Hockey: Players collect end-of-season awards
Just because Ohio’s season ended more than three weeks ago doesn’t mean the accolades have stopped rolling in for the Bobcats.
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Just because Ohio’s season ended more than three weeks ago doesn’t mean the accolades have stopped rolling in for the Bobcats.
When Delaware scored in double overtime to beat Ohio in the quarterfinals of the American Collegiate Hockey Association national tournament Sunday, it ended a season full of heartbreak rather than joy for the Bobcats.
Who would have thought a fight between a Hen and a Bobcat would last more than an hour?
After six months of practice, 40 contests, 2,415 minutes and 33 seconds of in-game action and the numerous cuts, scrapes, bruises, breaks and sprains that went with it all, the weekend the Ohio hockey team has been waiting for is finally here.
With, at the most, four games left in his collegiate career, Ohio captain Michael Schultz is in a race against the clock.
You win some, you lose some, and some you wish got rained out.
Every college kid needs a little review before the big exam, and the Bobcats ought to get their studying in this weekend.
When Jake Holzemer took the ice Friday night against Kent State, most watching from the Bird Arena stands probably didn’t realize the work it took for him to get there.
After a long weekend of hockey at Bird Arena, the fairytale ending Bobcat fans were hoping for vanished in the blink of an eye.
Lindenwood used three third-period goals to defeat Ohio 6-3 in the Central States Collegiate Hockey League championship game Sunday afternoon at Bird Arena.
In by far the most competitive and hard-fought game at Bird Arena this season, Ohio overcame an inspired Robert Morris squad 3-2 on a Zach Tisdale overtime goal in the Central States Collegiate Hockey League tournament semifinals Saturday night.
The numbers are straightforward enough: seven teams, six games, five states, four former national title winners, three days, two nights and only one champion.
During player introductions at Ohio hockey games, easy-to-pronounce names from familiar-sounding places fill the air at Bird Arena: Schultz, Agnew, Pilmore and Gulch; Toledo, Pittsburgh, Akron and Cleveland.
After a rough weekend in Athens, the Golden Flashes might need a new motto: Kent shoot, Kent score, Kent State.
Back in December, after his team lost three games on a tough Arizona road trip, coach Dan Morris called two upcoming games against Kent State “the most important of the season so far.”
For an Ohio team in need of a U-turn, this week can only be described as urgent.
The Bobcats will take a weekend off from playing American Collegiate Hockey Association foes to help in the fight for a much greater cause.
A five-game losing streak isn’t common for the Ohio hockey team. In fact, coach Dan Morris can’t remember the last time his team had one.
Ohio and Penn State will resume relations this weekend in a rivalry that has been one of the fiercest and most-hotly contested in the 20-year history of the American Collegiate Hockey Association. But this weekend’s contests will be the last in the storied rivalry, at least at the ACHA level.