Broadcast Information: Radio: All Notre Dame games can be heard
live on ESPN Radio 1620, South Bend's SportsCenter. Mike Lockert,
"the voice of Irish hockey" calls all the action with Tom Nevala
handling the color commentary. Irish hockey can also be heard live
via the internet at www.und.com.
GETTING BACK ON TRACK: Notre Dame returns home this week after four
consecutive games away from the Joyce Center. The Irish will look to
put last weekend's two losses (4-3 in ot, 1-0) at Northern Michigan
behind them as they prepare for a visit from the Alaska Fairbanks
Nanooks. The Irish fell to 12-9-3 on the year after last weekend's
sweep and 8-8-2 in the CCHA, good for 18 points and eighth place in
the league standings. Alaska Fairbanks comes into the weekend series
with a 12-12-0 overall record and an 11-9-0 mark in the CCHA good for
22 points and fourth place in the league. The Nanooks are coming off
a home-series split with Bowling Green where they lost 6-2 on Friday
and won, 3-1, on Saturday. In the all-time series with the Irish,
UAF leads with a 16-13-2 overall record. At the Joyce Center, the
Nanooks are 5-7-0. Over the last two years, Alaska Fairbanks has
owned the Irish, winning four straight games. Last year at
Fairbanks, the Nanooks took 4-3 and 5-4 verdicts. In their last trip
to South Bend (2001-02), UAF recorded 7-5 and 6-5 wins over the
Irish. Prior to Alaska Fairbanks' four-game winning streak, Notre
Dame had a 10-game unbeaten streak (8-0-2) that started during the
1997-98 season. In the last 10 meetings overall, the series is tied
at 4-4-2. Following this weekend, the Irish return to the road when
they visit Miami on Feb. 6-7. Friday's game is in Oxford, Ohio and
Saturday's is at the Cincinnati Gardens in Cincinnati.
HOME SWEET HOME: Notre Dame comes into the weekend series with
Alaska Fairbanks owning a 7-1-1 home record. The Irish are just two
wins away from their 300th all-time victory at the Joyce Center as
the record stands at 298-245-41 (.547). The seven home wins this
season equals last year's total when the Irish were 7-6-3 and are the
most since the team was 11-7-3 in the 1999-2000 season.
SCORING DROUGHT: The Irish have been held to just eight goals over
the last four games. Seven of those eight goals have been scored by
either Rob Globke (Sr., West Bloomfield, Mich.) or Aaron Gill (Sr.,
Rochester, Minn.). Globke has scored four of them with Gill getting
three in the four-game span. Sophomore Mike Walsh (Northville,
Mich.) has the other goal. On the season, that trio has scored 33 of
Notre Dame's 66 goals. Globke has 15 with Gill and Walsh collecting
nine each.
NORTHERN MICHIGAN RECAP: The Irish dropped a pair of games in
Marquette, Mich., last weekend,
4-3 in overtime on Jan. 23 and 1-0 on Jan. 24. In Friday's game, the
Irish got two goals from Rob Globke and a goal and an assist from
Aaron Gill. Goaltender Morgan Cey (Jr., Wilkie, Sask.) made 30 saves
in the overtime loss. Northern took a 1-0 first-period lead on a
power-play goal by Jamie Milam. In the second period, Gill and
Globke scored three-and-a-half minutes apart (9:17 and 12:46) to give
the Irish a 2-1 advantage. Nathan Oystrick tied the game 19 seconds
after Globke's goal and Pat Bateman gave the Wildcats a 3-2 lead late
in the second period. Globke made it 3-3 with a goal off a scramble
in front of Craig Kowalski at 6:29 of third period. That set up
Darin Olver's game winner with 14 seconds left in overtime. Northern
outshot the Irish 34-24 in the game. On Saturday, Oystrick got the
lone goal of the game at 16:21 of the first period and Kowalski made
27 saves in the shutout win. The shutout was the second against the
Irish this season (Cornell, 4-0, Dec. 28). David Brown (Fr., Stoney
Creek, Ont.) made 22 saves for the Irish. Notre Dame was 0-for-11 on
the power play for the weekend. The last time Notre Dame dropped a
weekend series in Marquette was Dec. 10-11, 1981.
OVERTIME HEARTBREAK: The 4-3 overtime loss to Northern Michigan on
Jan. 23 marked the second time this season that the Irish have lost
in the extra stanza. For the year, the Irish are 0-2-3 in overtime.
Prior to the Jan. 9, 5-4 overtime loss at Bowling Green, the Irish
had gone eight straight overtimes with the game ending in a tie
(0-0-8) between last season and the early part of the current
campaign. Notre Dame's last regular-season overtime win was Jan. 25,
2002 at Miami, a 4-3 win. Since that win, the Irish are 1-3-9 in
overtime with the one win and one of the losses coming in the CCHA
playoffs. Since the start of the 1999-2000 season, the Irish have
been involved in 38 overtime games and are 5-4-29 in those contests.
GOLDEN GLOBKE: Senior right wing Rob Globke (West Bloomfield, Mich.)
ranks second in the CCHA with 15 goals this season. Over a two-game
period (Jan. 18 at Wisconsin and Jan. 23 at Northern Michigan) he
scored four goals. His goal streak and season-high six-game scoring
streak (5-4-9) were snapped at Northern Michigan on Jan. 24. Globke
was named the CCHA offensive player of the week for the week ending
Jan. 18. At Wisconsin, Globke accounted for two goals and two
assists and was +2 for the weekend as the Irish tied (2-2) and downed
the fourth-ranked Badgers (3-1). Globke was the first Notre Dame
player to receive offensive player of the week honors since Dan
Carlson ('01) was named on Feb. 7, 2000.
HOT GOALTENDER: Freshman goaltender David Brown is back in his
early-season groove over his last three starts. Brown has given up
just two goals in those three games (beginning on Jan. 10 vs. Bowling
Green). In those three games, Brown is 2-1-0, has played 179:07
minutes with a 0.67 goals-against average and a .977 save percentage,
stopping 84 of 86 shots. For the year, Brown is 8-5-2 with a 2.18
goals-against average and a .926 save percentage.
HOT GOALTENDER, PART II: Since returning to action after missing
seven games due to arthroscopic surgery on his right knee, Morgan Cey
picked up where he left off after his first two seasons. Cey
returned to the Notre Dame lineup on Dec. 28 and since then is 2-2-1
with 2.10 goals-against average and a .933 save percentage. His two
wins were 1-0 shutouts. The two losses came in overtime. For the
year, Cey is 3-3-1 with a 2.09 goals-against average and a .935 save
percentage.
GAME-WINNING GLOBKE: Rob Globke picked up his CCHA-leading fifth
game-winning goal of the season in the 3-1 win over Wisconsin on Jan.
18. He ranks second in the country with the five game-winners. For
his career at Notre Dame, Globke now has 13 game-winning goals. That
ties him for first on the all-time game-winning goal list with Brian
Urick ('99) and current head coach Dave Poulin who recorded 13 game
winners from 1978-82.
CENTURY MARK FOR GLOBKE: Senior right wing Rob Globke became the
40th player in Notre Dame hockey history to go over 100 points in his
career with two assists versus Western Michigan (Dec. 6). He is now
34th on the all-time scoring list with 64 goals and 46 assists for
110 career points. He is just one of 18 players in school history to
have 60 or more goals in a season and now ranks 17th with 64 career
goals. On the year, Globke has 15 goals and 11 assists for a
team-leading 26 points. He turned in back-to-back two-goal games
versus Wisconsin and Northern Michigan to give him five games this
season and 15 for his career with two or more goals. He opened the
season with a hat trick in Notre Dame's 5-2 win at Ohio State. The
hat trick was the second of his career. He has added two-goal games
versus Lake Superior (Nov. 21), Northern Michigan (Nov. 29),
Wisconsin (Jan. 18) and Northern Michigan again (Jan. 23).
ONE GOAL LOSSES: Notre Dame's two one-goal losses to Northern
Michigan dropped the Irish to 3-3 in one-goal games this season.
After winning the first three one-goal games (they were in all 1-0
wins), Notre Dame has now lost three straight. Notre Dame has been
involved in four 1-0 games this season and is 3-1 in those contests.
ON THE SIDELINES: Notre Dame defenseman Derek Smith (Jr.,
Marysville, Mich.) is sidelined indefinitely with post-concussion
syndrome. He suffered a concussion on Jan. 4, 2003 at Nebraska-Omaha
and has not played since.
GILL GOALS: Senior center Aaron Gill has three goals in his last
three games. He scored twice in Notre Dame's 2-2 tie at Wisconsin
(Jan. 17) and then added a single goal in the 4-3 overtime loss at
Northern Michigan (Jan. 23). He leads the Irish with six power-play
goals on the season. Gill is second in scoring for the Irish with
nine goals and 14 assists for 23 points. He needs just four more
points this season to become the 41st player in school history to
reach the 100-point mark for his career. The Rochester, Minn.,
native comes into the Alaska Fairbanks weekend with 41 goals and 55
assists for 96 career points.
POWER-PLAY POINTS: For just the second time this season, the Irish
have gone two consecutive games without a power-play goal as Northern
Michigan held Notre Dame scoreless in 11 chances last weekend. The
first time was a three-game drought between Oct. 18-30 when the Irish
were 0-for-11 over three games. Prior to the Northern Michigan
series, Notre Dame had power-play goals in six consecutive games and
in 15 of 16 games.
LEAGUE LEADERS: Through the first 13 games of the season, Notre
Dame's team defense was tops in the CCHA. In the first 16 games, the
Irish gave up 26 goals for a 1.97 goals-against average. Games 14-16
saw the Irish give up 18 goals over three contests, moving the
goals-against average to 2.59. Since those three games, the Irish
have given up just 13 goals in the last eight games to give Notre
Dame the best goals-against average in the CCHA with a 2.38 overall
mark.
LEBDA'S LINE: Senior defenseman Brett Lebda (Buffalo Grove, Ill.)
continues to make his move on the top 10 scoring spot among Irish
defensemen. Lebda added an assist to his totals in the 3-1 win
versus Wisconsin. He is one of three Irish defensemen with 13 points
this season. Lebda has four goals and nine assists for his 13
points. For his career, Lebda now has 24 goals and 50 assists for 74
career points. Notre Dame has had 10 defensemen in its history
record 80 or more points in their careers. Lebda needs just seven
more points to catch Steve Curry (1970-74) who had 80 points (19g,
61a). Benoit Coitnoir (1995-99) is ninth with 88 points (28g, 60a).
PUTTING THE "P" IN POWER: Sophomore left wing Mike Walsh is quickly
becoming one of the top power forwards in the CCHA. He scored his
ninth goal of the season in the 3-1 win at Wisconsin on a wicked
wrist shot from the top of the left wing circle that beat the Badgers
Brian Elliott over his glove hand. Walsh believes that the quickest
way to get from point A to point B is a straight line as he barges
and charges to the net. After battling through an injury and illness
filled freshman year, Walsh has become a key contributor to the Irish
attack. With nine goals and seven assists, he is tied for third on
the team with 16 points. Three of his nine goals this season are
game winners.
LUCKY 13: Three Notre Dame defensemen are tied for the team-lead in
scoring among defensemen. Brett Lebda, Neil Komadoski (Sr.,
Chesterfield, Mo.) and Tom Galvin (Sr., Miller Place, N.Y.) all have
13 points on the season. Lebda has four goals and nine assists for
13 points, Komadoski has two goals and 11 assists for his 13 points
and Galvin has all of his points on 13 assists. Not surprisingly,
during their Notre Dame careers, all three defenders have led the
Irish defensemen in scoring in one season. Lebda (7-19-26) led as a
freshman, Galvin (4-19-23) led as a sophomore and Komadoski (1-23-24)
led last year.
SCORELESS STREAKS: Morgan Cey (Jr., Wilkie, Sask.) saw his
consecutive minutes of scoreless hockey come to an end at 158:53 when
D'Arcy McConvey scored at 10:27 of the second period on Jan. 9. The
streak was the longest of Cey's career, passing his previous best of
149:17 (set between Mar. 14-20, 2003 in the CCHA playoffs). Cey's
158:53 is the second longest in Irish history behind David Brown's
mark of 193:27 set this past October between Oct. 17-Nov. 8.
IRISH SHUTOUTS: Prior to last season's CCHA playoffs when Morgan Cey
recorded back-to-back shutouts versus Miami, Notre Dame had never
recorded back-to-back shutouts. Since Cey did it last March, both
freshman David Brown (three in a row) and Cey have turned the trick
this year. Notre Dame's six shutouts are a single-season school
record. The previous best was 1999-2000 when the Irish had three
shutouts (Tony Zasowski had two and Jeremiah Kimento had one).
2003-04 IRISH AWARD WINNERS
David Brown - CCHA rookie of the week
(Oct. 19, Nov. 1, Dec. 2)
CCHA defensive player of the week
(Jan. 12)
HCA rookie of the month (October)
Morgan Cey - All-tournament team at Everblades
Collegiate Hockey Classic (Dec. 28)
Rob Globke - CCHA offensive player of the week
(Jan. 19)
RISING TO THE OCCASION: With Morgan Cey sidelined twice this season
due to knee injuries, freshman goaltender David Brown has played in17
games for the Irish and had a strong first half. In 15 starts, Brown
is 8-5-2 with a 2.18 goals-against average and a .926 save
percentage. Four of his eight wins have been shutouts. He had an
eight-game unbeaten streak (6-0-2) snapped on Dec. 6 in a 6-4 loss at
Western Michigan. During his streak which covered nine games, Brown
had a 1.96 goals against (17 goals in 521:30 minutes and a .932 save
percentage (232 saves). Included in those nine games were three
consecutive shutouts between 10/18 and 10/31. For good measure,
Brown also threw in a fourth shutout on Nov. 14 versus the U.S.
Under-18 team that does not count in the statistics. He was also
named CCHA rookie of the week three times, CCHA defensive player of
the week once and the Hockey Commissioner's Association (HCA)
national rookie of the month for October.
BEATING THE BEST: Notre Dame's 1-0 shutout win at Boston College on
Oct. 24 came versus the Eagles while they were ranked first in the
nation in the USA Today/American Hockey Magazine poll. The last time
the Irish beat a top-ranked team came on Jan. 3, 1999 when they won
4-3 at North Dakota.
IRISH WINS VERSUS #1 TEAMS:
10/24/03 - at Boston College, 1-0
1/3/99 - at North Dakota, 4-3
11/10/78 - at Minnesota, 3-2
1/13/78 - vs. Denver, 5-3
1/18/74 - vs. Michigan Tech, 7-1
2/24/73 - vs. Wisconsin, 8-5
2/23/73 - vs. Wisconsin, 4-3
The last time the Irish faced a top-ranked team prior to Oct. 24 was
on Nov. 10, 2000 when they played Boston College. Notre Dame lost
that game by a 5-3 score.
SPECIAL SPECIAL TEAMS: Notre Dame has killed 95 of 110 opponent
power-play chances this season. Of the 15 power-play goals
surrendered, 10 have come in five games (two in each game). Over the
remaining 19 games, the Irish have given up just five other
power-play goals. Notre Dame has killed 86.4% of opponent power
plays this season.
OFFENSIVE DEFENSEMEN: In 24 games this season, Notre Dame defensemen
Brett Lebda, Tom Galvin, Neil Komadoski and Wes O'Neill (Fr., Essex,
Ont.) have combined for eight goals and 39 assists for 47 points.
Lebda (4g, 9a), Komadoski (2g, 11a) and Galvin (0g, 13a) lead the
team with 13 points each. O'Neill has two goals and six assists for
eight points on the year.
HUMANITARIAN NOMINEE: Irish defenseman Neil Komadoski was one of 14
nominees for the prestigious College Hockey Humanitarian Award that
goes to college hockey's "top citizen." The award for community
service and leadership is presented along with the Hobey Baker Award
at the NCAA Frozen Four each year. On Jan. 15, the five finalists -
Patrick Foley (UNH), Dan Boeser (Wisconsin), Chanda Gunn
(Northeastern), Derek Nisula (Babson) and Mark Persick (Canisius) -
were selected. Komadoski has been involved in Notre Dame's community
service programs since his freshman year. He is a member of the
school's Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) for three years
and is chairman of the SAAC community service sub-committee since the
fall of 2002. He represented Notre Dame at the NCAA's
Student-Athlete Leadership Conference last May. His community
service work has included participation in SAAC's Pediatric Christmas
Party in all four years since joining the Irish hockey program. He
has also participated in Christmas in April (2001, 2002), Habitat for
Humanity (2003) and the Downs Syndrome Buddy Walk in the fall of 2002
and 2003. He has also worked with the Robinson Community Learning
Center' Children's Ice Skate Day in the fall of 2002 and 2003.
IN THE CLUTCH: Sophomore Mike Walsh recorded his third game-winning
goal of the season in the 1-0 win over Maine. That ties him for
third in the CCHA behind Rob Globke and seventh in the nation in
game-winning goals. His nine goals are a career-high for Walsh. For
his career, Walsh has scored 10 goals with four of them being
game-winning goals.
MR. STEADY - CORY'S STORY: Cory McLean (Jr., Fargo, N.D.) is tied for
third in scoring with seven goals and nine assists (career high) for
16 points. His career-high 17 points came last season (10g, 7a). On
the year, he has scored in 13 of Notre Dame's 22 games. He has had a
pair of four-game point streaks this season. As a freshman, McLean
had just one goal and four assists for five points.
WILD ONE: Notre Dame and Western Michigan combined for 14 goals (8-6
Bronco win) on December 5. The last time the Irish played in a game
that both teams combined for 14 goals was on November 20, 1998 when
the Irish downed Western Michigan, 9-5. Coming into the Dec. 5 game
with Western, the Irish had surrendered just eight goals in their
last five games. The last time the Irish gave up eight goals in a
game was Jan. 27, 2001 in an 8-2 loss at Yale.
IRISH VERSUS HOCKEY EAST: For the first time since Hockey East
started in 1984-85, Notre Dame has recorded a pair of wins over
Hockey East conference teams. On Oct. 24, the Irish defeated Boston
College at Chestnut Hill, Mass. On Dec. 28, Notre Dame took a 1-0
decision versus Maine at the Everblades College Classic. In both 1-0
shutouts, sophomore left wing Mike Walsh got the game-winning goal.
RIVALRY CLUSTERS: Notre Dame has split the first eight games played
between cluster rivals Bowling Green and Northern Michigan as the
Irish are 4-4-0 in those games. Overall, the Irish are 5-4-1 versus
teams in their cluster. They are 1-0-1 versus Lake Superior State
and play the Lakers the final weekend of the season. The Irish are
2-2 versus Northern Michigan and 2-2 versus Bowling Green. A year
ago, the Irish were 7-4-1 in their cluster that included Bowling
Green, Western Michigan and Ferris State.
HCA ROOKIE OF THE MONTH: Notre Dame freshman goaltender David Brown
was selected as the Hockey Commissioner's Association (HCA) national
collegiate rookie of the month for the month of October. Brown had
an October to remember as he recorded a Notre Dame school record
three consecutive shutouts in his first four career starts and a
school-record shutout string of 193:27 consecutive minutes. His
three shutouts also set a Notre Dame record for shutouts in a season.
For the month, the 5-11, 188-pound puck stopper was 3-2-0 with a
CCHA-leading 1.15 goals-against average and a .946 save percentage to
go with the three shutouts. Among his three shutouts was a 1-0,
27-save performance on Oct. 24 versus the top-ranked Boston College
Eagles at Conte Forum in Chestnut Hill, Mass. The three shutouts came
versus Bowling Green (10/18), Boston College (10/24) and
Nebraska-Omaha (10/31). He has been selected as the CCHA rookie of
the month three times this season (10/19, 11/2, 12/1) and defensive
player of the week once (1/12).
CENTRAL SCOUTING RANKINGS: The National
Hockey League's (NHL) Central Scouting has released it's mid-term
report that ranks the top 270 draft eligible skaters and the top 30
goaltenders for the 2004 NHL Entry Draft next June. Irish defenseman
Wes O'Neill is ranked 19th overall, third among U.S. College players
behind North Dakota's Drew Stafford (9th) and Michigan State's A.J.
Thelen (16). Freshman forward Michael Bartlett (Morton Grove, Ill.)
was ranked 211th overall and 36th among collegiate players.
Goaltender David Brown is ranked 29th overall and second among
collegiate goaltenders behind top-ranked Al Montoya of Michigan.
DOWN BY TWO: Prior to the Nov. 29 comeback versus Northern Michigan
(the Irish trailed 2-0 in a 4-2 win), last time the Irish rebounded
from a two-goal deficit to win a game was on Oct. 12, 2002 when the
Irish fell behind Minnesota-Duluth, 2-0, and rallied for a 5-3 win at
Duluth.
IRISH ON CSTV: Notre Dame has made three appearances on CSTV and now
has a 2-1-0 record after the 4-0 loss to Cornell on Dec. 27. The
Irish have wins over Ohio State (10/10) and Boston College (10/24).
The Irish are also schedlued to appear again on CSTV on Friday, Feb.
27 versus Michigan. Face off is set for 8:05 p.m.
SOME TRICK: Sophomore defenseman Chris Trick (Troy, Mich.) recorded
his first collegiate goal in the Nov. 28, 5-1 win over Northern
Michigan. He made the most of it too, as the goal came short-handed
in the second period and proved to be the game winner. Trick came
out of the penalty box after a Northern Michigan centering pass
eluded the point men. Trick beat Craig Kowalski with a backhander
for his first goal in 35 career games.
DIRECTOR'S CUP STANDINGS: The University of Notre Dame stands 12th
in the 2003-04 United States Sports Academy Division I Director's Cup
all-sports competition sponsored by the National Association of
Collegiate Directors of Athletics (formerly known as Sears
Directors'Cup). Fall NCAA competition earned the Irish 199 points.
Michigan is first (413 points), followed by UCLA, Stanford, Maryland,
BYU, North Carolina, Penn State, Washington, USC, and Wake Forest
round out the top 10.
ALL GOOD THINGS MUST END: Irish goaltender David Brown saw his
streak of three consecutive shutouts end in the Nov. 8 game versus
Michigan State. Jim Slater's goal at 7:12 of the first period ended
his consecutive-minute streak at 193:27. That is a new Notre Dame
record. The last time Brown had given up a goal was on Oct. 17
versus Bowling Green with 4:22 left in the third period. He followed
with shutouts versus Bowling Green (Oct. 18), Boston College (10/24)
and Nebraska-Omaha (10/31).
OH CANADA: Freshman defenseman Wes O'Neill was a member of Canada's
Under-18 Select team that played in last summer's Under-18 Select
World Cup tournament. O'Neill had a goal and four assists in helping
Canada to a fourth-place finish. The former Green Bay Gambler also
played for Team Ontario at the Under-17 World Championships in Feb.
of 2003. There he had three goals and nine assists in six games.
O'Neill was the second pick in the 2002 Ontario Hockey League (OHL)
Draft by the Kingston Frontenacs. He is the highest-drafted OHL
player to decide to play college hockey.
CEY IT AIN'T SO: Goaltender Morgan Cey missed the first five games
of the season after having knee surgery in July. He then missed
seven games after re-injuring his knee on Nov. 7, requiring
arthroscopic surgery. Prior to this season, Cey had started 71 of
Notre Dame's 79 games as a freshman and sophomore. He was 15-15-6
last season with a 2.87 goals-against average and a .912 save
percentage with two shutouts. Career-wise, Cey is 33-32-10 with a
2.72 goals-against average and a .914 save percentage with six
shutouts. He is sixth on Notre Dame's all-time wins list with 33.
His 2.72 goals-against average, .914 save percentage and six shutouts
make him the leader in all three categories at Notre Dame.
NHL DRAFTEES: Notre Dame has three players on the 2003-04 roster that
have been selected in the National Hockey League Entry Draft. Senior
Rob Globke was a second-round choice of the Florida Panthers in the
2002 NHL Entry Draft. Selected 40th overall, Globke's selection was
the earliest any Notre Dame player has ever been chosen. Senior
defenseman Neil Komadoski was selected in the third round of the 2001
draft by the Ottawa Senators. Sophomore left wing Mike Walsh was
selected in the fifth round in 2002 draft by the New York Rangers.
CONSECUTIVE GAME STREAK: Graduated defenseman Evan Nielsen ('03) set
Notre Dame's record for consecutive games played last season with 114
in a row from 2000-03. Coming into this weekend at Northern
Michigan, seniors Rob Globke and Brett Lebda have each played in 82
consecutive games and are the leaders among active players. The only
games Lebda has missed in his career came in 2001-02 when he missed
four games while playing at the World Junior Championships. He has
played 137 of 141 career games.
BRAIN POWER: Senior defenseman T.J. Mathieson (Clarksville, Md.) is a
candidate for Rhodes, Mitchell and Marshall Scholarships for
postgraduate studies. Mathieson owns a 3.812 grade-point average in
aerospace engineering in Notre Dame's School of Engineering. He is a
two-time winner of Notre Dame's Rockne Scholar-Athlete Award. He
spent the past summer working at General Electric Aircraft Engines in
Cincinnati. There, he worked doing stress analysis of high-pressure
turbines for commercial aircraft engines.
THE CAPTAINS: Senior center Aaron Gill will serve as the team
captain for the Irish in 2003-04. As a junior, he finished fourth in
scoring with 13 goals and 12 assists for 25 points. Four of his 13
goals came on the power play and he recorded his first career hat
trick on Oct. 19 in an 8-5 win over Western Michigan. Serving as
alternate captains this season are senior right wing Rob Globke and
senior defenseman Neil Komadoski. Globke led the Irish in scoring
last season with 21 goals and 15 assists for 36 points. Komadoski
was Notre Dame's top scorer from the blue line last year as he scored
a goal and added 23 helpers. His 23 assists and 24 points were
career-highs for the veteran defenseman.
FOURTH TIME: Morgan Cey's back-to-back shutouts (1-0 and 5-0)
versus Miami in the first round of last season's CCHA playoffs made
him the fourth goaltender to turn the trick. The others are:
1988-1989 -
Bruce Hoffort, LSSU beat Ferris State, 5-0, 3-0.
1993-94 -
Blaine Lacher, LSSU beat Ohio State, 5-0, 8-0
1999-00 -
Ryan Miller beat Notre Dame, 4-0 in semis and Nebraska-Omaha, 6-0 in finals.
PENALTY SHOTS: Notre Dame goaltender Morgan Cey has faced four
penalty shots in his Irish hockey career, including three last
season. On Feb. 28, in a 4-2 loss to Western Michigan, Cey stopped
Bronco VinceBellissimo at 14:06 of the third period. A month
earlier, Jan. 25, in a 3-3 tie with Michigan State, Cey stopped Jim
Slater at 16:23 of the second stanza. His first stop in 2002-03 came
on Nov. 22 at Michigan, in a 4-2 loss to the Wolverines. There, he
stopped Milan Gajic at 12:36 of the second period. The first penalty
shot Cey faced came during his freshman season when he stopped
Bowling Green's Greg Day on Dec. 8, 2001. That stop came in a 4-2
loss to the Falcons.
FAMILY MATTERS: After having as many as four players whose fathers
played in the National Hockey League, only one remains for the
2003-04 season. That would be Neil Komadoski, Jr., whose father,
Neil Komadoski, Sr., played eight NHL seasons as a defenseman with
the Los Angeles Kings ('72-'78) and the St. Louis Blues ('77-'80),
totaling 16G-76A and 632 penalty minutes in 501 career games.
ALL IN THE FAMILY: Two Irish sophomore hockey players - Rory Walsh
(So., Milton, Mass.) and Mike Walsh - have fathers who attended Notre
Dame. 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.
FROZEN TUNDRA: The Irish have developed a pipeline with the Green
Bay Gamblers of the United State's Hockey League. Three members of
the current Notre Dame team have played in the Land of Lombardi.
Junior defenseman Joe Zurenko (Arlington Heights, Ill.) played there
during the '00-'01 season and freshmen blueliners Noah Babin (Palm
Beach Gardens, Fla.) and Wes O'Neill were teammates there last year.
Assistant coach Layne LeBel also spent the past two seasons with the
Gamblers.
GOLD MEDAL ASSISTANT: Irish assistant hockey coach, Andy Slaggert,
served as an assistant coach with USA Hockey's gold-medal winning
Under-18 Select Team in August at the World Under-18 Select
tournament in the Czech Republic. The 11-year assistant at Notre
Dame has been involved in coaching with USA Hockey since the 1996-97
season. This was his first time for coaching on the international
level.
YOST BUSTERS: Notre Dame's 4-3 win at Michigan on Nov. 23 was the
first regular-season win for the Irish at Yost Arena since they
returned to the CCHA in 1992-93. Prior to that, the last time Notre
Dame won in Ann Arbor was Oct. 22, 1982, a span of 14 regular-season
games. The Irish did win a CCHA playoff game at Yost in the 1998
playoffs. In the regular season, Notre Dame is now 1-14-1 in the
last 16 meetings and since 1992-93, the Irish are 2-18-1 versus the
Wolverines at Yost Arena. Over the last three meetings, the Irish
are 1-1-1 when playing in Ann Arbor.
PATRIOTIC GROUP: Notre Dame's current roster includes eight players
who have past experience with USA Hockey, as members of the National
Team Development Program (NTDP) and/or the National Junior Team.
Since the program began, the Irish have had a total of 13 NTDP alums
grace their roster. The current contingent includes seniors Rob
Globke, Neil Komadoski and Brett Lebda, junior Derek Smith
(Marysville, Mich.), sophomore Tim Wallace (Anchorage, Alaska) and
freshmen Noah Babin (Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.), Michael Bartlett
(Morton Grove, Ill.) and Josh Sciba (Westland, Mich.)
Former Irish players Brett Henning, Paul Harris, Michael
Chin, Connor Dunlop and John Wroblewski are all alums of the U.S.
Developmental Program.