[ad_1]
LOWELL — The numbers of Saturday night’s hockey game between UMass Lowell and Northeastern are perplexing.
But the video board at the Tsongas Center doesn’t hold any nuances in the Huskies’ 8-2 win that cued many of the 5,134 fans to trickle to the exits in the third period.
UML outshot Northeastern by a 35-20 margin and held a significant 38-19 advantage at the faceoff dot. Shot attempts were heavily slanted in favor of UMass Lowell, 72-28.
Even the eye test triggered a similar response from the opposing Hockey East coaches.
Northeastern bench boss Jerry Keefe said postgame that his team has “a lot of things we need to work on.” Longtime UMass Lowell head coach Norm Bazin quipped that he actually thought his team looked better compared to Friday’s 2-0 loss to the Huskies.
That’s because the River Hawks held large chunks of possession time and offensive zone opportunities for much of Saturday’s blowout loss. UML’s undoing was allowing eight goals on 20 shots in what was the first eight-spot UMass Lowell has relinquished since the 2014-15 season, when Michigan marched into the Tsongas Center with an 8-4 win.
“In an odd way, I was happier with our game today than I was yesterday,” Bazin said. “But it’s not reflected in the score.”
Statistics aside, momentum continues not to be on the side of the UMass Lowell men’s hockey team. And the group’s home struggles also remain prevalent, falling to 3-11-0 at the Tsongas.
After completing the Hockey East weekend sweep on the road at the University of Vermont, the River Hawks entered a two-game home set with Northeastern with a golden opportunity to stay hot as the regular season winds down against a Huskies team that had won just one game in their last eight tries entering Friday.
But a two-goal salvo from the visitors in the opening minutes was a backbreaker.
“I didn’t see this coming,” Bazin said. “I thought we were going to come out pretty well tonight.”
UMass Lowell (12-20-0, 8-14-0 HE) outshot Northeastern (15-15-1, 10-11-0 HE) 14-6 in the first period before holding a 12-4 advantage in the middle frame. But the Huskies blocked an eye-popping 23 shots on Saturday, as opposed to UML’s three.
“Making that commitment to eating pucks for each other is something we talk about all the time,” Keefe said. “I think that kind of shows the type of guys we have in our room.”
UML has been showing plenty of fight as of late, and it looked like the hosts were beginning to piece together a late comeback when TJ Schweighardt scored a power play goal on a shot from the point at 9:32 of the middle frame to cut the Northeastern lead to 4-1.
But the Huskies’ Austen May found twine 5:42 into the final stanza to position UML in a deep hole.
Northeastern came out firing in the first period, as Eli Sebastian and Joe Connor lit the lamp in a 50-second span just 1:53 into the game. Connor’s goal will certainly be added to his highlight reel. Northeastern’s second-leading goal scorer entered the attacking zone with speed along the right wall on his forehand before sliding the puck to his backhand and roofing it as he barreled into the boards with a defender on his hip.
Noah Jones scored his first career goal with under four minutes to play in the first to provide the Huskies with a commanding 3-0 lead at the break. Bazin yanked Samuel Richard from the crease after the starter allowed three goals on five shots.
“Everything that was shot towards our net went in today,” Bazin said. “Our goalies have had good games for us this year. Today wasn’t one of those.”
Northeastern’s lead ballooned to 4-0 when Dylan Compton scored in the opening six minutes of the middle period, until Schweighardt stopped the bleeding. But the Huskies would roll to the finish line with tallies off the sticks of May, Giacomo Martino, Jack Pechar and Matthew Perkins in the third period before Lee Parks scored in garbage time. Parks also picked up an assist earlier.
Martino’s laser off the top right post and in at 9:17 cued many fans in Lowell to trickle to the exits.
Only two games remain on the regular season slate for UMass Lowell. After making the quick jaunt to North Andover for a rare Thursday meeting with Merrimack on March 5 (7 p.m.), UML will host Boston University in the season finale on March 7 at 6:05 p.m.
“We’re going to have to come up with a lot of solutions here,” Bazin said. “So we’ll work on that this week. I wish we weren’t off, but we are.”
[ad_2]
Jason Cooke
Source link

