Notre Dame’s Steeves signs with Maple Leafs

A Notre Dame star is headed to the Toronto Maple Leafs. Details here!

NOTRE DAME, Ind. — Junior forward and leading scorer Alex Steeves signed a three-year entry-level contract for the 2021-22 season, the Toronto Maple Leafs announced today (March 28).

Steeves recently wrapped a junior season which saw him put together career-high totals for goals (15), assists (17) and points (32) in 29 games played. His 15 goals were also a team-high total. He ended the season on a seven-game point streak (5-5-10) and he posted at least one point in 22 of 29 games.

Steeves had six multi-point efforts on the season, including a four point game (1-3-4) in Notre Dame’s 6-1 win at Ohio State (Feb. 5). He finished the regular season tied for fifth nationally with the 15 goals, while his 14 goals in Big Ten play ranked second only to Cole Caufield (24). He was a Hobey Baker Fan Vote nominee (Feb. 1) and he was named the Big Ten’s Second Star of the Week on two occasions (Feb. 9 & Feb. 23).

The Eden Prairie, Minnesota native skated in 104 career games, totaling 69 points on 33 goals and 36 assists. He was also an Academic All-Big Ten selection each of the past two seasons.

Notre Dame to open Big Ten tournament hosting Penn State

Can Notre Dame win a third-straight game against Penn State?

  • As the No. 4 seed (based on conference winning percentage), Notre Dame will play fifth-seeded Penn State for the third consecutive game at noon on Sunday, March 14 in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament.
  • It will mark Penn State’s fifth consecutive game against the Irish.
  • The winner will play top-seeded Wisconsin at 4:30 p.m. on Monday, March 15 as there is no re-seeding at the 2021 Big Ten Tournament (see page 22 for the bracket).
  • The teams have met twice previously in the Big Ten Tournament at Compton Family Ice Arena.
  • In 2018, Notre Dame’s first season in the league, the Irish eliminated the Nittany Lions with a 3-2 semifinal win as Jack Jenkins scored the game winner with 31 seconds left in the third (current NHL defensemen Jordan Gross and Andrew Peeke also scored for the Irish in that win).
  • Current seniors Matt Hellickson (one assist) and Colin Theisen played in that game, while Dylan St. Cyr was on the bench with Cale Morris getting the start.
  • Then in 2019, the teams met in the championship game with the Irish once again posting a 3-2 win.
  • Spencer Stastney opened the scoring in that game with his first career goal, while Theisen and Graham Slaggert added assists.
  • The Fighting Irish are 7-2-0 all time in Big Ten Tournament games (6-0-0 at Compton Family Ice Arena) and captured the 2018 and 2019 Big Ten Tournament Championships.
  • Notre Dame carries a five-game unbeaten streak into the tournament (4-0-1), tied for the fourth-longest active unbeaten streak in the country.

QUICK HITS

  • Senior goaltender Dylan St. Cyr was named the Big Ten’s Second Star of the Week for the second consecutive week after helping the Irish sweep Penn State to close out the regular season.
  • St. Cyr led Notre Dame to wins of 5-2 and 7-1 as the Irish improved to 14-12-2 on the year. For the weekend, St. Cyr stopped 75 of the 78 shots he faced for a .962 save percentage to go along with a 1.56 goals against average.
  • St. Cyr has started 14 of Notre Dame’s last 15 games dating back to the 2-1 win at Minnesota on Jan. 16 while posting a 2.00 goals against average and a .939 save percentage during that span.
  • Notre Dame finished the regular season tied with Wisconsin, Bowling Green and Michigan Tech for the most games played at 28 (both Notre Dame and Wisconsin were able to play each game on their schedules).
  • Alex Steeves leads the Irish with 15 goals and 31 points and has at least one point in 21 of 28 games this season.
  • Steeves’ 15 goals rank tied for fifth nationally, while his 14 goals in Big Ten play rank second to Cole Caufield (24).
  • Steeves’31 points rank sixth nationally.
  • Steeves enters the tournament with a six-game point streak (5-4-9), as does Landon Slaggert (3-6-9).
  • Graham Slaggert leads the Irish with 18 assists and ranks second on the team with 25 points while his 18 assists ranks tied for ninth in the country.

For second week in a row, St. Cyr Earns B1G Second Star Of The Week Honors

Dylan St. Cyr takes home the same award for a second week in a row…

NOTRE DAME, Ind. — Fighting Irish senior goaltender Dylan St. Cyr has been named the Big Ten’s Second Star of the Week after leading Notre Dame to a weekend sweep of Penn State to close out the regular season (March 5-6).

St. Cyr led Notre Dame to wins of 5-2 and 7-1 as the Irish improved to 14-12-2 on the year. For the weekend, St. Cyr stopped 75 of the 78 shots he faced for a .962 save percentage to go along with a 1.56 goals against average.

A senior from Northville, Michigan, St. Cyr is now 11-8-1 on the season with a 2.30 goals against average and a .925 save percentage. He has started 14 of Notre Dame’s last 15 games dating back to the 2-1 win at Minnesota on Jan. 16 while posting a 2.00 goals against average and a .939 save percentage during that span.

It marked the second consecutive week St. Cyr earned Big Ten Second Star of the Week accolades.

Big Ten Stars of the Week — March 9
First Star: Cole Caufield, So., F, Wisconsin
Second Star: Dylan St. Cyr, Sr., G, Notre Dame
Third Star: Matty Beniers, Fr., F, Michigan

Notre Dame’s 2020-21 B1G Stars of the Week
First Star: Ryan Bischel (Dec. 1), Graham Slaggert (Jan. 19)
Second Star: Max Ellis (Jan. 13), Alex Steeves (Feb. 9, Feb. 23), Dylan St. Cyr (March 2 and March 9)

Next Up

  • Notre Dame will now play host to the 2021 Big Ten Tournament on March 14-16.
  • As the No. 4 seed, the Irish will play No. 5 seed Penn State at noon on Sunday, March 14 in the first game of the tournament.
  • All six games of the Big Ten Tournament will be televised by Big Ten Network.

St. Cyr named Big Ten’s second star of week

St. Cyr led Notre Dame to a pair of 2-0 victories over the weekend, stopping all 27 shots he faced in game one and then turning around and totaling 29 saves in game two for his second and third shutouts of the season and the fourth and fifth shutouts of his Irish career. 

NOTRE DAME, Ind. — Fighting Irish senior goaltender Dylan St. Cyr has been named the Big Ten’s Second Star of the Week following back-to-back shutouts of Michigan State (Feb. 26-27).

St. Cyr led Notre Dame to a pair of 2-0 victories over the weekend, stopping all 27 shots he faced in game one and then turning around and totaling 29 saves in game two for his second and third shutouts of the season and the fourth and fifth shutouts of his Irish career.

A senior from Northville, Michigan, St. Cyr is now 9-8-1 on the season with a 2.38 goals against average and a .919 save percentage. He has started 12 of Notre Dame’s last 13 games dating back to the 2-1 win at Minnesota on Jan. 16 while posting a 2.07 goals against average and a .934 save percentage during that span.

It marks the first Weekly Big Ten honor of St. Cyr’s career.

Big Ten Stars of the Week — March 2
First Star: Cole Caufield, So., F, Wisconsin
Second Star: Dylan St. Cyr, Sr., G, Notre Dame
Third Star: Matty Beniers, Fr., F, Michigan

Notre Dame’s 2020-21 B1G Stars of the Week
First Star: Ryan Bischel (Dec. 1), Graham Slaggert (Jan. 19)
Second Star: Max Ellis (Jan. 13), Alex Steeves (Feb. 9, Feb. 23), Dylan St. Cyr (March 2)

Next Up

  • The Irish are slated to close out the regular season at home this weekend against Penn State (March 5-6).
  • Game one (7:45 p.m.) will be televised on NBCSN, while game two (5:30 p.m.) is slated for RSN distribution including SNY, NBC Sports Boston, NBC Sports Chicago, NBC Sports Philadelphia and NBC Sports Washington.
  • Saturday’s game will include a post-game ceremony to honor the team’s graduating senior class of Pierce Crawford, Matt Hellickson, Dylan St. Cyr, Nick Sanford, Matt Steeves and Colin Theisen.

Watch: Highlights of Notre Dame’s weekend sweep at Michigan State

Notre Dame hockey maybe .500 on the year but they have been flat-out great away from home. Highlights from the weekend here:

The Notre Dame hockey team went on the road this weekend for the final time in 2020-21 and came home victorious after beating Michigan State 2-0 on consecutive nights.

The pair of shutout victories improved the Irish to 12-12-2 on the season as they sit in third place in the Big Ten at 10-10-2 in the league.

Highights from Friday’s 2-0 win at Michigan State:

More highlights below, these from Saturday’s win at Michigan State, also a 2-0 Irish victory:

Irish sweep Michigan State after another 2-0 win

Details to Notre Dame ending the road portion of their regular season strong as they swept Michigan State.

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Special teams proved pivotal as the Fighting Irish put together a second consecutive 2-0 win at Michigan State for a weekend sweep at Munn Ice Arena.

Colin Theisen and Landon Slaggert each scored power-play goals and Dylan St. Cyr made 29 saves for the Irish (12-12-2).

St. Cyr stopped all 56 shots he faced over the weekend to lead the Irish to the sweep, while Graham Slaggert had a pair of assists on Saturday.

The Fighting Irish power play finished 2-for-4 on the day, while the Notre Dame penalty kill unit held the Spartans to a 0-for-3 mark, including killing off a five minute major to start the third period.

“Our special teams have gotten better over the last month, credit to our guys on the PK for doing an outstanding job and then the power play as well, scoring a couple critical goals,” Head Coach Jeff Jackson said.

“I thought [Dylan St. Cyr] played a quiet, calm game and when we needed him he was there. I thought he did an outstanding job handling and moving the puck, he made the saves he needed to and made a few that were above the norm.”

How It Happened
Michigan State’s Joshua Jagger took a 5-minute major on a hit from behind at 4:41 of the first period and the Irish went to work on the power play.

After a few good looks early, Colin Theisen’s one-timer from the slot beat Drew DeRidder for a 1-0 lead at the 8:16 mark. Graham Slaggert and Nick Leivermann had the assists on Theisen’s seventh of the season.

St. Cyr turned aside all eight shots he faced in the first 20 minutes as Notre Dame took the 1-0 lead to the locker room. Irish put 18 shots on goal in the first, with DeRidder totaling 17 saves.

The teams skated to a scoreless second period, with Alex Steeves, Ryder Rolston and Landon Slaggert having Notre Dame’s best looks including a goalmouth scramble with two minutes left in the period.

St. Cyr was tested more in the second but he turned aside all 15 shots he faced. The Spartans began a five minute power play with 35 seconds remaining in the middle frame after a Notre Dame major.

Still leading 1-0, the Irish opened the third by killing off the remaining 4:26 of Michigan State power-play time by holding the Spartans without a shot on goal.

St. Cyr made a left pad save on Tommy Apap at the 8:25 mark to preserve the 1-0 lead.

Then Landon Slaggert doubled the Irish lead to 2-0 at 11:10 of the third when he netted his seventh goal of the season from in close on DeRidder, with the assists going to Graham Slaggert and Alex Steeves.

Next:  Notes…

Notre Dame picks up another road win, this time at Michigan State

Notre Dame has had a great season away from home in hockey. That continued on Friday night at Michigan State.

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Landon Slaggert and Alex Steeves scored and Dylan St. Cyr stopped all 27 shots he faced to lead the Fighting Irish to a 2-0 win at Michigan State on Friday night at Munn Ice Arena.

Slaggert’s goal was his first career game-winner, while St. Cyr’s shutout was his second of the season and the fourth of his career. Matt Hellickson finished with a pair of assists.

“I thought we played a patient game,” head coach Jeff Jackson said after the win. “They’re a tough team to play against and they are good defensively and don’t give you a lot, so you have to play a patient game. We waited for our chances and scored a couple timely goals and Dylan played well in goal and gave us a chance to win.”

With the victory, Jackson moved into sole possession of 11th place for all-time wins (527) at the men’s NCAA DI level as he had been tied with George Gwozdecky.

How it Happened – Next…

Big Ten makes changes for hockey standings and tournament

In a year that has seen nothing go according to plan the Big Ten hockey season takes its turn

STATEMENT ON DATE CHANGE OF THE

2021 BIG TEN MEN’S ICE HOCKEY TOURNAMENT

The Big Ten Conference Administrators Council, which includes the Directors of Athletics and Senior Women Administrators from all 14 member institutions, approved measures to change the dates of the 2021 Big Ten Men’s Ice Hockey Tournament from March 18-20 to March 14-16. The tournament will take place as previously planned at Compton Family Ice Arena on the campus of the University of Notre Dame.

The decision to change the dates of the tournament was made in order to ease compression between the regular season and postseason tournaments in the interest of the health and safety of student-athletes, coaches and officials. The tournament will include Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn State and Wisconsin, and will consist of six games, with three games on Sunday, two games on Monday and the championship game on Tuesday. All six games will be carried live on BTN and the schedule can be found below:

Sunday, March 14

12 p.m. ET:  Quarterfinal #1

4 p.m. ET:  Quarterfinal #2

8:30 p.m. ET:  Quarterfinal #3

Monday, March 15

4:30 p.m. ET:  Semifinal #1

8:30 p.m. ET:  Semifinal #2

Tuesday, March 16

8 p.m. ET:  Championship Game

Due to the number of games postponed this season and the limited number of windows remaining to reschedule contests, the Big Ten Champion and Big Ten Tournament seeding will be determined using the protocol for unbalanced schedules approved prior to the start of the season. The first element of that protocol is winning percentage in Big Ten games, with wins in regulation and overtime counted as wins and shootout results counted as ties for the purpose of calculating winning percentages. All institutions affected by postponements will continue to work with the Conference to identify rescheduling options prior to the end of the regular season.

Notre Dame to meet Michigan State in final road series of year

Notre Dame hockey hits the road one final time this weekend as they’ll travel to East Lansing to take on Michigan State.

FOR STARTERS

  • Notre Dame heads to Michigan State to close out the road portion of its regular-season road schedule with a two-game series (Feb. 26-27).
  • It will mark the seventh and eighth road games out of the last 10 for the Irish.
  • Last weekend, Notre Dame went 0-1-1 at fifth-ranked Wisconsin, including a comeback tie in game two (Max Ellis secured the extra point with the shootout winner).
  • Junior forward Alex Steeves was named the Big Ten’s Second Star of the Week (Feb. 23) for the second time this season after a four-point, three-goal weekend against the Badgers.
  • Steeves had a two-point (G, A) performance in game one and then netted a pair of third-period goals in game two to help the Irish erase a two-goal deficit.
  • Steeves leads the Irish with 26 points and 13 goals in 24 games this season and has earned at least one point in 17 of those 24 contests.
  • Steeves’ 13 goals rank tied for fourth in the country and his 12 goals in Big Ten play rank second behind only Cole Caufield.
  • Notre Dame is 7-2-0 on the road this season, including series sweeps at then third-ranked Michigan (Nov. 27-28) and at then first-ranked Minnesota (Jan. 15-16).
  • In road games, the Irish penalty kill is 21-for-23 (.913), while the power play is 8-for-24 (.333/fourth in the NCAA).
  • Dating back to Notre Dame’s game two, 2-1 win at Minnesota on Jan. 16, senior goaltender Dylan St. Cyr has started 10 of 11 games and posted a .923 save percentage to go along with a 2.48 goals against average and a 4-5-1 record.

THE NOTRE DAME-MSU SERIES

  • Former CCHA rivals, the Irish and Spartans have met 129 times dating back to their first meeting in 1926, which was played at the University Rink in East Lansing, Michigan (Notre Dame won the first game, 3-1).
  • All-time, the Spartans lead the series 69-45-15.
  • The first meetings as a Notre Dame varsity sport were in the 1970-71 season when the Spartans came to South Bend and split a weekend series: Michigan State took the first game 10-5, before the Irish bounced back for a 4-3 victory the second night.
  • Since the turn of the century (2000-01 season), the Irish hold the narrow advantage as Notre Dame is 22-21-10 against Michigan State since 2000.
  • Of those 53 games, 12 have gone to overtime and 17 have been decided by a single goal.
  • Irish head coach Jeff Jackson is 31-19-12 all-time against his alma mater Michigan State (including his time at Lake Superior State).
  • Jackson graduated from Michigan State in 1978 with a degree in communications, followed by an education degree in 1979.
  • Jackson coached current Michigan State head coach Danton Cole and current Spartan assistant Chris Luongo during their junior hockey days with the Detroit Falcons and then Jackson also coached Cole during the 1983-84 season with the Fraser Flags of the Great Lakes Junior Hockey League (GLJHL).
  • The current Notre Dame roster features four Michigan natives: Dylan St. Cyr (Northville, Michigan), Max Ellis (Canton, Michigan), Ryder Rolston (Birmingham, Michigan) and Colin Theisen (Monroe, Michigan).
  • Since joining the Big Ten, Notre Dame is 8-4-4 against Michigan State.
  • Earlier this season (Dec. 19-20), the Irish went 0-1-1 against the Spartans to close out their first semester.
  • The teams skated to a 1-1 tie in the first meeting, with Max Ellis and Nick Leivermann scoring in the shootout to secure the extra standings point.
  • Drew DeRidder had 47 saves in that game to lift the Spartans to the tie.
  • In game two, Tommy Miller scored in overtime to give Michigan State the victory, while Graham Slaggert, Grant Silianoff and Michael Graham scored for the Irish.

Notre Dame Ties #5 Badgers, Earn Second B1G Point

In the shootout, Max Ellis scored and Dylan St. Cyr denied Cole Caufield, Dylan Halloway and Ty Pelton-Byce to seal the extra point in the Big Ten standings.

MADISON, Wis. — Notre Dame rallied with four goals in the third period to ultimately skate to a 5-5 overtime tie with fifth-ranked Wisconsin on Saturday evening at La Bahn Arena.

In the shootout, Max Ellis scored and Dylan St. Cyr denied Cole Caufield, Dylan Halloway and Ty Pelton-Byce to seal the extra point in the Big Ten standings.

The Irish had been trailing 3-1 after two periods of play but responded in the third.

“It was just about playing for pride,” head coach Jeff Jackson said after the game. “I thought [in] the second period we were on our heels and they dominated usas we did a poor job managing the puck … I was really proud to see how they responded in the third.”

Alex Steeves had a pair of goals for Notre Dame to bring his season total to 13, while Colin Theisen had a goal and an assist and Max Ellis and Landon Slaggert each had a pair of assists.

St. Cyr finished with 39 saves on the night, including 18 in a busy second period. In the Wisconsin net Cameron Rowe finished with 31 saves.

On special teams, Notre Dame was 1-for-2 while Wisconsin was 1-for-3.

How It Happened
The Irish struck first when Trevor Janicke got to the net and knocked a deflected Jesse Lansdell pass in for his second goal of the season at 4:38 of the first period. Colin Theisen also had an assist on the play.

Freshman defenseman Jake Boltmann hammered a point shot off the post midway through the first and then Theisen had a chance as he was sent in on a breakaway by a Jake Pivonka chip pass, but after the puck found its way through Rowe it hit the post with seven minutes left in the opening frame.

Wisconsin was able to tie it up at 14:55 of the first when Ty Pelton-Byce dug the puck out from under St. Cyr and forced it across the goal line while the Badgers were on the power play.

The Irish killed off another Wisconsin power play and the first came to a close tied at 1-1.

Five and a half minutes into the second, St. Cyr made a big pad stop to deny Dominick Mersch on a two-on-one chance.

Then the Irish killed off a Badger power play that started midway through the second, but just seven seconds after it expired Wisconsin crashed the net and took a 2-1 lead on a Roman Ahcan goal.

Max Ellis had Notre Dame’s next good look with 3:45 left in the second, but Rowe fought off the wrist shot from the slot with his glove.

Then with 20.8 seconds left in the period, Cole Caufield extended the lead to 3-1 when he converted a cross-ice feed for his 19th goal of the season.

Seven seconds into a power-play chance Alex Steeves got the Irish back within one with a one-timer from the faceoff circle, with the feed coming from Nick Leivermann. Landon Slaggert also had an assist on the goal, which came at 7:18 of the third.

Just 59 seconds later Max Ellis slid a cross-ice pass to Colin Theisen on a two-on-one chance and the senior buried his sixth goal of the season to tie the game, 3-3.

Wisconsin answered back at 11:11 when Linus Weissbach scored to give the Badgers a 4-3 lead.

Alex Steeves’ second goal of the night, a wrist shot from the slot, evened the score once again with 6:18 to go in the third.

Just 36 seconds later, Solag Bakich buried a feed from Ellis on a two-on-one rush to give Notre Dame a 5-4 advantage.

With Rowe pulled in favor of the extra attacker, Ty Pelton-Byce tied the game back up on a wrist shot following an offensive zone faceoff win with 27 seconds left in regulation.

The Badgers were whistled for a penalty just 15 seconds into the 3-on-3 overtime, and despite quality chances by Landon Slaggert, Leivermann and Alex Steeves, the Irish were unable to convert on the 4-on-3 advantage.

With a second B1G point up for grabs in the shootout, Ellis scored in the second round and St. Cyr stopped all three shooters he faced to clinch two points for the Irish.

Next Up and Game Notes After the Jump..