No. 10 Notre Dame hockey blanks Niagara

Notre Dame hockey bounces back with a 5-0 win

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The 10th-ranked Fighting Irish bounced back after a loss Saturday night to dominate Niagara for a 5-0 victory at Compton Family Ice Arena (3,374) Sunday evening.

Trevor Janicke and Cam Burke led the Irish offense. Each scored a pair of goals. Burke tallied Notre Dame’s first goal in the final minute of the first period and added his second goal in the second period. Janicke added two of his own in the second period, and sophomore Zach Plucinski scored his first goal of the season in the third.

Grant Silianoff had two assists, while seven other players had an assist in the contest, including goalie Ryan Bischel. The Irish offense tested Niagara for the full 60 minutes, outshooting the Purple Eagles 44-19.

Bischel earned his first career shutout in the victory. The junior tallied 19 saves, nine of which came in the second period.

“I knew that tonight we were going to come out and play a lot better than we did last night,” Bischel stated after the win. “The guys were fired up and we needed a response and had that tonight.”

Notre Dame improves to 13-6 with the victory.

The Irish power play was 1-for-4 on the night, and the penalty kill held Niagara to an 0-for-6 mark.

How It Happened

The Irish had the game’s first handful of chances, including a Trevor Janicke shot from the slot that went just wide and a Jack Adams backhander from in close that Chad Veltri made a pad stop on.

Midway through the first, Notre Dame goaltender Ryan Bischel made a save on Brandon Stanley to shut down a 2-on-1 chance.

With 40 seconds left in the first Burke opened the scoring with his fifth of the year, slamming home a rebound in front after Veltri made a save on a Ryder Rolston chance. Grant Silianoff set Rolston up in front for the initial chance to earn the second assist.

The Irish then scored three more goals in the first 7:18 of the second period to extend the lead to 4-0 after 40 minutes.

Trevor Janicke scored his first of the night at 2:06 when he cleaned up a rebound at the back post after Solag Bakich had brought the puck hard to the net.

Burke then scored a shorthanded goal at 5:07 to extend the lead to 3-0, after he took the a Bischel clear and scored on the breakaway chance.

Jake Sibell relieved Chad Veltri in the Niagara net after Burke’s second of the night.

Janicke netted his second of the night, crashing the net for a power-play goal at 7:18 with the assists going to Grant Silianoff and Chase Blackmun.

Notre Dame’s penalty killing unit came up big later in the period, killing off 1:40 of a Niagara 5-on-3 chance.

In the third, the Irish added another goal, this from Plucinski. Max Ellis’s shot was set up off of a pass from Spencer Stastney. The shot was deflected straight towards Plucinski who buried his chance to pick up his first goal of the season.

Next – Notes…

17 Notre Dame Hockey Players Earn Big Ten Academic Honors

17 Notre Dame hockey players were awarded academic All Big-Ten honors on Monday. Find out which record-setting 17 players right here!

Just because things didn’t go as well on the ice as some had hoped this past winter that doesn’t mean Notre Dame hockey players weren’t doing a lot of winning away from the rink.

Monday the Big Ten announced their academic award winners for this past season and the list was stocked full of Fighting Irish.

Official release from the University of Notre Dame Athletics Department:

NOTRE DAME, Ind. — Seventeen members of the 2019-20 Notre Dame hockey team earned Big Ten All-Academic team honors, the conference announced on Monday afternoon (May 11).

The 17 honorees tied with Michigan State for the most in the Big Ten hockey conference. The 17 honorees also marked the most conference All-Academic team honorees for a single season in program history, spanning Notre Dame’s time in the Big Ten, Hockey East, CCHA and WCHA.

Seniors Cal Burke and Cale Morris had the added distinction of earning All-Academic team honors for the fourth time in their careers (three seasons in the Big Ten, one season in Hockey East).

Notre Dame’s 2019-20 Big Ten All-Academic Team Honorees
Cal Burke, Sr., Business Analytics; Boxborough, Massachusetts ***
Cam Burke, So., Business; Boxborough, Massachusetts
Nate Clurman, So., Business; Boulder, Colorado
Pierce Crawford, Jr., Business; Analytics Park Ridge, Illinois *
Michael Graham, So., Business; Eden Prairie, Minnesota
Matt Hellickson, Jr., Finance; Rogers, Minnesota *
Nick Leivermann, So., Business; Eden Prairie, Minnesota
Cale Morris, Sr., Business Technology; Larkspur, Colorado ***
Jake Pivonka, So., Business; Naperville, Illinois
Charlie Raith, So., Business; Winnetka, Illinois
Nick Sanford, Jr., Political Science; Morristown, New Jersey *
Graham Slaggert, So., Business; South Bend, Indiana
Dylan St. Cyr, Jr., Finance; Northville, Michigan *
Spencer Stastney, So., Business And Film, Television And Theatre; Mequon, Wisconsin
Alex Steeves, So., Business; Eden Prairie, Minnesota
Matt Steeves, Jr., Business Technology; Eden Prairie, Minnesota *
Colin Theisen, Jr., Finance; Monroe, Michigan *

* – Indicates prior Big Ten and/or Hockey East All-Academic Team honors. Freshmen student-athletes are ineligible for the Big Ten All-Academic Team. 

Notre Dame Hockey: Season Over After Loss to Gophers

Notre Dame’s season came to an end with a 3-2 loss to Minnesota in the third and decisive game of the Big Ten quarterfinals Sunday.

Notre Dame’s season came to an end with a 3-2 loss to Minnesota in the third and decisive game of the Big Ten quarterfinals Sunday. The Irish finished the season with a 15-15-7 record.

After battling Minnesota to a scoreless first period, the Irish got on the scoreboard first in the second frame on a wrister from Alex Steeves. But the Gophers rallied to score three unanswered goals to round out the scoring from that period. Ben Meyers scored twice on the power play, and a tally from Sampo Ranta was sandwiched between Meyers’ goals. Cam Morrison got the Irish closer with his second power-play goal in as many nights in the third period, but that’s where the game’s scoring stopped.

Cale Morris finished his collegiate career with 18 saves. His senior season ended better than the sophomore campaign of Cam Burke, who received a major penalty and game misconduct for checking from behind in the second period. That resulted in what proved to be the game-winning goal for Minnesota.