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Subject: Women-in-Hockey Digest V1 #545
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Women-in-Hockey Digest   Tuesday, November 23 1999   Volume 01 : Number 545



In this issue:

   Replacement Footbeds for Hockey Skates
   Re: Replacement Footbeds for Hockey Skates
   PERONEAL TENDON
   Womens Websites/pages wanted
   Wisconsin Women's Hockey release
   D-1 Bemidji State vs. D-3 Augsburg College

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Date: Mon, 22 Nov 1999 09:28:42 -0500
From: email@hidden
Subject: Replacement Footbeds for Hockey Skates

Has anyone had any luck finding good replacement footbeds for hockey skates?
I've got the basic one that CCM supplies with the TACK Goalie Skates.  The
problem that I have is that I can sometimes feel the rivets through the
existing footbeds.  I've been told that there are 2 kinds that are worth
looking at:  Profit and SuperFeet.  Has anyone ever tried either brands?

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Date: Mon, 22 Nov 1999 06:58:44 -0800
From: email@hidden (Megan Bryant)
Subject: Re: Replacement Footbeds for Hockey Skates

I found that Dr. Scholl's GEL shoe inserts work great.

They can be found at most grocery stores or drug stores.

You may have to trim the top part, where there isn't any gel.

These work great, they are MUCH cheaper AND they are super easy to find.

Also, the gel does NOT leak out. It is not liquid.







- -- 

Megan Bryant
Rhythm & Hues         
310 448 7551

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Date: Mon, 22 Nov 1999 12:30:00 -0500 (EST)
From: "J.E. Hamer" 
Subject: PERONEAL TENDON

Has anybody else had a peroneal tendon injury?  It's the tendon that go
under the outside ankle bone.  I was just doing a skating drill at
practice on Thursday and felt my peroneal tendon go over my ankle.  I was
just wondering what I have to expect in terms of treatment and rehab.

J.E. 

________________________________________

 J.E. Hamer
 Department of Biostatistics
 University of North Carolina
 (w)919-966-6094
 (h)919-933-1448
 http://jhamer.homepage.com

      ("`-''-/").___..--''"`-._
       `6_ 6  )   `-.  (     ).`-.__.`)
       (_Y_.)'  ._   )  `._ `. ``-..-'
     _..`--'_..-_/  /--'_.' ,'
    (il),-''  (li),'  ((!.-'

 GO STATE! BEAT SPARTANS!
 JOE PATERNO GOES FOR 316!
________________________________________
                                         

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Date: Mon, 22 Nov 1999 14:13:05 EST
From: email@hidden
Subject: Womens Websites/pages wanted

Women's Websites wanted!  Do you have a website that you would like added to 
the Open Directory?  (The Open Directory is the search engine that provides 
listings for AOL and AltaVista.)  As a new editor, I would like to add many 
new sites to the Women's Hockey subdirectory.  Please forward the URL 
(www."yoursite".com) to email@hidden for review.  We are looking for 
general interest and team pages and any site related to women's hockey.

NOTE:  All websites must have working graphics or they cannot be accepted!  
Lets help make women's hockey recognizable on the net!

Lori Switaj
Open Directory Editor

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 22 Nov 1999 19:05:54 -0600
From: "Paul Capobianco" 
Subject: Wisconsin Women's Hockey release

This week: Wisconsin (7-6-1, 5-4-1 WCHA) heads east to Princeton, N.J., for the Princeton Thanksgiving Tournament on Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 27 and 28. The Badgers face host Princeton (2-3-1, 2-3-1 ECAC) at 4 p.m. CST, at Hobey Baker Rink on Saturday. The UW takes on Yale (0-6-0, 0-6-0 ECAC) at 10 a.m. CST, on Sunday.

SCHEDULE CHANGE: The Badgers contest with Concordia (Quebec) scheduled for Dec. 31 at 11:30 a.m. CST, has been changed. The game will now take place at 9:30 a.m. CST. The game with the Stingers is part of the Dartmouth Invitational Tournament. 

MAKING HER POINT: Frosh Kendra Antony (Yorkton, Sask.) had the best game of her young career, and equalled the Badgers* best single-game performance of the year when she tallied four points against No. 3 Minnesota this past Friday. The Badgers fell 7-4, but Antony notched a point on each UW goal. She set up Roberta Shufeldt (Jr., Romulus, Mich.) for the first goal of the game, set up Bridget Buchholz (Fr., Waupun, Wis.) to give the Badgers a 2-1 lead, scored to give UW a 3-2 lead, and assisted Melanie Schmitt (Fr., Sheboygan, Wis.) to bring the Badgers within one at 5-4. Antony finished the evening with a goal and three assists, and increased her team-leading point total to 21. Antony now has 11 goals and 10 assists, and ranks fifth in WCHA overall scoring.

FAMILY MATTERS: The reunion of Wisconsin*s Bridget Buchholz  and sister Emily at Minnesota ended with both players notching one point over the weekend. Bridget scored her second goal of the season for the Badgers in Friday*s game, while Emily had an her second assist of the season in the same game. The siblings will skate against each other at least one more weekend this season when Wisconsin and Minnesota meet up in Minneapolis, Minn., on Feb. 26 and 27.

ATHLETIC SUPPORTERS: The Badgers have played eight home games so far in the 1999-2000 season and 8,198 have come to watch. That*s an average of 1,025 fans per home contest. The Badgers attracted 3,892 fans, the second largest crowd in women*s college hockey history, for opening night against Minnesota-Duluth on Oct. 8. Since then, the lowest attended game in Madison, Wis., still saw 530 people come through the turnstiles. 

ON THE ROAD AGAIN: Wisconsin heads back on the road after a three-week home stand. The road has been kind to the Badgers, who sport a 5-0-1 mark in unfamiliar surroundings. The UW has a road sweep over Ohio State, wins over Ohio State, Wayne State (Mich.) and Findlay, and a tie with Ohio State.

SIGNINGS: Defender Nicole Uliasz (Perkasie, Penn.), forward Stephanie Millar (Hudson, Wis.) and forward Meghan Hunter (Oil Springs, Ontario) signed national letters of intent last week and will attend Wisconsin starting the fall semester of 2000.
TELEVISION COVERAGE: Wisconsin Public Television televised two Badger home games this season. The first was opening night at the Kohl Center against Minnesota-Duluth. WPT also televised the game against Minnesota at the Dane County Coliseum on Nov. 20. Rob Hudson and Turina Bakken called the action.
	Hudson is currently a sports anchor for Madison*s WMTV-channel 15 and has performed play-by-play for several men*s hockey games over the past two years.
	Bakken, a former UW-Madison club hockey team player, currently plays for the Madison Edge as a winger. Bakken is also a professor of marketing at Madison Area Technical College.

POLL POSITION: The Badgers fell off the US College Hockey Online Poll this week after dropping two games to then-No. 3 Minnesota. Harvard regained the No. 1 ranking it had to start the season after defeating then-No. 1 New Hampshire. UNH dropped to second. Brown ranks third and Dartmouth moved up one to No. 4. Minnesota dropped two spots to No. 5 despite sweeping the Badgers. Northeastern is sixth, Minnesota-Duluth ranks seventh and St. Lawrence moves into the top eight after not ranking last week. Providence and Princeton are each receiving votes.
	In the American Hockey Magazine Poll, the Badgers received two votes, to rank just outside the top ten. New Hampshire moved up to No. 1, with Harvard at No. 2 and Brown at No. 3. The Gophers slipped to fourth despite sweeping Ohio State. Just ahead of the Badgers, with nine votes at No. 10, was St. Lawrence. The new poll comes out Tuesday.

DEFENSE IN NAME ONLY: Defenders own three of the top four spots on the Wisconsin scoring chart. Sis Paulsen leads the defensive corps and is second on the team with seven goals and nine assists. Michelle Sikich (So., Apple Valley, Minn.) shares third with Kerry Weiland (Fr., Palmer, Alaska), and has six goals and six assists. Weiland has five goals and seven assists.  
	As a whole, Badger defenders account for 19 goals and 24 assists. That is 43 of the team*s 104 points.

THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE: The Badgers notched their first win in program history with a 2-1 victory at Ohio State on Friday, Oct. 15. Michelle Sikich (So., Apple Valley, Minn.) tallied the game-winner at 9:52 of the third period and Chanda Gunn (Huntington Beach, Calif.) made 30 saves to earn the win. 

IF YOU PLAY IT, THEY WILL COME: The Wisconsin women*s ice hockey team opened up its inaugural season on Friday, Oct. 8. Gov. Tommy Thompson, Olympic Gold Medalists Cammi Granato and Karyn Bye, U.S. National Team coach Ben Smith and other VIPs attended. The second-largest women*s collegiate ice hockey crowd attended. 3,892 came to the Kohl Center for the opening night. 
	The largest crowd to attend a women*s collegiate ice hockey game came together on Nov. 2, 1997 when Minnesota held its inaugural game against Augsburg at Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis, Minn. 6,854 people showed up and saw the Golden Gophers shutout Augsburg 8-0.

PRACTICE SCHEDULE: The Badgers practice at the the Dane County Coliseum Arena this week. Please contact Paul Capobianco at 608-263-1983 for times.

HEAD COACH JULIE SASNER:  Head coach Julie Sasner (Harvard, 1988) is in her first year with the Badgers after spending six years at the helm of Cornell. The Badgers first coach sports a 7-6-1 record behind the bench for Wisconsin, and is 60-67-7 lifetime. She led Big Red to a 53-61-6 mark and the 1995-96 team to its first Ivy League title since 1990 with an 8-1-1 record. She also directed Cornell to a 15-8-3 record in 1997-98 and a 16-7-2 mark during the 1995-96 season. She was named the 1995 Coach of the Year by the American Women*s Hockey Association. 
	A member of the first U.S. Women*s National Team in 1990, she has since helped coach the team at the 1999 International Ice Hockey Federation Women*s World Championship. She was also the head coach for the U.S. Women*s Select Team that competed in the Three Nations Cup held in Finland in December of 1998. She earned her first U.S. head coaching position, leading the U.S. Women*s National Team to a silver medal at the Pacific Women*s Hockey Championship in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1996.


HER ASSISTANTS:  Trina Bourget (New Hampshire, 1994), Tracy Cornell (Cornell, 1997) and Mike Dibble (Wisconsin, 1978) will serve as the Badger assistant coaches for the inaugural season. 
	Bourget coached the past two years at Division III Sacred Heart University and led the Pioneers to the No. 8 national ranking in just the third year of the program*s existence. Named the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference*s Coach of the year for her team*s 15-4-3 mark for the 1998-99 season, Bourget was named runner-up for the American Women*s Hockey Coaches Association Coach of the Year Award. Bourget spent her playing days with the University of New Hampshire.
	Cornell coached Cushing Academy in Ashburnham, Mass., to a 24-4-2 record last year, the most successful season in school history. Her team captured second during the regular season and advanced to the NEPSAC Championship. Her playing experiences include four years at Cornell and one as a professional player in Switzerland with the SC Reinach Lions. While at Cornell, she was a two-time All-Ivy League player and a co-captain her senior year.
	Dibble coached Sun Prairie High School from1980-86. While coaching Sun Prairie, he also served as the coaching program director for the the state of Wisconsin*s WAHA from 1979-86. In 1987, he became the Central District coaching director, a position held until 1992. At the national level, Dibble was a part of the original staff of USA Hockey*s National Goaltender Camp and coached the U.S. National Midget Team in 1986. Most recently he served as coach of the U.S. National 17-Selects in 1994. The former men*s hockey goaltending standout ranks on numerous Badger top-10 lists, was the Badgers* 1975 MVP and helped the squad to the 1977 NCAA Championship. A draft pick of the New York Islanders in 1974, the Minneapolis, Minn., native was the alternate goalie for the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team. 

WHERE HAVE I DONE THIS BEFORE?: Sophomore Michelle Sikich (Apple Valley, Minn.) played last year in an inaugural collegiate women*s ice hockey game. Sikich captained Minnesota State, Mankato*s first-year squad. The Mavericks opened their season against Minnesota.
	Sikich was also a part of the inaugural state girl*s ice hockey championship. While with Apple Valley High School in Minnesota, Sikich helped the team win the first girl*s high school championship in the United States back in 1995.

THE TIGERS: Ranked ninth in the most recent polls, the Princeton Tigers (2-3-1, 2-3-1 ECAC) come off a .500 weekend. The Tigers knocked off Cornell by a 4-2 score, before falling to St. Lawrence, 3-2. Their other win came over Maine (3-1). They lost are to Providence (2-1) and New Hampshire (5-3), and tied Northeastern (2-2).
	Head coach Jeff Kampersal is in his fourth of Princeton*s 20 seasons as a women*s ice hockey program. The 1992 Princeton graduate sports a 42-49-4 mark during his tenure.
	Junior defender Annamarie Holmes paces the Tiger scoring attack. The former Ms. Minnesota Hockey leads with four goals and seven assists in six games. Last season*s leading scorer, Andrea Kilbourne, ranks second this season with four goals and six assists. Frosh Nikola Holmes has three goals and three assists for third on the team.
	Sophomore Susan Maes sees most of the time in goal for Princeton. Through five games, Maes is 1-3-1 with a 2.37 GAA and .879 save percentage. Frosh Sarah Ahlquist is 1-0-0 with a 2.00 GAA and .933 save percentage in a back-up role.  

THE BULLDOGS: Yale (0-6-0, 0-6-0 ECAC) enters its match-up with Wisconsin after falling to St. Lawrence and Cornell by 6-1 scores. The Bulldogs were shutout in their first three games by three ranked teams: No. 8 Providence (4-0), No. 6 Northeastern (7-0) and No. 1 New Hampshire (7-0). They also lost to Maine (4-1).
	Third-year head coach John Marchetti sits 12-46-5 with the Bulldogs. For his career, the 1971 Providence graduate boasts a 274-115-20 mark, mostly at the helm of his alma mater.
	Junior Lisa Meyers has two of Yale*s three goals on the season, while sophomore Sara Wood has the other. Ashley Campion, Deanna McDevitt and Lauren Gulka have the Bulldog assists.
	Katie Hirte is the only goaltender to see action for Yale. The sophomore has a 5.67 GAA and .844 save percentage.	
	
COLLEGE HOCKEY STATS: Information regarding all collegiate women*s ice hockey teams can be found at: 
www.collegehockeystats.com. Box scores, standings and statistics are updated following each night*s action in college hockey.

WCHA FAX-ON-DEMAND: The WCHA now has a fax-on-demand system for women*s hockey. To retrieve a document, dial 770-563-1131 then enter your pin number (your 10-digit fax number). The WCHA passcode is 9242#. From there, enter the document you want followed by # key. Press 3, then the # key and finally the * key. Document 2000 gives a listing of all the codes for the WCHA schools.
BIG TEN FAX-ON-DEMAND:  Information on Badger women*s hockey can now be retrieved using the Big Ten Conference*s fax-on-demand system. Using the Infoconnection System, information will be posted as follows:
	Entire Release:  	3365
	Statistics/Results:	3366
	Roster/Schedule:	3367
	Latest Game Report:	3368

BADGERS IN THE WCHA:

Overall Scoring	WCHA Scoring
5. Kendra Antony (11-10=21)	5. Kendra Antony (8-7=15)
Goals	Goals
5t. Kendra Antony (11)	5t. Kendra Antony (8)
10t. Sis Paulsen (7)	10t. Kelly Kegley (5)
Assists	10t. Sis Paulsen (5)
7t. Kendra Antony (10)	Power-Play Points
10t. Sis Paulsen (9)	5t. Sis Paulsen (2-3=5)
Power-Play Points	7t. Kendra Antony (3-1=4)
5t. Kendra Antony (3-2=5)	7t. Kerry Weiland (1-3=4)
5t. Sis Paulsen (2-3=5)	Power-Play Goals
9t. Michelle Sikich (1-3=4)	2t. Kendra Antony (3)
9t. Kerry Weiland (1-3=4)	6t. Sis Paulsen (2)
Power-Play Goals	Defense Scoring
3t. Kendra Antony (3)	3t. Sis Paulsen (5-6=11)
6t. Sis Paulsen (2)	3t. Kerry Weiland (4-7=11)
Game-Winning Goals	7t. Michelle Sikich (3-5=8)
4t. Michelle Sikich (2)	9t. Roberta Shufeldt (3-1=4)
4t. Sis Paulsen (2)
Defense Scoring
2. Sis Paulsen (7-9=16)
3t. Michelle Sikich (6-6=12)
3t. Kerry Weiland (5-7=12)
Goals Against Average
2. Chanda Gunn (1.91)
Save Percentage
1. Chanda Gunn (.933)

HOME, SWEET HOME:  The Badgers will play home games in five different arenas during the 1999-2000 season. After the opening weekend at the Kohl Center, the Badgers* next home game comes almost a month later when they host defending national champion Harvard. The game with the Crimson, on November 5, will take place at Capitol Ice Arena in Middleton, Wis.  On November 7, the UW will return to the Kohl Center to host Brown. The following weekend, Bemidji State *comes* to play the Badgers in Eau Claire, Wis., at Hobbs Arena. The weekend of November 19, long-time Wisconsin rival Minnesota comes to Madison to play at the Dane County Coliseum. The Coliseum will play host to eight games throughout the season. Finally, the UW will host the U.S. National Team on January 8 at the Blue Line Ice Center in Fond du Lac, Wis.

UPCOMING FOR THE BADGERS:  Wisconsin closes out the first half of the WCHA schedule when it hosts MSU, Mankato on Dec. 3 and 4. The games, slated for 7:05 p.m., take place at the Dane County Coliseum.


Paul Capobianco
Assistant Women's SID
University of Wisconsin
Phone: (608) 263-1983
Fax: (608) 265-8051
email@hidden

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 23 Nov 1999 13:25:10 -0600
From: lohr 
Subject: D-1 Bemidji State vs. D-3 Augsburg College

Monday, November 22
Augsburg College (division 3)- 0
Bemidji State (division 1)- 2

MINNEAPOLIS (11/22/99)--Jessica Bina (So., Grand Forks, N.D.) and Kerri McEwen 
(Fr., Thunder Bay, Ontario) scored the only goals Bemidji State University 
would need as the Beavers shout out host Augsburg College 2-0 in a 
nonconference women's hockey game Monday evening at Augsburg Ice Arena.

Goalie Katie Anderson (Fr., Salem, Wis) improved to 2-2 on the season with the 
victory in goal, the Beaver's second shutout win of the season.

Bemidji State, of the Division I Western Collegiate Hockey Association Women's 
League, improved to 6-4 overall.  Augsburg, of the Division III Minnesota 
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, drops to 2-1 overall.

Bemidji State outshot the Auggies by just a 25-22 margin, but controlled the 
action for the majority of the game, keeping play in the Augsburg end and 
allowing only a handful of Augsburg rushes at the BSU net.  BSU killed four 
Auggie power-play attempts, including a short 5-on-3 advantage in the second 
period.

Bina's goal, an unassisted tally at the 10:21 mark of the first period, was 
the first of the season for her, while McEwen's tally, on an assist from Amy 
Shelper (Fr., Royal Oack, Mich.), was her team-high seventh goal of the 
season.

Auggie goalie Meg Schmidt (Sr., West St. Paul, Minn) made 23 saves in a losing 
effort.

Bemidji State has a two-game series Saturday and Sunday (11/27-28) at 
Minnesota State-Mankato, while Augsburg returns to action on Dec. 3-4 
(Friday-saturday) for a two-game home series against MIAC foe 
Concordia-Moorhead.

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End of Women-in-Hockey Digest V1 #545
*************************************