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The North Wind

The North Wind

The North Wind

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The North Wind is an independent student publication serving the Northern Michigan University community. It is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee. The North Wind digital paper is published daily during the fall and winter semesters except on university holidays and during exam weeks. The North Wind Board of Directors is composed of representatives of the student body, faculty, administration and area media.

Photo courtesy of NMU Athletics
Women’s spring soccer comes to an end this weekend
Lily GouinApril 19, 2024

’Cats drop two against Ohio State, look to bounce back against Spartans

Plagued by penalties, the Wildcats (1-4-3-2 CCHA, 4-5-3 overall) fell to Ohio State University 4-1 on both Friday and Saturday.

“I don’t know what it is playing on the road, but we made some uncommon mistakes,” sophomore center Vigier said. “We didn’t play the game that we needed to play to win.”

Northern came out strong against OSU (5-2-1-1 CCHA, 8-3-1 overall) on Friday, scoring the only first-period goal. Stephan Vigier hit the back of the net at 16:07, assisted by junior left wing Kory Kaunisto.

The Buckeyes tied it at the beginning of the second period and scored three more unanswered goals in the third, including a power play and empty net goal.

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We’ve been pretty good at home, and we’ve been pretty bad on the road,” said head coach Walt Kyle. “You could make a bunch of excuses, but the reality is you’ve got to find a way to man up on the road.”

On Saturday, OSU took a two-goal lead in the first two periods before freshman center Dylan Walchuk scored 3:12 into the third period, assisted by sophomore right wing Reed Seckel.

However, the Buckeyes fired right back with a power play goal just a minute later, and sealed the win with a fourth goal.

“At times, we showed glimpses of who we really are,” Walchuk said. “But for the most part we didn’t play up to our potential and didn’t work hard enough throughout the weekend, and it obviously showed on the scoreboard.”

Senior goalie Reid Ellingson stopped 34 shots on Friday and 19 on Saturday before being replaced at the 29:08 minute by sophomore goalie Jared Coreau.

“Our goaltending was great,” Walchuk said. “They gave us a chance to win each night, and unfortunately we just didn’t come through.”

Kyle said he made the decision to pull Ellingson after Ohio State scored its second goal against the Wildcats. Coreau made 15 saves in his 30:52 minutes of play.

“You get an opportunity to put Jared in, and he responded well,” Kyle said. “At the same time, you get an opportunity to change momentum and you don’t put Reid in position where he’s got to eat four goals against.”

Walt said the ’Cats, who have been outshot in nine of 12 games this season, need to produce more offensive opportunities. Ohio State posted 38 shots each night, compared to Northern’s 13 shots on Friday and 19 on Saturday.

“We have guys who offensively need to simplify their game a little bit, create basic chances and try to take advantage of those,” Kyle said. “A shot on net is rarely a bad decision.”

Time in the box took a toll on Northern, who took 10 penalties for 31 minutes on Friday and seven for 22 minutes on Saturday.

“Penalties were crucial,” Walchuk said. “We took them at bad times in the game and they capitalized on our penalties. It kind of took us out of the game.”

OSU scored on two of 11 power play opportunities throughout the weekend, whereas Northern was unsuccessful in its three opportunities.

The Wildcats have a 3-0-3 overall record at home and 1-5 away. Kyle said the team’s goal this weekend is simply to play better.

“We’re sick right now,” Kyle said. “It’s not a disease that’s going to kill us, but it’s a common cold and we need to fix it.”

NMU takes on Michigan State University at 7:30 p.m. both Friday, Nov. 18 and Saturday, Nov. 19 at the Berry Events Center. The Spartans have a 2-3-0 CCHA record and are 5-4-0 overall.

“Earlier in the year we were playing good hockey, taking care of the puck, taking a lot of shots and limiting their chances,” Vigier said. “We just have to get back to the way we know how we should play.”

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