Author: schoolofcommunications

  • Report card: How baseball is faring at the mid-season point

    Report card: How baseball is faring at the mid-season point

    By: Benjamin Yeargin, Brandon Murdock, & Connor Wilson

    After sweeping Niagara last weekend, Quinnipiac baseball is officially halfway through its 30-game MAAC schedule. The Bobcats are 10-5 in league play, putting them tied for second with Rider and 1.5 games behind 10-2 Fairfield for first in the conference. 

    At the midpoint, QU Sports Page’s Benjamin Yeargin, Brandon Murdock and Connor Wilson handed out some grades to assess Quinnipiac’s performance, broken up by the different parts of the game.

    Offense: A+

    Offense is not the problem for Quinnipiac. The Bobcats lead the MAAC in batting average, home runs and slugging percentage in conference play.

    Senior infielder CJ Willis is spearheading the sticks. The Auburn, Massachusetts native is slashing .484/.548/1.016 with eight home runs, five doubles and 34 RBIs. Head coach John Delaney has Willis batting third.

    Willis is among five Bobcats who have an OPS above .900, joining sophomore infielder Kyle Garbowski, junior catcher Christian Smith, junior infielder Alex Irizarry and graduate infielder Johnny Knox. Graduate infielder Sebastian Mueller joins the above five with an on-base percentage north of .400 as well.

    In seven of Quinnipiac’s 15 MAAC games, it has scored double-digit runs. The Bobcats haven’t scored less than four runs in a conference game this season. 

    Quinnipiac is getting starters out of games early too. In MAAC play, the longest a starter has lasted against the Bobcats was Niagara’s junior right-hander Matthew DelVecchio going 6.1 innings on April 4 in an extra-innings 7-5 Quinnipiac win

    When Quinnipiac loses, it’s not because of the offense. The bats have been blazing, which is why the Bobcats deserve an A+ for their offensive production in MAAC play.

    – Yeargin

    Starting pitching: C-

    The starting pitching for the Quinnipiac Bobcats has been a bit of a roller coaster this season. Starting off in non-conference action, there was only one starter who went at least five innings in a start over the course of the first 11 games of the season. Nick Balcom, who went five innings against UNC Wilmington on Feb. 14, allowing two earned runs and recording four strikeouts.

    Since the start of MAAC play, the rotation, bulked by freshman Sam Wright and juniors Matt Alduino and Mike Poncini, have given the team more length at the beginning of games. Each have gone at least five innings multiple times, but have yet to find consistency. None of these starters have an earned run average below five.

    The rotation has been defined as Wright being the Friday starter, typically set for the team’s ace, followed by Poncini on Saturday, and Alduino on Sundays to close out the series.

    Wright has been the standout for this team so far in his first year, with his best start coming on March 21st against Marist when he pitched five innings and recorded four strikeouts while only allowing two earned runs. 

    Despite that game, Wright still holds a 5.29 ERA, followed by Alduino at 6.85, and Poncini at 7.88. 

    It’s clear that the offense for this team will just about always produce, the pitching needs to keep up and that begins with the starters. 

    The team currently sits at seventh in the conference in pitching with a 7.24 team ERA and a lot of that has come from the starters. 

    The length that the starters have been able to give since the start of conference play and the emergence of Wright are the only things keeping the starting pitching from a lower grade. 

    – Murdock

    Relief pitching: B-

    The bullpen has been a little more consistent, but definitely has some room for improvement in the back half of the MAAC schedule. In conference play, the Bobcats have four primary relievers with an ERA under 4.50, but also have three primary relievers with ERAs north of 8.00.

    Starting with the good, junior Andrew Rubayo has a team low 3.60 ERA in conference play (not counting infielder Johnny Knox’s scoreless outing). Rubayo allowed just one earned run in his first nine innings in MAAC play, but has struggled a bit in his past two outings giving up five runs in seven innings. Senior Ryan Hutchison had a rough day on March 16 against Rider when he allowed five runs in 1.2 innings, but besides that hasn’t allowed a run in any of his outings all season.

    Balcom has made four of his five MAAC appearances out of the bullpen. He had his best outing of the year on March 14 when he pitched five scoreless innings on the road against Rider. The final reliever with a solid ERA, first year JC Franconere, allowed just two runs in his first nine innings before allowing four in 3.1 in his last inning.

    Then there’s the bad. 

    Graduate student Jack Kabel has been solid overall this season, but has allowed four runs in 4.1 innings to the tune of an 8.31 ERA in league play. First year Griffin Seibel has allowed multiple runs in three of his four outings including five on  March 14 against Rider. Finally, graduate student Ryan O’Connell allowed five runs without recording an out on April 4 against Niagara which ballooned his MAAC ERA to 16.20.

    For the most part, the positives outweigh the negatives in the Quinnipiac bullpen. Most of the pitchers who have struggled in conference play have had one bad outing inflate their stats, while the arms who have been solid have strung together multiple good outings in a row. If you’re Delaney, you’d like to have as many relief pitchers as possible to rely on in big situations, so cleaning some things up in the back end will be crucial for the second half of MAAC play. 

    – Wilson

    Defense: B-

    To consistently win ball games, you need all three facets of the game to be working in tandem. Thankfully for the Bobcats, the defense hasn’t been that big of an issue. But it hasn’t been that great either. 

    Their 18 errors is eighth in the MAAC, not unbearable but not good enough to be an elite defensive team. Quinnipiac has turned 10 double plays, which both indicates that the Bobcat pitchers force grounders and the middle infield pair of Knox and Irizarry can twist it.

    But in the same breath, both Knox and Irizarry have some errors. Knox leads the squad with four and Irizarry is tied for third with two. 

    Behind the plate, Smith and redshirt freshman catcher Cole Constable have been good. They’ve allowed one and two past balls, respectively. In throwing out runners, Smith hasn’t gunned one runner down this year. Constable has caught three runners stealing and a smattering of pitchers have the other four caught stealing attempts. 

    Quinnipiac needs to improve its defense — mainly in limiting errors on ground balls — to continue its MAAC success.

    – Yeargin

  • Women’s lacrosse mid-season check in: How can the team get ‘Back in the mix’?

    Women’s lacrosse mid-season check in: How can the team get ‘Back in the mix’?

    By Zachary Carter and Cameron Levasseur

    After a dominant 18-6 win over conference bottomfeeder Merrimack, the Quinnipiac women’s lacrosse team went about its business. 

    Players walked the field’s perimeter to pick up spare balls. Bench players jogged back and forth between the end line and the restraining line. Trainers dumped ice from coolers and collected spare sticks. Victory house music was already spilling out of the locker room underneath the bleachers. The group stretched and huddled. Head coach Jordan Christopher kept her message brief.

    “Win on Saturday and we’re right back in the mix,” she said. 

    Looking at the Bobcats’ first six games of the season, it is head-scratching to wonder how a team that had so much success in the early going was not already “in the mix,” if not one of the top contenders to win the conference. Quinnipiac began the year 5-1, losing only to the country’s No. 4/5 ranked Yale Bulldogs. All signs pointed to a favorable conference schedule and advantageous seeding in the MAAC tournament. 

    But Quinnipiac went on to lose its next five games — two games on the road to end nonconference play and its first three games of MAAC play to Iona, Sacred Heart and Fairfield. Christopher noticed a pattern starting to form. 

    “We had to execute better when we were in our lull. We were executing almost too well at the beginning that we had to realize that we might have to grit it out a little bit when it’s not going our way,” Christopher said after the win against Merrimack. “We have kind of come out on the other side of it now.”

    During nonconference play, Quinnipiac jumped out early to multi-goal leads in each of its wins, setting a pace it used to control the remainder of the game. 

    But as the wheels fell off in mid-March, those fast starts became unmaintainable for the Bobcats, who blew 7-3 and 6-2 leads to Sacred Heart and Fairfield during their losing stretch. 

    “We start games off really, really strong,” freshman midfielder Emma Miller-Ayala said. “Going toward the middle (of the season) when we went into that losing streak, we’d start to fall off that lead slowly and not climb back out.”

    The team’s identity began to slip and external voices crept inside the players’ heads. 

    “We just had to worry about ourselves. Take care of our own business. We were in a bit of a rut where we were looking too much at other people’s records and (saying), ‘We should beat them,’ or, ‘We shouldn’t beat them,’ or whatever it may be,” Christopher said. “If we just play our brand of lacrosse we’re a really good lacrosse team.”

    Exactly one month after its last win over UMass Lowell on March 5, Quinnipiac righted the ship with a 15-1 trouncing of Manhattan on April 5, earning its first MAAC win just four games before the conference tournament begins. Only eight of the MAAC’s 12 teams will make the postseason. The Manhattan win put the Bobcats back on the bubble. Wednesday’s win against Merrimack bumped them in. 

    “We kind of started our momentum shift with Fairfield,” Miller-Ayala said. “And ever since then we’ve been ‘Go, go, go, go, go.’ We know we need to finish the season strong to get into the playoffs.”

    Manhattan and Merrimack both sit on the outside of the MAAC playoff picture. Two of Quinnipiac’s final three opponents, Canisius and Niagara, are on track for postseason berths. The road will only get more difficult for the Bobcats, but after climbing out of a month-long rut, every win seems that much closer to the summit.  

    “We have to take care of business on the road up at Buffalo. That’s a huge game for us. Niagara is coming off as the reigning MAAC champs, so to go up to their place and take care of business just sets a different tone for our whole team,” Christopher said. “Truthfully, I don’t know that we’ve ever beaten Niagara. I think that’s a big piece for us, too, is to get over that mental hurdle of actually being able to beat them.”

    Christopher’s guess is not far off. Quinnipiac has beaten Niagara. Once, in 12 all-time meetings. And that win? It came in 2002 — since then the Bobcats have lost 11-straight games to the Purple Eagles.

    But the team knows it only has so many more games guaranteed. To be the best means the team has to be beat the best, and Quinnipiac has an opportunity to do that as the season approaches its crescendo. Over 13 games, Christopher has watched her group rise, fall and get right back up again. She feels now the Bobcats are most prepared for what comes next. 

    “Super proud of them to stay bought into our message, to stay bought into who we are as a program and our identity,” Christopher said. “If you don’t have them locked in at this point in the year, you’re in trouble. We have them locked in, so I know we’re going to make a push here.”

  • Quinnipiac and Fairfield on collision course for winner-take-all MAAC tennis regular season finales

    Quinnipiac and Fairfield on collision course for winner-take-all MAAC tennis regular season finales

    By Carlos Calo Rodríguez and Toni Wetmore

    Both MAAC regular season tennis titles could be decided by the season’s final matches. Quinnipiac and Fairfield’s men’s and women’s programs were ranked in the top two in the preseason coaches poll, and an end-of-season date between the in-state rivals could determine who finishes on top this spring.  

    QUSportsPage’s Carlos Calo Rodriguez and Toni Wetmore broke down players to watch and storylines to monitor ahead of the April 17 matchup between the Bobcats and Stags.

    MEN’S 

    Key players

    The Bobcats will rely on the defending MAAC Player of the Year, Czechia native Daniel Velek, who is in his graduate year in Hamden, to keep pushing the team forward. Velek holds the No. 1 spot on both singles and doubles for the Bobcats. After posting a 17-8 record last season, he’s remained a crucial part of the Bobcats’ six-match winning streak, despite dealing with minor injuries this year.

    Velek holds a 7-3 record in MAAC play and has found chemistry in doubles play with first-year James Lorenzetti, with the pair going 4-1 through the first five conference matches. In singles, sophomores Carlos Braun Simo and Finn Burridge each boast a 4-1 singles record so far in conference play.

    Graduate transfer Alex Yang, who came by way of SMU, has been reliable in singles with a 4-1 record. Doubles, however, haven’t met expectations. Yang was anticipated to be a strong doubles partner for Velek, but the pairing didn’t click during the first tournaments of Spring. They went 0-3 in the first three tournaments playing together. Yang has only played one doubles match in MAAC competition and won it 6-3 vs. Siena, pairing with first-year Elias Hoxha

    Head-to-head against the Stags

    Quinnipiac holds an 8-7 edge in the all-time series since the 2008 season.

    Their most recent meeting was in the MAAC Tournament final last April when the Bobcats defeated the Stags 4-2 to clinch their first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance. On April 17, the stakes will once again be high, as both teams are expected to battle for the top seed and the regular season crown in what could be the match of the year. The Bobcats (5-0) are sitting in the No. 1 spot in the MAAC, while Fairfield (2-1) is currently No. 3 after falling to Siena on April 6. 

    What’s next?

    Two matches remain before facing the Stags: Mount St. Mary’s on April 12 and Sacred Heart on April 13. Last season, the Bobcats beat Sacred Heart 4-3 and Mount St. Mary’s 6-1. Their only regular-season loss came against Fairfield, in a match that — like this year — was the final fixture of the regular season for Quinnipiac. 

    “Fairfield has the talent, and they have become our rival,” Quinnipiac men’s coach Bryan Adinolfi told the Quinnipiac Chronicle in early March. “Siena, Marist, and Niagara all have good teams as well. In my opinion, everyone is good, and no match will be easy, and everyone will have to fight for those six spots in the conference tournament to win the whole thing. In a sense that makes it really exciting, because our work ethic and team chemistry and all those things actually matter.”

    With both teams unbeaten in conference play, the April 17 showdown will likely determine the MAAC regular-season champion and the No. 1 seed for the conference championships at Mercer County Tennis Park in West Windsor, New Jersey.

    WOMEN’S

    Key players

    First-year Bobcat Willow Renton won MAAC Player of the Week twice this season. The first came after her performance on the road at Niagara on Feb. 28, earning the No. 1 spot for singles and doubles. Renton and Caitlin Flower were paired for the doubles match and won 6-2.

    Renton then went 4-0 in her doubles and singles matches against Merrimack and Rider on March 29 and 30, respectively, all at the No. 1 spot. Her dominance is helping to propel the Bobcats toward an undefeated conference season.

    While Renton lost her singles match against Siena this past weekend, her and Flower stayed in the win column in the doubles match with a 6-1 victory. Renton will look to regain her momentum as the Fairfield match gets closer and closer.

    Flower won her singles match against Siena’s Andrea Vargas 6-3 and 6-4, making up for Renton’s loss. The team will need these two to continue to dominate together and individually to stay in the win column.

    Head-to-head against the Stags

    Same as the men’s team, the last time these two teams met was in the 2024 MAAC Championship, which Fairfield won 4-3. 

    Flower feels the team is more prepared to face Fairfield this time around.

    “We have been really successful in the past against Fairfield, and I think we kinda underestimated them a little bit,” Flower told The Quinnipiac Chronicle in early March. “When we lost, it was a little bit of a surprise. This year, we’re focusing on taking it really seriously and putting in the work that needs to be put in to have a successful season and hopefully get the win at the end.”

    What’s next?

    The Bobcats will look to extend their win streak to six on Saturday for the last home match of the season. Quinnipiac will face Mount St. Mary’s, which currently sits in eighth in the MAAC with one conference win.

    Then it’s a matchup at Sacred Heart, which is seventh in the MAAC at 2-3.

    The Bobcats wrap up their regular season against undefeated No. 2 Fairfield. While Quinnipiac is 5-0 in MAAC play, Fairfield has only played two conference matches. 

    This April 17 matchup could be a preview of a fourth-consecutive MAAC title matchup for these two Connecticut powerhouses.

  • Previewing Quinnipiac men’s hockey’s roster in 2025-26

    Previewing Quinnipiac men’s hockey’s roster in 2025-26

    By: Brandon Murdock and Tyler Platz

    Following an underwhelming season, the young Bobcats failed to reach the regional finals of the NCAA Tournament for the first time since the 2020-21 season. QU Sports Page’s Brandon Murdock and Tyler Platz took a look at who the team will bring back and where it can improve for next season.

    Key Returners

    Forwards

    Jeremy Wilmer, Sr.

    15 goals – 25 assists – 40 points 

    Wilmer led the team and came second in the ECAC in points in his first season in Hamden after transferring over from Boston University. He continued his success in the postseason with a pair of goals in four games. He will be someone the Bobcats lean on to lead the scoring next season.

    Mason Marcellus, Jr.

    10 goals – 28 assists – 38 points 

    Marcellus has been a prominent force on offense for the Bobcats since arriving on the scene last season, leading the team in total points since his collegiate debut. While struggling in the goal scoring department this season, Marcellus remains an elite playmaker racking up 28 assists.

    Andon Cerbone, Jr.

    15 goals – 20 assists – 35 points 

    Cerbone finished top five in the ECAC in points with 35 this season and will look to improve on that total heading into next season. As one of the veteran forwards coming back, he will look to lead a young group to help revamp the team’s offense for next season.

    Defensemen:

    Charlie Leddy, Sr.

    1 goal – 10 assists – 11 points

    Prior to the Gilson transfer news, Leddy was penciled in to be the oldest  upperclassmen on the blue line heading into next season. He made plenty of plays a year ago, racking up 11 assists on the season and will look to be an anchor in the defensive zone come October.

    Elliott Groenewold, So.

    4 goals – 8 assists – 12 points 

    The fourth round pick of the Boston Bruins had an impressive first season in Hamden playing alongside graduate defensemen Aaron Bohlinger. Groenewold led the returning d-core in points last season and will look to build on that offense and step up as a leader heading into next season.

    Drew Hockley, So.

    1 goal – 3 assists – 4 points 

    Hockley came to the team in January and didn’t miss a beat, playing in 23 games for the Bobcats. Head coach Rand Pecknold showed a lot of confidence in Hockley as he split time with defenseman Davis Pennington quarterbacking one of the top power plays in the country. 

    Goalies:

    Matej Marinov, Jr.

    12-3-0 1.75 GAA

    Marinov played in 17 games this season and dominated in his time. It seemed like he took control of the net as heading into the NCAA tournament game against UConn, playing in all the postseason games, but Pecknold made the switch to Dylan Silverstein for the biggest game.

    Dylan Silverstein, So

    12-9-2 2.25 GAA

    Silverstein played in the majority of the games this season and seemed like a clear No. 1 choice for the Bobcats this season. That was until the playoffs came and Marinov took over. While the numbers impressed, there were moments that Silverstein looked over his head in the bigger games.

    The Bobcats will bring back 11 forwards, including three of their top-four point scorers. They will also be bringing back four of their defensemen from a year ago on top of both of their goalies.

    Despite the early postseason exit, the team still see’s the season as a success.

    “A great year for us,” Pecknold said following the UConn loss. “I thought this would be a rebuild or a reload year, but we were better.” 

    Despite the optimism, there is still work to be done for next season.

    Where they need help

    From the forward group, the Bobcats will lose their third highest point getter in Travis Treloar (36), as well as their top goal scorer in Jack Ricketts (20). Either through the transfer portal or the incoming freshman class, the team, which was sixth in the nation this past season in goals per game with 3.55, will need to replace a combined 36 goals and 63 points of offense between the two graduating forwards. For that, they will also look to lean on other returning players such as rising sophomores Chris Pelosi, Tyler Borgula and Aaron Schwartz.

    For defense, the team will lose a lot of experience in the form of Aaron Bohlinger, Davis Pennington and Cooper Moore moving on, either to graduation or the pros. They have already started making moves in that area with the addition of former RPI junior defenseman Will Gilson out of the transfer portal. Don’t be surprised when Pecknold dips back in to add another experienced blue liner to his young position group. 

    In two games for RPI against the Bobcats this season, a 6-2 and 3-1 pair of Bobcats wins, Gilson was a bright spot, racking two blocked shots and three shots on goal. 

    In net, the team may need to find a new netminder to compete. It would not come as a surprise to see one of the two current goalies enter the portal at some point, given the irregularity of playing time throughout the season.For now, while both are on the roster, it is important to make a firm decision on who is No. 1. This would allow for them to know their particular role as either the starter or the back up and for whomever is picked to build confidence heading into the season.

    New leadership core

    Quinnipiac’s leadership will also have a different look next season with all four captains leaving. The next group of Bobcats needs to step up and set the tone for what will be a new team in 2025-26.

    Expect Marcellus to be named team captain, with senior forwards Wilmer and Victor Czerneckianair likely wearing the ‘A’ as alternate captains up front. To round out the group, Leddy on defense could also serve as an alternate captain.

    Marcellus finished second on the team in scoring with 38 points. Already leading on the scoresheet, his voice carries weight. Part of the Bobcats’ identity next season could come down to what he’s learned from the now-departed upperclassmen.

    “I’ve learned kind of something different from every single one of them,” Marcellus said after Quinnipiac’s NCAA Tournament loss. “They all kind of have their different ways of leading, whether they had a letter or not.”

    Marcellus’ role on this team has the potential to extend beyond putting points on the board, as he could be heading into his biggest season yet.

    With plenty of losses on the back end, the Bobcats will need leadership in that area. On defense, Leddy will be one of the only remaining seniors on defense who is an in-house name. With experience playing both at Boston College and Quinnipiac, Leddy has a leadership position carved out for him. 

    He’ll be tasked with leading younger defensemen such as sophomores Groenewold and Hockley in the upcoming season. Leddy’s steady presence could help keep this team’s defensive core in the long run, even after he’s graduated.

    Common themes of struggle

    In 2024-25, the Bobcats dropped six of their first nine games to open the season. However, they managed to dig out of that hole, eventually reaching the ECAC semifinals and the first round of the NCAA tournament, thanks to an at-large bid.

    It was promising to see Quinnipiac recover over the course of the season, but improving its start in the early months of the season will be critical for a return to the playoffs in 2025-26. No team avoids roster turnover, and having a slow start with a new team could be detrimental to the Bobcats’ season and derail them from finding a groove as the season moves along.

    A strong start for a team that will have several new faces could be pivotal in building chemistry.

    Situational hockey, particularly in the waning moments of a game, carries the utmost importance. Yet for the Bobcats, managing these instances was a sporadic challenge recurring over the course of this past season. 

    In an Oct. 19 game against Maine, Quinnipiac led 5-4 in the third period. With just under 30 seconds left in the game, the Bobcats allowed the Black Bears’ junior defenseman Brandon Holt to score, tying the game at five and sending the game into overtime. The collapse was complete just four minutes into the extra period, with senior defenseman David Breazeale netting the game-winner.

    Chalk this letdown up to early season struggles, but Quinnipiac experienced a similar letdown in the postseason. In the ECAC playoff semifinals against Cornell, the Bobcats positioned themselves to advance, holding a 2-1 lead in the third period after a goal from freshman forward Chris Pelosi with five minutes remaining.

    In the final two minutes of regulation, senior forward Kyler Kovich buried a shorthanded goal, knotting the game at 2-2. Quinnipiac once again squandered its third-period lead when senior defenseman Tim Rego sealed the game 3-2.

    Breakdowns like these, five months apart nonetheless, were troubling for Quinnipiac. The new roster next season needs to focus on improving late-game performances or, at the very least, learn from these past struggles early in the season.

    The Bobcats have their work cut out for them based on their confirmed non-conference opponents in 2025-26. They’ll open the season in October at the Ice Breaker tournament, hosted by Arizona State, where they’ll face a competitive bracket that includes ASU, Alaska and Notre Dame.

    In January, Quinnipiac will look to avenge this season’s loss in the CT Ice tournament. The Bobcats will once again be joined by Sacred Heart, Yale and UConn — the same UConn team that ended Quinnipiac’s NCAA tournament run in the first round. 

    Their non-conference schedule isn’t getting any easier, so how well Quinnipiac can adjust during this off-season could make or break the season ahead.

  • Pecknold explains goaltending decision in Quinnipiac’s NCAA Tournament loss

    Pecknold explains goaltending decision in Quinnipiac’s NCAA Tournament loss

    By Ethan Hurwitz and Mike King

    Down the home stretch of the regular season, the Quinnipiac men’s hockey team leaned on sophomore Matej Marinov in net. Both his 1.75 goals against average and .928 save percentage led ECAC Hockey. The Slovakia native was also between the pipes for seven of the Bobcats’ last 12 games, including four in a row.

    So why did head coach Rand Pecknold turn to freshman Dylan Silverstein for last Friday’s NCAA Tournament Regional Semifinal against UConn?

    “(I) just feel like we’ve got two guys, I made a decision,” Pecknold said following the Bobcats’ 4-1 loss to the Huskies. “He played awesome the last time we played UConn, played great. … Either one could have gone today.”

    In his NCAA postseason debut, Silverstein held his own for most of the night. Though not suiting up in a month, the freshman gave a respectable performance, making 18 saves on 21 opportunities.

    The Bobcats struggled to put together a string of chances, and despite standing tall for most of the night, the freshman goaltender was forced to fend for himself.

    “They were just all over us,” Pecknold said. “We just didn’t have enough there. I wanted to get us going, so that’s disappointing.”

    Pecknold’s decision to start Silverstein was influenced by the goaltender’s last outing against the Huskies. In the Connecticut Ice semifinal on Jan. 24, Quinnipiac fell 2-1 after surrendering a game-winning goal with half a second remaining. Despite the soul-snatching loss, Silverstein did his part exceptionally well, stopping 22 of 24 shots.

    “We made a mistake on the (penalty kill) late in the game and hung him out to dry,” Pecknold said.

    Throughout his first season of college hockey, Silverstein was a solid addition to the Bobcats’ goaltending rotation. The California native went 12-9-2 between the pipes and was fifth in the conference in goals against average (2.25). It was a strong enough season for Pecknold to roll the dice and start him in a do-or-die postseason atmosphere.

    Left on the bench was Marinov, who had been playing his way into earning the starting nod in the NCAA Tournament. A day before puck drop, Pecknold left the door open for either goalie to start.

    “Yeah, they’ve both been great,” Pecknold said during his media availability the day before. “So we feel comfortable playing either one of them. We feel that either one of them can win us a game.”

    Less than 24 hours later, Silverstein was the first Bobcat to take the ice. Marinov was the last.

    The Huskies — who were playing in their first-ever NCAA Tournament game — came out firing. They got goals from Hugh Larkin, Ethan Gardula and Tristan Fraser before an empty net goal slammed the door shut.

    “I told the team before the game, in order to be successful in this tournament, you can’t rely on luck,” UConn head coach Mike Cavanaugh said. “You have to bring your all.”

    UConn brought its all and then some, and Quinnipiac failed to advance past the tournament’s first round for the first time in four years. 

    “I never used the term rebuild, but a reload year,” Pecknold said. “We’ll be better next season. We will take a jump. … This was a reload year and (we) had a lot of success.”

    With both Silverstein and Marinov slated to return next season (barring an entry into the transfer portal), how this year ended will likely be a major discussion point in next season’s goaltending conversations.

  • Notes & Quotes: UConn freezes Quinnipiac’s championship hopes with statement win

    Notes & Quotes: UConn freezes Quinnipiac’s championship hopes with statement win

    By Connor Coar and Zachary Carter

    Quinnipiac’s net remained empty. The faceoff was set to be taken in UConn’s defensive end with just over two minutes to play in the third period. Off the draw, skipping up the boards and bouncing off the shoulder of Quinnipiac forward Mason Marcellus, the puck landed on the stick of UConn’s Joey Muldowney. The sophomore flung the puck the length of the ice, watching as it started left, popped up on its side before finally veering right and into the back of Quinnipiac’s unmanned net. 

    Ballgame. 

    The goal – UConn’s fourth of the game – cemented the Huskies’ win in the Allentown regional opening round, sending Quinnipiac home in unceremonious fashion. UConn dominated all game, unlike their previous matchup with Quinnipiac in the Connecticut Ice semifinal round, which was decided with less than a second to play in regulation. 

    UConn scored two early goals and took the match 4-1, never giving Quinnipiac a chance to climb back in. The Huskies will move on to the regional final against Penn State on Sunday, while the Bobcats will pack their bags and load the bus due northeast for Hamden, where Quinnipiac will regroup and plan for next year. Let’s open the notebook and see where Quinnipiac went wrong in contrast to what went right for UConn. 

    What went wrong: Quinnipiac

    Effort. It’s cliche, but Quinnipiac did not play a full 60 minutes. Head coach Rand Pecknold admitted his team was flat early, but fought to the end in an attempt to overcome a sluggish start. The Bobcats have advanced to the regional final every year since 2021 and were determined to do so again. UConn’s relentlessness got in the way of that streak. 

    Pecknold: “We just didn’t have enough. It took us too long to get us going. So that’s disappointing.”

    Luck. Quinnipiac never led throughout the course of the game, but it occasionally threatened a comeback — one that ultimately failed to arrive. The Bobcats’ best chance came in the third period. Though they trailed by two, the offense had started to click, as 11 of Quinnipiac’s 22 total shots came in the final frame. With the puck on the blue line, defenseman Elliot Groenewold fired a shot that beat UConn goaltender Callum Tung but rang the crossbar, deflecting downward and nearly crossing the goal line. UConn’s Viking Gustafsson Nyberg raced in to clear just in time, and Quinnipiac’s short-lived hope dried up. 

    Cavanaugh: “I told the team before the game, ‘In order to be successful in this tournament, you can’t rely on luck. You have to bring your A game.’ That being said, I’ve coached some real good teams in this tournament. And you need some luck sometimes, and that one hit the crossbar on it, you know, if it’s one inch lower it’s in. But it wasn’t. So I think we reset pretty quickly after that and played pretty well.” 

    Pecknold: “Tung made some big saves in the third when we were trying to make a push.

    Redemption. Freshman goaltender Dylan Silverstein had played in the CT Ice semifinal game against the Huskies in late January and played well for 59:59.5, but bit just a little too hard on a Ryan Tattle move that would eventually send the Huskies to the championship game. In the regional final Friday, Silverstein kept them in the game, but did not look as confident as he did two months earlier.

    Throughout the game, Silverstein was shaky in spots. Silverstein would save UConn’s initial shot, but many times the shot would deflect back in front of him, causing chaos in front of the crease. Other times, he wouldn’t see the puck at all and wait for a reaction from the crowd or skaters on the ice for play to continue. Despite that, Silverstein also stepped up in plenty of moments to deserve the starting nod to keep the Bobcats in the game. 

    Pecknold: “He played great the last time that we played UConn. We should have won. We out-chanced them heavily. We made a mistake on the PK late and hung him out to dry. That was part of it. Either one could have gone tonight.”

    What went right: UConn

    Defense. Quinnipiac’s offense was no pushover. The Bobcats led the ECAC in total goals scored (135) and shots on goal (1,118) through 38 games. Head coach Mike Cavanaugh made it a top priority for his group to possess the puck and force Quinnipiac to skate into unproductive shifts. 

    Cavanaugh: “Something that we take a lot of pride in is defending in our own zone. What allowed us to play so well was we were playing in their zone for the majority of the shift. If it’s a 40-second shift and we’re in their zone for 20-25 seconds, it’s a lot harder for them to play offense. Our defense is a byproduct of how we were controlling the game offensively in their zone.” 

    Energy. UConn’s trek through the Hockey East tournament revealed that a fast start usually correlates to wins. The team’s semifinal win over Boston University was propelled by a fast start and high energy, though it trailed early. In its next game, Cavanaugh thought his team took too long to wake up, and the Huskies had no answers in the loss to Maine. 

    To give an idea of how each team started the game Friday night, Quinnipiac needed over eight minutes to register its first shot on goal. In that time, UConn put eight shots on  Silverstein and even got one past him to open the scoring. 

    Cavanaugh: “We got out to a good start, and I think that helped and we had a lot of energy and as (Hudson Schandor) said that the shift that we scored on, I think there was three or four finished checks, and we finally got a turnover and then (Hugh Larkin) made a nice shot. So yeah, every game we play, we want to get off to a good start. I thought we started well against BU, and we were down 1-0. So, sometimes the score isn’t indicative of the start.”

    Penalty Kill. The Huskies took three penalties in the game and gave Quinnipiac — the nation’s highest converters on the power play — too many opportunities to climb back into the game. The penalty kill staved off any threats from Quinnipiac’s man-advantage units, but sloppy play could have easily cost the Huskies if the Bobcats started to click. The highlight here is again UConn’s defense. Cavanaugh had high praise for his group’s ability to limit second-chance opportunities. 

    Cavanaugh: “We really didn’t give up a lot of second-chance opportunities. That’s always a focal point when we’re playing, that we don’t want to give up second and third chance opportunities… We’re playing great teams. They’re going to get chances. That’s why you have a goaltender, and what we don’t want to do is hang them out to dry on second and third opportunities.”

    Depth. Schandor ranks third on UConn in total points (40) and leads the team in assists (30). His involvement in the offense has been crucial to the team’s success all season long. Naturally, when he suffered a lower body injury on March 14, he was missed throughout the team’s run through the Hockey East tournament. He returned against Quinnipiac, and his mere presence on the ice was a tally in the Husky win column.

    Cavanaugh: It certainly makes us deeper. Hudson has 40 points, he plays 20 minutes a night. We’re a better team with Hudson in the lineup… We pretty much rolled four lines tonight.

  • NCAA Tournament tiers: Where does Quinnipiac men’s hockey stand as field of 16 narrows?

    NCAA Tournament tiers: Where does Quinnipiac men’s hockey stand as field of 16 narrows?


    By: Cameron Levasseur and Ethan Hurwitz

    The NCAA Men’s Hockey Tournament kicked off Thursday with regional semifinal games in Toledo, Ohio, and Fargo, North Dakota. As the field of 16 narrows, QUSportsPage’s Cameron Levasseur and Ethan Hurwitz break down which teams have a realistic shot at hoisting a national championship trophy, which ones are facing an uphill battle and everyone else in between.

    TITLE FAVORITES:

    No. 1 Boston College Eagles | 26-7-2 | At-Large Bid (Hockey East)

    The country’s top team for most of the season, Boston College enters this tournament the overwhelming favorites, but there are a few question marks. Struggles on the power play plagued BC all year and an upset loss to Northeastern in the Hockey East quarterfinals sent the Eagles to Manchester on a losing streak.

    And yet, sophomore, all-conference trio of goaltender Jacob Fowler, forward Ryan Leonard (the nation’s leader with 29 goals) and forward Gabe Perreault should lead the Eagles to their 27th Frozen Four in program history with ease.

    No. 4 Western Michigan Broncos | 30-7-1 | Automatic Qualifier (NCHC Champions)

    Western Michigan has been the country’s winningest team all season. Its 31 wins tops any other program in this tournament, and it became just the second team in NCHC history to win the regular season and postseason titles in the same season. Now, a bigger trophy awaits, one that the Broncos (1-9-0 all time in NCAA Tournaments) have never hoisted

    After a double overtime win over Minnesota State on Thursday, the Broncos are one step closer to that goal, set to face UMass in the Fargo Regional Final on Saturday. 

    No. 3 Maine Black Bears | 24-7-6 | Automatic Qualifier (Hockey East Champions)

    What a season for Maine. After claiming their first Hockey East title since 2004, the Black Bears clawed their way to the third-overall seed in this tournament and a date with Penn State in the Allentown Regional. The favorites to advance to the Frozen Four, this is a dynamic unit that features eight 20-point scorers and a sophomore goaltender in Albin Boija that boasts a 1.76 GAA and the Hockey East Tournament’s MVP honor to boot.

    FROZEN FOUR CONTENDERS:

    Denver Pioneers | 29-11-1 | At-Large Bid (NCHC)

    Stop us if you’ve heard this before: The Pioneers are back in the NCAA Tournament for the fourth-straight season, and 34th time in program history. Winners of two of the last three national titles, head coach David Carle’s group entered the 2025 edition as an underdog to Providence, a team not unfamiliar with this bracket.

    Denver didn’t clinch the NCHC crown, falling to Western Michigan in a double-overtime thriller last Saturday. Instead, as one of the 10 at-large teams, it will be steered by forwards Jack Devine (56) and Aidan Thompson (51), two of the seven players across Division I to eclipse the 50-point mark.

    Providence Friars | 21-10-5 | At-Large Bid (Hockey East)

    The Friars — who are undefeated on neutral ice this season — will have over two weeks of rest after faltering to UConn in the Hockey East quarterfinals. They’ve also been resting from a tournament berth for over half a decade (2019).

    In the Manchester Regional, the defending national champion Denver Pioneers are up next on the docket, just the 25th time these programs have ever matched up, and second in an NCAA Tournament. It sure helps that theFriars’ two hour drive to SNHU Arena is nothing compared to Denver’s near-cross country flight.

    COULD MAKE SOME NOISE

    Quinnipiac Bobcats | 24-11-2 | At-Large Bid (ECAC Hockey)

    Just two years removed from a national title, Quinnipiac grabbed an at-large bid after leaving another conference tournament empty handed. In their way is fellow Nutmeg State program UConn, the same Huskies squad that knocked off these Bobcats in January. 

    Sophomore Matej Marinov (12-3, 1.75 GAA) has been one of the ECAC’s top goaltenders, while senior forward Jack Ricketts (team-high 20 goals) and junior forward Jeremy Wilmer (team-high 39 points) lead the offensive attack. A lucky draw to the Allentown Regional plays into the Bobcats’ hands, but losses in regional finals have plagued head coach Rand Pecknold’s team from adding to the trophy case in years past.

    UConn Huskies | 22-11-4 | At-Large Bid (Hockey East)

    This is the season UConn has been waiting for since it joined Hockey East in 2014. A program-record 22 wins, 12 wins in conference, a trip to the NCAA Tournament and the chance to grow the school’s pedestal of dominance beyond basketball. 

    The Huskies didn’t just make their first tournament, they asserted their ability to compete. They’re the No. 6 overall seed, set to face in-state rival Quinnipiac — which they beat en route to a Connecticut Ice Championship — in Allentown on Friday. 

    Penn State Nittany Lions | 20-13-4 | At-Large Bid (Big Ten)

    Two years ago, Penn State came up one goal short of its first Frozen Four appearance in an overtime loss to Michigan in the Allentown Regional Final, a regional it hosted. This year, the Nittany Lions are back in Allentown, again the hosts, and perhaps a better team than they were in 2023. 

    After a slow start to the season, Penn State is 13-4-4 since the start of the new year, led by Hobey Baker finalist Aiden Fink’s 52 points. The Nittany Lions face No. 3 Maine Friday night. 

    Boston University Terriers | 21-13-2 | At-Large Bid (Hockey East)

    BU won the Beanpot in Boston’s TD Garden in February, but couldn’t replicate that success on the same ice in the Hockey East Tournament in March, exiting with a three-goal loss to eventual runner-up UConn. So an at-large bid to the big dance for a second-straight year, the Terriers are looking to overcome their defensive shortcomings with an electric offense and power their way to a third-consecutive Frozen Four. They did so Thursday, powering past Ohio State with a five-goal third period to set up a date with Cornell in the Toledo Regional Final. 

    The team is led by Quinn and Cole Hutson (47 and 41 points, respectively). The latter Hutson, a freshman defenseman, has taken up the mantle left by his brother Lane, now with the NHL’s Montreal Canadians. 

    Cornell Big Red | 18-10-6 | Automatic Qualifier (ECAC Hockey Champions)

    Few teams in the tournament are as hot as Cornell, which came back to reality in the ECAC Tournament after a disappointing regular season hampered by injuries that left it as the conference’s No. 6 seed. The Big Red knocked off No. 3 Colgate, No. 1 Quinnipiac and No. 2 Clarkson en route to a second-consecutive Whitelaw Cup and an automatic berth. 

    Cornell head coach Mike Schafer will retire at the end of this season. He has made just one Frozen Four (2003) in his 30-year career. The Big Red took a step closer to making his second on Thursday, knocking off No. 2-overall seed Michigan State with a goal in the final ten seconds of regulation. 

    UMass Minutemen | 20-13-5 | At-Large Bid (Hockey East)

    The final of six at-large bids out of the Hockey East, UMass enters its sixth NCAA Tournament as an underdog. The Minutemen are 1,500 miles from home in Fargo, North Dakota, and faced a heavy crowd disadvantage against Minnesota Thursday. 

    Regardless, UMass battled the Gophers to overtime, an Aydar Suniev winner powering the Minutemen into the regional final for the first time since 2021, when they won  the national championship. They’ll face the indomitable No. 4 Western Michigan on Saturday with a trip to the Frozen Four on the line. 

    NEEDS A MIRACLE

    Bentley Falcons | 23-14-2 | Automatic Qualifier (Atlantic Hockey America Champions)

    Bentley won a program-record 23 games this season en route to an Atlantic Hockey Championship and its first NCAA Tournament Appearance. The Falcons, led by former Quinnipiac forwards Ethan Leyh (41 points) and Nick Bochen (29 points), stormed their way through the AHA Tournament as the No. 3 seed. They swept No. 2 Sacred Heart on its home ice in the semifinals and erased a two-goal deficit to top Holy Cross in the championship game. 

    The odds are stacked against Bentley, the No. 16 seed who will face overall No. 1 seed Boston College Friday, but such an upset is not out of the realm of possibility. Three Atlantic Hockey teams (RIT in 2015, Air Force in 2018 and American International in 2019) knocked off the tournament’s top seed as its lowest-ranked entrant. 

  • Quinnipiac and the quest for the Frozen Four: Who will rise in the 2025 NCAA Tournament?

    Quinnipiac and the quest for the Frozen Four: Who will rise in the 2025 NCAA Tournament?

    By Tyler Platz and Mike King

    Quinnipiac’s journey to the Frozen Four in St. Louis begins today as regional play in Allentown kicks off the 2025 installment of the NCAA men’s ice hockey tournament. The 16-team bracket includes six conference tournament champions who earned automatic bids, while the remaining 10 teams received at-large selections.

    Despite falling in the conference semifinals to the eventual ECAC champion Cornell, Quinnipiac once again makes its way into the tournament as an at-large team, thanks to the PairWise rankings. Hours out from puck drop, everything is set: Which teams are poised to make a run? Which players can change the game with the puck on their stick? And what needs to happen for Quinnipiac to advance to the Frozen Four?

    Puck drop is set for 5 p.m. as Quinnipiac looks to make another NCAA run while UConn makes its tournament debut.

    Who’s got a shot?

    No. 1 Boston College: 26-7-2 (18-4-2)

    There are many worthy contenders for this year’s chance at winning it all. Receiving the No. 1 rank in the USA Today poll as well as the top seed in regional play, Boston College looks like the team to beat in this tournament. 

    The Eagles boast two of the top point scorers in the country, with sophomore forward Ryan Leonard notching 29 goals and 18 assists alongside sophomore forward Gabe Perreault, who put up 15 goals and 32 helpers. With a high pace of play and multiple NHL draft picks on the roster, expect ferocity out of the boys from Chestnut Hill as they look to capture their first national championship since 2012.

    No. 3 University of Maine: 24-7-6 (13-5-6)

    Another team with the makings to win it all in 2025 is UMaine. The Black Bears are riding some serious momentum coming into regional play after receiving an automatic bid due to their recent Hockey East conference championship win over UConn.

    Maine is led by senior forward and team leading point-getter Harrison Scott. The team will face off against Penn State for the first time in program history, looking to make a splash in the early stages of the Allentown regionals. With 10 wins over ranked teams this season, watch for the Black Bears to do damage early and often, as they’ve scored a whopping 16 goals in their last three games.

    No. 4 Western Michigan: 30-7-1 (19-4-1)

    To round out the podium of potential winners, the NCHC (National Collegiate Hockey Conference) presents its conference champion, Western Michigan. This season, the Broncos became the second team in conference history to win the regular season title as well as the NCHC Frozen Faceoff, marking a historic run for the program. On top of this, they led the NCAA in wins this year with 30 and tied the record of 19 victories against in-conference foes.

    The Broncos provide a scary, top-tier offense in this tournament, with sophomore forwards Alex Bump, Owen Michaels, and senior forward Matteo Constantini combining for 98 points on the team’s top forward trio. Keep an especially close eye on Bump in this tournament, as he’s recorded a point in 20 of his last 22 games and was named the NCHC Forward of the Year this past regular season. 

    Mike King

    Key players to watch for

    Jacob Fowler | So. | G | Boston College

    The Eagles have the market cornered. Not only are they a threat to put up points – led by Walter Brown Award recipient Ryan Leonard – but they also have arguably the top netminder in the country holding down the back end in Jacob Fowler. 

    The 6-foot-2-inch goaltender has a 1.63 goals-against-average and seven shutouts heading into the tournament, both good enough for second in the nation. Not allowing goals will be huge for this Eagles team, which can lean on Fowler in close-scoring games. It’s difficult to beat a team that’s capable of outscoring you, it’s nearly impossible to beat a team that’s capable of both outscoring and shutting you out.

    Aiden Fink | So. | F | Penn State

    Penn State has been one of the more consistent teams over the past two months, sporting a 10-3-2 record in its last 15 games. Just as consistent has been Aiden Fink; he’s the classic chess piece— the perfect fit.

    He finished second in the country in points per game at 1.41, amassing 52 points in 37 games played. If the Nittany Lions want to advance into the later rounds, they’ll need that consistency from Fink to carry over from the regular season and conference playoffs into the NCAA tournament.

    Zeev Buium | So. | D | Denver

    Most of the chatter around the defending champion Pioneers is about senior forward Jack Devine, who led the country in assists. However, Denver’s key player might be Zeev Buium, a two-way defenseman who can make an impact on the goal line and the blue line. The 12th overall pick from the 2024 NHL draft finished second in points among all defensemen with 43, making him a constant threat in transition.

    The winner of the tournament will be decided by which team can produce the most when it matters. Buium’s 200-foot game forces opponents to account for him at all times and could be integral to Denver hoisting its third trophy in the last four years.

    – Tyler Platz

    How did Quinnipiac get here?

    The Bobcats have come a long way since the start of the season. In its first nine games of the winter, Quinnipiac suffered through a 3-6 stretch that left fans and other programs wondering what was going wrong for the 2023 national title holders. 

    Since that stretch, the team found its groove and went on to finish the season on a scorching hot run, going 21-5-2 in that span.

    However, Quinnipiac didn’t just rely on scoring goals and dishing sweet assists to make it to this point. Its goalie tandem of sophomore goalkeepers Dylan Silverstein and Matej Marinov has played a crucial role in getting the Bobcats back to national championship contention.

    “Both are extremely talented with great work ethic,” head coach Rand Pecknold said. “We feel that either one of them can win us a game.”

    The duo ranked among the top five in the ECAC in individual goals against average, with Silverstein ranking fifth (2.22) while Marinov led the conference with 1.75. Marinov also led the conference in save percentage, finishing at a .928 rate.

    – Mike King

    How Quinnipiac can avoid another early exit

    The Bobcats’ path to the Frozen Four begins with a rematch against UConn, the team that beat them 2-1 in a close CT Ice semifinals meeting in January. If Quinnipiac wants a different result, it needs to prevent UConn from keeping the game close. The Bobcats need to capitalize on any offensive opportunities to put points on the board, something they couldn’t seem to do in their last matchup with UConn.

    “We did play in chaos,” Pecknold said. “We had chances. Our offense were, phenomenal. We just didn’t score.”

    UConn kept the game tight thanks to its physical style of play, a style the Bobcats showed they could match. The Huskies stayed within reach until the final second when junior forward Ryan Tattle scored the game-winning goal. To advance, Quinnipiac will need to learn from its previous mistakes and, more importantly, execute when it counts.

    – Tyler Platz

  • Quinnipiac Softball: A Midseason Breakdown of the Good, Bad and Ugly

    Quinnipiac Softball: A Midseason Breakdown of the Good, Bad and Ugly

    By: School of Communications

    The Quinnipiac softball team opened up MAAC play last weekend against Iona after a lengthy 17-game road stretch that took them through Tennessee, Florida, Delaware and Missouri.

    The Bobcats went 5-12 during that stretch. Junior Sofia Vega was standout, recording 12 hits and 14 runs, with 10 of her hits coming in the last 17 games. Mary Fogg also impressed, tallying seven hits and 19 runs. She recorded at least one hit in 13 games and had an eight-game hitting streak during the road trip.

    Now, QU Sports Page’s Jake Baskin, Kaitlyn Grady and Khalise Harris break down the good, the bad and the ugly from the first half of the Bobcats’ 2025 season.

    The Good

    The Bobcats faced powerhouse programs like Illinois, Columbia, UCF and Syracuse — teams many mid-major programs shy away from. But instead of backing down, Quinnipiac embraced the challenge, proving it could hold its own against top-tier competition.

    Columbia entered the season ranked 5th in the ivy league preseason poll, while Princeton was naked 1st in the game poll as they are now 124th nationally with an 8-12 record. Missouri, sitting at 18-15, has defeated teams like Duke and Clemson and is ranked 29th. Meanwhile, Syracuse is ranked 82nd.

    While many MAAC teams haven’t faced the same level of non-conference competition, Quinnipiac has been tested early against several high-caliber programs. That experience could prove valuable as they enter conference play. The team has shown flashes of resilience, keeping games competitive against strong opponents.

    Offensively, Quinnipiac has recorded 42 RBIs during the stretch, with a season-high 14 against Columbia, eight against Morgan State, and six against Kansas City. Against Missouri, the Bobcats struck out 11 batters. If Quinnipiac can continue building on it’s offensive production, the team could be in a strong position heading into conference play.

    “Now we can compete with anybody,” head coach Hillary Smith said, highlighting a key positive from the team’s challenging early schedule. “We could play with the big dogs, we can hit some of the best pitchers in the country-we know that.” 

    – Harris

    The Bad

    The Bobcats have struggled at the plate early  this season. Through 20 games, they have hit .200 or fewer in 10 of those games, all of which resulted in a Quinnipiac loss. The Bobcats’ team batting average sits at .224, which ranks 283rd out of 300 in the NCAA.

    Quinnipiac has not been getting enough runs across the plate to win. In 15 out of their 20 games the Bobcats failed to score more than three runs, giving their pitching staff very little room for error. 

    There have been eight  games where Quinnipiac has held its opponents to three  or fewer runs. However, it ended up losing half of those games. The Bobcats are not capitalizing when they are getting good pitching because they are not scoring enough runs to win those games. Why? They lack power. The Bobcats have only hit two home runs this season. They also are struggling to get on base consistently, there have been 12 games where they have drawn only 2 or fewer walks in the game. 

    There is a way that Quinnipiac can use its offense to help get more wins in conference play.  The Bobcats need to elevate their offense a little more so that their advantage so that good starting pitching is not negated by lack of runs scored.They can do this by getting on base more consistently, getting ahead in counts and drawing more walks so they have more opportunities for RBI’s and having runners in scoring position. There were three games this season where the Bobcats accounted for a combined 28 RBI’s, however in their other 17 they only had a combined 21 RBI’s. Getting runners in scoring position and bringing them home consistently is a huge point of emphasis. They can accomplish this by playing small ball with singles and bunting and moving runners over because they lack the home run power.

     The Bobcats key to success in conference play will be scoring more than 4 runs per game, if they can do that they should be able to rack up some more wins.  

    – Grady

    The Ugly

    The Bobcats’ defense was inconsistent throughout their road trip. While the numbers do not necessarily put their performance in a bad light — Quinnipiac’s .953 fielding percentage is 197th out of 300 teams and they have only committed 28 total errors on the season — the timing of the errors has been particularly costly.

    In the final four games of the team’s Orlando road trip, the team committed seven errors. Both of Pittsburgh’s runs in a 2-1 win over Quinnipiac on Feb. 22 were unearned, while Columbia scored all 10 of its runs the following day immediately after Bobcat miscues. Quinnipiac recorded four errors in a loss to Princeton on March 14, and seven in a home loss to Iona on March 23.

    To this point, Quinnipiac is 1-6 when it has committed more than one error. As they move into conference play, the Bobcats can be satisfied that they’ve received some strong pitching and played competitive games against bigger schools. But if they are to put themselves in a position to win in the MAAC, they will need to make timely defensive plays and shut down opponents’ rallies.

    – Baskin

  • Quinnipiac basketball, hockey transfer portal tracker

    Quinnipiac basketball, hockey transfer portal tracker

    As the NCAA hockey and basketball seasons come to an end, both sports are entering another offseason defined by the transfer portal. Over 1,300 men’s and women’s basketball players have already entered since the window opened this week and men’s and women’s hockey are again expected to see a record number of entrants. 

    QUSportsPage will update this page with Quinnipiac’s departures and additions during the transfer portal periods.

    Men’s Basketball 

    Portal opening date: March 24th

    Portal closing date: April 22nd

    Amarri Monroe | Forward

    Years of eligibility remaining: 1

    The 2025 MAAC Player of the Year from Newburgh, New York, averaged 18.1 ppg and had 14 double-doubles in his second year in Hamden. The All-MAAC First Team selection this past season has heard from multiple schools in the SEC, Big Ten, Big East and ACC since entering the portal, according to On3sports

    Paul Otieno | Forward

    Years of eligibility remaining: 1

    Otieno spent three seasons with the Bobcats and garnered an All-MAAC First Team nomination in 2024-25. He finished behind Monroe in the MAAC’s double-double leaderboards (13) and was among the nation’s best in offensive rebounding. After spending his first collegiate seasons at Kilgore College (TX), the Kenyan native joined the 1,000 point club this past year, and was granted another graduate season after the NCAA’s junior college eligibility waiver ruling

    Doug Young | Guard

    Years of eligibility remaining: 1

    Young played two seasons at the JUCO level, one at Odessa College (TX) and one at Midland College (TX), but has spent the past two seasons with the Bobcats. He averaged 5.4 ppg off the bench this past season and scored a season-high 18 points against Sacred Heart. Young was granted another year of eligibility under the same precedent as Otieno.

    Ryan Mabrey | Guard

    Years of eligibility remaining: 1

    Coming over as a transfer last spring after spending his first two seasons at Miami (OH), Mabrey averaged 4.3 ppg in 32 games (12 starts) with Quinnipiac in what’s looking like his lone season in Hamden. He scored in double figures five times including a 17- point outburst in November against St. John’s where he buried a season high five triples.

    Khaden Bennett | Guard

    Years of eligibility remaining: 2

    In his second year in Hamden, Bennett had anything but a sophomore slump. He averaged 10.3 ppg on the season, including three 20-plus point games. He spent most the beginning half of the year as the primary ball handler with veteran guard Savion Lewis out with an injury. Many times guarding the opposing team’s second or third scoring option, Bennett compiled 43 steals during the season.


    Women’s Basketball

    Portal opening date: March 24th

    Portal closing date: April 22nd

    Gal Raviv | Guard

    Years of eligibility remaining: 3

    Raviv was the first player in MAAC history to win both Rookie and Player of the Year awards. The Kadima, Israel native finished the season averaging 17.9 points per game, the most for a Quinnipiac women’s basketball player since the 2013-14 season. 


    Men’s Ice Hockey

    Portal opening date: March 30th

    Portal closing date: May 13th

    Noah Altman | Goaltender

    Years of eligibility remaining: 1

    Atlman’s four years in Hamden made him the longest-tenured player in the program this season. He appeared in parts of seven games across four seasons, but his lively personality made him a favorite in both the locker room and among fans over the years. His impact on the program warranted his selection as an alternate captain for the 2024-25 season.

    Nate Benoit | Defenseman

    Years of eligibility remaining: 2

    With his portal entry, Benoit is destined for his third team in as many seasons. He spent his freshman year with North Dakota before transferring into Quinnipiac for his sophomore season. In 2024-25 with the Bobcats, he appeared in 21 games and recorded two assists. Benoit’s last appearance for Quinnipiac was in its ECAC Tournament semifinal loss to Cornell, where he slotted in as the seventh defenseman but did not see any ice time. He was a healthy scratch in the team’s NCAA Tournament loss to UConn.

    Michael Salandra | Forward

    Years of eligibility remaining: 3

    Salandra did not play in his first year in Hamden. During the 2023-24 season, he played in the BCHL, a part of the West Kelowna Warriors organization. During his second year with the Warriors, he was named an alternate captain and recorded 21 goals and 23 assists. 

    Noah Eyre | Forward

    Years of eligibility remaining: 3

    During his first year in Hamden, Eyre only appeared in five games and last played on Jan. 31 against Dartmouth. He came to Quinnipiac from the Sioux Falls Stampede along with two other Quinnipiac freshmen, Tyler Borgula and Chris Pelosi.

    Chase Ramsay | Defenseman

    Years of eligibility remaining: 2

    Similar to Eyre, Ramsay only played a handful of games in his second season in Hamden. During the season, there were two months between each of his three appearances. Playing seven games total in two years, Ramsay did not record a single point while wearing the blue and gold.


    Women’s Ice Hockey

    Portal opening date: March 16th

    Portal closing date: April 29th

    Outgoing Players

    Tiana McIntyre | Defender 

    Years of eligibility remaining: 1

    McIntyre, a native of Park City, Utah, dressed for 36 of the team’s 38 games in 2024-25. She did not register a point, but recorded 21 shots on goal, had an even plus-minus rating, and tied for seventh on the team with 16 blocked shots. As a sophomore in 2023-24, McIntyre had two assists and a +6 rating.

    Incoming Players

    Calli Hogarth | Goaltender | Merrimack

    Years of eligibility remaining: 1

    Hogarth played three seasons in North Andover, serving as Merrimack’s primary starter or a platoon goaltender in each of them. In 2024-25, she started 23 games for the Warriors, finishing with a 2.79 goals against average and .904 save percentage. At 6 feet tall, Hogarth reflects the growing trend of bigger goaltenders in women’s college hockey. She is expected to compete with rising sophomore Felicia Frank for playing time.

    Alex Law | Forward | Boston University

    Years of eligibility remaining: 2

    Law was a highly-touted recruit coming into college, playing for Canada’s national team at two IIHF Under-18 World Championships. She played two seasons for the Terriers, putting up 13 points as a freshman and nine this past year as a sophomore. She recorded an assist in BU’s NCAA tournament loss to Clarkson. Law also was a member of BU’s lacrosse team and is expected to play both sports at Quinnipiac.