Neil’s Notebook: Another Crucial Series Awaits Spartans at Munn this Weekend
2/20/2020 9:17:00 AM | Men's Ice Hockey
By Neil Koepke
MSUSpartans.com staff writer
EAST LANSING – First, it was Penn State. A crucial home series for Michigan State. The end result: a split.
Then it was a week off in early February, followed by very important series for the Spartans at Minnesota. The end result: another split.
Last weekend, it was a rivalry series with Michigan with more on the line than bragging rights. A split would have been nice, but MSU suffered two losses – 5-1 at Munn Arena and 4-1 at Little Caesars Arena.
And now? Perhaps you guessed it. Another crucial two-game Big Ten series against Ohio State.
There's a lot of stake as the Spartans (14-15-1 overall, 10-8-2-0) play host to the No. 12/12 Buckeyes (16-10-4, 9-8-3-1) at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Munn Arena.
The two teams are tied for fourth place with 31 points, two behind third-place Michigan (33), five points in back of co-leaders Minnesota (36) and Penn State (36). MSU and OSU are only two points ahead of sixth-place Notre Dame (29).
"As tight as the standings are, it doesn't matter who you play. Everything is a big game,'' MSU coach Danton Cole said.
Both the Spartans and Buckeyes have four games left and 12 possible points to gain. It's the same for Minnesota, Michigan and Notre Dame. But Penn State and seventh-place Wisconsin have only two league games remaining.
"Ohio State is a very good team. They present a lot of challenges,'' Cole said. "They're deep, they're old. We've had some good battles over the years. We'll need to have our best game on Friday night.''
If the Spartans sweep the Buckeyes, it would ensure that MSU would finish higher in the final standings, even if it would lose twice at Notre Dame next weekend and OSU sweeps Wisconsin in its final two games. The teams would be tied with 37 points but Michigan State would get the higher seed in the standings because of more Big Ten victories – 12-11 – the first tiebreaker.
Of course, the Spartans are only looking ahead to Friday and the first game of the series with the Buckeyes, who swept MSU, 3-1 and 2-0, in Columbus over Thanksgiving weekend.
"Everybody has changed so much. That was three months ago,'' Cole said. "They're a good team. The thing I like about Ohio State is they're very consistent in how they play. They make it hard for you.
"They defend well and you don't get a lot of odd-man rushes against them. They're just a complete team. If you do get through them, their goaltending is pretty good.
"I thought Ohio State was good then, I think they're good now.''
Unlike MSU's last three opponents – Michigan, Minnesota and Penn State – the Spartans aren't facing a team that's on an impressive roll. Ohio State, which had a bye last weekend, is 3-5-2 in its last 10 games.
In their last series two weeks ago, the Buckeyes tied Penn State 2-2, winning the shootout, and lost 6-3. In the two previous series, OSU split at Michigan and got swept at Minnesota.
The Buckeyes will be well-rested since they haven't played since Feb. 7-8, and like MSU, they still have a chance to finish first, although securing home ice for the playoffs with at least a fourth-place finish is also a major goal for these teams.
"These past three series, we've taken them as playoff series,'' senior center Patrick Khodorenko said. "Obviously, we had a tough weekend against Michigan, especially Friday. I thought we bounced back on Monday and played pretty well, but we had a couple of tough bounces.
"We have to play fast, starting in practice, and I think we'll have a great chance this weekend. It's playing our game. There's no secret formula. We've played the right way for most of the season, and we have to stick to that game plan – playing fast and with intensity.
"We have to make sure we have a lot of jump at the start. That's been killing us a bit. We have to be ready from (the start).''
Despite a bit of a stumble the last few weeks, Ohio State still has a good chance at making the NCAA Tournament. The Buckeyes are ranked No. 12 in both major polls and, more importantly, they're sitting tied for No. 12 in the latest Pairwise Rankings.
"They have a lot of skilled forwards and they play solid defense. They have good systems,'' Khodorenko said. "They don't turn the puck over a whole lot and they can do a lot in transition if we give them the puck at their blue line. They have a real good goalie (Tommy Nappier).
"We have to find away to get a lot of pucks on net and get guys in front of him. We have to get into their zone, create offense and get shots on net.''
Michigan State has scored only eight goals in the last five games, and in four of the losses, it has scored just one goal.
"Scoring one goal, it's tough to win the game,'' Cole said. "You try to get pucks the net, bodies in front. We did a lot of those things (against U-M) on Monday. And sometimes the puck doesn't go in.
"We may not be the deepest, most gifted goal-scoring team, but when we play hard and well, pucks go in for us, and we end up on the right side of it.''
Junior defenseman Tommy Miller said the key to bouncing back from the Michigan series starts in practice.
"It's focusing on having a good week of practice and getting back to playing Michigan State hockey,'' he said. "It's what we do. It's not thinking (too much) with the puck. It's making simple plays and playing hard. Playing 60 minutes and that wears teams down.
"Our systems work whenever we work. That's a thing the guys need to buy in. It's there. You've seen it this season. We know it's there. It's work hard and play our game.
"It's a pretty big weekend again. There are six teams within seven points of the lead.''

SENIOR NIGHT SATURDAY: Michigan State will salute nine seniors and two senior managers in ceremonies after Saturday's game, the Spartans' final regular-season home game.
The senior players include goalies John Lethemon and Spencer Wright, defensemen Jerad Rosburg, Butrus Ghafari, Damian Chrcek and Anthony Scarsella, and forwards Sam Saliba, Patrick Khodorenko and Logan Lambdin.
The seniors will be introduced and take the traditional skate around Munn Arena.
The MSU senior hockey managers are Cam Stevenson and Tony Fedrizzi.
"I'm trying not to think about,'' Khodorenko said. "The four years have definitely flown by. I'll miss playing here. It's part of my story and journey.
"It's being with the guys, the friendships you make and being around them every day and growing, not just as an individual but as a group. We've learned a lot in the last four years.
"There were a lot of struggles, there were ups and downs but I think we can finish strong . . . come out on top of the Big Ten and make the NCAA Tournament. That would be a nice cherry on top.''
Entering the weekend, Khodorenko has 53 goals and 65 assists for 118 career points in 137 games. He's never missed a game. This season, he has 15 goals and 16 assists for 31 points in 30 games.
Saliba, who served as captain last season and co-captain this year, has 30 goals and 23 assists for 50 points in 137 games. This season, Saliba has 10 goals and six assists for 16 points in 30 games. Like linemate Khodorenko, Saliba has never missed a game in four seasons as a Spartan.
Lambdin has 20 goals and 27 assists for 47 career points in 135 games. This season, he has five goals and eight assists for 13 points in 30 games.
Rosburg, a fifth-year senior who sat out his first season at MSU because of an injury, has 12 goals and 42 assists for 54 points in 135 games. This year, he has four goals and 12 assists for 16 points in 30 games.
Ghafari, who saw his playing time increase this season, has four goals and four assists for eight points in 108 games. This year, he has two goals and two assists for four points.
Chrcek has two goals and two assists for four points in 33 games. He has not played in any games this season.
Scarsella has played in 19 games and has one goal, against Western Michigan on Oct. 20, 2017. He played in one game this season.
Wright, MSU's No. 3 goaltender, made his first career appearance in the last 14 seconds of the Spartans' 4-1 win over Minnesota at Munn Arena on Jan. 10, 2020
Lethemon has played in 96 games and started 89. He has a career record of 37-52, a 2.82 goals-against-average, a .910 save percentage and nine shutouts. This season, Lethemon is 14-12-1, with a 2.12 GAA and a .935 saves percentage, which ranks 4th in the nation, and five shutouts, tied for 2nd nationally. He'll get major consideration for the Big Ten's All-Conference and as MSU's most valuable player.
THE MSU-OSU RIVALRY: The Spartans hold a 91-47-13 edge in the series which started with a 18-0 MSU victory on Dec. 7, 1957. MSU won the first six games before the Buckeyes won 7-6 on Nov. 3, 1972, in Columbus.
MSU's longest win streak vs. OSU was 14 games from Jan. 14, 1984, to Feb. 20, 1987. In the last four-and-a-half years, the Buckeyes are 16-4-2 against the Spartans. This season, Ohio State swept the Spartans, 3-1 and 2-0, in two one-goal games, minus empty-net goals in both games on Nov. 30-Dec. 1 in Columbus. Last year, MSU was 1-2-1 against OSU.

SCOUTING THE BUCKEYES: Despite still being in the race for first place in the Big Ten, Ohio State's recent record is under .500 entering its series with MSU. In their last 10 games, the Buckeyes are 3-5-2 and 1-4-1 in their last six.
OSU had last week off and played Penn State at home in the previous week. The Buckeyes tied 2-2 (winning the shootout) and lost 6-3. Their three victories since early January have been against Wisconsin, Notre Dame and Michigan.
Senior Tanner Laczynski is OSU's top scorer with seven goals and 20 assists for 27 points in 30 games. But he's not the top goal-scorer. Sophomore Gustaf Westlund has 12 goals and 12 assists for 24 points and is second in team scoring. Senior Carson Meyer and sophomore Quinn Preston have scored 11 goals. Meyer has 21 points (11-10) and Preston has 18 (11-7). Senior Ronnie Hein is fifth in scoring with 14 points (7-7).
OSU has four defensemen with 11-13 points. Gordi Meyer (5-8) and Matt Miller (4-9) have 13 points, Grant Gabriele (4-8) has 12 and Wyatt Ege (3-8) has 11.
Junior Tommy Nappier is one of the best goaltenders in the Big Ten with a 13-9-3 record, a 2.12 goals-against average and a .927 save percentage. Nappier is third in the conference – behind MSU's John Lethemon and U-M's Strauss Mann – in GAA and save percentage. He averages 26.9 saves per game.
On offense, Ohio State is averaging 2.70 goals per game, which is No. 6 in the Big Ten. But the Buckeyes' power play is No. 2 at 25.4 percent.
Defensively, OSU is second in the conference with a team GAA of 2.40, just ahead of Michigan State's 2.41. The Buckeyes' penalty kill is 5th in the Big Ten at 77.9 percent.
Coach Steve Rohlik, a 1990 Wisconsin graduate, is in his seventh season as a head coach – all at Ohio State. He has a career and OSU record of 129-94-32.
He's led OSU to the Big Ten regular season championship in 2018-19 and to the NCAA Frozen Four semifinals in 2017-18. Under Rohlik, the Buckeyes have made the NCAA Tournament in each of the last three seasons – 2017, 2018, 2019.
THE BIG TEN RACE: Two weekends and four conference games remain for five of the seven teams in the Big Ten, and six are contenders for the 2019-20 regular-season championship.
Minnesota and Penn State are tied for first place with 36 points, and they play each other on Friday and Saturday in University Park, Pa. The Gophers, 9-2-1 since Christmas, have four games left. They host Michigan next weekend to close out the regular season.
Penn State, however, will play its final two conference games this weekend, and has a bye next weekend. So, the Nittany Lions' final point total will be determined Saturday, and they'll have to sit and watch next week's three series – each having an impact on the final standings.
Michigan is in sole possession of third place with 33 points, three behind Minnesota and Penn State and two ahead of Michigan State and Ohio State.
The Spartans and Buckeyes are tied for fourth place with 31 points apiece, and they play each other this weekend at Munn Arena. Both have four games left, including another crucial series next weekend. MSU plays at Notre Dame and OSU is home against seventh-place Wisconsin.
Notre Dame is in sixth place with 29 points, but with four games left, it is still in the chase for first place. But the Irish need help with the right combination of losses for teams above them.
Notre Dame, 2-5-3 in its last 10 games, plays at Michigan on Friday and Saturday. The Wolverines swept the Irish, 3-0 and 3-1, in early January in Notre Dame, Ind.
Wisconsin (20 points), which is locked into 7th place, plays a non-conference on Friday and Saturday against No. 9/9 Arizona State. The Sun Devils have won seven games in a row and 11 of their last 12. ASU's last loss was to No. 5/6 Clarkson, 2-1, on Jan. 24 in Potsdam, N.Y.
In the Big Ten playoffs, the regular-season champion gets a bye in the first round, while the second, third and fourth-place teams get home ice.
The No. 2 team plays No. 7, it's No. 3 vs. 6 and No. 4 against No. 5 in best-of-three series March 6-8.
The three winners are ranked in order of regular-season points – 2, 3 and 4 - for the semifinals. The No. 1 team plays No. 4 and No. 2 hosts No. 3 in single-game matchups on March 13.
The two winners play for the Big Ten playoff title on March 21 with the highest surviving seed hosting the championship game.
MSUSpartans.com staff writer
EAST LANSING – First, it was Penn State. A crucial home series for Michigan State. The end result: a split.
Then it was a week off in early February, followed by very important series for the Spartans at Minnesota. The end result: another split.
Last weekend, it was a rivalry series with Michigan with more on the line than bragging rights. A split would have been nice, but MSU suffered two losses – 5-1 at Munn Arena and 4-1 at Little Caesars Arena.
And now? Perhaps you guessed it. Another crucial two-game Big Ten series against Ohio State.
There's a lot of stake as the Spartans (14-15-1 overall, 10-8-2-0) play host to the No. 12/12 Buckeyes (16-10-4, 9-8-3-1) at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Munn Arena.
The two teams are tied for fourth place with 31 points, two behind third-place Michigan (33), five points in back of co-leaders Minnesota (36) and Penn State (36). MSU and OSU are only two points ahead of sixth-place Notre Dame (29).
"As tight as the standings are, it doesn't matter who you play. Everything is a big game,'' MSU coach Danton Cole said.
Both the Spartans and Buckeyes have four games left and 12 possible points to gain. It's the same for Minnesota, Michigan and Notre Dame. But Penn State and seventh-place Wisconsin have only two league games remaining.
"Ohio State is a very good team. They present a lot of challenges,'' Cole said. "They're deep, they're old. We've had some good battles over the years. We'll need to have our best game on Friday night.''
If the Spartans sweep the Buckeyes, it would ensure that MSU would finish higher in the final standings, even if it would lose twice at Notre Dame next weekend and OSU sweeps Wisconsin in its final two games. The teams would be tied with 37 points but Michigan State would get the higher seed in the standings because of more Big Ten victories – 12-11 – the first tiebreaker.
Of course, the Spartans are only looking ahead to Friday and the first game of the series with the Buckeyes, who swept MSU, 3-1 and 2-0, in Columbus over Thanksgiving weekend.
"Everybody has changed so much. That was three months ago,'' Cole said. "They're a good team. The thing I like about Ohio State is they're very consistent in how they play. They make it hard for you.
"They defend well and you don't get a lot of odd-man rushes against them. They're just a complete team. If you do get through them, their goaltending is pretty good.
"I thought Ohio State was good then, I think they're good now.''
Unlike MSU's last three opponents – Michigan, Minnesota and Penn State – the Spartans aren't facing a team that's on an impressive roll. Ohio State, which had a bye last weekend, is 3-5-2 in its last 10 games.
In their last series two weeks ago, the Buckeyes tied Penn State 2-2, winning the shootout, and lost 6-3. In the two previous series, OSU split at Michigan and got swept at Minnesota.
The Buckeyes will be well-rested since they haven't played since Feb. 7-8, and like MSU, they still have a chance to finish first, although securing home ice for the playoffs with at least a fourth-place finish is also a major goal for these teams.
"These past three series, we've taken them as playoff series,'' senior center Patrick Khodorenko said. "Obviously, we had a tough weekend against Michigan, especially Friday. I thought we bounced back on Monday and played pretty well, but we had a couple of tough bounces.
"We have to play fast, starting in practice, and I think we'll have a great chance this weekend. It's playing our game. There's no secret formula. We've played the right way for most of the season, and we have to stick to that game plan – playing fast and with intensity.
"We have to make sure we have a lot of jump at the start. That's been killing us a bit. We have to be ready from (the start).''
Despite a bit of a stumble the last few weeks, Ohio State still has a good chance at making the NCAA Tournament. The Buckeyes are ranked No. 12 in both major polls and, more importantly, they're sitting tied for No. 12 in the latest Pairwise Rankings.
"They have a lot of skilled forwards and they play solid defense. They have good systems,'' Khodorenko said. "They don't turn the puck over a whole lot and they can do a lot in transition if we give them the puck at their blue line. They have a real good goalie (Tommy Nappier).
"We have to find away to get a lot of pucks on net and get guys in front of him. We have to get into their zone, create offense and get shots on net.''
Michigan State has scored only eight goals in the last five games, and in four of the losses, it has scored just one goal.
"Scoring one goal, it's tough to win the game,'' Cole said. "You try to get pucks the net, bodies in front. We did a lot of those things (against U-M) on Monday. And sometimes the puck doesn't go in.
"We may not be the deepest, most gifted goal-scoring team, but when we play hard and well, pucks go in for us, and we end up on the right side of it.''
Junior defenseman Tommy Miller said the key to bouncing back from the Michigan series starts in practice.
"It's focusing on having a good week of practice and getting back to playing Michigan State hockey,'' he said. "It's what we do. It's not thinking (too much) with the puck. It's making simple plays and playing hard. Playing 60 minutes and that wears teams down.
"Our systems work whenever we work. That's a thing the guys need to buy in. It's there. You've seen it this season. We know it's there. It's work hard and play our game.
"It's a pretty big weekend again. There are six teams within seven points of the lead.''
SENIOR NIGHT SATURDAY: Michigan State will salute nine seniors and two senior managers in ceremonies after Saturday's game, the Spartans' final regular-season home game.
The senior players include goalies John Lethemon and Spencer Wright, defensemen Jerad Rosburg, Butrus Ghafari, Damian Chrcek and Anthony Scarsella, and forwards Sam Saliba, Patrick Khodorenko and Logan Lambdin.
The seniors will be introduced and take the traditional skate around Munn Arena.
The MSU senior hockey managers are Cam Stevenson and Tony Fedrizzi.
"I'm trying not to think about,'' Khodorenko said. "The four years have definitely flown by. I'll miss playing here. It's part of my story and journey.
"It's being with the guys, the friendships you make and being around them every day and growing, not just as an individual but as a group. We've learned a lot in the last four years.
"There were a lot of struggles, there were ups and downs but I think we can finish strong . . . come out on top of the Big Ten and make the NCAA Tournament. That would be a nice cherry on top.''
Entering the weekend, Khodorenko has 53 goals and 65 assists for 118 career points in 137 games. He's never missed a game. This season, he has 15 goals and 16 assists for 31 points in 30 games.
Saliba, who served as captain last season and co-captain this year, has 30 goals and 23 assists for 50 points in 137 games. This season, Saliba has 10 goals and six assists for 16 points in 30 games. Like linemate Khodorenko, Saliba has never missed a game in four seasons as a Spartan.
Lambdin has 20 goals and 27 assists for 47 career points in 135 games. This season, he has five goals and eight assists for 13 points in 30 games.
Rosburg, a fifth-year senior who sat out his first season at MSU because of an injury, has 12 goals and 42 assists for 54 points in 135 games. This year, he has four goals and 12 assists for 16 points in 30 games.
Ghafari, who saw his playing time increase this season, has four goals and four assists for eight points in 108 games. This year, he has two goals and two assists for four points.
Chrcek has two goals and two assists for four points in 33 games. He has not played in any games this season.
Scarsella has played in 19 games and has one goal, against Western Michigan on Oct. 20, 2017. He played in one game this season.
Wright, MSU's No. 3 goaltender, made his first career appearance in the last 14 seconds of the Spartans' 4-1 win over Minnesota at Munn Arena on Jan. 10, 2020
Lethemon has played in 96 games and started 89. He has a career record of 37-52, a 2.82 goals-against-average, a .910 save percentage and nine shutouts. This season, Lethemon is 14-12-1, with a 2.12 GAA and a .935 saves percentage, which ranks 4th in the nation, and five shutouts, tied for 2nd nationally. He'll get major consideration for the Big Ten's All-Conference and as MSU's most valuable player.
THE MSU-OSU RIVALRY: The Spartans hold a 91-47-13 edge in the series which started with a 18-0 MSU victory on Dec. 7, 1957. MSU won the first six games before the Buckeyes won 7-6 on Nov. 3, 1972, in Columbus.
MSU's longest win streak vs. OSU was 14 games from Jan. 14, 1984, to Feb. 20, 1987. In the last four-and-a-half years, the Buckeyes are 16-4-2 against the Spartans. This season, Ohio State swept the Spartans, 3-1 and 2-0, in two one-goal games, minus empty-net goals in both games on Nov. 30-Dec. 1 in Columbus. Last year, MSU was 1-2-1 against OSU.
SCOUTING THE BUCKEYES: Despite still being in the race for first place in the Big Ten, Ohio State's recent record is under .500 entering its series with MSU. In their last 10 games, the Buckeyes are 3-5-2 and 1-4-1 in their last six.
OSU had last week off and played Penn State at home in the previous week. The Buckeyes tied 2-2 (winning the shootout) and lost 6-3. Their three victories since early January have been against Wisconsin, Notre Dame and Michigan.
Senior Tanner Laczynski is OSU's top scorer with seven goals and 20 assists for 27 points in 30 games. But he's not the top goal-scorer. Sophomore Gustaf Westlund has 12 goals and 12 assists for 24 points and is second in team scoring. Senior Carson Meyer and sophomore Quinn Preston have scored 11 goals. Meyer has 21 points (11-10) and Preston has 18 (11-7). Senior Ronnie Hein is fifth in scoring with 14 points (7-7).
OSU has four defensemen with 11-13 points. Gordi Meyer (5-8) and Matt Miller (4-9) have 13 points, Grant Gabriele (4-8) has 12 and Wyatt Ege (3-8) has 11.
Junior Tommy Nappier is one of the best goaltenders in the Big Ten with a 13-9-3 record, a 2.12 goals-against average and a .927 save percentage. Nappier is third in the conference – behind MSU's John Lethemon and U-M's Strauss Mann – in GAA and save percentage. He averages 26.9 saves per game.
On offense, Ohio State is averaging 2.70 goals per game, which is No. 6 in the Big Ten. But the Buckeyes' power play is No. 2 at 25.4 percent.
Defensively, OSU is second in the conference with a team GAA of 2.40, just ahead of Michigan State's 2.41. The Buckeyes' penalty kill is 5th in the Big Ten at 77.9 percent.
Coach Steve Rohlik, a 1990 Wisconsin graduate, is in his seventh season as a head coach – all at Ohio State. He has a career and OSU record of 129-94-32.
He's led OSU to the Big Ten regular season championship in 2018-19 and to the NCAA Frozen Four semifinals in 2017-18. Under Rohlik, the Buckeyes have made the NCAA Tournament in each of the last three seasons – 2017, 2018, 2019.
THE BIG TEN RACE: Two weekends and four conference games remain for five of the seven teams in the Big Ten, and six are contenders for the 2019-20 regular-season championship.
Minnesota and Penn State are tied for first place with 36 points, and they play each other on Friday and Saturday in University Park, Pa. The Gophers, 9-2-1 since Christmas, have four games left. They host Michigan next weekend to close out the regular season.
Penn State, however, will play its final two conference games this weekend, and has a bye next weekend. So, the Nittany Lions' final point total will be determined Saturday, and they'll have to sit and watch next week's three series – each having an impact on the final standings.
Michigan is in sole possession of third place with 33 points, three behind Minnesota and Penn State and two ahead of Michigan State and Ohio State.
The Spartans and Buckeyes are tied for fourth place with 31 points apiece, and they play each other this weekend at Munn Arena. Both have four games left, including another crucial series next weekend. MSU plays at Notre Dame and OSU is home against seventh-place Wisconsin.
Notre Dame is in sixth place with 29 points, but with four games left, it is still in the chase for first place. But the Irish need help with the right combination of losses for teams above them.
Notre Dame, 2-5-3 in its last 10 games, plays at Michigan on Friday and Saturday. The Wolverines swept the Irish, 3-0 and 3-1, in early January in Notre Dame, Ind.
Wisconsin (20 points), which is locked into 7th place, plays a non-conference on Friday and Saturday against No. 9/9 Arizona State. The Sun Devils have won seven games in a row and 11 of their last 12. ASU's last loss was to No. 5/6 Clarkson, 2-1, on Jan. 24 in Potsdam, N.Y.
In the Big Ten playoffs, the regular-season champion gets a bye in the first round, while the second, third and fourth-place teams get home ice.
The No. 2 team plays No. 7, it's No. 3 vs. 6 and No. 4 against No. 5 in best-of-three series March 6-8.
The three winners are ranked in order of regular-season points – 2, 3 and 4 - for the semifinals. The No. 1 team plays No. 4 and No. 2 hosts No. 3 in single-game matchups on March 13.
The two winners play for the Big Ten playoff title on March 21 with the highest surviving seed hosting the championship game.
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