Big Nine Conference
Moderators: Mitch Hawker, east hockey, karl(east)
scarlethockey33
scarlethockey33 wrote:Ok Kaufman.
Sorry to inform you but I'm not Kaufman nor am I Bruggemen
I have been tracking you for sometime now and we all know who you are!!!!!
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Not sure about the AL game but it was all Mayo last night. They put West on the defense scoring first only 20 seconds into the game, after the first period Mayo was up 3 zip. West really could not counter anything that Mayo was throwing their way. The ice was tilted one way during the entire game.GopherPuck15 wrote:Alright, so did Mayo dominate West then? How did Albert Lea get beat by Owatonna? Anyone have anymore details?
Really Visa. Mayo buried their chances, West didn't. 4 pipes and a couple of very good saves by Yaggy on a couple of odd man rushes for West. Granted Mayo was the better team, but the game was not a total domination as you say. Mayo's forwards are good, but they gave up way too many odd man rushes and breakaways for them to be considered seriously as the 1AA favorite. Alexander is a nice player that can finishVisa wrote:Not sure about the AL game but it was all Mayo last night. They put West on the defense scoring first only 20 seconds into the game, after the first period Mayo was up 3 zip. West really could not counter anything that Mayo was throwing their way. The ice was tilted one way during the entire game.GopherPuck15 wrote:Alright, so did Mayo dominate West then? How did Albert Lea get beat by Owatonna? Anyone have anymore details?
Mayo
I saw Mayo last night, and they were very, very, strong - especially the first line. Yaggy had a good game in goal too. How Owatonna beat Mayo earlier this season is hard to understand, but the Huskies beat Albert Lea last night, so that says something. Plus the whole conference seems a little unpredictable right now. Should be fun down the stretch.
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Mayo- 4
Jm- 0
Lorne Grosso and Scott Lecy have been through some significant games in the classic rivalry between the Rochester Mayo and Rochester John Marshall boys hockey teams.
Though Thursday's matchup at the Rochester Recreation Center didn't have a conference title or a trip to state hanging in the balance, it had a little bit of everything that makes the rivalry so great.
There were some picture-perfect goals, some highlight-reel saves, and plenty of physical play.
Grosso's Spartans had to scrap and grind for every goal in a 4-0 Big Nine Conference shutout over Lecy's Rockets at the Rochester Recreation Center.
The Spartans' victory tied the all-time series between these two storied programs. In 95 meetings, each team has won 47, with one tie (a 4-4 deadlock in their first meeting of the 1981-82 season).
"JM played good defense in front of their net, but we worked well down low," said Mayo forward Rick Weber, who scored the Spartans' second goal. "I had a great feed from Myles (Flott) on my goal; we had a couple of bounces go our way and (goalie) Jordan Yaggy was played outstanding. He came up big for us many times."
Yaggy needed to stop just 10 shots to earn his second shutout of the season for Mayo (4-0-0 Big Nine, 11-7-0 overall).
He had to work for a handful of his saves, though. JM (1-4-0, 5-14-0) had three odd-man rushes in the third period, including two when Mayo's lead was just 2-0.
Yaggy also robbed Zach Johnson with Mayo up 4-0 and 3:01 to go. Johnson came in alone, skated across the crease, and Yaggy sprawled out to make a save.
"If we could just bury the puck we'd be a (different) team," JM coach Scott Lecy said with a chuckle, thinking of all the close chances the Rockets had. "Mayo's a good team, a great skating team. ... We did everything we possibly could."
That included 43 saves from sophomore goalie Bryan King. He stopped 13 shots in the first period and 16 in the second.
JM also did a nice job of clogging up the space in front of King to limit Mayo's quality scoring chances.
"I told the guys we just have to be a little more patient," Mayo coach Lorne Grosso said. "As long as we're controlling the puck, they can't score.
"Our defensemen put a lot of shots on net, and their goalie played very well."
Drew Block opened the scoring at 6:13 of the second period with a short-handed goal. Block entered the JM zone one-on-one with a defenseman, stopped and spun in the slot, then poked a rebound of his own shot past King.
Weber made it 2-0 in the final minute of the period, one-timing a nice backhand pass from Flott, who made the pass from behind the net.
Alex Whitney and Tom Alexander added insurance goals in the third period.
Mayo plays at Lakeville South on Tuesday, while JM plays a conference game at Austin on Saturday.
MAYO 4, JM 0
First period -- no scoring. Second period -- 1. M, Drew Block 7 (Ethan Hoppenworth 4) 6:13 (sh). 2. M, Rick Weber 5 (Myles Flott 10) 16:23. Third period -- 3. M, Alex Whitney 14 (Brad Fisher 17, Jack Dingle 1) 10:11. 4. M, Tom Alexander 22 (Weber 16) 13:19 (pp).
Shots on goal -- M 13-18-16--47; JM 5-2-3--10. Goalies, saves -- M, Jordan Yaggy (10 shots, 10 saves); JM, Bryan King (47 shots, 43 saves). Power-play opportunities -- M 1-for-2; JM 0-for-3. Penalties -- M 7 minors-14 minutes; JM 6 minors-12 minutes.
Jm- 0
Lorne Grosso and Scott Lecy have been through some significant games in the classic rivalry between the Rochester Mayo and Rochester John Marshall boys hockey teams.
Though Thursday's matchup at the Rochester Recreation Center didn't have a conference title or a trip to state hanging in the balance, it had a little bit of everything that makes the rivalry so great.
There were some picture-perfect goals, some highlight-reel saves, and plenty of physical play.
Grosso's Spartans had to scrap and grind for every goal in a 4-0 Big Nine Conference shutout over Lecy's Rockets at the Rochester Recreation Center.
The Spartans' victory tied the all-time series between these two storied programs. In 95 meetings, each team has won 47, with one tie (a 4-4 deadlock in their first meeting of the 1981-82 season).
"JM played good defense in front of their net, but we worked well down low," said Mayo forward Rick Weber, who scored the Spartans' second goal. "I had a great feed from Myles (Flott) on my goal; we had a couple of bounces go our way and (goalie) Jordan Yaggy was played outstanding. He came up big for us many times."
Yaggy needed to stop just 10 shots to earn his second shutout of the season for Mayo (4-0-0 Big Nine, 11-7-0 overall).
He had to work for a handful of his saves, though. JM (1-4-0, 5-14-0) had three odd-man rushes in the third period, including two when Mayo's lead was just 2-0.
Yaggy also robbed Zach Johnson with Mayo up 4-0 and 3:01 to go. Johnson came in alone, skated across the crease, and Yaggy sprawled out to make a save.
"If we could just bury the puck we'd be a (different) team," JM coach Scott Lecy said with a chuckle, thinking of all the close chances the Rockets had. "Mayo's a good team, a great skating team. ... We did everything we possibly could."
That included 43 saves from sophomore goalie Bryan King. He stopped 13 shots in the first period and 16 in the second.
JM also did a nice job of clogging up the space in front of King to limit Mayo's quality scoring chances.
"I told the guys we just have to be a little more patient," Mayo coach Lorne Grosso said. "As long as we're controlling the puck, they can't score.
"Our defensemen put a lot of shots on net, and their goalie played very well."
Drew Block opened the scoring at 6:13 of the second period with a short-handed goal. Block entered the JM zone one-on-one with a defenseman, stopped and spun in the slot, then poked a rebound of his own shot past King.
Weber made it 2-0 in the final minute of the period, one-timing a nice backhand pass from Flott, who made the pass from behind the net.
Alex Whitney and Tom Alexander added insurance goals in the third period.
Mayo plays at Lakeville South on Tuesday, while JM plays a conference game at Austin on Saturday.
MAYO 4, JM 0
First period -- no scoring. Second period -- 1. M, Drew Block 7 (Ethan Hoppenworth 4) 6:13 (sh). 2. M, Rick Weber 5 (Myles Flott 10) 16:23. Third period -- 3. M, Alex Whitney 14 (Brad Fisher 17, Jack Dingle 1) 10:11. 4. M, Tom Alexander 22 (Weber 16) 13:19 (pp).
Shots on goal -- M 13-18-16--47; JM 5-2-3--10. Goalies, saves -- M, Jordan Yaggy (10 shots, 10 saves); JM, Bryan King (47 shots, 43 saves). Power-play opportunities -- M 1-for-2; JM 0-for-3. Penalties -- M 7 minors-14 minutes; JM 6 minors-12 minutes.
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big nine confrence
Austin will take the confrence, they are outstanding this year!!
Re: big nine confrence
HAHAcharlieconway wrote:Austin will take the confrence, they are outstanding this year!!

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They have not lost a conference game. (not to be confused with "they haven't lost to a Big 9 opponent").SEMNHOCKEYFAN wrote:Explain 2 me how century controls there destiny...????golfreak wrote:AL- 6
JM- 2
FINAL
Looks like everything comes down to the last week with Century controlling their own destiny with Mayo and AL lurking.
The same can be said of Mayo, no?
Sorry but I am not following you here? The Big 9 is the conference and then they play in 1AA section. You are correct that as of today they have not lost a conference game (same as a Big 9 Opponent) However, they have lost to both Lakeville teams. Unless something really off the wall happens with the seeding this will position them below Mayo, as they have beat both of these team and Owatonna, last night. Please help me understand what I am missing in your logic here and I am really not trying to be sarcastic. ThanksPanthersIn2011 wrote:They have not lost a conference game. (not to be confused with "they haven't lost to a Big 9 opponent").SEMNHOCKEYFAN wrote:Explain 2 me how century controls there destiny...????golfreak wrote:AL- 6
JM- 2
FINAL
Looks like everything comes down to the last week with Century controlling their own destiny with Mayo and AL lurking.
The same can be said of Mayo, no?
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I am a little confused with what you're saying about the same thing can be said with Mayo, no statement. Mayo has not lost a conference game either. Overall for big 9 opponents Century is 5-4, Mayo is 9-1. In the big 9 Century is 5-0 and Mayo is 6-0. As for the remaining schedule, Mayo has it a little tougher with Albert Lea twice and Century the last big 9 game. Century's really only tough game left from what I see is Owatonna and Mayo, I don't see JM pulling off another win. I can see the deciding game for being the big 9 champions coming down to the final game between Mayo and Century.PanthersIn2011 wrote:They have not lost a conference game. (not to be confused with "they haven't lost to a Big 9 opponent").SEMNHOCKEYFAN wrote:Explain 2 me how century controls there destiny...????golfreak wrote:AL- 6
JM- 2
FINAL
Looks like everything comes down to the last week with Century controlling their own destiny with Mayo and AL lurking.
The same can be said of Mayo, no?
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The topic of this thread is the Big 9. Not section 1AA.
Golfreak stated that Century controls their own destiny which confused SEMNHOCKEYFAN. I merely pointed out that this is true because they have not yet lost a conference game -- they do not need help from anyone to win the Big 9 conference.
I also pointed out that Mayo is in the same situation. Maybe I should have stated it "Mayo is in the same situation. (period)" or "Mayo also controls their own destiny."
If we were discussing sectional playoffs, isn't it obvious that every team controls its own destiny?
Golfreak stated that Century controls their own destiny which confused SEMNHOCKEYFAN. I merely pointed out that this is true because they have not yet lost a conference game -- they do not need help from anyone to win the Big 9 conference.
I also pointed out that Mayo is in the same situation. Maybe I should have stated it "Mayo is in the same situation. (period)" or "Mayo also controls their own destiny."
If we were discussing sectional playoffs, isn't it obvious that every team controls its own destiny?