Notre Dame Fighting Irish - Official Athletics Website

Irish Blank Miami 1-0 In Game Two Of CCHA Playoff Series

March 15, 2003

Box Score

Oxford, Ohio – Notre Dame goaltender Morgan Cey picked a fine time to notch his first shutout of the season. All that was at stake was the season for the Irish as they went into Saturday’s playoff game versus Miami, down one game to none in the best-of-three series.

The sophomore goaltender came up big on the night making 37 saves on the night to back up freshman Tim Wallace’s third period goal to give the Irish a 1-0 win to tie the sereis at one game each. Game three will be played at Miami’s Goggin Arena on Sunday night at 7:35 p.m.

“I got in a zone early and the team really played well in front of me,” said Cey.

“We all knew how important this game was. This is what we play for. The do-or-die games bring out the best in a player. We look forward to tomorrow night.”

Cey’s shutout was the first in Notre Dame’s playoff history and it made the Irish the last team in the CCHA to record a shutout this season.

The victory evens the Irish record at 16-16-6 overall and Miami falls to 21-16-3 for the year.

“We played with a lot of poise tonight,” said Irish coach Dave Poulin following the game.

“We told them after the second period that this game wasn’t going to end 1-0. When we got the goal, they kept attacking and applying pressure on the forecheck.”

The lone goal of the game came after 47 minutes of scoreless action. Jake Wiegand dug the puck out of the left wing corner in the Miami zone and fed it to Brett Lebda at the left point. Lebda managed to keep the bouncing puck in the zone and got a shot on the net. Miami goaltender David Burleigh got his pads on it with the rebound coming in front. Wallace fought off a Miami player and beat Burleigh low to the glove side at 7:18 for his sixth goal of the season.

“We worked the puck deep into the zone and then back to (Brett) Lebda at the point. He got off a great shot and I just went to the net. The rebound bounced right to me and I just snuck it in low to his glove hand,” said Wallace in describing his game winner.

As the game went on, it became obvious that the goaltenders were in control as neither team managed to get on the scoreboard through the first 40 minutes. Heading into the third period, Cey had stopped all 27 shots he faced and Burleigh had done the same with 20 Notre Dame offerings.

After Wallace put the Irish ahead, Miami still had its chances, but Cey was equal to the task. The RedHawks pulled Burleigh with 57 seconds left for a sixth attacker and were able to get three good chances. The best came off the stick of right wing Greg Hogeboom, who had a hat trick in Friday’s 4-1 win. Hogeboom came out of the left wing corner alone and got off a great shot with 25 seconds left.

“He came down the side and I just tried to play the angle all the way,” said Cey.

“I played the shortside and was lucky to get a pad on the shot. Luckily he didn’t try to pass it because I was watching him all the way.”

Now the Irish season comes down to one game. A win on Sunday sends them to Joe Louis Arena next weekend for the CCHA’s Super Six. A loss ends the season.

“We’ve been in this situation before last year against Omaha. Three games in three nights is tough, but we’ll be ready,” said Poulin.

“We got great balance tonight. Everyone made great contributions. That’s what you need at this time of the year.”

GAME SUMMARY 1 2 3 F

Notre Dame (16-16- 0 0 1 1

Miami (OH) (21-16-3) 0 0 0 0

Scoring

First Period: No Scoring.

Penalties: ND: 1 for 2 minutes; MU: 1 for 2 minutes

Second Period: No Scoring.

Penalties: ND: 4 for 8 minutes; MU: 4 for 8 minutes.

Third Period: ND: Tim Wallace 6 (Brett Lebda, Jake Wiegand), 7:19.

Penalties: ND: 0 for 0 minutes; MU: 0 for 0 minutes.

Shots On Goal:

Notre Dame 8 – 12 – 10 – 30

Miami (OH) 14 – 13 – 10 – 37

Goaltender Saves:

ND – Morgan Cey (60:00) 14 -13 – 10 – 37

MU – David Burleigh (59:03) 8 – 12 – 10 – 30

Power Plays:

ND: 0 for 3

MU: 0 for 3

Attendance: 732