This post has been updated. Cornell men’s hockey starting goalie Matt Galajda — a reigning All-American and current third-team All-ECAC selection — has been ruled out for the upcoming East Regional slate, head coach Mike Schafer ’86 confirmed Friday. Austin McGrath — a first-team All-Ivy selection in his own right — will start in his classmate's place after a season of temporary back-and-forth between the two netminders. Cornell plays Northeastern in the first round 4:30 p.m. Saturday, and should it win, the Red will play the winner of Minnesota State-Providence 4 p.m. Sunday. Galajda will be unavailable for both contests, however. Galajda was originally deemed "doubtful" for the weekend by Schafer on Tuesday, but the head coach one-upped the earlier assessment by telling reporters in Providence Friday that "there's no question that he's not going to play this weekend." “Right now he’d be doubtful for the weekend,” Schafer said Tuesday. “We’re working hard with Austin and [freshman Nate McDonald], both getting ready for the weekend.
“Unless things change dramatically between [Tuesday] and probably Thursday,” Schafer said at the time. “He’s gotta practice, he has to get confidence in himself that he can play, so that’s why I say he’s doubtful.” As it has become clear, things did not change. Galajda injured his knee in a bizarre sequence just under 10 minutes into the overtime period Saturday. With junior defenseman Yanni Kaldis and a Clarkson forward fighting for possession behind Galajda’s net, the two collided with the back of the goal, tipping its weight onto the netminder and pinning him in an awkward position with his skate caught in the netting. Without play stopping, Kaldis and Clarkson forward Devin Brosseau proceeded to try and pry the net off Galajda’s body, but the goalie appeared to tweak his knee as he yanked his leg loose while the puck was still in the Cornell zone. “That was the frustrating aspect of it, it shouldn’t have happened, it was preventable,” Schafer said Tuesday after expressing disdain for the officials’ handling of the sequence on the ice after the game Saturday. “But otherwise, it’s an injury no different than when he was injured back in November, and as a team we need to overcome it.” In the midst of a championship game in overtime, McGrath came in cold and proceeded to see the ice for just 3:47 before Clarkson forward Chris Klack sent a backdoor shot into a wide-open net for the game-winner in a sequence probably not many goalies could have corralled. “It was definitely an interesting situation, one that not a lot of people have been in before,” McGrath said Tuesday. “I was less nervous than you think I was going in, and I just wanted to do what I could to help us. An unfortunate bounce at the end, but that’s hockey, I guess.” "I felt bad for Austin, and I mean this time he has an opportunity to prepare," Schafer said Friday. "Last time he's going in, with seven minutes to go into overtime period in an ECAC championship and not warmed up and it was kind of shocking, just had to kick myself in the butt for not just throwing a bucket of pucks out there, doing something to get the kid warmed up at Lake Placid. He had to just come off the bench, we didn't even know why Matty was coming over to the bench and so, it was a tough experience."ICYMI, here's the sequence that left Galajda injured: net tipped forward on its moorings, skate got caught in the netting and he tweaked his knee trying to get free. He remained in the game for a few mins before taking himself out. pic.twitter.com/eeYLDe9YyQ
— Zachary Silver (@zachsilver) March 26, 2019


Malott is in a similar boat that now-senior defenseman Brendan Smith was two years ago. In the 2017 regular season finale against Union, Smith endured a torn ACL but was back in the lineup by game one of the ensuing season, giving Schafer and the program optimism that a similar fate could follow the junior forward. “Brendan Smith hurt himself very similarly maybe a week earlier, two weeks earlier, and Brendan was back ready to go at the start of the season,” Schafer said. “Hopefully Jeff follows the same kind of rehab that Brendan was on.”Bad looking knee injury for Jeff Malott, who needed assistance getting off the ice and went directly to the locker room. Was grimacing on the ice. Does not look promising. pic.twitter.com/OoXQz2WeUG
— Zachary Silver (@zachsilver) March 24, 2019