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Tag: College hockey

  • Austin Elliott makes 21 saves, UMass Lowell defeats No. 19 UMass, 3-1

    Freshman goaltender Austin Elliott made 21 saves to backbone the UMass Lowell hockey team to a 3-1 win over UMass during a Hockey East clash Friday night at the Tsongas Center.

    The win snapped a four-game losing streak by UML (10-17-0, 5-11-0). The River Hawks received goals from senior forward Dillan Bentley (No. 12), sophomore forward Lee Parks (No. 4) and junior forward Jak Vaarwerk (No. 6) to defeat 19th-ranked UMass.

    Vaarwerk’s empty-net goal with 2:07 left in regulation sealed the victory for the River Hawks. Libor Nemec and Connor Eddy picked up assists.

    Bentley opened the scoring in the second period, wristing a shot from the left faceoff circle into the top right corner behind UMass goalie Michael Hrabal. Assists on the play were earned by Luke Shipley and Mirko Buttazzoni.

    UMass tied it on a goal by Justin Kerr. But late in the second period, Parks tallied the game-winning goal. Nate Misskey passed behind UML’s net to TJ Schweighardt.

    Situated next to the rear boards, Schweighardt feathered a pass more than 100 feet to Parks, who broke in alone on Hrabal. Parks’ low shot found the net.

    UML held a 33-22 shots advantage.

    UML will play at UMass (16-11-0, 9-8-0) on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. It will be the third meeting in seven days.

    Staff Report

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  • UML hockey notebook: River Hawks, UMass set to clash 3 times in 7 days

    LOWELL — As Hockey East rivalries go, the Hatfields vs. the McCoys comes to mind.

    And by next Saturday night, don’t expect a lot of hugs to be exchanged between UMass Lowell and UMass players.

    Starting with Sunday (3:30 p.m.) at the Tsongas Center in Lowell, the River Hawks and Minutemen will play three times over a seven-day span.

    UML (9-16, 5-10 HE) will host UMass (15-10, 8-7 HE) again on Friday (7:15 p.m.) and then the Minutemen will host the third game on Saturday (7:30 p.m.) at the Mullins Center.

    “It’s more like a playoff series than it is a regular-season series,” UML head coach Norm Bazin said.

    In-state bragging rights are on the line whenever the programs play. Despite the frigid temperatures outside, emotions on the ice may boil over due to the expected intensity level.

    UML has dropped three games in a row, including a painful 6-5 overtime loss to Maine last Saturday. UML scored five straight goals to take a 5-3 lead, but then allowed the final three games to fall at home.

    Senior Dillan Bentley (11-9-20) continues to lead the River Hawks in goals and points. Graduate student Jay Ahearn (9-6-15) and junior Jak Vaarwerk (5-9-14) have also supplied consistent offense.

    In goal, neither Samuel Richard (2.93 GAA, .901 save %) nor Austin Elliott (2.70 GAA, .898 save %) has been able to get on a roll.

    Conversely, UMass is riding a six-game winning streak. In that span, the Minutemen have posted three shutouts and only allowed five total goals.

    “They’ve been hot of late,” Bazin said. “The last two or three weekends they’ve been tough to score on. From a structure standpoint, they’re playing a good brand of hockey.”

    Michael Hrabal has been superb between the pipes with a 2.15 goals against average and .929 save percentage. Offensively, the top scorers have been Jack Musa (10-14-24) and Vaclav Nestrasil (11-12-23).

    UMass has shined on the road, going 8-4.

    UMass Lowell’s Jak Vaarwerk (29) is denied by Maine goaltender Albin Boija during Friday’s college hockey game at the Tsongas Center. (James Thomas for the Lowell Sun)

    Kroll makes jump

    Due to season-ending injuries to defensemen Tnias Mathurin and Daniel Buchbinder, the River Hawks recently brought in Des Moines (USHL) captain Ryan Kroll. Kroll has seen action in two games.

    A 6-1, 194-pound native of Plainville, Ill., Kroll is a sturdy, stay-at-home defenseman who plays a simple game.

    “We didn’t give him a big workload, but he played well. We feel he’s going to be a good defenseman,” Bazin said. “He’s a defensive defenseman. He has a good attitude. He knows what he is.”

    UML has struggled to find consistency. One reason is the lack of collegiate experience among the defensemen.

    “Sometimes we show our age,” Bazin said.

    Loose pucks

    Bazin was encouraged by the play of sophomore forward Lee Parks, who tallied a goal and assist in Saturday’s game. He also led the River Hawks with three blocked shots.

    A 6-foot-2, 210-pound native of Ontario, Parks tallied eight goals as a freshman. He has three goals and five assists this winter.

    “He’s starting to really move his feet,” Bazin said, “and when he moves his feet he’s an excellent player.” … Sunday’s game can be viewed on NESN. … The River Hawks are hoping to improve on their 2-8 record at the Tsongas.

    Barry Scanlon

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  • UMass Lowell hockey team blanked 2-0 at home by No. 17 Maine

    UMass Lowell was hoping a thrilling 4-3 overtime win at Boston University would be a springboard to a winning streak.

    Instead the River Hawks were blanked by BU the next night in Lowell and they were shut out Friday night for the sixth time this season and the fifth time in their last 14 games.

    Maine defeated UML for the seventh straight time following a 2-0 Hockey East win at the Tsongas Center in Lowell.

    Maine goalie Albin Boija posted a 25-save shutout. Austin Elliott turned aside 27 of 29 shots for UML. UML went 0-for-6 on the power play to fall to 2-7 at home this winter.

    Brock James opened the scoring in the first period for No. 17 Maine. He was denied on a partial breakaway by Elliott, but the puck squirted to Nicholas Peluso. Peluso centered it and James was able to poke it into the UML net.

    Minutes later, UMass Lowell captain Jay Ahearn snapped a 20-foot wrist shot which clanked off the left post behind Boija. Ahearn led UML with five shots on goal.

    Charlie Russell doubled Maine’s lead in the second period.

    Maine has now won the first two games of the season series against UML. The teams will battle Saturday (6:05 p.m.) back at the Tsongas.

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  • UMass Lowell shut out at home, can’t sweep Boston University

    LOWELL – For the second weekend in a row, the UMass Lowell hockey team was unable to pull off a Hockey East sweep at home.

    One night after pulling out a thrilling overtime road victory over No. 20 Boston University, the River Hawks returned home to the Tsongas Center looking to bank more league points.

    But the Terriers had other ideas, as BU’s sophomore forward Cole Eiserman score a late goal in the second period, followed by a Nick Roukounakis goal in the third to help BU get a 3-0 win on Saturday night in front of a crowd of 5,856.

    “I thought it was a good game for the bulk of the night. I didn’t have a problem with the effort. The execution wasn’t there tonight, and we certainly made it hard on ourselves in the offensive zone, and weren’t able to get shots through,” UML head coach Norm Bazin said. “So we could do a better job that way and figure out what we can do to create more offense in the offensive zone, because I thought the effort with their first touches, for the most part were there, and the guys were hungry, but had nothing to show for it.”

    Boston University goalie Mikhal Yegorov was fantastic in net, with 23 saves in the victory, and forward Ben Merrill netted a late open net goal to seal the win.

    The River Hawks fell to 2-6 on home ice.

    The River Hawks (8-14-0, 4-8-0) hoped to take the season series against the ranked Boston University Terriers (12-9-1, 8-6-0) after their 4-3 overtime win the night prior at Agganis Arena in Boston.

    Early in the first period, senior center Dillan Bentley had a shot in front of the net that flew wide at the 18:00 mark. BU freshman forward Jack Murtagh found himself alone with a wide open shot in front, but River Hawks goalie Austin Elliott made a great blocker save to keep things even.

    UMass Lowell was able to attain its first power play opportunity of the game after a boarding call with 9:50 to go in the period, but their advantage was short lived, receiving a hooking call only four seconds into their power play chance to get back to an even 4-on-4 for the next two minutes. Both goalies traded big saving plays, as BU’s Yegorov made his at the 6:00 mark, with Elliott following that up with another great blocker save with 4:30 to go in the first. The Terriers got their first full power play chance of the game after a tripping call on the River Hawks with 1:33 to go. The first period ended scoreless, with UML leading shots on goal in the period, 6-4.

    In the second period, UML had a good scoring chance in front on a one-timer opportunity, only to be denied by Yegorov with a phenomenal diving save at the 15:00 mark. BU was given its second power play after a cross checking call on the River Hawks with 12:52 to go, but would be given an interference call only a minute and a half later to give UML its third power play chance as well.

    Elliott made another great save with 6:00 left as BU failed to corral the rebound off his blocker. BU’s Eiserman had a big breakaway chance with 3:00 to play, but his shot went wide right, as the game appeared to stay 0-0 heading into the third. Eiserman was able to make up for his mistake in miraculous fashion, however, scoring an unassisted goal with only 1.7 seconds left to give Boston University a huge 1-0 lead heading into the third, his ninth of the season.

    Knowing they had to be aggressive out the gates, the River Hawks opened up the third period with a slap shot from left wing Jay Ahearn that was saved glove side by Yegorov. UML dominated the first 10 minutes in shots on goal, with nine compared to BU with four.

    The Terriers had a 3-on-1 opportunity with 11:00 left, but Elliott kept the River Hawks in the game with a nice save, stick side. As the clock ran under 10 minutes to play, BU kept on the attack. With 9:20 left, Roukounakis was able to put another one in the back of the net, this time a rebound that bounced off Elliott’s left blocker, giving the Terriers a 2-0 lead with a little under half the period remaining.

    With three minutes left, the River Hawks opted to pull Elliott, giving them an extra attacker needing two goals to extend the game. This decision would prove to be detrimental, as BU’s Merrill scored an empty net goal with 2:00 left to give the Terriers a 3-0 lead, and eventual win against the River Hawks.

    Mike Sidhly

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  • Quentin Miller has huge shoes to fill as DU’s No. 1 goalie, but the freshman looks up to the task

    There is tough news for the other top NCAA hockey programs that were happy to see Matt Davis exhaust his college eligibility: It appears the University of Denver has found another one.

    It was a winding journey for Quentin Miller to get here, but he looks quite at home in net for the Pioneers. He made 29 saves Friday night, outdueling Colorado College star netminder Kaidan Mbereko in a 2-1 overtime win in front of the largest crowd ever for a hockey game at Magness Arena (7,073).

    “He’s amazing. He’s the best person and kid too, so you just want to see him have success,” DU defenseman Boston Buckberger said. “I think what he’s done for our team, being kind of a brick and our foundation back there, we know we can rely on him. He’s bailed us out numerous times already. When we go the other way and get our chances, we’ve got to look back and give kudos and credit to him.

    “If it weren’t for him, we wouldn’t have been able to come back (Friday) night. Huge credit to him. I just hope he keeps it rolling, because it’s awesome.”

    People toss around the term legend too loosely in sports, but Davis became one at DU after his incredible 2024 postseason run leading the Pioneers to an NCAA-record 10th national championship. He also helped the Pios back to the Frozen Four last year, and finished his career 6-1 in NCAA Tournament games with eight goals allowed.

    Those are massive skates to fill. Enter Miller, who played for three different Canadian junior teams and 10 months ago wasn’t playing at all because of an injury.

    A Montreal native, Miller was the backup goalie for the Patrick Roy-led Quebec Ramparts in 2022-23. That team won the Memorial Cup, and helped Roy return to the NHL with the New York Islanders. His work also made him a fourth-round pick in the 2023 NHL draft by his hometown Montreal Canadiens.

    Miller was traded in the middle of the next season to Rimouski. He needed shoulder surgery in September 2024, so Rimouski, which was hosting the Memorial Cup, traded for another goaltender. When he was getting close to returning from the surgery, there wasn’t going to be obvious playing time for him, so he went west to the BCHL and joined the Chilliwack Chiefs.

    That’s when the Pioneers got involved. Before players with CHL experience were granted NCAA eligibility, junior players often committed years in advance of college. The forthcoming rule change drastically altered the recruiting landscape last season.

    “(Assistant coach Tavis MacMillian) learned of a guy in Chilliwack that was coming out of injuries, so just connections and people that we know up there,” DU coach David Carle said. “We didn’t have a long time to watch him, because he came back from injury sometime in late January, early February. We made the decision to recruit him and fortunately for us, he was able to get (33) games in through the BCHL playoffs.

    “We have good connections in the Montreal organization as well, and they were supportive of him coming here. That all kind of factors into it.”

    Miller played 10 regular-season games for the Chiefs, then helped them to the BCHL championship series before losing to the Brooks Bandits. The Pios not only had to replace Davis, but his backup from the past two seasons, Freddie Halyk, also transferred to Brown.

    The three goalies on the roster are two freshmen — Miller and Johnny Hicks — plus junior Paxton Geisel, who had appeared in one game in two years.

    “I think that was the big question coming into this year. We didn’t really have a goalie,” junior defenseman Eric Pohlkamp said. “But (Miller) has come in and he’s been fantastic. Even from game one against Air Force, he had a really good game, and he’s just embraced it. He’s super confident. He’s easy to play with. He’s getting better on his goalie breakouts and just keeps improving.”

    Miller improved to 6-2-1 with a .941 save percentage after the win Friday night. He helped DU go to Western Michigan, the defending NCAA champs, and sweep the Broncos last weekend with 76 saves on 80 shots.

    Corey Masisak

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  • UML hockey notebook: Nate Misskey a big defenseman from a small town

    LOWELL — When Nate Misskey was drafted by a National Hockey League team, he was the talk of his Canadian town.

    It seemed everyone heard the news because, well, Melfort, Saskatchewan (population 5,955 in a 2021 census) is a tight-knit and small community.

    “It’s a small little town,” the 6-3, 213-pound UMass Lowell freshman defenseman said after practice Tuesday at the Tsongas Center. “Everyone pretty much knows everyone else around town. That was a pretty big deal. It was awesome. People were calling my parents to congratulate them.”

    Misskey, selected by the San Jose Sharks with the 143rd pick in 2024, is coming off his best game as a River Hawk. On Saturday, he tallied his first collegiate goal in his eighth game and added an assist as UML earned a Hockey East split with 16th-ranked Providence thanks to a solid 5-1 home victory.

    Known more as a strong defenseman, Misskey has three points in his last three games.

    “He’s very honest defenseman,” head coach Norm Bazin said. “When he’s on he’s been very good offensively and defensively.”

    Bazin said Misskey has had plenty on his plate “because we have a young D corps.” Like other players coming from the Canadian Hockey League, there’s been an adjustment period to college hockey for Misskey.

    “The guys are bigger, stronger. Definitely a lot of speed in (Hockey East),” he said.

    Misskey made the tough decision at age 14 to leave home and further his hockey career. His travels ultimately led him to the Western Hockey League. He played in 172 regular-season games over the previous three seasons with the Victoria Royals.

    He staged an impressive season last winter, compiling 10-37-47 totals in 63 games and then added six assists in 11 playoff games.

    Playing in front of home crowds at the Tsongas has been “amazing,” he said.

    Misskey brought the crowd to its feet last Saturday when he pocketed his first collegiate goal. Stationed in the left faceoff circle, he one-timed a nifty cross-ice feed from Jak Vaarwerk for a power-play goal against Providence.

    “It was a nice feed from Vaarwerk. It’s certainly something I’d like to contribute,” he said of providing offense from the back end.

    He has long admired the play of hulking veteran NHL defenseman Brent Burns, known mainly for a booming slap shot and lengthy beard. The beard is something Misskey doesn’t have in common with Burns, though.

    “I can’t grow facial hair,” the baby-faced Misskey said with a laugh.

    UML freshman defenseman Nate Misskey begins to celebrate after scoring his first collegiate goal against Providence. He’s a draft pick of the San Jose Sharks. (Photo by Rich Gagnon/UMass Lowell Athletics)

    Scouting the Wildcats

    UML (4-4, 2-2) will return to Hockey East play with a weekend set against New Hampshire. UNH (3-4, 1-2 HE) is coming off a split against Vermont.

    The Wildcats stunned many in their season opener when they defeated No. 2 Michigan State, 4-3. UML will host the first game Friday (7:15 p.m.) and the Wildcats will host the Saturday (7 p.m.) rematch.

    “A team that has a good transition offense and good goaltending,” Bazin said. “A lot to be aware of.”

    Bazin said he was pleased with the way his team responded after falling 5-1 to Providence last Friday.

    “Every game we’re adding a little piece. I’d like us to be more connected,” he said. “We showed a good response Saturday from Friday. We realized we have to play a certain way to have a chance at success.”

    “It was pretty big. It shows what we’re built of,” Vaarwerk said. “We have a big weekend against UNH. I know they’ve had our number in the past.”

    Loose pucks

    Two players who seemed to emerge last weekend were junior defenseman Sean Kilcullen and sophomore forward Libor Nemec.

    Kilcullen tallied his first collegiate goal Friday with a well-placed wrist shot. On Saturday, he blocked a shot with his team shorthanded. Fellow defenseman TJ Schweighhardt picked up the puck, raced down ice and sniped a key goal.

    Nemec, meanwhile, who showed promise during an injury-plagued freshman season, was held without a point in his first seven games. But he collected two assists in Saturday’s win.

    “I like the way those guys played over the weekend. I think there’s other guys ready to bust out. I do,” Bazin said. … UML has tallied two shorthanded goals this season. Strangely, both have been notched by defensemen – Tnius Mathurin had the first. … UML continues to be without Mathurin and freshman forward Diego Buttazzoni due to injuries.

    Bazin said sophomore defenseman Daniel Buchbinder, who was injured during one of his first shifts in the season opener against Merrimack, will not return this season. … Area football fans are thrilled by the six-game winning streak put together by the Patriots. But at least one UML player says New England won’t win the AFC East.

    Asked who will capture the division, Vaarwerk couldn’t have answered more quickly. “The Bills,” responded the native of Clarence, N.Y., a Buffalo suburb, and a lifelong Bills fan. … Vaarwerk (2-4-6), Schweighardt (2-4-6) and Dalyn Wakely (0-6-6) lead the team in points.

    Barry Scanlon

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  • University of Denver moving to West Coast Conference in 2026, according to report

    The University of Denver is riding the latest wave of college realignment.

    DU is moving from the Summit League to the West Coast Conference in 2026, according to a report by ESPN’s Pete Thamel. The Pioneers will be a member of the conference in nine sports.

    A move to the WCC fits the bill for DU, a private school, as the league is comprised of private schools on the West Coast. Though Gonzaga, historically the conference’s best basketball school, is leaving for the rebuilt Pac-12 in 2026, the conference is still a step up for the Pioneers in the college athletics landscape.

    The Pioneers have belonged to the Summit League since 2013. Prior to that, DU spent a year in the Western Athletic Conference, was in the Sun Belt from 1999-2012, and was independent from 1962-99. Before that, DU was a part of the Mountain States Athletic Conference.

    Basketball-wise, the WCC will be a challenge for DU’s men’s basketball team, which struggled to find a consistent footing in the Summit and has never made an NCAA Tournament appearance. The Pioneers begin the 2025-26 season next week under first-year coach Tim Bergstraser, and haven’t had a winning season since 2016-17.

    The school has yet to make a formal announcement about the move, though that is expected to come sometime Friday morning. DU athletics staff members received emails early Friday morning stating there would be a mandatory meeting at 9 a.m., a source told The Denver Post.

    This story will be updated.

    Kyle Newman

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  • DU Pioneers beat UMass on Tristan Broz’s goal to claim double-overtime thriller in NCAA Tournament

    DU Pioneers beat UMass on Tristan Broz’s goal to claim double-overtime thriller in NCAA Tournament

    The University of Denver hockey team crossed two time zones to reach its NCAA hockey regional in Springfield, Mass.

    There, the top-seeded Pioneers met a fourth-seeded UMass Minutemen squad that needed to drive approximately 26 miles to arrive at MassMutual Center for Thursday afternoon’s win-or-go home affair.

    Yet somehow, the Pios never ran out of gas.

    In a back-and-forth marathon that featured two brilliant performances in net, forward Tristan Broz slipped a wrist shot into the right side of the goal to send DU to a 2-1 double-overtime victory that left a partisan UMass crowd stunned.

    The game-winner put the Pioneers (29-9-3) a win away their 19th Frozen Four bid, with all that’s standing between them and a trip to St. Paul, Minn., a date with Maine or Cornell on Saturday (2 p.m. MDT) in Springfield.

    “It wasn’t easy,” Broz told the ESPN2 broadcast after the win. “That was a heck of a hockey game and (UMass) gave us everything they had.”

    Of course, Broz wouldn’t have even have had a chance at the game-winner were it not for the play of goaltender Matt Davis in net. The junior turned away 46 shots, including several at close range, and somehow managed to stay in the game after appearing to injure himself doing the splits in the second OT.

    “It felt like they could have had five or 10 goals there,” Broz said of UMass. “… (Davis) is a warrior and we love him.”

    DU entered the regional as the No. 3 overall seed in the 16-team NCAA Tournament bracket and played like it early on, putting up a 10-5 advantage in shots on goal in the first period.

    Matt Schubert

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  • Could the A’s really play in Las Vegas’ minor league park? Recent history says yes

    Could the A’s really play in Las Vegas’ minor league park? Recent history says yes

    LAS VEGAS — A major professional team playing in a minor league venue would’ve been unheard of just a few years ago, which is what the Oakland Athletics likely will do if they move to Las Vegas.

    There is recent precedent for a major professional team making a similar transition while waiting for the new venue to be constructed. The NFL’s Chargers played in an MLS stadium after moving from San Diego to Los Angeles, and the NHL’s Arizona Coyotes have called a college arena home while awaiting what they hope is a new building of their own.

    A’s president Dave Kaval has said he would like to break ground next year and move into a new Las Vegas stadium in time for the 2027 season. The team has an agreement with Bally’s and Gaming & Leisure Properties to build a potential $1.5 billion park on the Tropicana hotel site along the Las Vegas Strip. The A’s are asking for nearly $400 million in public support from the Nevada Legislature, which could vote on a proposal this week.

    The club’s lease at Oakland Coliseum runs through 2024, and there is a chance the A’s would play the 2025 and 2026 seasons at Las Vegas Ballpark, home to their Triple-A affiliate, the Aviators.

    Las Vegas Ballpark is 53 years younger than the Coliseum and has been voted the nation’s best Triple-A park three years in a row (minus the COVID-shutdown year in 2020) by Ballpark Digest. But it seats only about 10,000. The A’s proposed stadium on the Strip would have a seating capacity of about 30,000.

    The A’s are drawing 8,695 fans per game in Oakland this season — the only franchise pulling fewer than 10,000 per game. Another lame-duck season in Oakland isn’t likely to boost those numbers, which may incentivize the A’s to try relocating even sooner than 2025.

    “Any time you’re a short-timer like this, that final season is going to be terrible no matter what it is, so most teams try to move as quickly as they can when that happens,” said sports economist Victor Matheson, a professor at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. “Once they say, ‘Hey, we’re going,’ you know you’re going to lose it in your local market.”

    The Montreal Expos were the most recent Major League Baseball team to relocate, moving to Washington in 2005 and becoming the Nationals. They averaged 9,356 fans for home games split between Montreal and San Juan, Puerto Rico, with a stripped-down roster that won only 67 games.

    Other franchises have taken the temporary step of playing in much smaller venues while waiting for a new place to be built.

    The Chargers left San Diego in 2017 for the Los Angeles area, playing three seasons in the 30,000-seat stadium that houses the MLS’ LA Galaxy. The Chargers had hoped to play there two years, but construction delays at state-of-the-art SoFi Stadium in Inglewood forced them to remain an extra season.

    Having left behind a fan base in San Diego angry over their departure for an area that was at best indifferent to the Chargers, they regularly played before fans cheering the away team during that three-year stretch. Even now, the Chargers are the secondary team at SoFi to the Rams, who moved back into the area from St. Louis in 2016.

    Unlike the Chargers, the Rams played at a stadium more conducive to pro football, at the spacious though aging Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on the University of Southern California campus.

    The Coyotes just finished their first season at Arizona State University’s Mullett Arena, a 5,025-seat venue that is ideal for college hockey but far from suitable for an NHL team. Nevertheless, the Coyotes are scheduled to play there two more seasons after getting booted from the arena in suburban Glendale after negotiations broke down over a lease extension.

    Unlike with the Chargers, however, the Coyotes don’t for certain have a new arena in the making. This week, Tempe residents voted against a $2.3 billion entertainment district that would include a new arena for the Coyotes.

    What the Chargers and Coyotes have in common is moving into venues considered far below the standard of their leagues, even if just temporarily. That’s the path the A’s could follow, hoping that fan interest in Las Vegas greets them even if the big league stadium isn’t ready yet.

    “For the most part, this is a little unusual of not having the facilities,” said Scott Stempson, a sports history expert at the University of Nebraska. “It doesn’t seem like they’re clamoring to get the A’s in Vegas that I’ve heard of.”

    That also was the situation in Memphis, Tennessee, when the NFL’s Oilers left Houston in 1997. While waiting for the stadium to be built in Nashville, the Oilers promised to play two years at Memphis’ Liberty Bowl.

    One problem: Nashville and Memphis are two cities that share a state but little else. Memphis residents weren’t going to show up in droves to cheer on a team that would one day be Nashville’s, and those who live in Music City weren’t in much of a hurry to make the six-hour round-trip drive eight times a year.

    So one season after drawing sparse crowds, the Oilers moved to Nashville early and played at Vanderbilt Stadium for a season. The next season, the Oilers changed their nickname to the Titans, played in front of sold-out crowds in their new digs and came a yard short from winning the Super Bowl.

    That could be something for the A’s to hold on to. As they play in front of dwindling crowds in Oakland and ponder the idea of playing in a minor league park for at least two years, the long-range plan is what matters most.

    It might just be a little bumpy before they get there.

    “They have totally destroyed that (Oakland) fan base through their actions over the last couple of years,” Matheson said. “When you finally announce, ‘OK, we’re done with you people,’ what do we expect ‘you people’ to do at that point?”

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    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • Devils sign Jack Hughes’ brother Luke to 3-year contract

    Devils sign Jack Hughes’ brother Luke to 3-year contract

    The New Jersey Devils have signed defenseman Luke Hughes — the younger brother of star center Jack Hughes — to a three-year, entry-level contract starting this season

    NEWARK, N.J. — The New Jersey Devils signed defenseman Luke Hughes — the younger brother of star center Jack Hughes — to a three-year, entry-level contract starting this season.

    Devils general manager Tom Fitzgerald announced the deal on Saturday, two days after Luke Hughes’ Michigan team’s season ended in a Frozen Four loss to Quinnipiac.

    Having the deal start this season will allow Luke Hughes to reach free agency a year sooner. Financial terms of the contract were not disclosed.

    Luke Hughes was the fourth overall selection in the 2021 NHL draft. He has been assigned jersey No. 43, but Devils coach Lindy Ruff said he won’t be in the lineup Saturday night when New Jersey faces the Bruins in Boston.

    The 19-year-old Hughes was an assistant captain for the Wolverines as a sophomore and ranked ranked second in scoring with nine goals and 33 assists. His point total ranked second for all NCAA defensemen this season.

    Jack Hughes, 21, was the first overall selection in the 2019 NHL draft. He leads the Devils in scoring this season and has been an All-Star the past two seasons.

    Luke’s eldest brother, Quinn, was selected by Vancouver with the seventh overall pick in the 2018 NHL draft. Luke and Jack will mark the third set of brothers to play for the franchise simultaneously. Patrik and Peter Sundstrom played for New Jersey in 1989-90. Bob and Paul Miller played for Colorado in 1981-82, the final season the Rockies played in Denver before moving to New Jersey and becoming the Devils.

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    More AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • 1 dead, 2 dozen injured, when bus carrying students crashes

    1 dead, 2 dozen injured, when bus carrying students crashes

    WALTHAM, Mass. — A college student died while more than two dozen other passengers and the driver were injured when a bus returning from a hockey game struck a tree in suburban Boston, authorities said.

    The preliminary investigation suggests the bus was returning to Brandeis University from a hockey game at Northeastern University in Boston at about 10:30 p.m. Saturday when it crashed in Waltham not far from campus, according to a statement from Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan and Waltham police Chief Kevin O’Connell.

    One student died at the scene. The remaining 26 passengers and the bus driver “sustained injuries of varying degrees” and were taken to area hospitals, the statement said.

    Brandeis in a statement early Sunday said 17 of the injured had been released from the hospital and the remainder have been admitted.

    “Given the number of injured people and the different hospitals to which they were transported, it is taking time to determine the status of everyone involved, including which passengers are Brandeis students,” the statement said.

    No names were made public and no one has been charged.

    The crash remains under investigation and police are asking witnesses to come forward.

    Brandeis said grief counselors were available at the university’s counseling center.

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