.8

8 Colgate 38/175 2 21.7

9 St. Lawrence 25/118 0 21.2

10 Robert Morris 31/147 0 21.1

11 Northeastern 29/142 5 20.4

12 UConn 24/120 3 20.0

13 Minnesota 21/106 0 19.8

14 Bemidji State 19/103 3 18.4

15 Sacred Heart 23/128 1 18.0

16 Wisconsin 21/117 0 17.9

17 Franklin Pierce 25/148 1 16.9

18 Harvard 18/107 2 16.8

19 Union 19/113 4 16.8

20 Penn State 24/147 2 16.3

21 Ohio State 19/118 4 16.1

22 St. Cloud State 10/64 1 15.6

23 Quinnipiac 19/123 4 15.4

24 New Hampshire 24/158 6 15.2

25 Cornell 20/134 2 14.9

26 Vermont 19/142 4 13.4

27 Brown 14/105 5 13.3

28 Syracuse 19/144 3 13.2

29 Lindenwood 13/100 2 13.0

30 Mercyhurst 20/156 3 12.8

31 Providence 17/134 5 12.7

32 Rensselaer 16/133 3 12.0

33 Dartmouth 12/104 1 11.5

34 Princeton 14/131 4 10.7

35 Maine 12/127 3 9.4

Merrimack 12/127 4 9.4

37 Saint Michael's 8/88 3 9.1

38 Minnesota State 9/103 1 8.7

39 Post 7/102 5 6.9

40 RIT 8/147 4 5.4

PENALTY KILL Totals SHF PK%

1 Cornell 110/119 8 92.4

2 Holy Cross 87/96 2 90.6

3 Clarkson 143/158 2 90.5

4 St. Cloud State 80/89 1 89.9

5 Colgate 144/161 2 89.4

6 Princeton 118/132 3 89.4

7 Saint Anselm 105/118 1 89.0

8 Ohio State 106/121 1 87.6

9 Providence 128/147 9 87.1

10 Sacred Heart 73/84 8 86.9

11 Rensselaer 79/91 2 86.8

12 Mercyhurst 151/174 3 86.8

13 Syracuse 151/175 2 86.3

14 Penn State 112/130 1 86.2

15 Maine 123/143 1 86.0

16 Wisconsin 89/104 1 85.6

17 Quinnipiac 77/90 1 85.6

18 Minnesota 82/96 4 85.4

19 UConn 103/121 1 85.1

20 Boston College 132/156 10 84.6

Minnesota Duluth 66/78 0 84.6

22 New Hampshire 120/143 3 83.9

23 Harvard 98/117 0 83.8

24 St. Lawrence 89/107 2 83.2

25 Robert Morris 118/142 8 83.1

26 Franklin Pierce 97/117 3 82.9

27 Northeastern 121/146 3 82.9

28 Vermont 118/144 2 81.9

29 Yale 102/125 1 81.6

30 Bemidji State 77/95 3 81.1

31 RIT 131/163 0 80.4

32 Boston University 112/140 5 80.0

33 Lindenwood 89/112 1 79.5

34 Minnesota State 78/102 2 76.5

35 Union 79/104 1 76.0

36 Saint Michael's 68/91 3 74.7

37 Brown 94/126 1 74.6

38 Dartmouth 87/118 0 73.7

39 Merrimack 77/107 3 72.0

40 Post 99/141 1 70.2

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