For the first time this season, BU will square off against two different opponents in the same weekend, as Denver comes to town Friday night before the Terriers visit the Friars of Providence College on Saturday night.
From The Vault Former Terrier Matt Lane fires off a shot in the 2016 West Reginal in St. Paul against Denver. (Photo by Matt Dresens) |
The Pioneers come into this weekend’s game with a 2-0-2 record and ranked number one in the nation. On opening night, Denver and Notre Dame skated to a 2-2 draw before the Pioneers doubled up the Irish 4-2 the next night. Last week, Denver took three points from Lake Superior State at home.
For coach David Quinn, the preparation didn’t change just because Denver is the number one ranked team. He took this week and treated it like any other game.
“We try to do that no matter who we play,” Quinn said. “It’s pretty much come to work every day and try to become a better team. Obviously, we make some tweaks with every team we face because every team plays a little bit differently. This isn’t a game you have to get a team excited to play.”
A year ago, BU traveled to Denver and was swept by the Pioneers by scores of 4-2 and 3-1 respectively. In 2016, Denver ended BU’s season with a 7-2 beatdown in the West Regional in St. Paul. Earlier in the 2015-16 season, BU beat the Pioneers 5-4 in overtime at Agganis Arena.
“I think there’s a familiarity from both ends,” Quinn said. “There’s certainly a lot of respect too. They’ve been one of the top programs in the country for a long time and we’ve always had great games with them and we’re looking forward to this one.”
“They keep it simple and fast,” said junior forward Bobo Carpenter, who has faced DU four times in his career. “They really want attack hard and get their offense going. Their transition is a key their success. We want to be that team too, so it’s going to be exciting.”
Scouting the Pioneers
To no one’s surprise, Denver is led in scoring by Henrik Borgström, Troy Terry and Dylan Gambrell. The electrifying Borgström and US World Junior shootout hero Troy Terry have identical stat lines of three goals and three assists for five points. Borgström had a pair of goals against BU last year in the second game. Gambrell has posted five points by way of two goals and three assists.
Other players to watch include Liam Finlay, Tyson McLellan and Jarid Lukosevicius, who scored all three of Denver’s goals in the national championship game last year.
In goal, Tanner Jaillet is 1-0-2 to start his senior season and owns a 2.21 goals against average and a .911 save percentage.
From The Vault Jake Oettinger makes one of 38 saves in a 2-1 win at Providence last December. (Photo by Matt Dresens) |
Both teams will be in the same situation facing a back-to-back on Saturday. On Friday, the Friars are home against Boston College, a team they lost to 4-3 in overtime two weekends ago.
“We’ve played two games for three weekends in a row now,” mentioned Quinn. “Its nothing new to us. We focus on the game Friday night and don’t even think about the game Saturday. They’re in the same situation. We’ll talk about Providence Saturday morning.”
Scouting the Friars
Josh Wilkins leads the team in scoring with a pair of goals and three assists for five points in five games. Fellow sophomore Kasper Björkqvist has a team-high four goals, while Jacob Bryson leads the assists column with four helpers. Other players to watch include Brian Pinho, Vincent Desharnais and Ryan Tait.
PC got a huge boost last weekend when junior defenseman Erik Foley, a former member of the team USA World Junior Championship team came back from injury.
In goal, Hayden Hawkey holds an .871 save percentage and a 3.33 goals against average.
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