UMaine goalie Albin Boija stays at the ready during the Black Bears’ season opener Friday against Holy Cross at Alfond Arena in Orono. On Saturday, Boija recorded his seventh career shutout. (Libby Kamrowski Kenny/Staff Photographer)
ORONO — Albin Boija hopes it was an accident when a Holy Cross player ran him over near the red line during pregame warmups prior to Saturday night’s game at Alfond Arena. Boija has no idea who it even was. But with some Holy Cross players chirping at him while he was laid out on the ice, the University of Maine goalie turned the incident into motivation.
“He might not have been looking, but I don’t know why you wouldn’t be looking when you’re skating through a whole team of players. He skated me right over. He just ran me full over,” Boija said. “I knew I wasn’t going to talk back or hit them back or anything. That’s not going to do anything. So I just wanted to beat them, and they’re 0-2 this weekend, so I feel that speaks for itself.”
Composed and energized, Boija made 22 saves for the seventh shutout of his career in Maine’s 6-0 win.
“He makes the routine saves look really easy,” Maine coach Ben Barr said. “That was (Holy Cross goalie Danick Leroux’s) first game. Obviously, it’s a tough place to play your first game at. A lot of the shot quality was probably similar, but Albin’s just experienced and he just holds on to the puck, and it seems easy for him.”
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Do not take Albin Boija for granted. Barr sure doesn’t. Neither do any of Boija’s teammates.
Boija, a junior from Sundsvall, Sweden, is now tied with Frank Doyle for second in career shutouts with the Black Bears. Jimmy Howard’s record of 15 shutouts is a million miles away, but Boija already has established himself among the best goalies to pull on a Maine sweater.
An All-American last season, Boija was the MVP of the Hockey East tournament as Maine won its first conference title in 21 years. In two games this season, allowing two goals on 42 shots, Boija has picked up right where he left off.
“He’s a rock back there,” said forward Josh Nadeau.
Reliable goalies are like mechanics. When you find a top-notch one, you thank your lucky stars. In Boija, the Black Bears have a netminder they know is unlikely to give up a goal softer than two scoops of chocolate on a hot summer day. He’ll make the routine saves look easy, and he’ll make the harder ones look easy, too.
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And occasionally, he’ll make a save that makes the entire college hockey world gasp, like he did late last season against UMass when he dove across the crease and stretched out like Superman in mid-flight to rob Dans Locmelis.
There was nothing like that Saturday night, just steady, quiet saves. Boija was his strongest when Maine needed him the most, early when the game was still close. The Black Bears killed four penalties in the game’s first 24 minutes, maintaining a 1-0 lead in the process before breaking the game open with two goals later in the second period and three more in the third.
Seventeen of Boija’s 22 saves came in the first two periods. In the third, he was called on to stop the puck just five times.
The Black Bears spent the final 1:58 of the game on the penalty kill, too, but Oskar Komarov’s short-handed goal at 18:53 sucked any remaining offensive swagger out of the Crusaders and made Boija’s path to the shutout easier.
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Asked to think of a save that stood out, Boija couldn’t.
“Nothing really specific. The boys did a really good job shutting the most dangerous stuff down. I just had to come up with the ones they had,” he said.
Ben Verbrugge is a freelance sportswriter with a journalism degree from CSU Dominguez Hills. He is a member of the Los Angeles media and spends most of his time covering the NBA, NFL, and MLB. When not writing, he is either playing or watching sports.
Ben Verbrugge
Contributing Sports Network
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The Maine Black Bears will take on the Merrimack College Warriors on Saturday at Duane Stadium in what should be an exciting college football matchup.
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Wilson footballs are lined up on the field prior to the game between the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers and the South Carolina Gamecocks at Williams-Brice Stadium on September 1, 2018 in Columbia, South Carolina. SC won… Wilson footballs are lined up on the field prior to the game between the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers and the South Carolina Gamecocks at Williams-Brice Stadium on September 1, 2018 in Columbia, South Carolina. SC won 49-15.
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How to Watch Maine vs Merrimack
Date: Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025
Time: 1:00 PM ET
Channel: NESN
Stream: Fubo (TRY FOR FREE)
Entering this weekend, Maine is 2-1 in CAA play despite a 2-4 record overall on the season. Merrimack, meanwhile, competes as an independent team and sits at 3-3 on the season, including a 3-0 home record.
Maine has won two games in a row, including a 34-14 win over Bryant last weekend. Quarterback Carter Peevy had a strong game, going 23-for-36 for 338 yards and three touchdowns. Despite the 2-4 overall record, Maine looks to be a solid team with two of the losses coming against FBS teams and the other two coming by a combined four points.
Merrimack is coming off a 24-7 win over Robert Morris, winning despite quarterback Ayden Pereira going 5-for-13 for 73 yards and a pick. Pereira did run for a score, as did DeMarcus McElroy.
This is an excellent college football matchup that you will not want to miss; make sure to tune in and catch all the action.
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Maine’s Justin Poirier controls the puck against Conner de Haro of the New Hampshire during an exhibition game on Friday at Bowdoin College in Brunswick. The teams played to a 2-2 tie. (Daryn Slover/Staff Photographer)
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ORONO — Alfond Arena, this is Justin Poirier. Justin, this is Alfond. I think you’re going to hit it off.
Playing in his first collegiate hockey game, a 5-2 Maine win over Holy Cross, Poirier showed the offensive skill that made him a fifth-round pick of the Carolina Hurricanes in the 2024 NHL draft. Poirier recorded a hat trick, and also played with a little grit, acknowledging that to take his game to the next level, mentally and literally, he has to become a better two-way player.
“When I scored my first goal, I just turned my back around to the crowd. Amazing,” Poirier said. “I can’t describe the feeling. It was just unbelievable, and that’s fun to play in front of a good crowd.”
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Poirier said 14 members of his family made the trip from Valleyfield, Quebec, to witness his strong debut. He was a gifted scorer in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League over the last three seasons, scoring 210 points (122 goals, 88 assists) in 181 games with the Baie-Comeau Drakkar. Last season, Poirier was fourth in the QMJHL in goals with 43 in 58 games. The season before, he was second in goals with 51 goals in 68 games.
Poirier is one of nine former major junior players on the Black Bears’ roster, taking advantage of a new NCAA rule that makes them eligible for college hockey. He learned in last week’s scrimmage against rival UNH, a 2-2 tie, that what worked in junior hockey won’t necessarily work in the college game.
“I just thought the work ethic was much better than it was last week,” Maine coach Ben Barr said not just of Poirier, but the entire team. “We’re going to make mistakes. Everyone does. But when we work as hard as we did for the most part tonight, it covers it up.”
UMaine’s Justin Poirier celebrates one of his goals Friday against Holy Cross. The Black Bears opened their season with a 5-2 win at Alfond Arena. (Libby Kamrowski Kenny/Staff Photographer)
That was apparent on Poirier’s second and third goals, blistering one-timers from between the circles. The first came on a power play at 7:42 of the second period, off a Jaden Lipinski pass. It triggered a short Maine outburst, with Lipinski scoring just 17 seconds later to give the Black Bears a 3-0 lead.
Poirier’s third goal, the one that sent hats raining onto the ice, was another one-timer, this one off a Max Scott pass at 3:43 of the third. He said he studies video of NHL players with shots he admires, like Cole Caulfield of the Montreal Canadiens. More importantly, Poirier knew he had to keep his feet moving to create the space needed for his dangerous shot.
“That’s the difference between junior and here. I realized a lot of things in last week’s game. The guys are older, bigger, and the play’s faster,” he said. “I just have to move my feet quicker, and I think I did that pretty well tonight. What happened when I moved my feet? Great chance, and I can capitalize on that chance.”
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Poirier’s first goal was the result of that hard work. When his initial shot rebounded off the right pad of Holy Cross goalie Connor MacKenzie, Poirier skated hard to the front of the net to get to the puck and score for a 2-0 lead at 5:56 of the second period.
At 5-foot-8 and 185 pounds, crashing the net is a serious commitment for Poirier.
“My shot is my weapon. I like to use my shot. But sometimes I just have to work hard and go to the front of the net,” Poirier said. “I know I’m short, but I know I can play against older and bigger guys. I just have to go to the front of the net and work hard.”