2010 NCAA National Collegiate women's ice hockey tournament

Last updated

2010 NCAA National Collegiate women's
ice hockey tournament
Teams8
Finals site
Champions Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs  (5th title)
Runner-up Cornell Big Red  (1st title game)
Semifinalists
Winning coach Shannon Miller  (5th title)
MOP Emmanuelle Blais (Minnesota Duluth)

The 2010 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament involved eight schools in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of women's NCAA Division I college ice hockey. The quarterfinals were held at the home sites of the seeded teams and the Frozen Four was hosted by the University of Minnesota at Ridder Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota. [1]

Contents

Qualifying teams

USA Midwest and Northeast.svg
ButtonGreen.svg
Mercyhurst
ButtonRed.svg
Minnesota Duluth
ButtonRed.svg
Minnesota
ButtonBlue.svg
Harvard
ButtonBlack.svg
Boston University
ButtonBlue.svg
Cornell
ButtonBlue.svg
Clarkson
ButtonBlack.svg
New Hampshire
2011 Qualifying Teams
ButtonRed.svg WCHA, ButtonBlue.svg ECAC, ButtonBlack.svg Hockey East, ButtonGreen.svg CHA

The winners of the ECAC, WCHA, and Hockey East tournaments all received automatic berths to the NCAA tournament. The other five teams were selected at-large. The top four teams were then seeded and received home ice for the quarterfinals.

SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bid
1 Mercyhurst CHA 29–2–3At-large bid6th2009
2 Minnesota Duluth WCHA 28–8–2Tournament champion9th2009
3 Minnesota WCHA25–8–5At-large bid8th2009
4 Harvard ECAC 20–7–5At-large bid8th2008
Cornell ECAC19–8–6Tournament champion1stNever
Clarkson ECAC23–11–5At-large bid1stNever
New Hampshire Hockey East 19–8–5At-large bid5th2009
Boston University Hockey East16–9–12Tournament champion1stNever

Bracket

Quarterfinals held at home sites of seeded teams

National Quarterfinals
March 12–March 13
National Semifinals
March 19
National Championship
March 21
         
1 Mercyhurst4
Boston University 1
1 Mercyhurst 2
Cornell3*
4 Harvard 2
Cornell6
Cornell 2
2 Minnesota Duluth3***
2 Minnesota Duluth2
New Hampshire 1
2 Minnesota Duluth3
3 Minnesota 2
3 Minnesota3*
Clarkson 2

Note: * denotes overtime period(s)

Source. [2]

Results

National Quarterfinals

(1) Mercyhurst vs. Boston University

March 13 Boston University 1–4
(0–2, 0–0, 1–2)
Mercyhurst Mercyhurst Ice Center
Attendance: 1,300
Game reference
Melissa Haber Goalies Hillary Pattenden
0–114:26 – ppSchols (Scanzano)
0–216:36 – ppBram (Scanzano, Bendus)
0–342:53 – Bendus (Jones)
Watchornpp – 53:381–3
1–453:48 – Bram (Scanzano, Cockell)
10 minPenalties12 min
18Shots33

(4) Harvard vs. Cornell

March 12
7:00
Cornell 6–2
(2–0, 4–1, 0–1)
Harvard Bright Hockey Center
Attendance: 870
Game reference
Amanda Mazzotta Goalies Laura Bellamy
Kylie Stephens
Referees:
Bill Doiron
Julie Piacentini
Linesmen:
Shane Belanger
Chris Leavitt
White (Young) – 2:341–0
Overguardsh – 6:262–0
Fortino (Karpenko) – 26:423–0
Jue (Danforth, Ogilvie) – 28:064–0
Karpenko (Rougeau)pp – 29:455–0
5–133:47 – ppGriffin (Buesser, Fami)
Ogilvie (Karpenko) – 35:316–1
6–253:11 – Coskren (Bassett)
8 minPenalties6 min
18Shots36

(2) Minnesota Duluth vs. New Hampshire

March 12 New Hampshire 1–2
(1–1, 0–0, 0–1)
Minnesota Duluth DECC Arena
Game reference
Kayley Herman Goalies Jennifer Harss
0–12:42 – Larocque (Ambroz)
Long (Brock) – 5:421–1
1–243:57 – ppWong (Blais)
24Shots26

(3) Minnesota vs. Clarkson

March 13
4:07
Clarkson 2–3 (OT)
(0–1, 0–1, 2–0, 0–1)
Minnesota Ridder Arena
Attendance: 785
Game reference
Lauren Dahm Goalies Noora Räty Referees:
Ray Doocy
Michael Elam
Linesmen:
Dan Fitzsimmons
Alicia Hanrahan
0–114:19 – ppFrancis (West, Bozek)
0–217:36 – West (Erickson)
49:51 – Waldie (Selina, Eusepi)1–2
58:16 – Baribeau (Boudreau)2–2
2–363:09 – West
10 minPenalties12 min
39Shots35

National Semifinals

(1) Mercyhurst vs. Cornell

March 19
5:04
Cornell 3–2 (OT)
(1–0, 0–2, 1–0, 1–0)
Mercyhurst Ridder Arena
Game reference
Amanda Mazzotta Goalies Hillary Pattenden Referees:
Ray Doocy
Mike Elam
Linesmen:
Kristine Langley
Tai Thorsheim
Fortino (K. Overguard, Rougeau)sh – 6:301–0
1–128:43 – Rossler
1–230:38 – Corbett (Rossler, Jones)
K. Overguard (Martino, Jue) – 47:062–2
White (A. Overguard)3–2
10 minPenalties12 min
30Shots30

(2) Minnesota Duluth vs. Minnesota

March 19
8:38
Minnesota 2–3
(0–1, 1–2, 1–0)
Minnesota Duluth Ridder Arena
Attendance: 2,070
Game reference
Noora Räty Goalies Jennifer Harss Referees:
Dan Lick
Robert Ludwig
Linesmen:
Dan Fitzsimmons
Alicia Hanrahan
0–15:55 – Fridfinnson (Blais)
0–232:55 – Blais (Fridfinnson, Larocque)
Erickson (West) – 37:301–2
1–339:15 – Blais (Fridfinnson)
West (Francis, Schleper) – 59:052–3
12 minPenalties8 min
29Shots24

National Championship

Cornell vs. (2) Minnesota Duluth

March 21
12:05
Cornell 2–3 (3OT)
(0–0, 1–0, 1–2, 0–0, 0–0, 0–1)
Minnesota Duluth Ridder Arena
Attendance: 1,473
Game reference
Amanda Mazzotta Goalies Jennifer Harss Referees:
Derek Zuckerman
Dan Lick
Linesmen:
Alicia Hanrahan
Kristine Langley
Jue (Rougeau, Fortino)pp – 33:441–0
1–140:18 – ppBlais (Tuominen, Rasmussen)
1–254:42 – pp – Rasmussen (Tuominen, Cournoyer)
Jue (Fortino, Overguard) – 56:302–2
2–3119:26 – Wong (Gray, Posa)
18 minPenalties12 min
51Shots64

Tournament notes

Saara Tuominen and Jaime Rasmussen of Minnesota Duluth were the only players to score two points in the championship game.

Two records were set in the championship game: at four hours and twenty-four minutes, the game set an NCAA Frozen Four record for longest game, and Cornell goaltender Amanda Mazzotta set a record for most saves in an NCAA Championship game with 61 saves. The former record holder was Bulldog goaltender Patricia Sautter, who set the previous record in 2003 with 41 saves. [3]

Tournament awards

All-Tournament Team

* Most Outstanding Player [4]

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References

  1. "Championship Sites For 2010 And 2011 Released". NCAA. Retrieved April 1, 2009.[ permanent dead link ]
  2. https://www.ncaa.com/sports/w-hockey/recaps/032110aad.html%5B%5D [ dead link ]
  3. "High five! Bulldogs win fifth NCAA title with 3-2 triumph over Cornell in triple overtime". UMD Bulldog Athletics. March 21, 2010. Archived from the original on July 25, 2011. Retrieved May 28, 2011.
  4. "NCAA Women's Frozen Four Records Book" (PDF). NCAA.org. March 19, 2023. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 20, 2023. Retrieved March 19, 2023.