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The Minnesota Golden Gophers defeated the Wisconsin Badgers on Saturday night thanks to two goals in the third period.
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Oddly enough in a game that the Gophers won, the turning point was a play which did not go their way.
After Nick Bjugstad was given an extra minor coming out of a melee early in the third period, Erik Haula and Nate Schmidt scored less than three minutes apart for Minnesota (24-12-1, 20-8-0 WCHA) as they defeated Wisconsin (16-16-2, 11-5-2 WCHA) Saturday and celebrated the program's 13th MacNaughton Cup.
With the win, the Gophers are tied for sixth (virtually 7th) with Boston University in the Pairwise rankings.
"It's been fun all six times [that he's won the MacNaughton]," Gophers head coach Don Lucia said after the game. "I'm just happy for our seniors."
Tyler Barnes scored for the Badgers and freshman Joel Rumpel made 31 saves in defeat.
Wisconsin's best chance in the first period came five seconds into the game but despite a stellar opening twenty minutes by the Gophers out-shooting them 15-7, the two teams were tied at zero at the end of the end of the period. Having Bjugstad back helped revitalize the first line and Minnesota did a better job crashing the net in the first five minutes than they did all game Friday. Joel Rumpel stood tall, however, even though they outworked the Badgers and made a couple great saves on two Gopher power plays.
The second period saw Wisconsin outwork the Gophers and force them to take three penalties. All three times the Badgers had great opportunities to score - including a whiffed rebound by Tyler Barnes and defenseman Jake McCabe hitting the post - but Barnes made up for his earlier attempt when he put home another rebound to give them a 1-0 lead midway through the second.
It was the lone blemish for senior goaltender Kent Patterson, who made 17 saves a night after spending the third period watching his backup play for the for first time all season.
"I've seen the [view from the bench] one too many times," he said.
Minnesota continued trying to find a way to beat Rumpel throughout the rest of the second period but to no avail. Even when the freshman goalie was out of position, the Wisconsin defense was able to clear a rebound or get a stick on a shot destined to tie the game.
"[Wisconsin's] playing well right now. They're never easy and Justin Schultz and Mark Zengerle are two of the premiere players in college hockey," said Lucia.
Frustrations rose on both sides with Badgers captain John Ramage took offense to a Kyle Rau hit on Joesph LaBate that wasn't called for a penalty and by the beginning of the third period it was only a matter of when, not if, a fight would break out. Emotions finally boiled over 3:33 into the third period when Nick Bjugstad ran into Rumpel and a ten person scrum broke out. Three players from each side ended up in the penalty box with Bjugstad receiving an extra minor for goaltender interference.
Instead of Wisconsin taking advantage on the power play again or the Gophers not having their leading goal scorer on the ice for 4 minutes like they did all night Friday, the melee was just the thing Minnesota needed to find an opening.
A minute into the penalty kill, Erik Haula and Jake Hansen were on their second shorthanded two-on-one of the game. Rumpel stopped the previous opportunity but Haula saw his own and beat the Badger goalie for his 15th goal of the season to tie the game at one.
"I knew [the Wisconsin defender] was going to take Hansen and took it," said Haula. "I haven't had one all game, it felt great."
The crowd of 10,241 at Mariucci Arena came unglued with the goal, which was only a precursor to what came later.
"That's the loudest I've ever heard the place in my life,"Nate Schmidt said. "It's unbelievable. I was sitting next to [goalie Michael] Shibrowski on the bench after the first goal and couldn't hear him. The crowd was so loud it gave me goosebumps."
Haula's goal gave the Gophers the confidence they had been lacking for much of the weekend and on an ensuing power play with Ramage in the box, Schmidt happened. The Minnesota defenseman, who leads all college hockey defensemen with 30 assists but only has two goals this season, saved the team from taking an offsides call, faked a shot to make a Badger defender go down, went around him and unleashed a cannon of a slap shot over Joel Rumpel's shoulder to give the Gophers the lead with 12:20 remaining.
If the building was loud after Haula's goal, the roof came off for Nate Schmidt.
Wisconsin made Patterson and the defense work with a couple late opportunities but it wasn't enough to stop Minnesota from ending the season and Senior Night on a high note. It was the capstone on a tremendous season for the Gophers and they were able to celebrate a win and being presented the MacNaughton Cup by WCHA Commissioner Bruce McLeod in front of the student section and crowd.
"It's fun to play here," said Erik Haula." I love the fans. I'm just so happy to win the [MacNaughton] Cup with this group of guys."
In the end, as good as a comeback win Saturday night was, the team made sure to point out that there is still more work to be done. But for now, with the MacNaughton in hand and touched by the entire team (forgoing superstition), Saturday is a time to enjoy.
"I'm probably going to celebrate today, tonight and then go back to work on Monday," Haula said.
Minnesota faces Alaska-Anchorage next weekend in the first round of the WCHA Playoffs Friday, Saturday and (if necessarily) Sunday. All three games begin at 7 p.m. Central and will air on Fox Sports North (the exact channel, regular or Plus is yet to be determined).
For more on the Minnesota Golden Gophers, check out The Daily Gopher. For more on the Wisconsin Badgers, check out Bucky's Fifth Quarter. You can also catch up on the WCHA and college hockey over at Western College Hockey.
The Gophers are only making one change Saturday night against Wisconsin but it's a big one.
Nick Bjugstad, Minnesota's leading goal scorer, returns to the lineup Saturday after missing Friday's 4-1 loss to the Badgers. He was injured in the second period of last week's 3-2 win over Nebraska-Omaha and did not return to that game as a precaution. He replaces Travis Boyd, who sits in favor of senior Joey Miller.
Wisconsin made no changes from their Friday lineup.
Kent Patterson is in net again for the Gophers after being pulled for Michael Shibrowski Friday. Joel Rumpel gets the nod again for the Badgers.
Minnesota Golden Gophers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Kyle Rau (#7) - Nick Bjugstad (#27) - Zach Budish (#24)
Sam Warning (#11) - Erik Haula (#19) - Jake Hansen (#21)
Nate Condon (#16) - Taylor Matson (#9) - Seth Ambroz (#17)
Tom Serratore (#14) - Nick Larson (#18) - Joe Miller (#15)
Defense:
Seth Helgeson (#4) - Justin Holl (#12)
Ben Marshall (#10) - Mark Alt (#20)
Jake Parenteau (#6) -Nate Schmidt (#29)
Goalies (bold indicates starting):
Kent Patterson (#35)
Michael Shibrowski (#1)
Jake Kremer (#30)
University of Wisconsin Badgers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Ryan Little (#20) - Mark Zengerle (#9) - Tyler Barnes (#7)
Matt Paape (#8) - Brendan Woods (#21) - Michael Mersch (#25)
Joesph Labate (#16) - Jefferson Dahl (#14) - Sean Little (#18)
Brad Navin (#26) - Keegan Meuer - Jason Clark (#17)
Defense:
Frankie Simonelli (#27) - Justin Schultz (#6)
Jake McCabe (#19) - John Ramage (#55)
Eric Springer (#4) - Joe Faust (#24)
Goalies:
Joel Rumpel (#33)
Landon Peterson (#31)
Referees: Brian Thul, Scott Bokal
Linesmen: Tony Czech, Jeff Schultz
Tonight's game starts at 7:00 PM and is being televised on Fox Sports North Plus (find your channel here). You can follow me on Twitter for in-game hockey updates @gopherstatelive from Mariucci and follow @sbnminnesota for the best in Minnesota sports.
After last night's 4-1 loss to Wisconsin (16-15-2, 11-14-2 WCHA) , the Golden Gopher hockey team gets a chance to celebrate both their new MacNaughton Cup and seven seniors in style.
Minnesota (23-12-1, 19-8-0 WCHA) faces the Badgers in the second game of a two-game series Saturday at Mariucci Arena and the regular season finale for both teams. Despite losing Friday, they clinched a share of the WCHA Regular Season title with St. Cloud State defeating Minnesota-Duluth 2-1.
It's also senior night, which will see the Gophers honor seniors Jake Hansen, Jake Kremer, Nick Larson, Taylor Matson, Joe Miller, Kent Patterson and Nico Sacchetti.
They may also get back leading goal scorer Nick Bjugstad after he missed Friday's game. Head coach Don Lucia said after last night's game that there was a "good chance" Bjugstad would play but that it depended on how he felt.
Details for Saturday's game, which airs on Fox Sports North Plus because of Minnesota Timberwolves-Portland Trailblazers game, is below.
Game Date: Saturday March 3rd
Location: Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis, MinnesotaGame Time: 7:00 PM CST
TV Schedule: Fox Sports North Plus (find channel here)
Announcers: Anthony LaPanta & Kevin Gorg (FSN)Radio: 1500 ESPN
Announcers: Wally Shaver & Frank Mazzocco
For more on the Minnesota Golden Gophers, check out The Daily Gopher. For more on the Wisconsin Badgers, check out Bucky's Fifth Quarter. You can also catch up on the WCHA and college hockey over at Western College Hockey.
With last night's 4-1 loss to Wisconsin and Minnesota winning a share of the MacNaughton Cup behind us, it seemed appropriate to take a look at the not-so-distant future.
One of the questions that I kept getting asked last night was what the Gophers winning the WCHA regular season title meant for their postseason chances. Despite losing to the Badgers, Minnesota still clinched the top seed in the first round of the WCHA playoffs after St. Cloud State defeated Minnesota-Duluth. Even if they lose tonight and the Bulldogs win to tie them at 38 points, the Gophers will still the top seed by virtue of beating Minnesota-Duluth twice in October.
Because of that, Minnesota will be playing 12th-place Alaska-Anchorage at Mariucci Arena next weekend. The Seawolves have 11 points and cannot catch 11th-place Minnesota State (who have 18 points and will be playing Minnesota-Duluth at Amsoil Arena). This series is a sort of revenge for the Gophers, who were swept by Alaska-Anchorage when the two teams met in the first round at Mariucci last season.
In fact, Minnesota has lost a total of three WCHA first round games since they moved to the present Mariucci Arena and all three are to the Seawolves (the other game was in 2007).
The Gophers do not a clinch an automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament with a WCHA Regular Season title. Only the winner of the WCHA Conference Tournament receives an automatic bid but it is hard to come up with a scenario in which they move outside the top 14 teams in the Pairwise Rankings. Even if Minnesota loses tonight and Alaska-Anchorage defeats them twice to advance to the WCHA Final Five (the worst-case scenario), it will still take a few teams surprising to drop them that low.
Minnesota stood still at seventh (tied with Union) despite losing last night.
That's the good news. The bad news concerning the Pairwise rankings is that the Gophers have an uphill battle gaining any ground in the rankings if they go on a run, defeat Alaska-Anchorage next weekend and win the WCHA Final Five in St. Paul. The reason for this has to do with Minnesota's non-conference record.
Losing to Northeastern and Vermont (the ninth and tenth-place teams in the ten-team Hockey East) harm head-to-head comparisons against many of the Hockey East teams above them (although the two teams directly above the Gophers, Ferris State and Massachusetts-Lowell, also lost to Vermont - those are 3 of the Catamounts' 6 wins). The same is true with the CCHA as losses to Michigan State and Notre Dame (who have fallen off and are in ninth place) hurt Minnesota with comparisons in that conference. It's why the Gophers only moved up one spot after sweeping Nebraska-Omaha last weekend but at this point in the season the only thing they can do is worry about themselves.
Plus it also helps that Minnesota will play in St. Paul (as regional host) for the first round of the NCAA tournament regardless of seed.
Other notes:
-Chuck Schwartz has a nice recap of last night's win for the Badgers over at Bucky's 5th Quarter.
-Minnesota's 13th MacNaughton Cup moves them ahead of Denver for second all-time. Only North Dakota (15) has more.
Follow Nathan for more Gopher hockey coverage on Twitter @gopherstate.
For more coverage of the Minnesota Golden Gophers, check out The Daily Gopher and for Wisconsin coverage read Bucky's Fifth Quarter. You can also find more on the WCHA at Western College Hockey.
The good news for Minnesota hockey fans is that St. Cloud State beat Minnesota Duluth 2-1 Friday night and the Gophers clinched a share of the MacNaughton Cup and a date next weekend with Alaska-Anchorage.
The bad news? Everything that happened at Mariucci Arena.
Wisconsin (16-15-2, 11-14-2 WCHA) sophomore Mark Zengerle had four points (1 goal and 3 assists) and Joel Rumpel made 26 saves as the Badgers handed Minnesota (23-12-1, 19-8-0 WCHA) their worst loss of the season Friday 4-1.
"We played Denver a couple weeks ago at home [beating the Pioneers 5-2]. This ranks up there." Badgers head coach Mike Eaves said when asked where this game ranks for Wisconsin.
Nico Sacchetti scored the lone Gopher goal with 1:02 remaining in the game and backup goalie Michael Shibrowski made his season debut in the third period. Despite the loss, Minnesota remains in seventh place in the Pairwise.
Solid defensive play from both teams opened the game as Wisconsin was able to neutralize the Gophers' speed by limiting their passing lanes and movement. Minnesota, meanwhile, came out physical and hit every Badger they could, much to the delight of the 9,969 fans at Mariucci. They also blocked 8 shots.
The turning point of the game, however, happened with 2:01 left in the period when Tyler Barnes found an opening for his 9th goal of the season after Kyle Rau failed to clear a puck in front of Minnesota goalie Kent Patterson. The Gophers were never able to respond.
"I felt that the first goal took it out of us. We tried but it just didn't happen," said Minnesota senior forward Jake Hansen.
The Badgers continued...well badgering the home team throughout the second period as Zengerle played a big role in all three goals. The first saw him force Ben Marshall to turn over the puck and the sophomore found Ryan Little. He did the rest, scoring on a wrist shot 5:25 into the second period to give Wisconsin a 2-0 lead.
"I think getting the early lead tonight was key," said Eaves. "This building is tough to play in and we took the crowd out of it.
Michael Mersch scored his 14th goal of the season four minutes later on the power play when Patterson thought a shot by Jake McCabe was frozen. It wasn't. The fourth goal saw Zengerle finally getting in on the goal-scoring action when he undressed Gopher defenseman Seth Helgeson with some fancy stickhandling and shot the puck past Patterson with 4:17 remaining in the second period to make it 4-0.
"He had an outstanding offensive night for us. There are a lot of fine forwards in the WCHA and Mark is one of them," said an exuberant Eaves about Zengerle.
Minnesota were without leading goal scorer Nick Bjugstad Friday and at times that was very apparent. Wisconsin's defense is talented and they were able to build upon Nebraska-Omaha in the third period last Saturday by keeping the Gophers outside of the crease. They out-shot the Badgers 27-20 but the vast majority were from outside the face-off dots. At times Minnesota defensemen would be able to have shots go wide off the wall,come back in front of Rumpel and no one would be within 15 feet.
"You take a guy [like Bjugstad] out of your lineup and it changes the chemistry of the whole team," said Eaves while praising the effort of the Badger blue line.
As good as Travis Boyd was Friday night (and for a player stepping up from the fourth line he didn't look too out of place), being without Nick's speed and mostly size hampered what has been the Gophers' top line. However, there's a good chance that Bjugstad will play tomorrow according to Coach Lucia, adding that they will see how feels.
The other story of the game was the end of Kent Patterson's reign as the only goalie to play for Minnesota this season. Down 4-0, backup Michael Shibrowski took the ice for the third period, ending a streak that stretches back to December 3, 2010 and includes170 regular season periods and 12 overtimes.
"[The four goals in two periods] are not on Kent, it's on us," said Hansen. The forwards played bad and we let him down.
Shibrowski played well in a mop-up role, making a couple big saves to keep it a four-goal game and didn't let the Badgers capitalize on any rebound opportunities. Sacchetti added his third goal of the season after tipping in a Jake Parenteau shot and the Gophers avoided their first shutout since March 12, 2011.
Minnesota can be thankful that they won a share of the MacNaughton Cup with Minnesota-Duluth losing 2-1 to St. Cloud State but no team wants to win a trophy by backing into it. The good news for the Gophers is that as bad as tonight was, as good as Mark Zengerle, Joel Rumpel, Justin Schultz and the Wisconsin defense were there is another game tomorrow night.
"We've played well on Saturday nights," said Hansen, one of seven seniors on this year's team. "It's senior night. We'll definitely give our best effort tomorrow."
Minnesota and Wisconsin play again tomorrow (Saturday March 3rd) at Mariucci Arena. The game starts at 7 p.m. CST and will air on Fox Sports North Plus (find your channel here).
For more coverage of the Minnesota Golden Gophers, check out The Daily Gopher and for Wisconsin coverage read Bucky's Fifth Quarter. You can also find more on the WCHA at Western College Hockey.
Minnesota is going to have to get their fifth win in a row Friday without their leading goal scorer Nick Bjugstad.
The sophomore missed the third period of Saturday's 3-2 win over Nebraska-Omaha as a precaution for an undisclosed injury. Coach Don Lucia stated after Wednesday that Bjugstad was "day-to-day" but will once again be held out of action. Travis Boyd takes his place on the first line with Kyle Rau and Zach Budish.
Two other players, Nick Larson and Ben Marshall, return to the lineup after injuries of their own. Larson has been out since having wrist surgery from an injury suffered against Notre Dame. Marshall, meanwhile, returns after missing last weekend's series and will be reunited with Mark Alt.
Kent Patterson is in net, as usual for the Gophers. Joel Rumpel gets the nod for the Badgers.
Minnesota Golden Gophers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Kyle Rau (#7) - Travis Boyd (#22) - Zach Budish (#24)
Sam Warning (#11) - Erik Haula (#19) - Jake Hansen (#21)
Nate Condon (#16) - Taylor Matson (#9) - Seth Ambroz (#17)
Tom Serratore (#14) - Nico Sacchetti - Nick Larson (#18)
Defense:
Seth Helgeson (#4) - Justin Holl (#12)
Ben Marshall (#10) - Mark Alt (#20)
Jake Parenteau (#6) -Nate Schmidt (#29)
Goalies (bold indicates starting):
Kent Patterson (#35)
Michael Shibrowski (#1)
Jake Kremer (#30)
University of Wisconsin Badgers Line Combinations
Forwards:
Ryan Little (#20) - Mark Zengerle (#9) - Tyler Barnes (#7)
Matt Paape (#8) - Brendan Woods (#21) - Michael Mersch (#25)
Joesph Labate (#16) - Jefferson Dahl (#14) - Sean Little (#18)
Brad Navin (#26) - Keegan Meuer - Jason Clark (#17)
Defense:
Frankie Simonelli (#27) - Justin Schultz (#6)
Jake McCabe (#19) - John Ramage (#55)
Eric Springer (#4) - Joe Faust (#24)
Goalies:
Joel Rumpel (#33)
Landon Peterson (#31)
Referees: Brian Thul, Scott Bokal
Linesmen: Tony Czech, Jeff Schultz
Tonight's game starts at 7:00 PM and is being televised on Fox Sports North Plus (find your channel here). You can follow me on Twitter for in-game hockey updates @gopherstate live from Mariucci and follow @sbnminnesota for the best in Minnesota sports.
With Minnesota facing off against Wisconsin this weekend at Mariucci Arena, I took the opportunity to ask one of my favorite writers on the SB Nation network a few questions about the Gophers' opposition, Justin Schultz's case for winning the Hobey Baker and why Wisconsin has struggled on the road.
Chuck Schwartz covers Badger hockey for Bucky's 5th Quarter and is the go-to source for all things pertaining to the team. You can follow him on Twitter @UWChuckSchwartz.
SBN Minnesota: First off, it would be fair to say this hasn't been a successful season for Wisconsin with the Badgers sitting in 9th place. Why do you think things went wrong? What positives are there to take away for next year?
Chuck Schwartz: Well, first of all I think that it shows the type of program that Wisconsin has built that this is considered by many arguably the worst season the Badgers have had since Mike Eaves took over the program 10 years ago, yet they are still in 22nd in the KRACH rankings out of 58.
In terms of what went wrong, it's kind of a myriad of things but most importantly they got caught with too many underclassmen. They have just one senior and four juniors and the lack of experience has shown. There's talent on the roster, and that is clear in splits with teams like Denver and Minnesota and an earlier sweep of North Dakota. The problem is that with so many young faces they simply have no consistency, and have a tough time putting together consistent efforts on the road.
The positives to take away are pretty evident to me. The team only loses one senior, as well as junior Justin Schultz to the NHL. So everyone coming back adding a year of experience should be a major step in the right direction for this club.
SBN Minnesota: Freshman goalie Joel Rumpel started both games against Minnesota in Madison but Mike Eaves has rotated Rumpel and fellow freshman goalie Landon Peterson for most of the season, including the last two weekends. Should that be something Minnesota fans expect to see this weekend?
Schwartz: Yeah, I would expect to see both this weekend. Rumpel had won the #1 job but was injured against Denver a few weeks ago and Peterson was inserted and played very well. I think it's safe to say that we'll see both as long as they continue to stop the puck.
SBN Minnesota: Justin Schultz was very impressive against Minnesota with two assists in the Badgers' Friday night win in Madison. His name has come in Hobey Baker discussions - do you think he deserves it? Why or why not?
Schwartz: I think he deserves to win the award because it's supposed to go to the best player in college hockey, and I'd be hard pressed to find many non biased parties to openly say that #6 for the Badgers isn't the best player in the country. It's amazing to me that he puts up the numbers that he does as a defenseman.
Andy Baggot from the Wisconsin State Journal wrote a good article the other day with some stats that put it in perspective for me. Schultz (remember he's a defenseman), would lead 53 of the 58 D-1 teams in scoring. Schultz has been on the ice for 65 of the 96 (68%) goals Wisconsin has scored this season. He's +12 for a team that has scored just 3 more goals than the opposition for the year, and has been on the ice for 24 goals scored on the power play, which doesn't count for +/- purposes.
To me, the argument that he doesn't deserve to win the award solely because his team might not make the NCAA tournament is ludicrous. I've yet to hear that argument against Colgate's Austin Smith, and Colgate (#34 in KRACH), is 12 spots behind the Badgers.
Remember that Matt Carle, who put up a stat line very similar to Schultz in his Hobey season did not make the NCAA tournament with his Denver club either.
SBN Minnesota: Besides Schultz, who are a few other players Gopher fans should keep an eye on?
Schwartz: Well, I think you are going to notice #9 Mark Zengerle a lot this weekend. On bigger ice surfaces he has a lot of time to work and that really suits his game. He's a play making center that can buy ice and give his teammates time and space to get themselves open and he's a wizard feeding the puck. He's third in the country in assists for a club that has yet to score 100 goals this season.
Additionally watch #25 Michael Mersch. The Sophomore winger has been playing with Zengerle lately and played well, but even before that change the rangy winger has showed flashes of why the L.A. Kings took him in the 4th round of the draft this summer.
SBN Minnesota: The Badgers head to Mariucci Arena on the heels of sweeping Bemidji State on the road but have only won one other road game this season. Is there any explanation for why Wisconsin has not played well away from the Kohl Center or is it just one of those things? Also do you think that it will affect the Badgers this weekend?
Schwartz: Well, playing well and winning can be two different things. I was at both games in Grand Forks and Wisconsin didn't play bad in either contest but simply didn't get the desired result. That's happened a few times this season. In Mankato Phil Cook stood on his head one night and shutout the Badgers.
As I had previously alluded to, one of the reasons they haven't been winning many games on the road is the consistency with a young lineup.
As for this weekend, I think the sweep in Bemidji last weekend is going to go a long ways in terms of confidence. This team knows it can go into hostile buildings and win games now. Before it was almost in their heads that they couldn't win on the road.
SBN Minnesota: Prediction time. Who do you see winning this weekend and why?
Schwartz: I think you can expect to see a young club with some fire in their belly's this weekend. This is obviously a rivalry weekend and I also think the team is sick and tired of hearing how bad they are on the road. Wisconsin is well aware that Minnesota can win the Cup this weekend and if you don't think that's going to play into their motivation, then you're nuts. There's no way that any player in that Badger locker room wants to see the Gophers parade the MacNaughton around in front of them.
However there is a reason that Minnesota is playing for a chance to win the Cup this weekend. I think the Gophers come out hard on Friday night and probably take it to the Badgers a little bit. Saturday night, on senior night, I think the Gophers take their foot off the gas pedal a little bit after clinching a share of the regular season title and the Badgers steal one at Mariucci.
Split.
Thank you Chuck for taking the time out to answer a few questions (as well as having me do the same over at Bucky's Fifth Quarter). Once again, be sure to follow him on Twitter and read his work at the Wisconsin SB Nation blog Bucky's Fifth Quarter.
For more coverage on the Minnesota Golden Gophers, check out The Daily Gopher. You can also read WCHA coverage on Western College Hockey.
Minnesota looks to win their first WCHA regular season title since 2007 this weekend when they face the Wisconsin Badgers for two games at Mariucci Arena.
For more coverage of the Minnesota Golden Gophers, check out The Daily Gopher.
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