2022–23 Holy Cross Crusaders men's ice hockey season explained

The 2022–23 Holy Cross Crusaders men's ice hockey season was the 57th season of play for the program, the 25th at the Division I level, and the 20th in the Atlantic Hockey conference. The Crusaders represented the College of the Holy Cross and were coached by Bill Riga, in his 2nd season.

Season

Due in part to having to find a new starting goaltender, Holy Cross got off to a poor start. The Crusaders won just 2 out of their first 15 games. By the end of November, the team was one of the worst clubs in college hockey both on offense and defense. The Crusaders had scored more than 2 goals in a game on just 2 occasions, which coincidentally were their only wins to that point. Jason Grand got a third turn in goal as the team's starter and that seemed to work like a charm. Beginning with their match against New Hampshire, the Crusaders suddenly found life and won three games in a row. Their inspired play continued and the club lost just once over an 8-game stretch. On offense, Jack Ricketts began taking over as the team's primary scorer and, seemingly overnight, Holy Cross was managing to score goals as well.

Though there were some hiccups, Holy Cross posted a winning record over the second half of the season and crept up to 7th in the conference standings. The Crusaders faced American International in the quarterfinals, who had won every league championship over the previous 4 seasons. After dropping the opening game, Holy Cross was facing the end of their season when the Yellow Jackets score the first two goals of the rematch. Just before the end of the second, Liam McLinskey scored to cut the lead in half and began a run of 4 consecutive goals from the Crusaders. McLinskey notched the last of those markers which turned out to be the game-winner after AIC potted a third goal after pulling their goalie.[1] McLinskey again opened CHC's scoring in the deciding game before AIC and the Crusader power play began to trade goals. A scoreless third period ended with the score tied 3–3 but Holy Cross was controlling the pace of the game. The Crusaders continued to press in overtime and attacked the AIC cage. Eventually McLinskey managed to stop a clearing attempt and then scored off of a rebound to quiet a nearly empty arena.[2]

Holy Cross had made the conference semifinal for the first time since 2006 and their reward was facing the best team in the conference, RIT. In front of a much more boisterous and hostile crowd, Jason Grande had probably the best game of his career and stopped all 36 shots from the Tigers in regulation. The Crusaders, on the other hand, were limited to just 7 shots in the first two periods but began to warm up in the third. They more than doubled their shot total in the final 20 minutes but were unable to score themselves, sending the Crusaders into overtime once more. The play was a little more even in the extra session and, 8 minutes into the frame, Liam McLinskey got behind the defense and broke in alone on the RIT cage. After a deke, he slid the puck into the Tiger net for his sixth goal of the postseason and third consecutive game-winning goal.[3]

Ordinarily, that goal would have sent Holy Cross to the title game, however, Atlantic Hockey had changed their postseason format that year and converted the semifinal round into a best-of-three series.[4] Despite the reprieve for RIT, McLinskey gave the Crusaders a lead in the second game after scoring twice during a 5-on-3 power play. RIT was able to push Holy Cross into overtime yet again but this time the Crusaders came out on the losing end. While the series was tied, Holy Cross didn't panic and scored twice in the first period of the deciding game. RIT cut into the lead in the second but the Crusaders reestablished their 2-goal advantage before the start of the third. The defense held firm over the last 20 minutes, stifling the Tigers and preventing them from getting a second goal. When RIT pulled their goaltender, all that served to do was give the Crusaders an empty net to shoot at and they scored twice more, the last being McLinskey's 9th of the postseason, to cap a huge upset over the heavily favored Tigers.[5]

With Holy Cross 1 win away from their first league championship in 17 years, The Crusaders ran into the only goalie in the conference as hot as Jason Grande. No matter how hard they tried, the Crusaders could not get a puck past Jacob Barczewski. Even after pulling Grand for an extra attacker, CHC was unable to score and lost the championship game 0–3.

Departures

Daniel Colabufo Forward Transferred to Oswego State
Bryce Dolan Defenseman Graduation (retired)
Erik Gordon Goaltender Graduation (retired)
Michael Higgins Defenseman Signed professional contract (HC ZUBR Přerov)
Jack Hillman Defenseman Left program (retired)
Michael Kane Forward Left program (retired)
Ryan Leibold Forward Graduate transfer to Merrimack
Ryan Pineault Defenseman Left program (retired)
Matt Radomsky Goaltender Transferred to Alaska
Matt Slick Defenseman Graduate transfer to Ferris State
Erkka Vänskä Forward Graduation (retired)
Anthony Vincent Forward Graduate transfer to Long Island

Recruiting

Jonathan Balah Defenseman 21 Barrie, ON
Matt DeBoer Forward 20 Madison, NJ
Jason Grande Goaltender 23 West Chester, PA
transfer from Bentley
Louden Hogg Goaltender 19 Cheyenne, WY
Conner Jean Forward 25 Oakland, MI
transfer from Carleton
Forward 21 Pearl River, NY
transfer from Quinnipiac
Mack Oliphant Defenseman 19 Northbrook, IL
Devin Phillips Forward 21 Raleigh, NC
Jack Seymour Defenseman 21 Chelsea, QC
Joe Solimine Forward 20 Middleton, MA
Charlie Spence Defenseman 20 Boston, MA

Roster

As of August 4, 2022.[6]

Schedule and results

|-!colspan=12 style=";" | Exhibition|-!colspan=12 style=";" | Regular Season|-!colspan=12 style=";" |

Scoring statistics

41 16 16 32 32
40 21 4 25 22
41 7 16 23 28
38 5 14 19 37
38 7 11 18 22
40 4 14 18 30
36 7 10 17 28
37 8 8 16 31
41 1 13 14 29
40 6 6 12 12
41 2 10 12 10
36 5 6 11 12
36 0 9 9 32
39 3 5 8 18
41 1 5 6 45
41 1 4 5 55
11 1 2 3 4
30 1 2 3 12
38 0 3 3 19
13 1 1 2 5
30 0 2 2 4
8 1 0 1 4
17 0 1 1 2
7 0 1 1 0
3 0 0 0 0
18 0 0 0 0
20 0 0 0 10
Total 98 164 262 503
[7]

Goaltending statistics

20 1131:51 12 7 1 44 453 1 .911 2.33
19 990:01 3 11 2 43 397 1 .902 2.61
8 365:03 2 3 0 20 137 1 .873 3.29
Empty Net - 30:35 - - - 12 - - - -
Total 41 2519:22 17 21 3 119 987 3 .902 2.58

Rankings

See main article: 2022–23 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings.

PollWeek
Pre12345678910111213141516171819202122232425 26 27 (Final)
USCHO.comNRbgcolor=FFFFFF-NRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRbgcolor=FFFFFF-NRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRbgcolor=FFFFFF-NR
USA TodayNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNRNR
Note: USCHO did not release a poll in weeks 1, 13, or 26.[8]

Awards and honors

Jack RickettsAtlantic Hockey Second Team[9]
Nick HaleAtlantic Hockey Third Team[10]
Mack OliphantAtlantic Hockey Rookie Team[11]
Jack RobilottiAtlantic Hockey All-Tournament Team[12]
Liam McLinskey

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 2023 . College Hockey Inc. . March 4, 2023 . March 21, 2023.
  2. Web site: This Week in Atlantic Hockey: Down to final four in conference postseason with semifinals on tap this weekend . USCHO.com . March 8, 2023 . March 21, 2023.
  3. Web site: FRIDAY ROUNDUP: Playoffs in full swing for Atlantic Hockey, ECAC Hockey, NCHC as Holy Cross downs RIT, Colorado College upsets Western Michigan, Quinnipiac blanks Yale to start busy weekend . USCHO.com . March 10, 2023 . March 21, 2023.
  4. Web site: 2023 Atlantic Hockey Postseason . Atlantic Hockey . February 26, 2023.
  5. Web site: SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 2023 . College Hockey Inc. . March 12, 2023 . March 21, 2023.
  6. Web site: Crusaders Men's Ice Hockey — 2019–20 Roster . GoHolyCross.com . July 2, 2018.
  7. News: College of the Holy Cross 2022-2023 Skater Stats . Elite Prospects . March 7, 2020.
  8. Web site: USCHO Division I Men's Poll . USCHO.com . November 26, 2019.
  9. Web site: Atlantic Hockey Announces 2022-23 All-Conference Teams . Atlantic Hockey . March 14, 2023 . March 14, 2023.
  10. Web site: Atlantic Hockey Announces 2022-23 All-Conference Teams . Atlantic Hockey . March 14, 2023 . March 14, 2023.
  11. Web site: Atlantic Hockey Announces 2022-23 All-Conference Teams . Atlantic Hockey . March 14, 2023 . March 14, 2023.
  12. News: Canisius Wins the 2023 Atlantic Hockey Championship . Atlantic Hockey . March 18, 2023 . March 19, 2023 .