2021–22 Northeastern Huskies men's ice hockey season explained

The 2021–22 Northeastern Huskies Men's ice hockey season was the 90th season of play for the program. They represented Northeastern University in the 2021–22 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season and for the 38th season in the Hockey East conference. The Huskies were coached by Jerry Keefe, in his first season, and played their home games at Matthews Arena.

Season

In the offseason, Northeaster reshuffled its athletic department with former hockey head coach Jim Madigan being promoted to Athletic Director and former assistant Jerry Keefe taking his place at the helm of the program.[1] The biggest addition to the team, however, was new starting goaltender Devon Levi. Levi had sat out the previous season on account of COVID-19 but remained enrolled throughout his freshman year. He kicked off his college career with a pair of shutouts and quickly acclimated to the pace of play and volume of shots.

After a bit of a fitful start, Levi settled down and produced a tremendous stretch of goaltending. Over the course of fourteen games beginning in late-October and continuing until early-January, Levi didn't allow more than two goals in any match. Northeastern went 12–1–1 in that time with Levi racking up 5 shutouts and posting a mind-boggling .969 save percentage. The Huskies defense wasn't particularly porous, allowing fewer than 28 shots against in those games, but Levi's astounding performance had him chasing history for the all-time record.

Unfortunately, Northeastern wasn't playing nearly as well on the other end of the ice. The Huskies were relatively weak in the goal-scoring department with the exception of Aidan Mcdonough. The team ended up relying on the junior winger for more than a quarter of its goals and was hard pressed to put together much in the way of offense when he was off the ice.

In February 2021, both the men's and women's programs were selected to participate in the 2021 Winter Universiade.[2] Concerns about COVID-19 caused postponements to be announced in August but new dates were set by November. By the end of the month, however, fears over the Omicron variant forced the Swiss government to introduce new travel restrictions which forced the cancellation of the games.[3]

Despite the scoring woes, Northeastern was in a prime position to make the NCAA tournament when the second half of the season began. However, after a couple of easy tilts against Long Island, Levi's performance began to break down. In a 4-game stretch, he allowed 15 goals and put the team precarious close to dropping below the cutoff line for the NCAA tournament. To make matters worse for the Huskies, Levi departed afterwards to join Team Canada at the 2022 Winter Olympics.[4] His replacement, T. J. Semptimphelter, was a true freshman that had yet to play a single minute of college hockey and he was thrown in against #14 Massachusetts Lowell. Semptimphelter responded with an admirable, although losing, performance and then produced several solid games over the next four weeks.

Upon Levi's return in late-February, Northeastern had improved its position during his absence. Although the team lost in the Beanpot final, the Huskies were ranked in the top-15 and had an outside chance at a conference title. Levi announced his return with a 60-save victory over Connecticut and followed that up with a 40-save performance the following night. After a stunning loss to lowly Vermont, the team needed quite a bit of help as it was 5 points behind Massachusetts for 1st-place. In a stunning turn of events, the Minutemen lost both games on the final weekend of the regular season in regulation while Northeastern shut down Merrimack to vault to top of the standings and capture the program's first ever league title.[5]

Postseason

When the Huskies began postseason play they did so knowing that the only guarantee of making the NCAA tournament was a conference championship. With anything less, they would have to hope that other conferences would not be won by underdog teams. Boston College was the first opponent for Northeastern and everything seemed to be going their way in the first two periods. NU entered the final frame with a 3–0 lead and was ready to cruise to an easy victory but the Eagles had other ideas. BC's offense went on the attack and fired 25 shots on goal in the last 20 minutes, getting two goals in just over 16 minutes, but the defense was able to hold over the last 3:48 and prevent Boston College from forcing overtime. The narrow victory was a portent of things to come, however, and the team was again widely outshot in the semifinal. Connecticut's defense was ready for the Huskies and limited Northeastern to a single goal, knocking NU out with a 1–4 loss. The defeat put Northeastern on the brink of disaster since the team was dropped down to #14 in the Pairwise rankings. That meant that the Huskies would miss out on the tournament if more than one lower-seeded teams won their conference championship games. After Harvard won the ECAC Hockey crown, the Huskies were put on the chopping block. Both the Hockey East and CCHA title games went into overtime but, fortunately for Northeastern, both were won by higher-seeded teams and the Huskies ended up receiving the last at-large bid into the tournament.

Northeastern was set opposite Western Michigan, one of the top offenses in the nation. With their work cut out for them, the 4th-seeded Huskies came out skating hard and tried to outplay the Broncos. Both teams raced up and down the ice for most of the game and though WMU got an early lead, Levi made sure they weren't able to build on it. Northeastern seemed to grow stronger as the match wore on and fired more and more pucks on goal. With less than 4 minutes remaining in the game, Mcdonough finally broke through with his 25th goal of the year, tying the score. Less than 90 seconds into overtime, Levi made a poor clearing attempt from behind his net. The puck was knocked down by a Bronco who then skated around the cage and tried to score on an empty net. Levi raced to get back into position and initially it appeared that he was just able to stop the goal. However, replay showed that the puck had completely crossed the goal line prior to his diving attempt and the game went to Western Michigan.

Levi ended up finishing the season just .004 below the all-time record for save percentage in a single season. However, because he played in at least 30 games during the season, Levi broke the record for career save percentage with .952. Retaining the record will depend on his performance in future seasons.

Departures

Billy Carrabino Defenseman Graduation (retired)
Curtis Frye Goaltender Graduation (retired)
Austin Goldstein Forward Graduation (retired)
Grant Jozefek Forward Graduation (Signed with Worcester Railers)
Michael Kesselring Defenseman Signed professional contract (Edmonton Oilers)
Collin Murphy Defenseman Graduation (retired)
Connor Murphy Goaltender Transferred to Union
Nick Scarpa Goaltender Graduation (retired)
Neil Shea Forward Transferred to Sacred Heart
Zach Solow Forward Graduation (Signed with Chicago Wolves)
T. J. Walsh Forward Transferred to Rensselaer

Recruiting

Matt Choupani Forward 19 Montreal, QC
Evan Fear Goaltender 22 Winnetka, IL
transfer from Quinnipiac
Cam Gaudette Defenseman 21 Braintree, MA
Justin Hryckowian Forward 20 L'Île-Bizard, QC
Jack Hughes Forward 17 Westwood, MA
Chase McInnis Forward 20 Hingham, MA
Tommy Miller Defenseman 22 West Bloomfield, MI
graduate transfer from Michigan State
Jakov Novak Forward 22 Riverside, ON
transfer from Bentley; selected 188th overall in 2018
T. J. Semptimphelter Goaltender 19 Marlton, NJ
Ryan St. Louis Forward 18 Burlington, VT

Roster

As of August 12, 2021.[6]

Schedule and results

|-!colspan=12 style=";" | Regular season|-!colspan=12 ! style=""; | |-!colspan=12 style=";" | Regular season|-!colspan=12 ! style=""; | |-!colspan=12 style=";" | |-!colspan=12 style=";" |

Scoring statistics

38 25 14 39 44
29 12 15 27 18
39 8 17 25 20
27 7 15 22 14
28 6 14 20 10
39 5 15 20 14
39 8 9 17 28
39 7 9 16 28
34 3 11 14 65
39 4 8 12 2
31 2 10 12 16
35 1 10 11 14
39 6 4 10 8
39 1 8 9 12
34 2 4 6 14
8 0 3 3 0
38 1 1 2 6
28 0 2 2 0
32 0 2 2 0
37 0 2 2 12
24 1 0 1 4
8 0 1 1 0
19 0 1 1 2
1 0 0 0 0
6 0 0 0 2
8 0 0 0 0
8 0 0 0 0
14 0 0 0 0
20 0 0 0 2
Total 99 175 274 335
[7]

Goaltending statistics

32 1873 21 10 1 48 952 10 .952 1.54
8 438 4 3 0 15 211 0 .934 2.05
1 26 0 0 0 2 9 0 .818 4.51
Empty Net - 9 - - - 1 - - - -
Total 39 2347 25 13 1 66 1172 10 .947 1.69

Rankings

See main article: 2021–22 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings.

PollWeek
Pre12345678910111213141516171819202122232425 (Final)
USCHO.comNR18182020NR171818161313111112151615131513111012bgcolor=FFFFFF-13
USA TodayNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNR13131091315NRNR1415131111121312
Note: USCHO did not release a poll in week 24.[8]

Awards and honors

Devon LeviTim Taylor Award[9]
Devon LeviMike Richter Award[10]
Devon LeviAHCA East First Team All-American[11]
Aidan McDonough
Jordan HarrisAHCA East Second Team All-American
Jordan HarrisHockey East Best Defensive Defenseman
Devon LeviHockey East Rookie of the Year
Devon LeviHockey East Goaltending Champion
Devon LeviHockey East Three-Stars Award
Jerry KeefeBob Kullen Coach of the Year Award[12]
Devon LeviHockey East First Team[13]
Jordan Harris
Aidan McDonough
Devon LeviHockey East Rookie Team[14]
Justin Hryckowian
Jack Hughes

Players drafted into the NHL

2022 NHL Entry Draft

2 34 Cameron Lund San Jose Sharks
2 51 Los Angeles Kings
4 128 Cameron Whitehead Vegas Golden Knights
6 165 Hunter McDonald Philadelphia Flyers
6 176 Jackson Dorrington Vancouver Canucks
7 203 James Fisher Columbus Blue Jackets
† incoming freshman[15]

Notes and References

  1. News: Northeastern veteran bench boss Madigan promoted to AD; associate coach Keefe to take Huskies’ helm . USCHO.com . June 17, 2021 . June 24, 2021.
  2. News: Northeastern men’s, women’s college hockey teams selected to represent U.S. at 2021 World University Winter Games . USCHO.com . February 9, 2021 . December 15, 2021.
  3. News: 2021 FISU Winter Universiade cancelled over new Omicron coronavirus strain — source . TASS . November 29, 2021 . December 15, 2021.
  4. Web site: Canada . IIHF . June 25, 2022.
  5. News: Northeastern Huskies men's Hockey 2018-19 Media Guide . Northeastern Huskies . June 10, 2019 . November 5, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211105070114/https://s3.amazonaws.com/northeastern.internetconsult.com/documents/2018/11/21/1819Guide_LR.pdf . dead .
  6. Web site: 2020–21 Men's Ice Hockey Roster . Northeastern Huskies . January 20, 2020.
  7. News: Northeastern Univ. 2021-2022 Skater Stats . Elite Prospects . July 2, 2020.
  8. Web site: USCHO Division I Men's Poll . USCHO.com . November 26, 2019.
  9. Web site: Northeastern's Devon Levi Is 2022 Tim Taylor National Rookie Of The Year . Hockey East . April 8, 2022 . July 31, 2022 .
  10. Web site: Northeastern’s Devon Levi Wins 2022 Mike Richter Award . Hockey East . April 8, 2022 . July 31, 2022 .
  11. News: Four players return to 2021-22 Division I men’s All-American teams, led by three-time pick Dryden McKay . USCHO.com . April 8, 2022 . April 8, 2022.
  12. Web site: Bobby Trivigno Named Hockey East Player of the Year . Hockey East . March 15, 2022 . March 16, 2022 .
  13. Web site: Hockey East Names 2021-22 Men's All-Star Teams . Hockey East . March 11, 2022 . March 16, 2022 .
  14. Web site: Hockey East Names Men's Pro Ambitions All-Rookie Team . Hockey East . March 9, 2022 . March 16, 2022 .
  15. News: NCAA player rankings, selections in 2022 NHL Draft . USCHO.com . July 9, 2022.