National Hockey League
Boston College beats Alaska-Fairbanks 3-1 in NCAAs
National Hockey League

Boston College beats Alaska-Fairbanks 3-1 in NCAAs

Published Mar. 28, 2010 1:11 a.m. ET

Pat Mullane scored the tiebreaking goal 3:46 into the third period and Matt Price was awarded a goal when he was hauled down breaking toward an empty net with 12 seconds left, lifting Boston College to a 3-1 win over Alaska-Fairbanks in the NCAA tournament Saturday.

Matt Lombardi also scored for the Eagles (26-10-3), the top seed in the Northeast Regional. They will face Yale, a 3-2 winner over North Dakota, on Sunday for a spot in the Frozen Four.

Andy Taranto scored for Alaska-Fairbanks (18-12-9) in its NCAA tournament debut.

Boston College, the Hockey East tournament champion, improved to 9-0 in first-round NCAA tournament games in Worcester. The Eagles are seeking their third NCAA title since 2001.

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With Nanooks goalie Scott Greenham pulled for an extra skater in the final 30 seconds, Price was racing toward a loose puck deep in the Alaska zone when he was hooked down by defenseman Joe Sova.

After a brief pause, the referee signaled ``automatic goal'' with both hands in the air, grabbing one wrist to indicate a goal even though the puck never went into the net.

``I was thinking when I was lying in the crease, is he going to make me take a penalty shot? Can you have a penalty shot when there's no goalie?'' Price said. ``It took a while for him to signal it was an automatic goal.''

Lombardi had a short-handed goal in the first period for BC. Taranto tied it with a power-play score late in the second.

Eagles goalie John Muse made 28 saves - and caught a break when Dustin Sather hit the crossbar with just more than 2 minutes to play.

``We had all we could handle,'' Boston College coach Jerry York said. ``I don't think I've ever been in an NCAA tournament game where the games aren't difficult.''

The Eagles jumped ahead 1-0 when Lombardi collected a loose puck near center ice, broke in on a semi-breakaway, shifted and tucked a backhander behind Greenham at 8:54.

Alaska tied it when Taranto took a pass from behind the net and slipped a shot by Muse from the slot.

For most of the game, the Nanooks kept BC's high-flying offense in check.

``I think the game from our standpoint was where we wanted it,'' Alaska coach Dallas Ferguson said. ``We didn't want it to be 7-6, 8-6.''

It was the farthest East the Nanooks have played since traveling to Elmira, N.Y., in 1993.

``I'm so proud of the way we competed, being our first time in the tournament,'' Ferguson said.

Greenham made 29 saves.

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