{"id":152408,"date":"2025-03-23T18:11:31","date_gmt":"2025-03-23T23:11:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=152408"},"modified":"2025-03-23T21:07:38","modified_gmt":"2025-03-24T02:07:38","slug":"womens-division-i-college-hockey-the-wisconsin-badgers-are-2025-national-champions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2025\/03\/23\/womens-division-i-college-hockey-the-wisconsin-badgers-are-2025-national-champions\/","title":{"rendered":"Women\u2019s Division I College Hockey: The Wisconsin Badgers are 2025 National Champions!"},"content":{"rendered":"
MINNEAPOLIS — The Wisconsin Badgers earned their eighth title on Sunday, coming from behind to defeat Ohio State 4-3 in overtime at Ridder Arena on the campus of the University of Minnesota.<\/p>\n
The Badgers tied the game on a penalty shot with just 18.9 seconds left on the clock after Mark Johnson’s coaches challenge revealed Ohio State’s Maddi Wheeler had covered the puck with her hand in the crease.<\/p>\n
Kirsten Simms buried the penalty shot to force overtime.<\/p>\n
The game broadcast showed Johnson asking his team “Who wants it?” in reference to the penalty shot and Simms’ hand shooting up, but after the game she said her initial inclination was not to put herself in that situation.<\/p>\n
But her teammates were chanting her name and hyping her up.<\/p>\n
“We know she’s the best goal scorer on the team, so we had to let her know and remind her and tell her she’s clutch,” said Laila Edwards.<\/p>\n
Johnson said he put the question to the players on who wanted to shoot because he knew confidence was the most important part of the equation.<\/p>\n
“I wanted to see who wanted to step up and own it and who felt comfortable in this setting, because you can’t have one ounce of negativity in your mind as you pick the puck up. It’s got to be all positive,” he said.<\/p>\n
Though she didn’t start there, the support from her teammates got Simms there and had her shooting her hand up when the question came from her coach.<\/p>\n
Both goalie Ava McNaughton and Johnson admitted after the game that they did not watch Simms take the shot.<\/p>\n
“I knew that she she has so many moves up her sleeve and it’s so difficult to defend her on a shoot out. I knew that she had everything she needed in her toolbox and I didn’t need to look. All I needed to hear was the crowd and I knew that it was going to go in,” said McNaughton.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Simms said she didn’t overthink what move she was going to use on the play, but it turns out the last successful penalty shot the Badgers scored was put in by Kirsten Simms – and she scored it on Thiele with a move that looked similar to Sunday’s – with one exception. On Sunday, Simms pulled the puck back across to her forehand to score.<\/p>\n