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Hockey is a team effort and in a game Saturday which Minnesota was desperate for a win, it was the most unlikeliest of heroes who stepped up for the team.
Nico Sacchetti, a senior who has spent most of the season as a healthy scratch, scored the game-winning goal 5:16 into the second period as the Gophers overcame a slow start and an overturned goal to beat Colorado College 2-1 on Hockey Day Minnesota. With the win the Maroon and Gold re-took first place in the WCHA because Minnesota Duluth is playing non-conference Alabama-Huntsville this weekend.
"It's tough to see [injured Gopher senior] Nick Larson go down," said Sacchetti. "But we have a deep team and I have to take advantage of the opportunities."
Nate Condon also scored for Minnesota (16-9-1, 13-5-0 WCHA) while Jaden Schwartz scored his eighth goal of the year for Colorado College (14-9-1, 11-7-0 WCHA) in an losing effort.
For two teams averaging over 3.5 goals per game, Saturday's contest was defensive with both games this weekend featuring six goals in total. Once again, the Tigers' Josh Thorimbert, who made 35 saves, and Gophers' Kent Patterson, who made 19, shined but they were helped out by great defensive play. Both teams' top lines were held in check and Minnesota looked sluggish at times before Schwartz was finally able to break out and score with 4:58 left in the first.
The St. Louis Blues first-round pick was set up in front of Patterson on a pass behind the net from Jeff Collett and shot it over the Gopher goalie. While it was only the Tigers' third shot in fifteen minutes of play, they were given other opportunities with Minnesota not connecting passes and managing to have any type of flow.
"You know we haven't had that many starts like that," said Minnesota head coach Don Lucia after the game.
It looked like that would continue before a late shorthanded goal by Condon tied the game at one 2:19 before the end of the period and finally woke the Gophers up. With Jake Parenteau in the box for cross-checking, Nate was able to find a gap with linemate Taylor Matson and Colorado College's Gabe Guentzel and Scott Winkler coming together and sniped a shot from the top of the top of the circle past Thorimbert.
"I was just trying to find a little hole and not hit Taylor Matson in the back," said Condon.
The goal was Condon's fourth shorthanded on the season and ninth overall. With that, he took over sole possession of second place in college hockey trailing only Austin Smith of Colgate's five goals shorthanded.
Minnesota came out of first intermission the hungrier team. Although Matson took the period's first penalty, the Gophers continued moving their feet and forcing Colorado College to take penalties. It marked a rough night for the Tigers' special teams, which went 0-4 tonight and 0-8 on the weekend.
"There was not a lot of room despite an Olympic sheet," said Colorado College head coach Scott Owens (Mariucci Arena is 15 feet wider than a NHL-regulation sheet). "That being said, I haven't seen our power play that out of sync in a couple years."
Along with Colorado College taking penalties, the Gophers started to crash the net more as they stayed composed. It paid off for Sacchetti who, of all people, was right in front of Thorimbert hacking away twice before burying the puck in the back of the net.
Condon almost added a second goal midway through the period and for a few minutes Minnesota lead 3-1. With 9:59 remaining in the second the sophomore was able to crash the net along with Matson and linemate Seth Ambroz and score. However, the goal was overturned after a lengthy review which determined Matson passed the puck with his hand to Condon and despite the puck bouncing off of goalie Josh Thorimbert, that did not constitute the Tigers regaining possession.
What could have been a letdown for the Gophers ended up fueling them throughout the rest of the second period and the game.
"That's what you worry about," said Lucia. "You're dominating the game but can't get the separation necessary."
Minnesota continued trying for that third goal but could not get another shot past Thorimbert. A few frenzies in front of the net were saved and a missed chance from a snakebittten Erik Haula ended up going wide but they spent most of the final period in the Colorado College zone. It was a solid effort and one of the best periods of the year with the Gophers out-shooting the Tigers 19-6.
"Friday was done with," said Condon. "We had to come out [tonight] and forget [what happened last night]."
Instead of sitting back and having four guys play defense, the Gophers were the aggressors getting multiple chances from a vicious forecheck. They also got great defense from all three pairings along with the line known more for scoring - the top line of Kyle Rau, Nick Bjugstad and Zach Budish - shutting down the Tigers' top line of Jaden Schwartz, Rylan Schwartz and Jeff Collett. The Schwartz brothers only had two quality shots in the third period and both came on the one shift they were not matched up with Minnesota's top line.
"All in all I was pretty happy with how we played," said Owens. "I would have liked to come out with a point though.
Overall, it was a good win for a Minnesota hockey team in need of one. What makes Saturday's game more special is that first period aside, everyone on the team gave a great effort and were rewarded, none more than the fourth-liner Nico Sacchetti. Some players who were toiling in anonymity or hadn't played well lately showed why they wore the block "M" on their chest. Guys like Seth Ambroz, Justin Holl and Travis Boyd all shined during stretches of play without scoring and in the end a player who was scratched Friday night scored the game winner.
Colorado College showed why they are one of the WCHA's elite teams this weekend but when guys are playing hard and firing on all cylinders, Minnesota's depth is its biggest strength.
Minnesota returns to play Friday and Saturday against St. Cloud State in a home and home series. Friday's game is at Mariucci Arena and broadcast on BTN while Saturday's game is at the National Hockey Center in St. Cloud. Both games start at 7 PM CST.
After tinkering with the lines last night, Minnesota coach Don Lucia has gone back to "normal" in tonight's rematch. Seth Ambroz, who was on a line with Erik Haula and Jake Hansen Friday, is back with regular linemates Nate Condon and Taylor Matson while Sam Warning makes his return after being a healthy scratch the last two games.
Nico Sacchetti is also in for the Gophers and two players from Friday's game, Joe Miller and Christian Isackson, are sitting.
Kent Patterson is between the pipes for Minnesota while Josh Thorimbert once again starts for Colorado College. The Tigers made one change, inserting freshman defenseman Peter Soykewych for Ian Young.
Minnesota Golden Gophers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Kyle Rau - Nick Bjugstad - Zach Budish
Sam Warning - Erik Haula - Jake Hansen
Nate Condon - Taylor Matson - Seth Ambroz
Tom Serratore - Travis Boyd - Nico Sacchetti
Defense:
Seth Helgeson - Justin Holl
Ben Marshall - Mark Alt
Jake Parenteau - Nate Schmidt
Goalies (bold indicates starting):
Kent Patterson
Michael Shibrowski
Jake Kremer
Colorado College Tigers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Jaden Schwartz - Rylan Schwartz - Jeff Collett
Alexander Krushelnyski - Nick Dineen - Scott Winkler
Archie Skalbeck - David Civitarese - William Rapuzzi
Michael Morin - Tim Hall - Andrew Hamburg
Defense:
Gabe Guentzel - Joe Marciano
Aaron Harstad - Mike Boivin
Peter Stoykewych - Arthur Bidwell
Goalies:
Josh Thrimbert
Joe Howe
Tonight's game starts at 5:00 PM and is being televised on Fox Sports North as part of Hockey Day Minnesota. You can follow me on Twitter for in-game hockey updates @gopherstate and follow @sbnminnesota for the best in Minnesota sports.
In a thirty second stretch Friday night, 10,027 people at Mariucci Arena went from being louder than most rock concerts to deflated after being punched in the stomach. It's hard to blame them either.
Tim Hall scored his second goal of the season with 36 seconds left in the game to give Colorado College (14-8-1, 11-6-0 WCHA) a 2-1 win over Minnesota (16-9-1, 12-5-0 WCHA) Friday night in Minneapolis. Sophomore Nick Bjugstad scored his 20th goal of the season while the Gophers had an extra man with 1:17 left but 38 saves by Tigers goalie Josh Thorimbert and a failed five minute power play in the third period proved to be their downfall.
"Obviously a loss like this is hard," said Bjugstad. "[As a team] we have to be more detailed...mental lapses cost us at times."
Despite both teams having two of the more high-powered offenses in the WCHA, Friday's game featured a display of defense and goaltenders. Neither team was able to get on the scoreboard in the first period with Minnesota's Kent Patterson and Colorado College's Thorimbert overcoming rough starts to hold their own. Thorimbert turned away 15 Gophers shots, including five shots on their only power play of the period.
Before that Jake Hansen had a golden opportunity on a rebound but despite an empty net, Thorimbert was able to get his pad in the way for a remarkable save.
"[Thorimbert] was real good tonight. He played solid all game," said Bjugstad afterwards.
With Minnesota continuing to get chances in the second period, it was Colorado College who got on the board first. Captain Nick Dineen took advantage of a missed pass from the Minnesota blue line by Hansen, picked the puck up unguarded and beat Minnesota goalie Kent Patterson five-hole 4:04 into period to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead.
Thorimbert continued to stand tall against Gopher chances. He thwarted Nate Condon's attempt for his fourth shorthanded goal of the year on a breakaway, a couple saves on rebounds and even got some love from the Hockey Gods when a shot from Kyle Rau hit the post.
Rau had an eventful second period himself; besides hitting the post he laid out CC's Archie Skalbeck in an open-ice hit which rejuvenated the Mariucci faithful and laid out to block a shot. It was part of an all-out defensive effort for Minnesota.
"I thought our penalty kill did a great job and kept the Schwartzes (Jaden and Rylan) off the board," said head coach Don Lucia.
The third period contained much of the same defensive effort until Skalbeck's penalty with 12:23 left. They had a couple great chances against the Tigers penalty kill, getting four shots on net, but for the third time in four games the Gophers were unable to take advantage of five minute major given by the opposition.
"We need to get the puck on net more," said defenseman Mark Alt when asked about what Minnesota needs to do about kickstarting their power play. "Just move it around and make things happen. I thought we did some of that tonight but have to get the puck on net more."
The Gophers continued getting shots on Thorimbert throughout the third but it seemed like the Colorado College goaltender would steal a game before Nick Bjugstad tied the score with 1:17 left in regulation. Bjugstad's goal came twelve seconds after Patterson left the crease for an extra attacker and found its way through traffic. There was concern Josh Thorimbert was interfered with but after a review, the referees allowed the goal to stand.
It was however, all for naught. Minnesota came close to getting a second goal past the Tigers goalie before CC worked its way into the Gopher zone. All of a sudden Hall was there on Patterson's doorstep, got to the right of Patterson and a game that was heading to overtime with Minnesota's momentum was over.
"Our guys made a mistake off the face off and it cost us the game," said Lucia. "It's disappointing. You work so hard to get yourself back."
With how the game ended, it will be interesting to see how the Gophers respond tomorrow. Tonight wasn't their best game of the season but they were able to shut down one of the most dangerous lines in the WCHA in Jaden Schwartz, Rylan Schwartz and Jeff Collett while making Josh Thorimbert stand on his head at times. In most cases this would be a moral victory but with how the game ended giving up the winning goal thirty seconds after tying things up, it's enough for anyone to feel like they've been punched in the stomach.
In Minnesota's case, they better hope it's not a feeling repeated at the end of the season because of this one.
Both teams play again tomorrow evening at 5 PM as part of Hockey Day Minnesota. The game will be broadcast on Fox Sports North and on the radio at ESPN 1500.
With Nick Larson being out of action after having wrist surgery earlier in the week and a couple players stepping up when given the chance, there are a few changes from the normal Gophers lineup. Two players who normally sit, Joey Miller and Christian Isackson, get a chance to play while Sam Warning is scratched for a second consecutive game. Freshman Seth Ambroz takes his spot on the second line with Erik Haula and Jake Hansen.
Kent Patterson is between the pipes for Minnesota while Josh Thorimbert starts for Colorado College.
Minnesota Golden Gophers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Kyle Rau - Nick Bjugstad - Zach Budish
Jake Hansen - Erik Haula - Seth Ambroz
Nate Condon - Taylor Matson - Christian Isackson
Tom Serratore - Travis Boyd - Joe Miller
Defense:
Seth Helgeson - Justin Holl
Ben Marshall - Mark Alt
Jake Parenteau - Nate Schmidt
Goalies (bold indicates starting):
Kent Patterson
Michael Shibrowski
Jake Kremer
Colorado College Tigers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Jaden Schwartz - Rylan Schwartz - Jeff Collett
Alexander Krushelnyski - Nick Dineen - Scott Winkler
Archie Skalbeck - David Civitarese - William Rapuzzi
Michael Morin - Tim Hall - Andrew Hamburg
Defense:
Gabe Guentzel - Joe Marciano
Aaron Harstad - Mike Boivin
Ian Young - Arthur Bidwell
Goalies:
Josh Thrimbert
Joe Howe
Tonight's game starts at 7:00 PM and is being televised on Fox Sports North. You can follow me on Twitter for in-game hockey updates @gopherstateand follow@sbnminnesota for the best in Minnesota sports.
The 16-8-1 University of Minnesota Golden Gophers play two hockey games this weekend against the 13-8-1 Colorado College in Minneapolis. Minnesota split a two-game series against rival North Dakota last weekend, losing 2-1 Friday before ending a three-game losing streak and winning 6-2 in Grand Forks. The Tigers also split their two-game series last weekend against St. Cloud State, winning 3-1 Friday before losing 5-4 in overtime on Saturday.
Minnesota enters this weekend ranked fourth in the USCHO poll and second by USA Today/USA Hockey. Colorado College is ranked 11th in both polls
Details for this weekend's series are below.
In addition, Root Sports Rocky Mountain will be broadcasting Friday's game live and tape-delaying Saturday's game until 7:00 PM in that region.
For more Gophers coverage, check out The Daily Gopher
For more Gophers coverage, check out The Daily Gopher.
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Photographs by
Micah Taylor,
clairity, and
Fibonacci Blue used in background montage under Creative Commons. Thank you.