Hockey: No. 3 Ohio fights its way to a weekend sweep over Pitt
The Bobcats showed no signs of missing their head coach and four of their best players this weekend.
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The Bobcats showed no signs of missing their head coach and four of their best players this weekend.
The bench may be thinner and the lines may be different for Ohio this weekend, but the team still expects the same results.
Nathan De La Torre doesn’t wear a jersey on game nights anymore. At practice, he’s blowing whistles and leading drills instead of taking orders.
Just before it all gets serious, before Ohio plays its final three regular season weekend games heading into the playoffs, the team made time for a fun event to support a worthwhile cause.
For the second time in four weekends, the Bobcats will step away from their American Collegiate Hockey Association schedule.
Matt Hartman won’t lie. He’s a little nervous.
In its first road series since mid-November, No. 2 Ohio took a series sweep over Rutgers University this past weekend at Codey Arena in West Orange, New Jersey. The Bobcats beat the Scarlet Knights 8-5 on Friday and 6-1 on Saturday.
Skating toward the neutral zone against Delaware, Gianni Evangelisti flipped the puck up high between the support beams in the rafters at Bird Arena. It looked like a simple clearing attempt, until the puck landed perfectly onto the stick of Tyler Harkins.
More than a month has passed since Ohio played an American Collegiate Hockey Association game.
Standing on the Ohio bench, arms folded across a black Ohio Hockey jacket, Reese Hayes scans the chaos unfolding on the ice.
In the second half of their season, in a new year and with the holidays over, the Bobcats find themselves in a familiar position — near the top of the American Collegiate Hockey Association.
Prior to the holiday break, Ohio had played games every weekend since late September. It was the teams first hockey-less weekend.
As the season progresses for the Bobcats, and the weekend series continue to physically impact them, they will inevitably get injured. Post reporters Jordan Horrobin and Spencer Holbrook will write a weekly blog — if injuries allow — documenting Ohio’s bumps and bruises.
The Bobcats have reached the halfway point of their regular season and, as usual, look poised to compete for a national title in March.
As the season progresses for the Bobcats, and the weekend series continue to physically impact them, they will inevitably get injured. Post reporters Jordan Horrobin and Spencer Holbrook will write a weekly blog — if injuries allow — documenting Ohio’s bumps and bruises.
Ohio was selected to host the American Collegiate Hockey Association’s Game of the Week this Friday, when the top-ranked Bobcats will play No. 17 Illinois at Bird Arena.
Coach Sean Hogan has a good type of problem right now: he has more contributing players than spots for them to fill on game nights.
As the season progresses for the Bobcats, and the weekend series continue to physically impact them, they will inevitably get injured. Post reporters Jordan Horrobin and Spencer Holbrook will write a weekly blog — if injuries allow — to document Ohio’s bumps and bruises.
The differences between Ohio’s wins against University of Michigan-Dearborn on Friday and Saturday were an edge-of-the-seat shootout and a screaming, enthusiastic “fan of the game.”
Matt Rudin chose to be different.