Rand Pecknold<\/a>, 21st season at Quinnipiac and overall<\/p>\nRecord:<\/b> 23-11-4 (16-3-3 ECAC Hockey, first place)<\/p>\n
How they got in:<\/b> At-large bid<\/p>\n
Regional seed:<\/b> Fourth<\/p>\n
Last NCAA tournament appearance:<\/b> 2014<\/p>\n
Best NCAA finish:<\/b> Runner-up, 2013<\/p>\n
Why they’ll get to the Frozen Four:<\/b> The Bobcats will buckle down and play smart, opportunistic hockey in the absence of top scorer Sam Anas.<\/p>\n
Why they won’t get to the Frozen Four:<\/b> Offensive struggles will be magnified exponentially, allowing opposition to play aggressively to the point of smothering the Bobcats.<\/p>\n
It’s doubtful that many folks would be able to find Quinnipiac on a map, even among college hockey fans, but the hard-to-find school with the hard-to-say name is anything but a novelty in the NCAA tournament.<\/p>\n
The Bobcats return to the Big Dance for the third consecutive season, each time on the strength of their regular season as an at-large bid. Picked by many to have a down year due to graduations and early departures, the young roster (18 of 27 players are underclassmen) has performed above and beyond even its own coaches’ expectations: Veteran coach Rand Pecknold had, until very recently, often described his team as “overachieving.”<\/p>\n
One bright-star-gone-dark, however, is that of sophomore Sam Anas. The 23-goal sniper missed the ECAC Hockey championship weekend with what is reported to be a sprained knee ligament, and he is not expected to play this weekend, either.<\/p>\n
“He’s not a kid that you can replace,” Pecknold said of his star forward. “He’s one of the best in the ECAC. He’s dynamic. He’s one of the better power-play players in the country. He drives possession. You’ve got to find a way to play a little bit different game [without him]. We did that in [ECAC Hockey quarterfinals] Game 3 against Union: We lost him early in the first, and were able to grit out a win.”<\/p>\n
This has left Quinnipiac even less margin for error than what little it had before Anas’ injury.<\/p>\n
“I think, for us, we’ve struggled a little bit to score goals this year,” Pecknold said. “It hasn’t been a major problem, but we haven’t been as prolific offensively as we have the last two years. What we have to do on Friday is have some unlikely heroes. We need some guys to step up and score a big goal for us. That’s usually what happens at this time of year: You get some unlikely people to step up and get a big one, and that’s what we need.<\/p>\n
“It’s going to be about playing to our identity and buying into it. When we play to our identity, we find success. We have the utmost respect for North Dakota. We’re basically playing a road game at North Dakota — I don’t care that it’s not in their rink, it’s still in their state — and we need to be ready to go.”<\/p>\n
— Brian Sullivan<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
North Dakota, Michigan Tech, St. Cloud State and Quinnipiac play in Fargo, N.D.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":117771,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[740],"coauthors":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
2015 West Regional preview: Challengers line up to try to take down regional host North Dakota - College Hockey | USCHO.com<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n