Wes O'Neill and the Irish fell To Denver 6-3 Saturday. (file photo)

Irish Travel To Fort Wayne To Face #6/#5 University Of Michigan

Feb. 15, 2005

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* The Series: Notre Dame Fighting Irish (5-21-6/3-16-5) vs. Michigan Wolverines (22-7-3/19-3-2)

* Date/Site/Times: Fri., Feb. 18, 2005 – 8:05 p.m. – Memorial Coliseum (10,5033) – Fort Wayne, Ind.

Sat., Feb. 19, 2005 – 7:35 p.m. – Yost Arena (6,637) – Ann Arbor, Mich.

* Broadcast Information: Radio: Notre Dame hockey can be heard live on ESPN Radio 1580, South Bend’s SportsCenter. Mike Lockert, “the voice of Irish hockey” and Tom Nevala will bring you all the action both nights. Irish hockey can also be heard live via the internet at www.und.com.

Television: Friday’s game will be televised nationally by College Sports Television (CSTV) beginning at 8:00 p.m. Veteran NHL announcers Mike Emrick and Billy Jaffe will handle the play-by-play and color commentary. The game is available on DirecTV, channel 610. Saturday’s game will be aired on Fox Sports Detroit at 7:30 p.m. Ken Daniels and Fred Pletsch will call the action and provide the commentary. Check local listings for Fox Sports Detroit in your area.

IRISH PLAY IN FORT WAYNE:

Notre Dame takes it’s show on the road this weekend when they face off against the Michigan Wolverines in a “home”-and-home series on Friday-Saturday, Feb. 18-19. The Irish will play their home game at Fort Wayne, Indiana’s Allen County Memorial Coliseum on Friday, Feb. 18 with face off set for 8:05 p.m. On Saturday, the Irish travel to Ann Arbor, Mich., to face the Wolverines at Yost Arena in a 7:35 p.m. game. Television will be on hand both nights as Friday’s contest will be televised nationally on College Sports Television (CSTV). Saturday’s game will be televised on Fox Sports Television as the CCHA’s game of the week. Notre Dame comes into the series with a 5-21-6 overall record and a 3-16-5 mark in the CCHA and are in 12th place in the league standings. Michigan is ranked sixth in the nation in the USA Today poll and fifth in the USCHO.com/CSTV poll. The Wolverines are 22-7-3 overall and 19-3-2 in conference play. Michigan is first in the CCHA with 40 points, just one point ahead of second-place Ohio State. Notre Dame is coming off a pair of losses (4-3 and 4-2) at home to Ferris State while the Wolverines took a pair on the road at Nebraska-Omaha by 6-4 and 4-3 scores. Following this weekend’s action, Notre Dame is off next week before finishing the regular season on March 4-5 with a home-and-home series with Michigan State. Michigan plays host to the USA Under-18 team on Feb. 26 in exhibition action.

IRISH VERSUS WOLVERINES:

Notre Dame and Michigan met in a home-and-home series in December with the Wolverines winning, 6-1, at Yost Arena and 8-0 at the Joyce Center. The two teams have met 103 times in the all-time series with Michigan holding a 57-41-5 edge. On neutral ice, the Wolverines are 6-1 versus the Irish. At Yost Arena, Michigan is 31-20-3 against the Irish, including 15-1-1 in the last 17 regular-season appearances.

DYNAMIC DUO:

Notre Dame’s defensive duo of Wes O’Neill (So., Essex, Ont.) and Noah Babin (So., Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.) sparked the Irish offense in the weekend series with Ferris State. Babin paced the Notre Dame offense with two goals and one assist for three points, including his first multiple-point game (1g, 1a) on Feb. 11. O’Neill chipped in three assists on the weekend as the Irish power play scored twice in each game, just the third and fourth times it has done that this season.

FERRIS STATE RECAP:

Saturday, Feb. 12 – The Ferris State Bulldogs scored four goals in the second period on the way to a 4-2 win over Notre Dame at the Joyce Center.

Derek Nesbitt led the way with a goal and two assists in the win. Jeff Legue added a goal and an assist for the Bulldogs. Notre Dame scored first in the game as Noah Babin scored via the power play at 9:26 of the first period. Nesbitt and Matt Verdone made it 2-1 at 3:11 of the second period. The Irish tied the game on a Cory McLean (Sr., Fargo, N.D.) power-play goal at 10:02 of the second. Ferris added two more goals in the second by Greg Rallo and Legue for the 4-2 final. Ferris State out shot Notre Dame by a 29-19 margin. Derek MacIntyre made 17 saves while David Brown (So., Stoney Creek, Ont.) had 25 stops for the Irish.

Friday, Feb. 11:

Ferris State’s Matt Verdone scored short-handed with 53 seconds left on Friday night to snap a 3-3 tie and give Ferris State a 4-3 win over the Irish. The Bulldogs jumped out to a 3-1 lead in the game only to see the Irish battle back to tie the game. Jeff Legue (18th) and Jim Jorgensen (2nd) staked Ferris State to a 2-0 first-period lead. Freshman Mark Van Guilder (Roseville, Minn.) got the Irish back in the game with a power-play goal at 16:15 of the first period for a 2-1 score. After Derek Nesbitt (10th) made it 3-1, Noah Babin collected his fourth of the season at 9:41 and Jason Paige (So., Saginaw, Mich.) scored on the power play at 13:02 (his third of the year) to tie the game at 3-3. On the night, the Irish were 2-for-7 on the power play while the Bulldogs were 0-for-5. Ferris State out shot the Irish, 40-24 in the game. Morgan Cey (Sr., Wilkie, Sask.) made 36 saves for the Irish while Derek MacIntyre had 21 for the Bulldogs.

OFFENSIVE SPARK, SORT OF:

The Notre Dame offense that has struggled all season long has scored eight goals over the last three games (2.67 per game) while the power play was 4-for-14 versus Ferris State last weekend. For the season, the Irish have scored just 51 goals in 32 games for a 1.59 goals-per-game average. The back-to-back three-goal games (2/5 vs. Nebraska-Omaha and 2/11 vs. Ferris State) marked the first time this season that the Irish had scored three goals two games in a row. It also marks just the second time on the year that Notre Dame scored six goals over a two-game span (Nov. 5-12, 4-4 tie with Bowling Green and a 2-2 tie with Northern Michigan). Over the last 16 games, the Irish have scored just 22 goals. For the year, the Irish have been outscored by a 107-51 margin. In 17 of the 32 games played to date, the Irish have scored a goal or less. Notre Dame’s previous low for goals-per-game in a season occurred during the 1999-2000 season when the Irish scored just 2.45 goals per game.

CAREER FIRSTS:

Sophomore defenseman Noah Babin and freshman right wing Mark Van Guilder each collected the first multiple-point games of their Notre Dame careers in the 4-3 loss to Ferris State on Feb. 11. Both players had a goal and an assist in the game. Babin now has five goals and six assists for 11 points on the year while Van Guilder checks in with three goals and five assists for eight points.

TWO ON THE POWER PLAY:

Notre Dame scored twice on the power play in both games of the Ferris State series (Feb. 11-12), going 4-for-14 (28.6%) on the weekend (2-for-7 in each game). That marks just the third and fourth times this season that the Irish scored a pair of power-play goals in a game. The previous times came on Nov. 26 in the 3-2 win at Alaska Fairbanks (2-for-5) and on Nov. 5 in the 4-4 tie with Bowling Green (2-for-7).

EARLY LEADS:

When Noah Babin scored at 9:26 of the first period in Saturday’s game versus Ferris State, it marked the first time the Irish scored the first goal of a game since Jan. 14 versus Ohio State. It also marked the first time that Notre Dame had a lead in a game since the 15:52 mark of the first period in that Jan. 14 game. The Irish have scored the first goal just 12 times this season and are 4-5-3 in those games.

TOUGH BARNS:

Since returning to the CCHA in 1992-93, Michigan’s Yost Arena and Michigan State’s Munn Arena have been regular “Houses of Horror” for the Irish. At Yost Arena, the Irish are 1-15-1 in the last 17 regular-season meetings and 2-19-1 overall. At Munn Arena, Notre Dame is 2-16-1 on the home ice of the Spartans.

OUT OF ACTION:

The 2004-05 season is one that sophomore right wing Matt Williams-Kovacs (Calgary, Alb.) would like to forget. He suffered a broken right ankle on Oct. 16 at Miami and missed the next 14 games. He returned to the Notre Dame lineup on Jan. 2 versus R.P.I. and played in that game and the first period of the Jan. 7 Lake Superior game when he suffered a broken right wrist and will be lost for the remainder of the season. He was scoreless in six games this season. Following the Jan. 28 game at Bowling Green, Williams-Kovacs was joined on the sidelines by sophomore left wing Josh Sciba (Westland, Mich.) and freshman defenseman Dan VeNard (Vernon Hills, Ill.). Both went down with shoulder injuries. Sciba returned to the Irish lineup on Friday night versus Ferris State after missing three games. VeNard, who missed six games earlier this season after suffering a shoulder separation at Western Michigan on Nov. 13 is out indefinitely and has now missed the last five games.

SHORT-HANDED GOALS:

After giving up just one short-handed goal in the first 28 games of the season, the Irish have now surrendered two in the last four games. Nebraska-Omaha’s lone goal in the Feb. 4, 1-1 tie came short-handed as did the game-winnning goal in Friday’s 4-3 loss to Ferris State. That goal came with 53 seconds left in the game.

WES FOR THE DEFENSE:

Sophomore defenseman Wes O’Neill has become Notre Dame’s offensive and defensive leader this season. Through 32 games, O’Neill leads the team in goals (6), points (16) and power-play goals. His 12 assists are tied for the team lead and his 65 shots are tied for second. O’Neill has career highs in goals, assists, points and power-play goals this season. As a freshman he had two goals and 10 assists for 12 points.

SHOT MARGINS:

For the season, Notre Dame has out shot its opponents just 10 times over the first 32 games. When Notre Dame out shoots an opponent, the Irish are 2-3-5. Notre Dame has been held to less than 20 shots in a game nine times this year. When out shot on the year, the Irish are 3-17-1. Notre Dame is 1-1 when shots are even.

MR. STRETCH DRIVE:

Over the course of his four seasons at Notre Dame, Morgan Cey has been Notre Dame’s go-to-guy in the stretch drive in each season including the postseason. The senior goaltender has played in 34 games, making 33 starts. He has played 1964:44 minutes, giving up 79 goals with 932 saves. He is 16-14-1 with a 2.41 goals-against average and a .922 save percentage. Included in his 16 wins are three shutouts.

CEY’S LAST MONTH:

In his last 12 decisions, Morgan Cey is 1-9-2 in 13 appearances. The senior goaltender owns a 2.74 goals-against average with a .911 save percentage. In the 13 games he played in, the Irish have scored 18 goals. He ranks third on Notre Dame’s all-time games played list for goaltenders with 108 career appearances. He will become second on Notre Dame’s minutes played list after playing 11 minutes in his next game for the Irish with 6,276:37 seconds played.

THE PUCK STOPS HERE:

Goaltender Morgan Cey continues to make his mark in the Notre Dame record books (see table above). On the season, the senior goaltender is 3-13-5 with a 2.74 goals-against average and a .916 save percentage. In his 20 decisions this year, the Irish have scored 32 goals. Earlier this season (Oct. 24), Cey was named the CCHA’s goaltender and USCHO.com’s defensive player of the week. Cey recorded a career-high 50 saves in downing the top-ranked Boston College Eagles, 3-2, at the Joyce Center on Oct. 22. Of the 49 goals he’s given up this year, 21 have been on the power play. SEN-CEY-TIONAL: Morgan Cey’s 50-save performance versus Boston College was the first 50-save game for a Notre Dame goaltender since Lance Madson (’86-’90) turned in 57 saves in a 6-3 loss to Air Force on Nov. 12, 1988. Cey, now has 38 wins in his career to rank sixth on Notre Dame’s all-time wins list.

IRON MAN:

Junior right wing Tim Wallace (Anchorage, Alaska) has played in all 111 games of his Notre Dame career. The Irish record for consecutive games played belongs to Evan Nielsen (’03) who played in 114 consecutive games between 2001-03. Nielsen missed just two games, playing in 156 of 158 games. Wallace played in all 40 games as a freshman and all 39 Irish games in 2003-04. The center has a three goals and eight assists for 11 points in the first 32games of 2004-05. That equals his career-best of 11 points, set in each of his first three seasons.

IRISH ON CSTV:

Notre Dame saw its record on College Sports Television (CSTV) fall to 1-1 this season and 4-2 all-time with the 2-0 loss to Wisconsin on Jan. 21. On Dec. 10, the Irish came from behind to defeat Michigan State in overtime, 3-2. All-time, the Irish are 4-2 when the CSTV cameras go on. Last season, the Irish won at Ohio State, 5-2, defeated Boston College, 1-0, lost to Cornell in the Everblades College Classic, 4-0 and then defeated Michigan at the Joyce Center, 4-1, in front of the national TV audience.

BLUE-LINE SCORING:

Sophomore defenseman Wes O’Neill leads the Irish in scoring after 32 games with six goals and 12 assists for 11 points. He is followed on the blue line by sophomore Noah Babin (5-6-11) and junior Chris Trick (Troy, Mich.) is third with a two goals and six assists for eight points. Freshman Brock Sheahan (Lethbridge, Alb.) checks in with three assists on the year while Dan VeNard (Fr., Vernon Hills, Ill.) has a goal and an assist. Freshman Luke Lucyk also has a goal and an assist on the season. Through 32 games, the Irish defense has accounted for 15 of Notre Dame’s 51 goals (29.4%) and 41 of Notre Dame’s 142 points (28.9%).

VERSUS RANKED TEAMS:

Through the first 32 games of the 2004-05 season, Notre Dame has played 13 contests versus teams ranked teams. In those 13 games, the Irish are 1-10-2. The lone win came against Boston College (Oct. 22) when the Eagles were ranked first in the nation. The ties have come versus Minnesota-Duluth and Northern Michigan.

POWER-PLAY STRUGGLES:

The Irish snapped an 0-for-8 drought on the power play by going 4-for-14 in the Ferris State series, scoring two ppg’s in each game (the two on Saturday were both of the 5-on-3 variety). Prior to that, the Irish were just 2-for-44 (4.5%) over the previous seven games. Since Dec. 10 (17 games), the Irish are just 10-for-101 with the power play (9.9%). On the year, the Irish have scored 22 power-play goals in 211 chances (10.4%).

PLAYING SHORT-HANDED:

Notre Dame’s penalty killers have surrendered 15 power-play goals in the last 71 opponent chances dating back to the Ohio State series (78.9% penalty killing rate) on Jan. 14-15. Included in that span of games was the Irish shutting Wisconsin’s No. 2-ranked power play (12-for-12) on Jan. 21-22. For the year, Notre Dame has given up 39 power-play goals in 211 chances for an 81.5% succes rate. Last season, Notre Dame’s penalty-killing unit was tops in the CCHA and was fourth in the nation in 2003-04, killing penalties at an 87.4% success rate.

NOAH KNOWS:

Defenseman Noah Babin (So., Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.) has recorded career highs this season in goals (5), assists (6) and points (11). In January, Babin had a career-best four-game point-scoring streak (1-3-4) that saw him have a hand in every Irish goal over a four-game span. He scored on Jan. 7 at Lake Superior, assisted on ND’s lone goal versus the Lakers on Jan. 8 and then assisted on each Notre Dame goal in the 4-1 and 3-1 losses to Ohio State. On the year, Babin is second among Notre Dame defensemen in scoring (tied for third on the team) with career highs in goals (4), assists (6) and points (10). As a freshman last year, Babin had one assist in 31 games.

FIT TO BE TIED:

Notre Dame’s tie versus Nebraska-Omaha (Feb. 4) was the first overtime game for the Irish since a Jan. 8 overtime loss to Lake Superior State. For the season, the Irish are 1-1-6 in overtime with the win coming on Dec. 10 versus Michigan State. That was the first regular-season overtime win since Jan. 25, 2002, a span of 16 overtime games (0-2-14). Since the 1999-2000 season, Notre Dame has been involved in 49 overtime games. In those games, the Irish are 7-6-36. During the 2003-04 season, Notre Dame had a total of eight overtime contests, going 1-3-4 in those games. The lone overtime win came in game three of the first round of the CCHA playoffs versus Western Michigan.

RORY’S STORY:

Junior goaltender Rory Walsh (Milton, Mass.) saw his first action in the Jan. 29 game versus Bowling Green since Dec. 5, 2003 at Western Michigan. He played the final 30:33 minutes, giving up just one goal on 12 shots. It was the fourth appearance in goal in his Notre Dame career.

ATTENDANCE MARK:

Notre Dame’s “home” game at Allstate Arena versus Wisconsin on Jan. 22 drew 8,173 fans who braved a winter snowstorm to watch college hockey. The crowd was the most to see a college hockey game in Chicago and is the largest home crowd ever for the Irish. Due to the bad weather, there were close to 3,000 no-shows for the game.

IRISH AT ALLSTATE:

Notre Dame has now played twice at Allstate Arena. On Jan. 18, 2003, the Irish dropped a 3-1 decision to Yale in front of 5,091 fans. That was the first collegiate hockey game played in Chicago since Illinois-Chicago dropped its program in 1996.

FRESHMAN FIRSTS:

Defenseman Luke Lucyk (Fr., Fox Point, Wis.) joined fellow freshman defender Dan VeNard by scoring the first goal of his collegiate career on Feb. 4 versus Nebraska-Omaha.. VeNard got the firs tof his career on Jan. 18 in the 6-2 loss to Michigan Tech as he beat Huskies goaltender Cam Ellsworth on a breakaway.

ALL TIED UP:

The most ties the Irish have ever had in a season is eight and that came during the 1999-2000 campaign. The most overtime games the Irish have participated in is 11 and that came during the 1993-94 season. Notre Dame was 2-4-5 in those games

ENDING THE DROUGHT:

Michael Bartlett’s (So., Morton Grove, Ill.) power-play goal in the 4-1 loss at Bowling Green ended a pair of goal-less streaks for the Irish. First, it ended a streak of 187:13 without a goal for Notre Dame, a streak that started in the second period of the Jan. 18 game versus Michigan Tech. It also ended an 0-for-29 streak for the Irish power play going without a goal. That streak started in the third period of the Jan. 15 game versus Ohio State.

NO TRICK TO THIS GAME:

After scoring just one goal in the first 77 games of his Notre Dame career, Irish defenseman Chris Trick (Jr., Troy, Mich.) has scored twice this season. In 31 games this season, the junior has career highs in goals (2), assists (6) and points (8).

BUCKEYE MASTERY:

Ohio State has had Notre Dame’s number since the start of the 2000-01 season. In the 14 games played between the two teams, the Buckeyes own a 10-1-3 record, including a pair of wins in each of the last two CCHA Super Six opening games.

CENTURY MARK:

Notre Dame head coach Dave Poulin needs one more win in CCHA play to reach the 100-win mark in league play. Now in his 10th season, Poulin is 99-133-40 in CCHA play. In all games, the Irish head coach is 138-179-50. His 139 career wins rank second on the all-time list at Notre Dame behind “Lefty” Smith who has 307 wins behind the Irish bench.

RANK-IN-FILE:

Freshman right wing Evan Rankin (Portage, Mich.) continues to show a nose for the net in his rookie season. The Portage, Mich., native returned to the lineup after missing two games (U.S. Under-18 Team and UAF) with a hip injury to score his fourth goal of the season (first on the power play) in the 3-2 loss to the Nanooks on Nov. 27. He set up Matt Amado’s game winner versus Michigan State and led the team with six shots on goal in the game. He leads Irish freshmen in scoring with four goals and five assists for nine points in 28 games this season. He has points in each of his last two games.

GILL THE THRILL:

Junior center Tony Gill (Rochester, Minn.) scored the first goal of his Notre Dame career in the 3-2 win over Alaska Fairbanks. He got his second goal of the year on Feb. 5 versus Nebraska-Omaha.

THREE RANKED BY NHL:

Three hockey players who have signed national letters-of-intent to attend Notre Dame have been ranked by the Nathional Hockey League’s (NHL) Central Scouting in their mid-term rankings for the June 2005 draft. Christian Hanson (Venetia, Pa./Tri-City Storm) was ranked 52nd among all North American skaters. He leads Tri-City in scoring with 15 goals and 25 assists for 40 points in 45 games. Defenseman Kyle Lawson (New Hudson, Mich./USA Under-18) is ranked 195th. He has two goals and 13 assists for 15 points in 27 games for the U.S. Under-18 Team. He will defer until the 2006-07 season. Goaltender Jordan Pearce (Anchorage, Alaska/Lincoln Stars) was ranked ninth among goaltenders eligible for the draft. He is 16-7-3 for Lincoln with a 3.12 goals-against average and a .892 save percentage. Hanson and Pearce were both in the USHL Top Prospects game.

THIRD PERIOD BREAKDOWNS:

Through the first 32 games of the season, Notre Dame has been out scored by a 107-51 margin. Much of the disparity has come in the third period when the Irish have been out scored 40-13 (-27).

THREE-GOAL LEADS:

Notre Dame led Bowling Green by a 3-0 score on Nov. 5, before giving up four goals to trail, 4-3. Wes O’Neill saved tje dau for the Irish when he scored with three seconds left in an eventual 4-4 tie. The last time the Irish surrendered a three-goal lead was on Nov. 6, 1998. The Irish led Boston College, 5-2 after two periods before settling for a 5-5 tie.

CAREER BESTS:

Junior left wing Mike Walsh (Northville, Mich.) had the first three-point game and the first three-assist game of his career in the 4-4 tie with Bowling Green. Defenseman Wes O’Neill recorded the first two-goal game of his career versus the Falcons. Freshman right wing Evan Rankin recorded the first multiple-point game of his career (goal and assist) versus Bowling Green. Cory McLean equalled his career-high with three points versus the Falcons as he scored once and added two assists in the contest.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES:

The Irish experienced their own version of Planes, Trains and Automobiles on their journey to Fairbanks, Alaska. The Irish hockey team left the Notre Dame campus at 1:30 p.m. (EST) on Wednesday, Nov. 24 and took five hours for the 112-mile trip to Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport (due to holiday traffic and weather). From there, the 7:20 p.m. (CST) flight to Anchorage, Alaska didn’t leave Chicago until midnight. The six-hour-and-thirty minute flight arrived at 3:30 a.m. (Alaska Standard Time – 7:30 a.m. EST). The Irish flight to Fairbanks left at 1:00 a.m. (AST), so the team had to stay in an Anchorage hotel for five hours before leaving for the airport at 9:45 a.m. (1:45 p.m. EST). The team arrived in Fairbanks at 12:30 p.m. (4:30 p.m. EST) making the normal 16-hour trip a 27-hour ordeal. The Irish went right from the airport to the Carlson Center to practice for an hour-and-a-half before enjoying Thanksgiving dinner at 3:30 p.m. (7:30 p.m. EST).

CAPTAINS:

Senior Cory McLean (Fargo, N.D.) will serve as Notre Dame’s team captain this season. The team’s two alternate captains will be junior Mike Walsh (Northville, Mich.) and sophomore Jason Paige (Saginaw, Mich.). Paige is just the second sophomore in Dave Poulin’s 10 seasons at Notre Dame to be selected as an alternate captain. The first was Steve Noble (’98) who was selected an alternate for the 1995-96 season. He went on to serve as captain in 1996-97 and 1997-98.

TOUGH PLACE TO WIN:

Notre Dame’s win at Western Michigan on Nov. 13th was just the fourth for the Irish at Lawson Arena since returning to the CCHA in 1992-93. Notre Dame is now 4-16-3 at Lawson since that season. Overall, the Irish are 7-19-4 in the all-time series versus the Broncos in Kalamazoo, Mich.

NHL DRAFTEES:

In June of 2004, the Irish had three players selected in the NHL Entry Draft. Freshman right wing Victor Oreskovich (Oakville, Ont.) was a second-round selection, 55th overall by the Colorado Avalanche. Sophomore defenseman Wes O’Neill was chosen in the fourth round, 115th overall by the New York Islanders. Sophomore goaltender David Brown was selected in the eighth round, 228th overall by the Pittsburgh Penguins. Those three join junior Mike Walsh as Notre Dame players selected by in the draft. Walsh was picked in the fifth round of the 2002 draft by the New York Rangers.

BEATING THE BEST:

For the second year in a row, Notre Dame faced the Boston College Eagles when the Eagles were the top-ranked team in the nation. For the second year in a row, the Irish sent the Eagles home with a loss as they prevailed on Oct. 22 by a 3-2 score. The last time the Irish had defeated a top-ranked team at the Joyce Center was Jan. 13, 1978 when they upset Denver, 5-3. A year ago, in Boston, the Irish downed the top-ranked Eagles, 1-0. In the 37-year history of the program, Notre Dame owns eight wins over top-ranked teams. The list:

10/22/04 – vs. Boston College, 3-2

10/23/03 – at Boston College, 1-0

1/3/99 – at North Dakota, 4-3

11/20/78 – at Minnesota, 3-2

1/13/78 – vs. Denver, 5-3

1/18/74 – vs. Michigan Tech, 7-1

2/24/73 – vs. Wisconsin, 4-3

2/23/73 – vs. Wisconsin, 8-5

BLASTING THE BISCUIT:

The Irish fired 54 shots at Bowling Green goaltender Jordan Sigalet on Nov. 5, including 29 in the second period. The last time the Irish had more than 54 shots on goal came on Oct. 17, 2003 when they fired 59 at – you guessed it – Jordan Sigalet of Bowling Green. He made 56 saves that night in a 5-3 Falcon win.

BISCUIT BARRAGE:

The 52 shots that Boston College fired at Morgan Cey on Oct. 22 was the most shots on goal the Irish have faced since Jan. 23, 2001 when Michigan fired 51 on the Notre Dame goal in a 9-0 Wolverine win.

THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME:

Notre Dame’s loss to Minnesota-Duluth on Oct. 8 snapped a 15-game (12-0-3) regular-season home unbeaten at the Joyce Center. The last time the Irish had lost a regular-season home game at the Joyce Center was on Oct. 17, 2003 versus Bowling Green. Notre Dame was 14-2-2 (.833) at the Joyce Center last season. This year, the Irish are 3-11-4 at home. The 2003-04 home record of 14-2-2 was the best for the Irish since 1987-88 when that year’s Irish squad was 18-2-0 on home ice.

FRESHMAN FIRSTS:

Freshman left wing Mark Van Guilder (Roseville, Minn.) collected his first collegiate goal on Nov. 4 at Bowling Green. He became the second Irish freshman to get his first goal, following Evan Rankin who scored the first goal of his Notre Dame career with a second-period goal versus Boston College (Oct.22). Defenseman Brock Sheahan collected his first career point in Notre Dame’s season opener versus Minnesota-Duluth and fellow defenseman Dan VeNard got his first career point on Nov. 12 at Western Michigan.

FAMILY MATTERS:

Two Irish junior hockey players – Rory Walsh and Mike Walsh – have fathers who played sports at Notre Dame while attending the University during the 1970’s. Rory Walsh’s father, Brian (’77), was an all-American hockey player for the Irish. A center iceman, the elder Walsh is Notre Dame’s all-time leading scorer after recording 234 career points on 89 goals and 145 assists. Mike Walsh’s father, Max (’74), was an offensive lineman on the Notre Dame football team and a member of the 1973 national championship team. Rory Walsh is one of Notre Dame’s goaltenders and Walsh plays left wing for the Irish.

TOPS IN DIRECTORS CUP STANDINGS:

Notre Dame stands first in the third set of fall sports standings released in the 2004-05 United States Sports Academy Division I Directors’ Cup all-sports competition sponsored by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (formerly known as Sears Directors’ Cup). This marks the first time in the 12-year history of the all-sports program that Notre Dame has ranked number one. The previous highest ranking for the Irish was second in the 2004-05 second set of fall standings. Fall NCAA competition earned the Irish 337 points based on their NCAA title in women’s soccer (100 points), their fourth-place finish in women’s cross country (80), 11th-place finish in men’s cross country (57) and second-round NCAA appearances in men’s soccer and volleyball (50 each). The current school rankings.

1. Notre Dame, 337

2. Michigan, 333

3. Stanford 332

4. Duke 327

5. UCLA 297

6. Maryland 280

7. Ohio State, 276

8. Colorado 275

9. Texas, 262

10.Wisconsin 251

In previous years, Notre Dame has finished 11th in ’93-’94, 30th in ’94-’95, 11th in ’95-’96, 14th in ’96-’97, 31st in ’97-’98, 25th in ’98-99, 21st in ’99-’00, 11th in ’00-’01, 13th in ’01-02 and ’02-’03 and 19th in ’03-’04.

GOLD-MEDAL IRISH:

Two former Notre Dame hockey players helped the United States win the gold medal in the recent Deutschland Cup tournament held in Hannover, Germany. Forward Yan Stastny, currently playing for the Nurnberg Ice Tigers in Germany, collected a goal and an assist in the four games. Defenseman Mark Eaton, currently a member of the Nashville Predators, scored a power-play goal in the gold medal game vrsus Slovakia. The U.S. defeated Germany, 5-1, lost to Canada, 5-3, defeated Switzerland, 4-2 and then shutout Slovakia, 4-0, to finish 3-1 in the tournament. The U.S. ended tied with Canada with 3-1 records, but received the gold medal due to greater goal differential over the four games.

FOUR OF FIVE:

Notre Dame has advanced to Joe Louis Arena and the CCHA finals in four of the last five seasons (2000, 2002, 2003, 2004). Only two other CCHA teams – Michigan and Michigan State – have been there all four years since the 1999-2000 campaign. The Irish also are one of five teams, joining Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State and Northern Michigan, to make it to the CCHA Super Six in each of the last three seasons.

NCAA ACTION:

The Notre Dame Fighting Irish hockey team had a season to remember in 2003-04. The Irish advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in the program’s 36-year history with a 20-15-4 overall record. In their first trip to the tournament, the Irish dropped a 5-2 decision to two-time NCAA defending champion Minnesota in the Grand Rapids Regional.

FORMER IRISH GREAT GREG MEREDITH RECEIVES NCAA SILVER ANNIVERSARY AWARD:

Former Notre Dame hockey All-American, Greg Meredith (1976-80) was one of six NCAA Silver Anniversary Award recipients at the NCAA Convention in Dallas, Tex., Jan. 9. The Silver Anniversary Award recognizes former student-athletes who have distinguished themselves since completing their college careers 25 years ago. Meredith is Notre Dame’s all-time leading goal scorer with 104 goals in 149 career games. He is also tops in power-play goals (43) and seventh in all-time points with 192 for his career. He is just one of two players ever to score 40 goals in a season (1979-80) at Notre Dame. A four-year letterwinner with the Irish, Meredith was a finalist for a Rhodes Scholarship and was an NCAA postgraduate scholarship recipient. He is currently the managing director for Putnam Lovell NBF Securities Inc., and has held positions with Salomon Brothers, Inc., Nationsbanc Capital Markets, Inc., and Fenway Partners, Inc. From 2001 to 2003, he served as president and chief executive officer at HSBC Capital and was also president and CEO of Printvision, a software company from 2002-03. In addition, Meredith is the founder and president of Proctor Capital, a private investment and strategic advisory firm. He played four years in the NHL for the Calgary Flames and was an assistant coach at Harvard. Meredith currently coaches the St. David’s hockey program for boys and girls between 9 and 11 years of age. He formed the Meredith Family Foundation in 1997, which contributes to programs such as the LOGAN Center, which provides services to individuals with intellectual disabilities, the St. Joseph’s County Special Olympics, and Camp Millhouse, a summer camp for children with significant intellectual disabilities. In addition, the organization funds educational initiatives including the Paul E. Meredith scholarships at Notre Dame. Meredith is the 10th former Irish athlete to receive the award that was started in 1973.

RETURN TO THE FROZEN TUNDRA:

Six members of the Notre Dame hockey team made a homecoming of sorts when the Irish faced Michigan Tech in Green Bay, Wis., on Jan. 18. Five players and one assistant coach spent parts of their hockey careers in the Land of Lombardi with the Green Bay Gamblers of the United States Hockey League (USHL). Senior defenseman Joe Zurenko (Palatine, Ill.) played for the Gamblers during the ’00-’01 season and sophomore blueliners Noah Babin (Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.) and Wes O’Neill (Essex, Ont.) were teammates there in ’02-’03. Second-year assistant coach Layne LeBel also spent two seasons (’01-’03) with the Gamblers. Freshmen right wing Victor Oreskovich (Oakville, Ont.) and defenseman Dan VeNard (Vernon Hills, Ill) also played in Green Bay, Oreskovich in ’03-’04 while VeNard played three seasons there from ’01-’04.

STORM WARNINGS:

Three members of the Notre Dame freshman class saw action with the USHL’s Tri-City Storm during the ’03-’04 season. Defensemen Brian D’Arcy (Western Springs, Ill.) and Luke Lucyk (Fox Point, Wis.) were members of the Storm’s highly ranked defense. Forward Mark Van Guilder (Roseville, Minn.) was a key contributor to the USHL’s regular-season champions. Van Guilder was fifth on the team in scoring with 17 goals and 22 assists for 39 points in 60 games. In 11 playoff games, Van Guilder added three goals and two assists for five points. D’Arcy saw his season cut short due to injuries, playing in 32 games with no goals and two assists to go with 36 penalty minutes. Lucyk was a regular on the defense with a goal and nine assists for 10 points in 60 games.

THE IRISH AND THE U.S. DEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAM:

Notre Dame’s current roster includes four players who have past experience with USA Hockey, as members of the National Team Development Program (NTDP). Since the program began, the Irish have had a total of 13 NTDP alums grace their roster. The current contingent includes junior Tim Wallace and sophomores Noah Babin, Michael Bartlett (Morton Grove, Ill.) and Josh Sciba (Westland, Mich.). Other former NTDP players who played at Notre Dame and their years in the national program include: Brett Henning (1997-98), Michael Chin (1997-98), Connor Dunlop (1997-99), Paul Harris (1997-99), John Wroblewski (1997-99), Neil Komadoski (1998-2000), Brett Lebda (1998-2000), Rob Globke (1998-2000) and Derek Smith (2000-01).

HOMETOWNS:

The 2003-04 Notre Dame hockey team features players from nine states and four Canadian provinces – Alberta, British Columbia,Ontario and Saskatchewan. In the nine-year tenure of head coach Dave Poulin, the Notre Dame hockey letter winners have hailed from 20 different states and provinces – those listed below, plus: Colorado, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Prince Edward Island and Quebec.

2004-05 NOTRE DAME HOCKEY – BY STATE OR PROVINCE:

Michigan (6): Chris Trick, Mike Walsh, Jason Paige, Josh Sciba, Evan Rankin, Andrew Eggert

Illinois (4): Joe Zurenko, Michael Bartlett, Brian D’Arcy, Dan VeNard

Minnesota (3): Tony Gill, T.J. Jindra, Mark Van Guilder

Alberta (2): Matt Williams-Kovacs, Brock Sheahan

Ontario (3): David Brown, Wes O’Neill, Victor Oreskovich

Alaska (1): Tim Wallace

British Columbia (1): Matt Amado

Florida (1): Noah Babin

Massachusetts (1): Rory Walsh

North Dakota (1): Cory McLean

Saskatchewan (1): Morgan Cey

Wisconsin (1): Luke Lucyk