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Quinnipiac’s Quillan, who scored national championship OT game-winner in 2023, leaves after junior year, signs with NHL’s Maple Leafs

Jacob Quillan was an offensive catalyst in his three seasons with Quinnipiac (photo: Rob Rasmussen).

The Toronto Maple Leafs announced Monday that the club has signed Quinnipiac junior forward Jacob Quillan to a two-year, entry-level contract beginning in 2024-25.

Quillan, 22, skated in 39 games for the Bobcats this season, registering 46 points (17 goals, 29 assists) and was the recipient of the ECAC Hockey best defensive forward award.

In 116 career games at QU, Quillan recorded 93 points (38 goals, 55 assists).

Last season, the Dartmouth, N.S., native scored the overtime winning goal to secure the 2023 national championship for Quinnipiac and was awarded the Frozen Four most outstanding player award.

Longtime USHL coach, Wisconsin-Stevens Point grad Noreen named new head coach for Miami, aims to set ‘a standard that all of our supporters can be proud of’

Anthony Noreen is a longtime head coach in the USHL, most recently with the Tri-City Storm since 2017 (photo: Tri-City Storm).

Miami announced Monday that Anthony Noreen has been named the seventh head coach in RedHawks history.

Noreen, who takes over for Chris Bergeron, who has not brought back after the 2023-24 season, has been the head coach of the USHL’s Tri-City Storm since 2017 and has also served as the Storm’s president of hockey operations since 2019. He has been involved with USA Hockey for nearly a decade, most recently as the 18U head coach for the 2022 Hlinka Gretzky Cup. Noreen led the 2018 U.S. Junior Select Team to a gold medal in the World Junior A Challenge.

“I am honored and humbled to be the next head hockey coach at Miami University,” said Noreen in a statement. “I would like to thank David Sayler and Brad Okel for their belief in me, and the alumni of this storied program for creating something special to build upon. I look forward to being a part of the next chapter of Miami hockey and establishing a standard that all of our supporters can be proud of.”

During his time with Tri-City, Noreen has produced a record of 236-126-24-18, making him the winningest coach in franchise history. His Storm teams have qualified for the playoffs in each of his seven seasons at the helm (with the exception of the 2019-20 postseason, which was canceled due to COVID). Noreen has led the Storm to two Anderson Cups (2018-19 and 2021-22), setting a franchise record for wins and points in the 2018-19 season and breaking the league record for wins and points in 2021-22. He was named USHL coach of the year in both of those seasons (the first Storm coach to earn that honor) and has produced more playoff appearances and more regular-season titles than any other Tri-City head coach.

The Storm topped the USHL in penalty killing for four straight seasons (2018-22) and led the league in goals against in two of those years. In 2021-22, Noreen’s team won a franchise-record 11 consecutive games and went on to lead the USHL in goals scored and power-play goals.

Noreen has coached 34 NHL draft picks over the past seven years with the Storm, and his Tri-City program has produced more than 100 NCAA Division I hockey players in that time. The 2024 NCAA tournament featured a total of 24 former Storm players, with 14 of the 16 participating programs (and each school in the Frozen Four) having at least one Tri-City product on their roster.

Storm players under Noreen won two USHL player of the year awards to go along with two defenseman of the year honors, three goalie of the year recognitions, one forward of the year pick and a rookie of the year selection.

“I am excited to introduce Anthony Noreen as the next head coach of the Miami University hockey program. All of us here at Miami are committed to getting our hockey program back to being nationally competitive within the NCHC and building on our proud history of NCAA tournament appearances,” said Miami director of athletics David Sayler. “I am reminded of a famous quote by Wayne Gretzky, where he said, ‘Skate to where the puck is going, not where it has been.’ This quote could not be more true of where we find ourselves in college athletics at this moment of time,” Sayler continued. “We set out to find someone that is adept at bringing high-end talent into their program, developing that talent on and off the ice, and communicating clearly to forge strong culture and win hockey games.

“Coach Noreen has succeeded in all of those areas while having to evaluate his ever-changing roster each year, something that will serve him extremely well in his new role as the head coach of the Miami hockey program.”

Noreen’s experience with USA Hockey includes his most recent role as U-18 head coach for the 2022 Hlinka Gretzky Cup as well as a collection of three medals earned with the U.S. Junior Select Team in the World Junior A Challenge. Noreen served as head coach for the U.S. Junior Select Team in 2019 (bronze medal) and 2018 (gold medal) after helping the U.S. to silver in 2017 as an assistant.

Before joining Tri-City, Noreen was the head coach for the ECHL’s Orlando Solar Bears from 2015 to 2017 after four previous seasons in the USHL as Youngstown Phantoms head coach and general manager (2011-15). Noreen posted a mark of 38-35-4-6 in Orlando and led the Phantoms to a 126-99-10-9 record. His 2014-15 Youngstown team set a USHL record with a 17-game win streak en route to claiming the Anderson Cup, as Noreen was named the league’s coach of the year.

Noreen, who holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Interpersonal/Organizational Communication from Wisconsin-Stevens Point, began his coaching career at his alma mater as an assistant from 2007 2010. Noreen played four seasons for the Pointers from 2003 2007, serving as a team captain in his junior and senior years. He was named to the NCHA all-academic team in 2005-06 and 2006-07 and graduated from UWSP in 2007.

Noreen will continue with the Storm through the remainder of the USHL regular season and postseason before officially assuming his role leading Miami hockey.

The introductory press conference for Noreen will be held April 9 at 1 p.m. in the club lounge at Goggin Ice Center.

Looking at the results from the regionals, a deluge of entries into the transfer portal: Weekend Review college hockey podcast Season 6 Episode 26

Hosts Jim Connelly, Derek Schooley, and Ed Trefzger review the games of the weekend and news of the week in this Monday, April 1, 2024 edition.

In this episode:

  • Transfer portal is flooded with entries as it opens for all players
  • Denver survives a pair of 2-1 games
  • Boston University rallied past Minnesota to advance
  • Boston College prevailed over Quinnipiac in OT
  • Michigan had a couple of strong third periods to advance
  • Looking at Hobey Baker and Richter awards

This episode is sponsored by the NCAA Division I Men’s Frozen Four, April 11 and 13 in St. Paul, Minnesota. Visit: ncaa.com/mfrozenfour

Subscribe to this college hockey podcast on Apple podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Find our podcast archive at USCHO.com/podcasts

Hockey Humanitarian Award Finalist Feature: Penn State’s Lugris taking on enjoyable role as ‘a catalyst’ in helping to build, grow local sled hockey program

Dylan Lugris has helped to grow the State College Coyotes sled hockey team, all while getting on a sled himself to join the Coyotes players (photo: courtesy Dylan Lugris).

Game recognizes game. And every so often, game helps game level up.

Over the past few years, a local sled hockey team in State College, Pennsylvania, has developed a fan following among Penn State’s men’s hockey program. Nittany Lions coach Guy Gadowsky approached the State College Coyotes, who practice out of PSU’s Pegula Ice Arena, to ask if he could hit a sled with them. He then encouraged his own players to do the same.

Among them was Penn State junior forward Dylan Lugris, who has now organized two editions of the Penn State Sled Hockey Classic, pitting his team against the Coyotes. Lugris’ work to put on an event that has gone from strength to strength has helped him become one of five finalists this year for the Hockey Humanitarian Award.

“I had started going to those practices with a couple of the guys on our team, and over time, I started to develop some good relationships with the Coyotes and was asking them questions and wanted to see if they played any games or how their season looked and how they ran their program,” Lugris said.

“When they told me they don’t get to play games because it’s expensive to travel and get people place to place, I thought, ‘We’ll play you here. We’ve got enough guys that we’ll play here and try to raise some money for next year so that you can travel and build the program.’”

Lugris got the green light from Gadowsky to spearhead the project, and in February of last year, the first Penn State Sled Hockey Classic was held. The game was held in front of a crowded Roar Zone, Penn State’s hockey student section, with Nittany Lions players putting on the whole show between playing, coaching the teams, officiating the game, ushering for fans and even running the scoreboard and public address system. A second edition of the event was held last month, and in terms of what happened on the ice, there was more to keep track of.

Dylan Lugris talks to the State College Coyotes sled hockey team, looking to encourage the players and pass on his knowledge of the game (photo: courtesy Dylan Lugris).

“The first year we did it, they only had nine or 10 people in their program, and it was easy to do us versus them, but this year, since we raised money and grew the sport a little bit, they actually grew their program to 22 players,” Lugris said. “We had line changes this year, and one of their players played for us because it was always a dream of his to play for Penn State, so Gads played for the Coyotes in a little trade.

“All our guys got involved, and when I brought it up to them the first time, they were all for it. The way we had to schedule it, we could only do it on a bye week and had to do it in a morning, so to get the response that we did of, ‘How can we help, what can we do,’ at 9 a.m. on a Saturday when we’re supposed to be off says a lot about who they are and our culture.”

The annual event has helped the Coyotes in other ways, too. They are now proud members of the Northeast Sled Hockey League and play in multiple games per month thanks in part to the nearly $50,000 that Penn State’s players have raised for the club over the past year.

Lugris credits Penn State staff members for helping behind the scenes, but all game day preparation and in-arena work was done by PSU players. And both times, the event exceeded Gadowsky’s expectations, because of the scale of the project.

“I thought Dylan had great intentions, but I didn’t think there was any way he would make it happen, because he basically said, ‘If I can do it, can I do it?’ I said, ‘Yeah, go ahead, but it’s all on you. If you can get it done, that’s great,’” Gadowsky said.

“I knew it would take organizing for both our team, the sled team, ice time and I didn’t know how he would do it with all the people it took, but he motivated our entire team to want to partake in it, and it was a first-class event. It was everything you could imagine.”

Dylan Lugris (16) and teammates celebrate a goal for Penn State (photo: Penn State Athletics).

And it would’ve been eye-opening for fans and players who were new to the world of sled hockey. In at least one instance, a fan looks set to become a player.

“It’s really tough, man,” Lugris said when asked how he has found the experience of playing sled hockey. “It’s a lot of core strength, your arms are tired and it’s faster than you would think, and more physical, too. I’ve gone most Sundays that I can make since my freshman year, and I’m still not very good, but it helps grow the sport, too. When fans see Division I athletes go out there and not be able to play sled hockey, even though they’re Big Ten athletes, it shows how athletic these sled hockey players are, no matter their disability.

“Just seeing their program almost triple in size was incredible, but one of our assistant coaches, his son is around 8 years old and had his birthday party that day this year, and he brought his friends and one of them is disabled. This kid went to the event, had a blast and when they had practice again the following day, he showed up and wanted to be a part of it. Little things like that really go a long way. Seeing a kid go to a birthday party and finding out that this is something he can enjoy and do for the rest of his life is really powerful.”

Lugris is studying corporate innovation and entrepreneurship at Penn State, and has another year left with the Nittany Lions. Plans are already in place for the next edition of the Penn State Sled Hockey Classic, and for future editions after Lugris has moved on, but he will be long remembered for what he put in motion.

“I don’t want to downplay the money raised, because that was certainly significant for a lot of reasons, but there was so much that was so much more impactful,” Gadowsky said. “The feeling of the whole day is awesome, and I really love the fact that our entire team gets behind it, our community gets behind it and that the exposure has helped transform the Coyotes program. That feels really great that Dylan was a catalyst for that.”

A first look at the 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four: Boston College, Boston University, Denver, Michigan

Four of the six most experienced Men’s Frozen Four teams are headed to St. Paul, Minn.

Boston College, Boston University, Denver and Michigan won regional championships to advance to the April 11 national semifinals. The winners will play for the 2024 championship at Xcel Energy Center on April 13.

Michigan extended its NCAA record by qualifying for a 28th Frozen Four. Boston College is making its 26th appearance, second behind the Wolverines. Boston University is third at 24 and Denver is sixth at 18.

They’ve combined to win 28 of the 75 NCAA championships. Denver and Michigan are looking to become the first to win 10.

Boston University will play Denver in the 4 p.m. Central semifinal on April 11. No. 1 overall seed Boston College will play Michigan at 7:30 p.m. Central.

Denver made it to the Frozen Four by beating UMass 2-1 in double overtime on Thursday and Cornell 2-1 on Saturday in the Springfield Regional.

The Pioneers have won seven straight games, including all six of their postseason contests. They won the NCHC Frozen Faceoff by beating St. Cloud State and Omaha, and they’re led in scoring by

Boston University made it two Frozen Four trips in two seasons under coach Jay Pandolfo by winning a pair of 6-3 games in the Sioux Falls Regional — over RIT on Thursday and Minnesota on Saturday.

The Terriers, who lost to Minnesota in the Frozen Four semifinals in 2023, feature the expected No. 1 pick in this year’s NHL draft, Macklin Celebrini. The freshman is tied for second nationally with 64 points.

Boston College earned the third spot in the Frozen Four out of the Providence Regional, beating Michigan Tech 6-1 on Friday and rallying past Quinnipiac 5-4 in overtime on Sunday.

The Eagles have four of the nation’s top six scorers in Will Smith (No. 1, 69 points), Cutter Gauthier (tied No. 2, 64), Ryan Leonard (No. 5, 59) and Gabe Perreault (No. 6, 57).

Michigan is the only non-No. 1 regional seed that won a regional, and it scored two goals in 12 seconds of the third period Sunday to spark a 5-2 win over Michigan State to go through. The Wolverines rallied past North Dakota 4-3 on Friday in the first round in the Maryland Heights Regional.

The Wolverines are making their third straight Frozen Four appearance and second in as many seasons under coach Brandon Naurato. They’re led in scoring by Gavin Brindley, the Big Ten player of the year, and Rutger McGroarty, a first-round pick of Winnipeg in 2022.

Michigan erupts with four goals in third period, advances to third straight Frozen Four in 5-2 win over rival Michigan State in Maryland Heights regional

Michigan is back in the Frozen Four after downing in-state rival Michigan State Sunday night (photo: Michigan Athletics).

MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. – Michigan scored four times in the third period, including the game’s final three goals in the final 7:18, as the Wolverines advanced to their third straight Frozen Four with a 5-2 win over archival Michigan State.

Michigan will face Boston College in the nightcap of the Frozen Four semifinals (April 11, 8:30 p.m. ET).

“Playing BC, the No. 1 team in the country, we have a lot of work to do, [but] we will enjoy this tonight and fly back tomorrow,” Michigan coach Brandon Naurato said. “They deserve it. The kids do.”

It was the first time in the history of the NCAA tournament that Michigan and Michigan State faced one another. It was also the sixth time this season with the Spartans winning four of the first five entering Sunday.

The emotions of the game were clear throughout every running second, as scrums of pushing and shoving were quick to break out after most stoppages in play.

Michigan State took the early lead on a power play goal after Michigan’s sophomore forward phenom Gavin Brindley was called for hooking, allowing MSU’s freshman forward Gavin O’Connell to tip in a puck from sophomore defenseman Matt Basgall and give the Spartans an early lead.

Michigan trailed, 1-0, heading to the second but evened the game on a shot from junior defenseman Ethan Edwards.

“[Edwards and Warren] did a great job, obviously we’re missing our top offensive defenseman Seamus [Casey], so the guys knew they had to step up and they did that, so play as a team and they gave us a chance to win,” Duke said.

Despite the effort from both teams in the second period, neither would score again in the middle frame, sending the game to the third, tied at one.

The Wolverines would be the one to break the tie, after a pass from freshman forward Garrett Schifsky allowed graduate forward Marshall Warren to put one just to the side of MSU’s freshman netminder Trey Augustine and take a 2-1 lead.

But the Spartans special team continued to shine and sophomore forward Joey Larson tied the game at two with 9:34 remaining.

From there it was all Michigan.

Dylan Duke gave the Wolverines the lead at 12:42 and Brindley finished off a highlight-reel pass from Frank Nazar just 12 seconds later.

Duke scored his second of the night with 2:19 remaining to account for the 5-2 final.

With the help of Michigan goaltender Jake Barczewski, a St. Louis-area native playing in front of his hometown fans, and his stellar play through the regional, the ticket was officially punched.

“Really just super, super happy for first of all my teammates, we’ve been through so much this year and to come back here to Missouri, there are so many people in the stands who I haven’t seen in so long, just being able to share this moment with them,” Barczewski said.

For Michigan State, which just eight days earlier won its first Big Ten title over Michigan, this loss will sting.

“It’s pretty hard to put into words to help them feel better, it hurts for sure, it’s not going to replace an opportunity to go play in the Frozen Four,” MSU coach Adam Nightingale said.

Michigan reaches the Frozen Four for 28th time in program history and is looking for its record 10th national title.

Quinnipiac ‘kept throwing the first punch,’ but Boston College’s Malone delivers knockout blow in 5-4 OT thriller as Eagles win Providence regional, reach Frozen Four

Boston College overcame deficits of 2-0, 3-2 and 4-3 and Jack Malone score at 3:06 of overtime to knock off defending national champion Quinnipiac 5-4 to advance to the program’s first Frozen Four since 2016 (photo: Elliot Jenner/Hockey East).

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Falling behind the defending national champions three different times, Boston College stuck with what made them the top-ranked team for most of the season.

The result was the program’s 26th trip to the Frozen Four.

Jack Malone scored in overtime to give BC a 5-4 win over Quinnipiac (ECAC Hockey) before a crowd of 5,835 at Mass Mutual Pavilion in the NCAA regional final on Sunday.

“We felt if we continued on the path we were going, one was going to go for us,” Malone said. “Just trying to keep the boys focused on what was at hand — not to get too high or get too low.”

Hockey East champion BC (33—5-1) advanced to the Frozen Four for the first since 2016. Quinnipiac’s defense of its 2023 NCAA title ended with a 27-10-2 record. The Eagles have now won 13 straight games.

“It was an even hockey game,” BC coach Greg Brown said. “They kept throwing the first punch, and we kept having to respond. Fortunately, we got the last one. It was definitely a game that could have gone either way.”

The Eagles rebounded from deficits of 2-0, 3-2 and 4-3. Boston College forced overtime when Aram Minnetian scored to make it 4-4 with 4:44 left to go in regulation.

Malone notched the game winner when he intercepted an attempted clear by Quinnipiac’s Christophe Tellier and pounded it into an open net. Bobcat goalie Vinnie Duplessis made the initial save on a long-range shot by BC’s Drew Fortescue, but couldn’t scramble back on his feet quickly enough, leaving an open net for Malone to feed. Fortescue and Colby Ambrosio were credited with assists.

“Colby obviously did a great job of getting a piece of it, creating some chaos in front,” Malone said. “I just tried to funnel it to the net and pick up the change and it just shot right out to me. I saw it and tried to rip it, and luckily it went in.”

After a goal-free first period, the teams combined for six in the second, the first three coming in a span of 61 seconds. Jacob Quillan deflected a Travis Treloar shot between the pads of BC goalie Jacob Fowler (26 saves) for a 1-0 Quinnipiac lead 1:19 into the frame. Just 35 seconds later, Iivari Rasanen’s shot from the faceoff circle sailed over Fowler’s left shoulder on the far side and the Bobcats were up 2-0.

BC’s Ryan Leonard redirected a power-play shot-pass by sophomore Cutter Gauthier into the net at 2:20 to put the Eagles on the board and cut Quinnipiac’s lead to 2-1. The assist was the 100th point of Gauthier’s career.

Things settled down after that, but not by much. Andre Gasseau scored for BC to tie the game 2-2 at 11:35 when, from the top of the faceoff circle, he one-timed a pass from Oskar Jellvik past Duplessis (27 saves). The teams traded goals to close out the period — Christophe Fillion buried a rebound to give the Bobcats a 3-2 lead at 15:59, while Leonard scored his second of the night on a wraparound at 17:55 to tie the game 3-3.

“It was a great college hockey game,” Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold said. “Frustrating to lose like that, to not be able to put them away. But (BC’s) a great hockey team. I’m really proud of our guys. The battle level was excellent. The passion was off the charts. We wanted it.”

It didn’t take long in the third period for Quinnipiac to regain the lead. Quillan took a shot from the end line that bounced off the right pad of Fowler and into the net to break a 3-3 deadlock just 16 seconds into the final frame. Boston College forced overtime when Minnetian scored exactly 15 minutes later.

Quinnipiac held a 29-28 shot advantage after regulation.

BC will face either Michigan or Michigan State on April 11, at 8:30 p.m. ET in Saint Paul, Minn.

Quinnipiac, Boston College heading to overtime tied 4-4 in Providence Regional; trip to Frozen Four at stake

No. 1 overall seed Boston College and Quinnipiac will need overtime to decide the Providence Regional final in a game that the Bobcats have never trailed. Click for live stats. (photo: Quinnipiac Athletics)

Rivals Michigan State, Michigan decide final Frozen Four berth: live stats

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Boston College, Quinnipiac play for Frozen Four spot: live stats

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Down 2-0, confident Boston University rallies to down Minnesota 6-3 to win Sioux Falls regional as Terriers ‘stuck to the game plan’ to get back to Frozen Four

Boston University celebrates its Sioux Falls regional title Saturday night (photo: Jim Rosvold).

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Revenge may not have been a motivating factor, but there’s no doubt Boston University is relishing returning the favor from how their 2023 campaign ended.

Second-period goals by Shane LaChance and Jack Harvey helped the Terriers rally from a deficit to a lead they would never relinquish as they avenged their Frozen Four loss to the Gophers last year by ending Minnesota’s season Saturday night 6-3 at the Denny Sanford Premier Center.

“Really proud of our group,” said Terriers coach Jay Pandolfo, who in his second year in charge has brought his team to the Frozen Four each time. “To get down 2-0 and not get rattled, we just stuck to the game plan.”

The Terriers, who were beaten in Tampa Bay 6-2 by the Golden Gophers in the Frozen Four semifinals last April, denied Minnesota a third consecutive trip while earning their second consecutive trip themselves. Pandolfo didn’t think revenge was on the minds of his players, however.

“We just talked about playing our game and we were capable of beating them,” Pandolfo said. “It’s a new year – we certainly liked ending their season like they did ours last year.”

Jaxon Nelson opened the scoring for Minnesota to cap off a brilliant regional while Bryce Brodzinski and Aaron Huglen added goals themselves, but the Gophers could not figure out a way to get one last puck past BU goaltender Mathieu Caron late in regulation after forechecking relentlessly over much of the second half of the third period – Caron’s teammates had a lot to do with that with 18 blocked shots overall on the night with most of them seemingly coming late.

Minnesota coach Bob Motzko knows the game could have ended much differently had the Gophers managed to sneak one through, and he’s not blaming his players.

“They’re awful talented players,” Motzko said of BU. “Their guys made a couple plays that flipped the game on us. Our guys battled. I got no issue on how we battled tonight to try and get back in that thing.”

Nelson, who earned all-regional honors and celebrated his 24th birthday Saturday, got the scoring started with an odd-angle shot from the right circle that somehow went in. With the assist going to Brodzinski on the play, it was the third straight Minnesota goal going back to Thursday where Nelson had the goal and Brodzinski had the lone assist. Then after Rhett Pitlick forced a turnover on the far wall, he found Brodzinski who then scored from the faceoff circle late in the period to get his fourth point of the regional, but the Terriers answered with two minutes left as Quinn Hutson managed to get a puck in on a soft shot that Gophers goaltender Justen Close couldn’t completely stop before it trickled slowly in.

“We lost a little momentum there,” Motzko said. “If we backtrack the game, just a couple critical mistakes.”

Terriers defenseman Lane Hutson certainly saw it as the main turning point.

“To get us back in the game, it was a good feeling for our guys,” he said. “We were confident that we were gonna claw back into the game, and that’s what we did.”

BU tied it early in the second as Macklin Celebrini made a brilliant move coming in before passing across the net to Shane Lachance, who fired into a gaping net as Close came back across too late. Jack Harvey gave the Terriers their first lead just over four minutes later with a wrister from the right circle.

Needing an answer to the sudden change of momentum, Minnesota got it when Huglen tied it at three with a rebound goal. But Boston University had another answer when Lane Hutson snuck one through to the right of Close, and it was 4-3 Terriers after two periods.

“Go get in the ‘O’ zone, get those pucks,” said Minnesota forward Brody Lamb when asked about what his team’s plan of attack was for the third period with the game still within reach.

The Gophers pushed hard to do just that, especially over the final six-plus minutes, but very few shots got through to Caron from the stingy Terriers defense down low – only nine did in the period, and none of them found twine. BU captain Case McCarthy and Sam Stevens eventually finished off the game with empty-net goals in the final two minutes.

“To go into the lead in the third period, and to play the way we did in the third says a lot about our group,” said Pandolfo.

Caron, who earned all-regional honors for Boston University, made 25 saves. Close had 32 for Minnesota.

Boston University will take on Denver in St. Paul in two weeks in the Frozen Four semifinals.

All-Sioux Falls Regional Team
Forward: Macklin Celebrini (Boston University)
Forward: Jack Harvey (Boston University)
Forward: Jaxon Nelson (Minnesota)
Defenseman: Lane Hutson (Boston University)
Defenseman: Case McCarthy (Boston University)
Goaltender: Mathieu Caron (Boston University)
Most Outstanding Player: Macklin Celebrini

Denver plays ‘whatever we need to play,’ earns Frozen Four berth, Springfield regional championship with 2-1 win over Cornell

Denver edged Cornell 2-1 in Springfield, Mass., and the Pioneers are returning to the Frozen Four (photo: Denver Athletics).

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — The highest scoring team in the nation didn’t need much of it to get back to the Frozen Four.

Denver, a team known for often posting victories by wide margins, posted its second-straight 2-1 victory in the NCAA tournament on Saturday. Two late-period goals were all the Pioneers needed for a thrilling win over Cornell in the NCAA regional final before a crowd of 4,407 at the MassMutual Center.

“We’ll play whatever we need to play,” said Denver coach David Carle, whose team went into the afternoon averaging 4.78 goals per game. “You look at our team, we’re comfortable playing any type of game now. We have a lot of confidence regardless of the style of play. Just really proud of our team for being able to execute in these types of hockey games.”

Denver goalie Matt Davis made 24 saves, none bigger than when he stopped Cornell’s Ryan Walsh with his right pad on a point-blank opportunity with less than 10 seconds remaining in the game.

“I thought the guys did a heck of a job there just shutting them down,” said Davis, the tournament MVP who deflects praise as well as he does pucks. “(Cornell’s) a hard, heavy team, and they look to create chaos at the net front. The guys were awesome in front of me there.”

NCHC champion Denver (30-9-3) will now head to the Frozen Four for the 19th time in program history, and first since 2022, when it won its ninth NCAA championship with a 5-1 win over Minnesota State in the final. ECAC Hockey champion Cornell, looking for its first trip to the Frozen Four since 2003, saw its season end at 22-7-6.

Sam Harris provided the game-winner for Denver late in the second period when he redirected a power-play shot by Shai Buium between the pads of Big Red goalie Ian Shane (16 saves) with just 4.8 seconds remaining to break a 1-1 tie. Shane initially appeared to make the save with his pads, but the puck trickled through and no one from Cornell was there to scoop it to safety before it slowly inched over the goal line.

It was Harris’ first goal of the tournament and 14th on the season.

The third period was devoid of scoring, but not excitement. Cornell’s Jonathan Castagna missed on an open-net chance with about 3:15 to go in the period. With Davis out of position, Castagna was unable to get enough of his stick on the puck in the fraction of a second he had to react.

Later in the frame, seconds after Shane was pulled for an extra skater, Walsh was called for a slashing penalty, putting the Pioneers on the power play. After the Big Red successfully killed the penalty, Shane returned to the bench, but Cornell was unable to find the equalizer.

“We fought all the way to the very end,” Cornell coach Mike Schafer said. “(Davis) made an unbelievable save. (He) did a tremendous job. Couldn’t be more proud of our hockey team.”

Cornell sophomore forward Nick DeSantis opened the scoring when he capitalized on a loose puck in front of Denver’s net at 6:44 of the first to put the Big Red up 1-0.

Miko Matikka provided the last-minute magic for the Pioneers in the first period, when his wrister from high in the slot got past Shane at 18:28, knotting the game at 1-1.

The Pioneers will face either Boston University or Minnesota in the Frozen Four on April 11 in Saint Paul, Minn.

Photos: Boston University returns to Frozen Four by beating Minnesota

Boston University clinched its second straight trip to the Frozen Four by beating Minnesota 6-3 on Saturday in Sioux Falls, S.D. Here are some photos.

Boston University faces Minnesota for a spot in St. Paul: live stats

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Denver, Cornell battle for a spot in the Frozen Four: live stats

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Omaha forward Mueller signs with NHL’s Canucks, gives up senior season with Mavericks

Ty Mueller collected 66 points over three seasons playing for Omaha (photo: Bonnie Ryan).

The Vancouver Canucks announced Saturday that the club has agreed to terms on a three-year, entry-level contract with Omaha junior forward Ty Mueller.

“Ty has continued to develop and take important steps forward since we drafted him,” said Canucks GM Patrik Allvin in a statement. “He is a smart two-way hockey player who we look forward to working with as he makes the transition from college hockey to the pro game.”

Mueller recently completed his junior season with the Mavericks, putting up 26 points (11 goals, 15 assists) and 33 penalty minutes in 40 games. He ranked tied for third on the team in points and tied for second in power-play goals (3).

In 98 career NCAA games, the native of Cochrane, Alberta, notched 64 points (31 goals, 33 assists) and 39 penalty minutes.

Mueller was originally selected by Vancouver in the fourth round (105th overall) of the 2023 NHL Draft.

Resilient Michigan squad steps up game in third period, comes from behind to down North Dakota with 4-3 win at Maryland Heights regional

Frank Nazar III ties the game for Michigan Friday night against North Dakota (photo: Michigan Photography).

MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. – A game between two of the most passionate college hockey fan bases, with a well-traveled crowd and a shot at continuing on further into the tournament went down Friday night between Michigan and North Dakota.

The Wolverines and Fighting Hawks faced off in the Maryland Heights regional round at Centene Community Ice Center, where both teams played a rough and rowdy game, continuing an unstoppable run for victory, but the Wolverines came out on top with a 4-3 victory, scoring three goals in the third period after being down 2-1 after 40 minutes.

North Dakota had been 20-0-0 this season when leading after two periods.

“That (North Dakota) team is a really, really good hockey team, very hard, physical, skilled, but just really proud of our guys for their resiliency,” Michigan coach Brandon Naurato said. “I feel like we found our game in the third and just proud of them for stepping up.”

Michigan had some major help from three key players in Garrett Schifsky and TJ Hughes, with Dylan Duke scoring the game-winning goal to come out on top.

The Fighting Hawks were the first team to get on the board in the first period as Hunter Johannes put one top shelf on Michigan goalie Jake Barczewski.

“We had a really good game plan in place, and I thought we did it for the most part, but again, when you’re dealing with playing against really good teams and skilled teams, if you don’t execute the part of the game that you needed to do than that’s what happens,” North Dakota coach Brad Berry said.

But the Wolverines had no quit in their game as Frank Nazar III picked up the heat to tie the game at one. Michigan came back to catch up quickly in shots on goal, but the Fighting Hawks answered on a goal from Hobey Baker top-10 finalist Jackson Blake.

North Dakota attempted to make a comeback by reaching within a goal with just a few fighting minutes left in the third period, as well as making the move to pull goalie Ludvig Persson for the extra attacker, but Michigan held off the comeback.

The Wolverines will now go on to face off against Michigan State in their sixth matchup on the year Sunday at 5:30 p.m. CST from the Centene Community Ice Center.

“Michigan State is always a good opponent for us,” Schifsky said. “They’ve gotten the better of us the last four times, so we’re playing with a little chip on our shoulder, with something to prove, and we’re looking to three-peat back to the Frozen Four.”

‘No worry on the bench’ as Czerneckianair pots overtime winner to send Quinnipiac to Providence regional final with 3-2 win over Wisconsin

Quinnipiac players mob Victor Czerneckianair after the Bobcats downed Wisconsin in overtime Friday evening in Providence (photo: Rob Rasmussen/P8Photos.com).

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — It took a little longer than the last time, but Quinnipiac will take it.

Victor Czerneckianair scored at 11:04 of overtime to lift Quinnipiac to a 3-2 win over Wisconsin in the first round of the NCAA tournament on Friday before a crowd of 6,988 at the Amica Mutual Pavilion.

It was the second straight NCAA tournament overtime victory for the Bobcats, who needed only 10 seconds to beat another B1G team, Minnesota, by the same score in overtime of last year’s NCAA championship game.

“I don’t think there’s really stress for our group,” Czerneckianair said. “We take it to them and kind of don’t worry about what happens. Because when you do that, you only make mistakes. We’ve been there before, obviously, and we handle adversity so well.”

Quinnipiac (27-9-2) will continue its quest to become the first repeat NCAA champions since Minnesota-Duluth in 2018-19 when it faces overall tournament No. 1 Boston College (Hockey East) on Sunday. Wisconsin saw its season end at 26-12-2.

“I thought we just battled the whole game,” Quinnipiac coach Rand Pecknold said. “In overtime, there was no panic, no worry on the bench. We really thought we were going to win. We knew we were playing a great team. (They) really believed.”

Czerneckianair’s game winner, his second goal of the night, came when Quinnipiac caught Wisconsin in a line change. Just 10 seconds after Wisconsin successfully killed a penalty, Quinnipiac’s Dennis Pennington played the puck from deep in the Bobcats’ own end. Pennington passed the puck across two zones to Travis Treloar on the right wing at the Wisconsin blue line, where he then found Czerneckianair skating alone in the slot. The sophomore forward from Southington, Conn., did some fancy stickwork and poked it past the right pad of Badgers goalie Kyle McClellan to send the Bobcats to a date with BC.

“They were absolutely gassed,” Wisconsin coach Mike Hastings said. “We tried to get to the bench in time, (and) they were able to transition and get it back, make a play, and then finish. The guys had done a really good job, I thought, killing that penalty.”

The game featured two lead changes and was thrice tied. It took only 2:12 for Quinnipiac (ECAC Hockey) to get the scoring started in the first period, when Christophe Fillion redirected a shot by Cristophe Tellier into the net to give the Bobcats a 1-0 lead.

A pair of goals just 1:15 apart early in the second period gave Wisconsin a 2-1 lead. Quinn Finley intercepted a pass intended for Quinnipiac’s Travis Treloar at the Bobcats’ blue line, skated right in and beat goalie Vinny Duplessis glove side.

The Badgers took a 2-1 lead via a highlight-reel play by freshman defenseman Joe Palodichuk, who collected a rebound of his own shot, went behind the net, wrapped around and tucked the puck past Duplessis’s left skate.

The Bobcats tied it up just before the end of the middle frame when Czerneckianair buried the rebound off a shot by Iivari Rasanen, shortly after Rasanen picked up the draw off a faceoff.

Duplessis finished with 18 saves, while McClellan had 28. Quinnipiac held a 24-17 advantage in shots after regulation.

Davidson nets game-winning goal in ‘really special game’ at Maryland Heights regional as Michigan State rallies from 4-2 deficit to take 5-4 OT win over Western Michigan

Karsen Dorwart celebrates his game-tying goal in the third period for Michigan State (photo: Michigan State Athletics).

MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. – It was a matchup of the year between two former CCHA teams who have not been brought together out on the ice since 2021 when Western Michigan took down Michigan State at the Great Lakes Invitational.

With the next team advancing to the second round of the tournament, the Spartans were able to pull off a 5-4 overtime victory over the Broncos at the Centene Community Ice Center to move on to the Sunday game. But it wasn’t without a couple bumps in the road, as well as being down 4-2 a whole third period of hockey left to play.

With just a minute to go in the third period, the Spartans tied up the game on a Karsen Dorwart goal, but it was a rip from senior forward Jeremy Davidson in the sudden-death overtime that gave the Spartans the victory.

“Karsen was one of the guys driving to the net and I had some time and space and just ripped it on net and it hit the guy’s (western defenseman Daniel Hilsendager) stick and went in,” Davidson said. “Thank God it did.”

“’Davy’ (Davidson) has been great,” MSU coach Adam Nightingale said. “He’s been through a lot, you know. He obviously started at UMass and then went back to juniors and then came in here. Really thankful for him to come in here and buy in.”

Both teams had some good looks in the first period, but WMU’s Matteo Costantini was the first of either team to have a look at the net and slip a puck past MSU netminder Trey Augustine on his glove side to put the Broncos up 1-0 early.

Between the two teams, the physicality was very high, as the well-oiled veteran team of the Broncos was quick to use that to their advantage, but MSU quickly crawled back into it to use their own push against them.

“Up 4-2, we had lots of chances to make it 5-2,” WMU coach Pat Ferschweiler said. “And then overtime, that unfortunate bounce, they make a good play by going north, so give them credit for sure, and then we turn around and it’s in our own net, so not the way we’d like to lose a hockey game, but certainly proud of this team.”

The playoff style of hockey meant that the game would be what was thought to be a low scoring one to say the least and going 25 minutes with no goal on the board, the Spartans put a tie to the game after Daniel Russell took a pass up the ice from Patrick Geary and ripped a puck past Western goalie Cameron Rowe.

But the game proved to be nothing less than low scoring.

Michigan State started buzzing against just halfway through the second period when they finally took a lead on the Broncos, but it didn’t last long when a power play for Western Michigan came along and the Broncos scored on the man advantage, and then again just a minute later to take back a one-goal lead.

With WMU leading with a minute to go in the third period and Augustine pulled from the goal, the Spartans tied the game on Dorwart’s goal to send the game into overtime, where the Spartans pulled off their second overtime win in two weeks to keep their season moving along.

“Obviously it’s tough, probably the toughest loss I’ve ever had in my hockey career,” Western Michigan captain Luke Grainger said. “This program has meant the world to me and it just sucks, and that’s the way I leave here. Obviously, it’s really tough.”

The Spartans will face off against the winner of the game between North Dakota and Michigan on Sunday at 5:30 p.m. CDT at Centene Community Ice Center.

“Obviously really proud of our guys, that was a really special game for us, but it’s a quick turnaround,” Nightingale said. “Our goal was to come here and win the tournament, so our group has done a good job of being even keeled. All we’re asking for is best effort every day and then have the best attitude and be the best teammate.”

North Dakota faces Michigan to wrap up NCAA tournament’s 2nd day: live stats

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