Penalty Box Post - Quick Hit - Friday, March 11, 2022

Penalty Box Post - Quick Hit
Friday, March 11th

NCAA Quarterfinals – Minnesota Duluth at #2 Minnesota
Saturday, March 12 at 2:00 p.m. CT – Ridder Arena

The 2nd-seeded Gopher Women's Hockey team will face the Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs for a sixth time this season, squaring off in an NCAA Women's Hockey Tournament Quarterfinal / Regional Final at Ridder Arena on Saturday, March 12 – at 2:00 p.m. CT. UMD advanced in the tournament after defeating Harvard, 4-0, in their First Round matchup last night at Ridder.

Gabbie Hughes netted the first three goals against the Crimson, scoring inside the first minute of the 1st period, repeating it inside the first minute of the 2nd stanza, and completing her natural hat trick later in the second. Elizabeth Giguere and Anna Klein combined for 5 assists on those goals. McKenzie Hewett added the Bulldogs' fourth goal in the third, and Emma Söderberg stopped all 27 shots she faced for the shutout. Harvard's Becky Dutton made 26 saves.

Other First Round results...

Wisconsin 3, Clarkson 1 – Maddi Wheeler scored in the first stanza and Daryl Watts doubled the Badger lead on a second-period power play. Nicole Gosling lit the lamp on a extra-attacker goal for the Golden Knights with 2:01 left in regulation, but Delaney Drake hit an empty-netter for Wisconsin with 18 seconds to go. Kennedy Blair made 30 saves for the win, while Clarkson's Amanda Zeglen stopped 22 shots.

Quinnipiac 4, Syracuse 0 – Four different Bobcats lit the lamp, scoring two in the 2nd period and two more in the third. Lexie Adzija led the way with a goal and an assist. Corinne Schroeder stopped all 16 shots she faced for the shutout, while Arielle DeSmet made 26 saves for the Orange.


Other Quarterfinal Saturday matchups...

University of Wisconsin (26-7-4) at #3-seed Northeastern University (30-4-2)
Puck drop at 1 p.m. ET / Noon CT

#5-seed Yale University (25-8-1) at #4-seed Colgate (30-7-1)
Puck drop at 3 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. CT

Quinnipiac University (26-9-3) at #1-seed Ohio State University (29-6-0)
Puck drop at 5 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. CT

The full interactive bracket can be found here.


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Power Play Club on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PowerPlayClubMN or on Twitter at twitter.com/powerplayclub.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

Penalty Box Post - Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Penalty Box Post
Wednesday, March 9
th

Goals for a Goal program continues counting...

We continue asking for assistance supporting Minnesota Women's Hockey's participation in a regular-season tournament in Las Vegas in 2022-2023.

The Power Play Club's Goals for a Goal campaign is collecting pledges for every goal scored by the Gophers, and we again provide a reminder that postseason goals are included in the count this year. Entering NCAA Tournament play, the team has recorded 168 goals, twenty (20) of which have come on the power play!!

There's still time to submit a pledge! We encourage you to do so online, or download the pledge form here and mail it in to the Golden Gopher Fund. The GGF will send out invoices following the completion of the season.


NCAA Tournament – Single-elimination

First Round – Minnesota Duluth (24-11-1) vs. Harvard (22-9-1)
Thursday, March 10 at 6:00 p.m. CT

Quarterfinal – First-round winner (UMD or Harvard)
vs. #2-seeded Minnesota Golden Gophers (29-8-1)
Saturday, March 12 at 2:00 p.m. CT

Both games at Ridder Arena

After a tough loss in the WCHA Championship Game, the Golden Gophers looks to rebound and advance through the 2022 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Hockey Tournament as the #2 seed, earning a quarterfinal home game. Minnesota Duluth and Harvard will come to Ridder Arena for one of the new First Round games in the expanded 11-team field, playing on Thursday, March 10 at 6:00 p.m. CT. The winner of that contest advances to face Minnesota in the quarterfinals on Saturday, March 12 at 2:00 p.m.

Ticket information – All advanced ticket sales are as all-session packages for both games, and are $15 per seat (both reserved chairbacks & general admission bench seating). They can be purchased online (or use this link) or by calling the U. of M. Ticket Office at 1-800-U-GOPHER.

Video coverage of both games will be free via the web, available on bigtenplus.com, with Thursday's First Round game here and Saturday's quarterfinal here.

Analyzing the Crimson – Despite matching 16-5-1 records in ECAC play in the regular season, Harvard had fewer losses in regulation than Yale & Colgate, giving them the league's regular-season championship. However, things unraveled for the Crimson in the conference playoffs, losing their quarterfinal series at home against 8th-seeded Princeton, two games to one. The Tigers took the opener 4-2, the Crimson evened the series with a 2-1 overtime win, but Princeton pulled off a second upset, 3-2, two Sundays ago.

Senior Becca Gilmore (#15) leads Harvard in total scoring with 45 points, recording a team-high 26 assists while lighting the lamp 19 times herself. Junior Kristin Della Rovere (#11) also reached the 40-point mark on 15 goals and 25 assists. Another junior, Anne Bloomer (#3) holds the Crimson's goal lead with 20 while dishing out 14 assists for 34 points. As a team, Harvard has outscored its opponents 113-68.

Senior goaltender Becky Dutton (#35) is 12-3-1 in her 16 starts, posting 3 shutouts with a 1.99 goals-against average and .922 save percentage. Dutton has split time primarily with junior Lindsay Reed (#29); Reed has 13 starts but only a 7-6-0 record, with 2 shutouts, a 2.40 GAA, and a .912 SV%. Freshman and Minnesota native Alex Pellici started Harvard's other three games, going 3-0-0 with one shutout, a 1.66 GAA, and an .898 SV%.

Minnesota Duluth vs. Harvard preview – The Bulldogs and Crimson are not strangers to each other, having squared off in Cambridge, MA, earlier this season on December 31 & January 1. UMD earned a sweep of their road series, winning 5-2 and 4-3. Gabbie Hughes led the way for Minnesota Duluth with a 4-goal, 2-assist performance, while Elizabeth Giguere also tallied 6 points with a goal & 5 helpers and Anna Klein added 2 goals & 2 assists. Five different Crimson players lit the lamp in the series, with Taze Thompson recording a goal and two assists; Becca Gilmore and Kyra Willoughby each dished out two assists. UMD netminder Emma Söderberg made 46 saves combined over both games; Lindsay Reed stopped 24 shots for Harvard in the opener, and Becky Dutton made 29 saves in the rematch.

Last meeting: Minnesota vs. Harvard – The Gophers and Crimson last met in November 2019 at the Country Classic Tournament in Nashville, TN. Sarah Potomak scored twice for Minnesota, Alex Woken & Abigail Boreen also lit the lamp, and Sydney Scobee stopped all 21 shots she faced to give Minnesota a 4-0 shutout victory. Lindsay Reed made 39 saves for Harvard.

Update: Minnesota vs. Minnesota Duluth – As noted in our email message on Monday, Catie Skaja, Abigail Boreen, and Emily Brown each recorded a goal and an assist, Crystalyn Hengler & Taylor Heise also lit the lamp, and Madeline Wethington dished out 2 helpers as the Gophers defeated the Bulldogs 5-1 in the WCHA semifinals. Elizabeth Giguere scored UMD's lone goal. Lauren Bench made 21 saves for the Gophers, while Jojo Chobak stopped 34 shots for the Bulldogs.

The victory last weekend gave Minnesota a 3 games to 2 advantage over Minnesota Duluth this season. Boreen took the Gophers' scoring lead in the head-to-head competition, posting 3 goals and 3 assists. Peyton Hemp remained with a goal and 4 assists for 5 points, while Audrey Wethington and Taylor Heise each recorded two goals and two assists. Gabbie Hughes and Giguere also each posted 3 goals and 3 assists across the five contests, while Anna Klein recorded a goal and 4 assists. In net, Lauren Bench improved to a 2.49 goals-against average and .891 save percentage against the Bulldogs this year, while Makayla Pahl stopped 24 of 25 shots in her one start. After UMD's Emma Söderberg went 2-2-0 with a 2.50 GAA and .919 SV% against the Gophers in the regular season, Jojo Chobak made 34 saves in the semifinal.


Hemp honored as national Rookie of the Year finalist

Minnesota Women's Hockey freshman forward Peyton Hemp was named one of five finalists for Division I Women's Hockey Rookie of the Year, as announced yesterday by the Hockey Commissioners Association. Hemp was a three-time WCHA Rookie of the Month honoree and led the conference in points and goals among freshmen. She became Minnesota's 10th WCHA Rookie of the Year winner behind 31 points on 12 goals (including 5 gamewinners) and 19 assists in the regular season. Congratulations, Peyton!!

As noted in the HCA's announcement, the award recipient is chosen by a vote of the NCAA D-I schools’ assistant coaches, with one vote per staff. The winner will be announced on Wednesday, March 16.


Other NCAA Tournament Matchups – First Round

Quinnipiac University (25-9-3) vs. Syracuse University (15-10-6) – at Ohio State
Thursday, March 10 at 6 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. CT

University of Wisconsin (25-7-4) vs. Clarkson University (22-11-3) – at Northeastern
Thursday, March 10 at 7 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. CT

Quarterfinals

Wisconsin / Clarkson at #3-seed Northeastern University (30-4-2)
Saturday, March 12 at 1 p.m. ET / Noon CT

#5-seed Yale University (25-8-1) at #4-seed Colgate (30-7-1)
Saturday, March 12 at 3 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. CT

Quinnipiac / Syracuse at #1-seed Ohio State University (29-6-0)
Saturday, March 12 at 5 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. CT

The full interactive bracket can be found here.


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Power Play Club online at www.powerplayclub.org, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PowerPlayClubMN, or on Twitter at twitter.com/powerplayclub.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.


The Penalty Box Post - Monday, March 7, 2022

Penalty Box Post
NCAA Bracket Update

Monday, March 7th

Gophers fall to Ohio State in WCHA Final Faceoff Championship

The Gopher Women's Hockey team fell in overtime to Ohio State, 3-2, in the WCHA Final Faceoff Championship yesterday, after defeating Minnesota Duluth 5-1 in the semifinals on Saturday. The Buckeyes claimed their second league playoff title in the past 3 seasons.

In the semis, the Gophers built a 4-0 lead over the Bulldogs early in the third period. Catie Skaja opened the scoring just 51 seconds into the contest, Crystalyn Hengler doubled the lead moments before intermission, Abigail Boreen lit the lamp in the second stanza, and Taylor Heise tallied 14 seconds into the third frame. UMD's Elizabeth Giguere lit the lamp with 16 minutes to play, but Minnesota held firm and Emily Brown tacked on an empty-netter with 2:44 remaining to complete the scoring. Skaja, Boreen, and Brown each finished with a goal and an assist, and Madeline Wethington dished out 2 helpers. Lauren Bench made 21 saves for the Gophers, while Jojo Chobak stopped 34 shots for the Bulldogs.

Ohio State came from behind to defeat Wisconsin in the semifinals, 2-1, with all the scoring occurring in the second period. Sophie Shirley netted the opening goal for the Badgers, but that was all Buckeyes goaltender Amanda Thiele surrendered as she stopped 33 shots in total. Liz Schepers knotted the score for OSU and Gabby Rosenthal put them ahead with the gamewinner. Kennedy Blair made 16 saves for Wisconsin.

After a scoreless first period of the championship game, Abigail Boreen and Peyton Hemp lit the lamp in the second stanza to put Minnesota up 2-0 with 20 minutes remaining in regulation. However, Sara Saekkinen and Sophie Jaques responded with third-period goals for Ohio State to level the score. A penalty on the Gophers late in that period turned into an overtime power play for the Buckeyes, and Jaques scored 23 seconds into the extra period to claim the title. Thiele stopped 32 of 33 shots for OSU, while Bench made 26 saves for the Gophers.

All-Tournament Team – Here's the list of players named to the WCHA Final Faceoff All-Tournament Team.

  • F - Liz Schepers, Ohio State

  • F - Abigail Boreen, Minnesota

  • F - Sara Saekkinen, Ohio State

  • D - Madeline Wethington, Minnesota

  • D - Sophie Jaques, Ohio State

  • G - Amanda Thiele, Ohio State

  • Most Outstanding Player: Sophie Jaques


NCAA Tournament – Single-elimination

First Round – Minnesota Duluth (24-11-1) vs. Harvard (22-9-1)
Thursday, March 10 at 6:00 p.m. CT

Quarterfinal – First-round winner (UMD or Harvard)
vs. #2-seeded Minnesota Golden Gophers (29-8-1)
Saturday, March 12 at 2:00 p.m. CT

Both games at Ridder Arena


Despite falling in the WCHA Championship Game, the Golden Gophers qualified for the 2022 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Hockey Tournament as the #2 seed, earning a quarterfinal home game. With the tournament field expanding to 11 teams this season, the bracket now features three First Round contests; Minnesota Duluth and Harvard will come to Ridder Arena for one of those games on Thursday, March 10 at 6:00 p.m. CT, with the winner advancing to face Minnesota in the quarterfinals on Saturday, March 12 at 2:00 p.m.

Tickets will go on sale later today (Monday, 3/7), to Gopher Score members at 11 a.m. CT and to the public at 1 p.m. CT. All advanced sales are as all-session packages for both games. Tickets can be purchased online or by calling the ticket office at 1-800-U-GOPHER.

More information about these “Minneapolis Regional” games will be shared in our regular issue of the Penalty Box Post on Wednesday.


Other NCAA Tournament Matchups – First Round

Quinnipiac University (25-9-3) vs. Syracuse University (15-10-6) – at Ohio State
Thursday, March 10 at 6 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. CT

University of Wisconsin (25-7-4) vs. Clarkson University (22-11-3) – at Northeastern
Thursday, March 10 at 7 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. CT

Quarterfinals

Wisconsin / Clarkson at #3-seed Northeastern University (30-4-2)
Saturday, March 12 at 1 p.m. ET / Noon CT

#5-seed Yale University (25-8-1) at #4-seed Colgate (30-7-1)
Saturday, March 12 at 3 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. CT


Quinnipiac / Syracuse at #1-seed Ohio State University (29-6-0)
Saturday, March 12 at 5 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. C


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Power Play Club online at www.powerplayclub.org, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PowerPlayClubMN, or on Twitter at twitter.com/powerplayclub.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

The Two-Minute Minor - An edition of the Penalty Box Post - Friday, March 4, 2022

The Two-Minute Minor
An edition of the Penalty Box Post
Friday, March 4th

Heise named 2021-2022 WCHA Player of the Year, Kazmaier Award Top 10 Finalist & National Player of the Month

Yesterday – Thursday, March 3rd – was quite a day for Minnesota Women's Hockey senior forward Taylor Heise as she picked up a trifecta of league and national honors, highlighted by being named the 2021-2022 WCHA Player of the Year!!

Heise recorded 26 goals & 34 assists for 60 points during the regular season, becoming the first Gopher in five years to reach the 60-point mark. Six of her goals were gamewinners while 4 came short-handed (she netted her fifth shorty in the conference quarterfinals last weekend). She also recorded a +38 plus-minus rating, claimed the league's Player of the Month award three times, and surpassed the career 150-point mark.

Heise becomes the seventh Gopher to be named WCHA Player of the Year, marking the ninth time a Minnesota player has won the award. Sydney Baldwin was the last previous winner from the Gophers, claiming the honor at the end of the 2017-2018 season.

Earlier in the day, Heise was named as a Top-10 finalist for the 2022 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award by the USA Hockey Foundation. The award is presented to the top player in NCAA Division I women's hockey, and was previously won by Minnesota's Krissy Wendell (2005) and Amanda Kessel (2013). Heise becomes the 35th Gopher to be named as a finalist for the award, dating back to its inception in 1998. The Top-3 finalists will be announced on March 17, with the award presented on March 26.

That was not the limit of the honors, as Heise was recognized as National Women’s Co-Player of the Month by the Hockey Commissioners Association following her 8-goal, 10-assist performance in February, averaging 2.25 points-per-game and recording a +16 plus-minus rating. Heise is now a two-time honoree this season as she also received the award for the month of November.

WCHA Individual Award Winners

  • Offensive Player of the Year & Scoring Champion: Taylor Heise, Minnesota

  • Defensive Player of the Year: Sophie Jaques, Ohio State

  • Goaltender of the Year: Emma Polusny, St. Cloud State

  • Goaltending Champion: Amanda Thiele, Ohio State

  • Rookie of the Year: Peyton Hemp, Minnesota

  • Coach of the Year: Nadine Muzerall, Ohio State

  • Outstanding Student-Athlete of the Year: Sophie Jaques, Ohio State


Six Gopher alumnae to play in USA-Canada “Rivalry Rematch”

The six Minnesota Women's Hockey alumnae who were members of the 2022 U.S. Women's Olympic Team – Megan Bozek, Hannah Brandt, Dani Cameranesi, Amanda Kessel, Kelly Pannek, and Lee Stecklein – are listed on the preliminary roster for a special USA vs. Canada “Rivalry Rematch” game scheduled for next Saturday, March 12, at 4 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. CT at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, PA. The event, a partnership of the NHL's Pittsburgh Penguins and the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA), is an unofficial rematch between players from the two Olympic teams. Additionally, two girls hockey clinics are being held at PPG Paints Arena in conjunction with the game.


IIHF announces tentative Women's U18 reschedule, Russia & Belarus suspensions – In a press conference held on February 16 at the Main Media Centre of the 2022 Olympic Winter Games, International Ice Hockey Federation president Luc Tardif indicated that the 2022 IIHF Women's U18 World Championship, originally scheduled for January in Sweden but canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, would be rescheduled for June and played in the United States. Exact dates and locations are still to be announced.

Meanwhile, the organization announced this past Monday, February 28, actions to be taken by IIHF Council following an extra-ordinary meeting of that body held in response to the war in Ukraine. Specifically, all Russian and Belarusian National Teams and Clubs are suspended from participation in every age category for all IIHF competitions or events until further notice, and Russia has been stripped of hosting rights of the 2023 IIHF World Junior (Men's U20) Championship.


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Power Play Club on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PowerPlayClubMN or on Twitter at twitter.com/powerplayclub.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

The Penalty Box Post - Wednesday, March 2, 2022

The Penalty Box Post
Wednesday, March 2nd

Goals for a Goal: Goal total increases to 161!

The Power Play Club's Goals for a Goal campaign is collecting pledges for every goal scored by the Gopher Women's Hockey Team, with the resulting donations used to support the squad's participation in a regular-season tournament in Las Vegas in 2022-2023. For the first time ever, goals scored in the postseason are included in the count, and so far the team has recorded 161 goals, twenty (20) of which have come on the power play!!

If you have not yet made a pledge, we encourage you to do so online, or download the pledge form here and mail it in to the Golden Gopher Fund. The GGF will send out invoices following the completion of the season.


Heise, Hemp earn WCHA full-season individual awards
after each claiming monthly honors for 3rd time this year

We send hearty congratulations to Minnesota Women's Hockey forwards Taylor Heise and Peyton Hemp, as they were two of the four players earning full-season awards from the WCHA yesterday!!

With 26 goals and 34 assists for 60 points throughout the regular season, Heise not only took the title as the 2021-2022 WCHA Hockey Scoring Champion but also claimed the award as the league's Offensive Player of the Year!

A 31-point scorer with 12 goals (5 gamewinners) and 19 assists in the regular season, Hemp was named Rookie of the Year!

The full-season honors follow Forward & Rookie of the Month awards for Heise and Hemp, respectively, for their play in February. Heise recorded 18 points (8 goals, 10 assists) in eight February games while posting a +16 plus-minus rating. Hemp tallied 7 points (3 goals, 4 assists) with a +9 rating. The monthly honors were the third this season for each of them; Heise was Forward of the Month for November & January, while Hemp was Rookie of the Month for October & November.


2022 WCHA Final Face-off at Ridder Arena

Semifinals – Saturday, March 5
#1/1 Minnesota (1st seed) vs. #7/8 MN Duluth (4th seed) – 1 p.m.
#2/2 Ohio State (2nd seed) vs. #4/4 Wisconsin (3rd seed) – 4 p.m.

Championship – Sunday, March 6 at 1:00 p.m.

With Ridder Arena hosting the WCHA Final Faceoff for the seventh-consecutive year, the top-ranked, top-seeded Gopher Women's Hockey team looks to follow up its WCHA Regular-Season Championship with the league's Tournament Championship. Minnesota kicks things off with the first semifinal on Saturday, March 5, against in-state rival Minnesota Duluth at 1:00 p.m. In a clash of red-clad squads, Wisconsin and Ohio State square off in the second semifinal at 4:00 p.m. The winners will advance to the championship game on Sunday, March 6, at 1:00 p.m.

Tournament television/video coverage – Continuing the WCHA's partnership, all three Final Faceoff contests will have video streaming on the B1G+ subscription service. Additionally, all three will also be broadcast on FOX9+ in the Twin Cities, with streaming of that station through Hulu with Live TV, Sling TV, fuboTV, and YouTube TV. More information has been posted by the WCHA here.

All-session ticket packages can be purchased from the University of Minnesota Ticket Office through GopherSports.com or by calling 1-800-U-GOPHER during normal business hours (M-F, 9am to 5 pm). The packages are $35 for reserved chairback seating, $25 for adult general admission (bench) seating, $20 for general admission for seniors, students & youth, and $10 per ticket for general admission groups of 10 or more. Single-day tickets have not yet gone on sale.

How they got here...

Gophers sweep St. Thomas in conference quarterfinals
The Gophers hosted 8th-seeded St. Thomas in the first round of the playoffs, the first time the league has had a full quarterfinal bracket in five years. Minnesota's defense was a large part of the weekend, holding the Tommies to a combined 28 shots on goal in the two-game series. Audrey Wethington, Taylor Heise, Abigail Boreen (PP), and Amy Potomak lit the lamp while Lauren Bench stopped the 9 shots she saw for a 4-0 shutout victory on Friday. UST goaltender Alexa Dobchuk made 49 saves. Catie Skaja scored Saturday's first two goals & Heise tallied her second of the series, all in the first period. Goals by Emily Oden and Wethington sandwiched St. Thomas' lone tally of the weekend by Jenna Hartung in the second stanza. Neither team scored in the final period, resulting in a 5-1 Gopher victory and the series sweep. Bench made another 18 saves; Saskia Maurer made 52 saves in 54 minutes of action, and Eryn Cooley stopped 3 shots in the final 5:33 of her Tommies career. Heise led all scorers with 4 points, adding a pair of assists to her two goals, while Wethington (2g, 1a), Boreen (1g, 2a), and Savannah Norcross (3a) each had a 3-point series.

Minnesota Duluth finished fourth in the conference standings, posting a 19-8-1-0 (1-1 in OT) mark in WCHA play. The Bulldogs faced Minnesota State in the quarterfinals, needing three games to eliminate the Mavericks and advance. The opener was a wild affair in which the teams traded the lead in the first period, going to the intermission with MSU ahead 3-2 after Kelsey King lit the lamp twice. But UMD's Naomi Rogge recorded a second-period natural hat trick to put the Bulldogs up 5-3 after 40 minutes, and the Mavericks could only muster an extra-attacker goal by Brittyn Fleming with 48 seconds remaining, giving UMD the series lead with a 5-4 victory. Mavericks goaltender Chantal Burke stopped 41 of 42 shots in Game 2 and Fleming scored twice in a 3-1 upset win to even the series at one game apiece. The Bulldogs took a 2-0 lead in Game 3 just over 2 minutes into the second period behind goals from Anna Klein & Taylor Anderson, but Fleming netted her fourth goal of the series to cut MSU's deficit to 2-1 and Jessica Kondas knotted the score in the third. The contest went to overtime, and Elizabeth Giguere punched the Bulldogs' ticket to the Final Faceoff with some amazing stick-work resulting in the game-winning goal at the 2:30 mark. Burke finished with a three-game combined total of 102 saves, while UMD's Jojo Chobak stopped 69 shots.

Ohio State finished second in WCHA play with a 21-6-0-0 (1-1 in OT) conference record plus a perfect 4-0-0 mark in non-conference play. The Buckeyes blanked 7th-seeded St. Cloud State in the quarterfinals, posting 6-0 and 3-0 shutout victories for the weekend sweep. Paetyn Levis exploded for 4 consecutive goals plus an assist on Friday, and dished out two more helpers on Saturday for a 7-point series. Liz Schepers recorded two goals and an assist, while Lauren Bernard added a goal and 3 assists. SCSU goaltender Emma Polusny's collegiate career came to a close with a combined 86 saves.

Wisconsin took third in the WCHA standings with an 18-6-3-2 (2-0 in OT) conference record, though they were 5-0-1 in non-conference action. Hosting 6th-seeded Bemidji State, the Badgers found themselves trailing the Beavers 1-0 after one period on a goal by Graysen Myers. However, that would be the only BSU scoring for the weekend. Maddi Wheeler lit the lamp in the second period and Brette Pettet tallied early in the third stanza for a 2-1 Wisconsin victory in Game 1. Kennedy Blair stopped all 15 shots she saw in Game 2 and Casey O'Brien contributed on all five Badger goals – scoring twice herself and dishing out 3 assists – for a 5-0 victory. Beavers goaltender Kerrigan Dowhy made a combined 82 saves.

Final Faceoff Semifinal Matchups

Minnesota vs. Minnesota Duluth – With the expansion of the NCAA Tournament field to 11 teams this year, UMD is not as much of a bubble team as they have been in the recent past. While the Gophers sit atop the Pairwise Rankings, the Bulldogs are in 8th.

Minnesota and Minnesota Duluth split their four-game regular-season series. The Gophers took the opener in Duluth in October, 3-1; after trailing by three goals, they came back to force overtime but the Bulldogs won in in the extra period, 5-4. In December in Minneapolis, the Bulldogs took the first game 3-2 at Ridder Arena, but the Gophers won the rematch, 2-1. Minnesota held a 125-95 advantage in combined shots on goal. Peyton Hemp led the Gophers in total scoring against UMD, lighting the lamp once and dishing out four assists for 5 points. Abigail Boreen & Audrey Wethington each recorded two goals and two assists, Emily Oden lit the lamp twice, and Taylor Heise added a goal and two helpers. Gabbie Hughes (3g, 2a) and Elizabeth Giguere (2g, 3a) each posted 5 points for the Bulldogs against the Gophers, while Liz Schepers recorded a goal and 3 assists. In net, Lauren Bench made 61 saves over the first three meetings, with a 2.99 goals-against average and .871 save percentage, while Makayla Pahl stopped 24 of 25 shots in the fourth game. Bulldogs goalkeeper Emma Söderberg stopped 114 shots with a 2.50 GAA and .919 SV%; however, Jojo Chobak has been UMD's primary goaltender in the second half of the season.

Ohio State vs. Wisconsin – Both the Buckeyes and Badgers are comfortably in the NCAA Tournament field, but while OSU will likely move up to the top spot in the national tourney with a Final Faceoff championship victory, Wisconsin needs a good weekend showing – and/or some help in the other conferences – to get an NCAA quarterfinal home game.

Ohio State held a 7-5 edge in the standings points over their four head-to-head contests. The Badgers took the first two meetings in Madison in late October, 3-1 and 2-1 (OT), but the Buckeyes earned a weekend sweep in the final series of the regular season, 5-1 and 2-1. A 45-23 shots on goal advantage in the fourth contest gave Ohio State a combined 130-114 edge in the season series. Casey O'Brien led the Badgers with 5 points on a goal and 4 assists against the Buckeyes, while Daryl Watts added two goals and an assist, Nicole LaMantia lit the lamp twice, and Makenna Webster tallied a goal & two helpers. OSU's Jenna Buglioni matched O'Brien with a goal and 4 assists, Kenzie Hauswirth scored 3 goals (all in the February series), and Gabby Rosenthal added 2 goals and an assist. Between the pipes, Kennedy Blair played the first 8 periods for Badgers, stopping 67 shots while recording a 2.61 goals-against average and .905 save percentage, while Cami Kronish appeared in the final four periods, making 54 saves with a 1.53 GAA and .964 SV%. Buckeyes goaltender Andrea Braendli made 59 saves with a 2.00 GAA and .937 SV% in the October series, while Amanda Thiele stopped 48 shots with a 1.00 GAA and .960 SV% in the February games.

Current PairWise Rankings

1. Minnesota (28-7-1 overall record, .6345 RPI)
2. Ohio State (27-6-0, .6280)
3. Northeastern (28-4-2, .6162)
4. Colgate (28-7-1, .6046 RPI)
5. Wisconsin (25-6-4, .6041)
6. Quinnipiac (25-8-3, .5968)
7. Yale (24-7-1, .6021)
8. Minnesota Duluth (24-10-1, .5914)
9. Harvard (22-9-1, .5877)
10. Clarkson (22-11-3, .5610)
11. Vermont (22-10-3, .5539)
12. Connecticut (23-8-4, .5539)
** Syracuse (15-10-6, .5126)

The NCAA Tournament Selection Show is scheduled for Sunday, March 6 at 9 p.m. ET / 8 p.m. CT and will be televised on ESPNews. Reminder: The conference playoff champions from the CHA, ECAC, Hockey East, and the WCHA earn autobids to the tournament; Syracuse has already claimed a space as the CHA Playoff Champion. Rankings and RPI calculations courtesy of BCInterruption.com.


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Power Play Club online at www.powerplayclub.org, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PowerPlayClubMN, or on Twitter at twitter.com/powerplayclub.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

The Two-Minute Minor - Monday, February 28, 2022

The Two-Minute Minor - An Edition of the Penalty Box Post
Monday, February 28th

Gophers to face Minnesota Duluth in Final Faceoff 1st semifinal Saturday;
Wisconsin and Ohio State to meet in second game

All four WCHA quarterfinal series completed with the higher-seeded home teams advancing, as Minnesota swept St. Thomas, Ohio State swept St. Cloud State, Wisconsin swept Bemidji State, and Minnesota Duluth eliminated Minnesota State in three games. As a result, the top-seeded Gophers will face the Bulldogs in the first of the Final Faceoff semifinal games, scheduled for 1:00 p.m. this upcoming Saturday, March 5, at Ridder Arena. The Badgers and Buckeyes will square off in the second semifinal at roughly 4:00 p.m.

We will recap the quarterfinal series and preview the Final Faceoff match-ups in our regular edition of the Penalty Box Post later this week. The WCHA has created a Final Faceoff Tournament Central site loaded with information, along with publishing a separate press release confirming the bracket.

Final Faceoff All-Session Packages are still available for purchase from the University of Minnesota Ticket Office through GopherSports.com or by calling 1-800-U-GOPHER during normal business hours (M-F, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.). The packages are $35 for reserved chairback seating, $25 for adult general admission (bench) seating, $20 for general admission for seniors, students & youth, and $10 per ticket for general admission groups of 10 or more.


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Power Play Club on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PowerPlayClubMN or on Twitter at twitter.com/powerplayclub.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

The Two-Minute Minor - Friday, February 25, 2022

The Two-Minute Minor - An Edition of the Penalty Box Post
Friday, February 25

Seven Gophers named to 2021-2022 All-WCHA teams;
10 honored as WCHA Scholar-Athletes, 15 on All-Academic Team

It's been a busy week with multiple announcements from the Western Collegiate Hockey Association. The league yesterday named its 2021-2022 All-WCHA Teams for their on-ice performance. We congratulate the seven (7) Gopher players named to the teams (and pictured above, left-to-right):

  • First Team – Taylor Heise

  • Second Team – Abigail Boreen

  • Third Team – Emily Brown & Madeline Wethington

  • Rookie Team – Peyton Hemp, Ella Huber & Emily Zumwinkle


Those on-ice honors follow two academic-based announcements. Ten (10) members of the Gopher Women's Hockey team were named among 83 players honored as WCHA Scholar-Athlete Award winners on Tuesday.

Emily Brown was named a Scholar-Athlete for the fourth time while Gracie Ostertag (pictured right) earned her third award. Olivia King, Emily Oden, Catie Skaja, and Madeline Wethington each became two-time honorees, while Lauren Bench, Josey Dunne, Maggie Nicholson, and Audrey Wethington earned their first scholar-athlete awards.

Those ten plus Abigail Boreen, Taylor Heise, Crystalyn Hengler, Olivia Knowles, and Makayla Pahl were honored as WCHA All-Academic Team members on Wednesday. Brown & Knowles (pictured left) earned their fourth All-Academic team selections, while Heise, Oden, Ostertag, and Skaja became three-time selections. Boreen, Hengler, King, Pahl, and Madeline Wethington each earned their second honors, while Bench, Dunne, Nicholson, and Audrey Wethington are first-time members.

Per the press releases from the league: To earn recognition as a WCHA Scholar-Athlete, league-member student-athletes must have completed at least one year of residency at their present institution prior to the current academic year and must also have a grade-point average of at least 3.50 on a 4.0 scale for the previous two semesters or three quarters or may qualify if their overall GPA is at least 3.50 for all terms at his or her present institution. The WCHA All-Academic Team includes student-athletes who have completed one year of eligibility at their present institution, prior to the academic year, and have a GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale in the previous two semesters or three quarters.

Congratulations and good job, ladies!!


PWHPA teams to compete in showcases this & next weekend

The Professional Women's Hockey Players Association's Secret® Dream Gap Tour is scheduled to continue this weekend (February 26 & 27) with a four-team showcase at the Nepean Sportsplex in Ottawa, Ontario. The organization then heads from one national capital to another, as the Washington, DC, region hosts a second showcase at the MedStar Capitals Iceplex in Arlington, Va., on March 4-6.

The Sonnet Showcase will feature Team Sonnet (Toronto region), Team adidas (Minnesota), Team Bauer (Boston), and Team Harvey's (Montreal), with Team Sonnet & Team adidas playing the first semifinal tomorrow (Feb. 26) at Noon ET / 11 a.m. CT, followed by Team Bauer vs. Team Harvey's at 3 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. CT. Those games will be webcast on cbcsports.ca. The championship game will be played Sunday (Feb. 27) at 11 a.m. ET / 10 a.m. CT, with video on Sportsnet's Tiktok channel. A consolation game will follow on Sunday at 1:30 p.m. ET / 12:30 p.m. CT.

The Capitals PWHPA Showcase will feature Team Sonnet, Team adidas, Team Bauer, and Team Scotiabank (Calgary), with Team Bauer vs. Team Sonnet on Friday, March 4, at 5:30 p.m. ET / 4:30 p.m. CT, and Team adidas vs. Team Scotiabank on Saturday, March 5 at 1:30 p.m. ET / 12:30 p.m. CT. On Sunday, March 6, a consolation game will be played at 10:30 a.m. ET / 9:30 a.m. CT, with the championship contest at 1:30 p.m. ET / 12:30 p.m. CT. All games will be available for streaming on the Washington Capitals' Facebook and Twitter.

No official rosters for the two showcases have been announced at this time, but the training rosters include Gopher Women's Hockey alumnae Gigi Marvin & Sydney Scobee as Team adidas members and Sarah Potomak on Team Scotiabank. We wish them all good luck in these events.


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Power Play Club at www.powerplayclub.org, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PowerPlayClubMN, or on Twitter at twitter.com/powerplayclub.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

The Penalty Box Post - Wednesday, February 23, 2022

The Penalty Box Post
Wednesday, February 23rd

Goals for a Goal: Gophers enter postseason with 152 goals!

The Gopher Women's Hockey team finished the regular season with 152 goals, nineteen (19) of which came on the power play!!

We send our thanks to everyone who has enrolled into the Power Play Club's Goals for a Goal campaign this year, submitting a pledge for every goal scored by the Gophers! But there's still plenty of time to make a pledge if you haven't done so. Additionally, we provide a reminder that goals scored in the postseason will be included in this year's final count. The collected funds will be used to support the squad's participation in a regular-season tournament in Las Vegas in 2022-2023. We encourage you to make your pledge online, or download the pledge form here and mail it in to the Golden Gopher Fund. The GGF will send out invoices following the end of the season.

GWH Online Auction recap

Additional thanks go to everyone who participated in the Gopher Women's Hockey online auction earlier this month. The auction netted $3,877 in support of the team!


The Minnesota Golden Gophers are 2021-2022 WCHA Regular-Season Champions!!

WCHA Quarterfinals - Best 2 out of 3 games
#1-seed Minnesota Golden Gophers (26-7-1, 21-6-1-1 WCHA)
vs. #8-seed St. Thomas Tommies (5-25-1, 3-23-1-0 WCHA)

Friday, February 25 at 6:00 p.m.
Saturday, Feburary 26 at 4:00 p.m.
Sunday, February 27 at 2:00 p.m. (if necessary) - at Ridder Arena

After completing the regular season against the University of St. Thomas Tommies, the Gopher Women's Hockey team will face them again to begin the WCHA playoffs. The best two-out-of-three-game quarterfinal series at Ridder Arena will open on Friday, February 25 at 6:00 p.m., then continue on Saturday, February 26 at 4:00 p.m. and (if necessary) Sunday, February 27 at 2:00 p.m.

Gophers earn WCHA regular-season crown with sweep of Tommies – Minnesota cruised in their final two regular-season contests, defeating St. Thomas with a pair of 7-1 results. Sixteen (16) different Gophers recorded a point in the series. The top line of Abigail Boreen, Taylor Heise, and Catie Skaja posted 15 points over the weekend; Boreen led all scorers with a 6-point effort on a goal and 5 assists, Heise lit the lamp 3 times and added two helpers for 5 points, and Skaja tacked on a goal and 3 assists. Three others each tallied 3 points – Ella Huber (2g, 1a), Peyton Hemp (1g, 2a), and Audrey Wethington (3a). Savannah Norcross also lit the lamp twice on Saturday. Skylar Vetter and Lauren Bench each made 11 saves in their respective starts. Maddy Clough & Luci Bianchi tallied for the Tommies. UST goaltender Alexa Dobchuk stopped 98 shots in 108 minutes of action, while Eryn Cooley made 13 saves in a 12-minute relief appearance on Thursday.

Tommies analysis update – With an assist on Thursday, freshman Abby Promersberger (#11) retained the Tommies' overall scoring lead with 13 points on 5 goals and 8 helpers, also bringing her into a tie with senior Anna Solheim (#19) for the assists lead (Solheim has 2 goals for 10 points). Juniors Allie Monrean (#14) and Luci Bianchi (#15) have each lit the lamp a team-high 6 times; Monrean has 5 assists for 11 points, while Bianchi has dished out 3 assists for 9 points.

Senior Alexa Dobchuk (#30) posted a new personal-best 59 saves in Saturday's game against the Gophers, but her record this season fell to 2-19-1 with a 4.50 goals-against average and an .896 save percentage. Fellow senior Eryn Cooley (#35) has now stopped 38 of 43 shots faced in just over 47 minutes of action across five relief appearances. Freshman Saskia Maurer's availability for this weekend is unknown; as noted last week, she has a 3-6-0 record in her 9 starts, with a 3.16 GAA and .917 SV%.


Huber earns conference honor for final regular-season weekend

Gopher Women's Hockey freshman Ella Huber was named WCHA Rookie of the Week for her performance against St. Thomas to conclude the regular season. In the finale on Saturday, Huber lit the lamp twice for her first career multi-goal game, also dished out an assist, and recorded a +3 plus-minus rating in the contest. Her effort also garnered additional recognition from the league as the Howies Hockey Tape Performance of the Week! Congratulations, Ella!!


Heise reaches 60-point season, surpasses 150 career points

With 3 goals and 2 assists this past weekend, Minnesota Women's Hockey senior Taylor Heise reached the 60-point mark for the season, becoming the first Gopher to do so since Kelly Pannek in 2016-2017. Heise currently leads the nation in total points scored & points-per-game (among those playing 20+ games), and her 26 goals are tied for the national lead as well. Additionally, with her assist on the opening goal last Thursday night, Heise reached the 150-point mark for her collegiate career; she now sits at 154 points on 64 goals and 90 assists. Congratulations, Taylor!!

With 52 points of her own, Abigail Boreen joins Heise as the first Gopher duo to both reach the 50-point mark in the same season since Pannek & Sarah Potomak did so in '16-'17.


Nine Gophers earn medals at 2022 Olympic Winter Games;
USA falls to Canada in Gold Medal Game, Finland takes bronze

A comeback attempt by Team USA fell short in the Olympic Gold Medal Game against Canada. The Canadians took a 3-0 lead as Sarah Nurse netted the opening goal and Marie-Philip Poulin struck twice. Hilary Knight scored short-handed, with an assist to Hannah Brandt, to cut the American deficit to two before the second intermission, but it took a 6-on-4 extra-attacker power-play with time running out to pull within one as Amanda Kessel scored with under 13 seconds left. Team Canada killed off the remaining time and took home the gold, winning 3-2.

Earlier in the Bronze Medal Game, Finland blanked Swtizerland 4-0. Viivi Vainikka opened the scoring in the first period. The Swiss held their deficit at one until the third period when the Finns lit the lamp three more times, including a power-play goal by Nelli Laitinen. Swiss goaltender Andrea Braendli made 43 saves in the contest, while Anni Keisala stopped 15 shots for Finland.

Gophers at the Winter Games – We send our congratulations to the nine Minnesota Women's Hockey representatives between Team USA and Team Finland who earned medals at the Games. Here are the final statistics for our Gophers (** indicates Silver Medalist, * indicates Bronze Medalist).

  • Amanda Kessel** (USA) – 3 goals, 5 assists, 8 points

  • Nelli Laitinen* (FIN) – 2 goals, 5 assists, 7 points

  • Kelly Pannek** (USA) – 2 goals, 4 assists, 6 points

  • Hannah Brandt** (USA) – 6 assists, 6 points

  • Dani Cameranesi** (USA) – 2 goals, 1 assist, 3 points

  • Megan Bozek** (USA) – 3 assists, 3 points

  • Josefin Bouveng (SWE) – 1 goal, 1 point

  • Lee Stecklein** (USA) – 1 goal, 1 point

  • Grace Zumwinkle** (USA) – 1 goal, 1 point

  • Abbey Murphy** (USA) – 1 assist, 1 point


Around the WCHA...

Last weekend – Ohio State took care of business at home to claim the 2nd seed for the WCHA playoffs, sweeping Wisconsin 5-1 and 2-1. Kenzie Hauswirth netted both Buckeye goals on Saturday after also lighting the lamp on Friday, while Jenna Buglioni recorded a goal and 2 assists and Amanda Thiele stopped 48 out of 50 shots. Makenna Webster and Daryl Watts scored for the Badgers.

Minnesota Duluth suffered a mini-upset last Tuesday (Feb. 15) when St. Cloud State played them to a 1-1 tie and the Huskies won the shootout (2-1 in 4 rounds). Meeting again for a standard weekend series in Duluth, the Bulldogs shut out the Huskies on Friday, 3-0, but needed two goals in the final minute of regulation on Saturday to complete the sweep with a 4-3 win. Naomi Rogge led UMD with 2 goals and 2 assists over the three contests, while Elizabeth Giguere dished out 4 helpers. After netting Tuesday's shootout-clinching goal, Courtney Hall recorded a goal and an assist for SCSU on Saturday.

Chantal Burke, a transfer goaltender from Penn State, made her debut for Minnesota State and earned her first two career shutouts, 2-0 and 5-0, over Bemidji State, stopping all 47 shots she faced. Brittyn Fleming recorded two goals and two assists for the Mavericks, posting a new Minnesota State program record for points in a season with 40. Kelsey King added a goal and 3 helpers for MSU.

Final regular-season standings:
1. Minnesota – .810 pts%, 21-6-1-1, 0-3 in OT, 68 points (26-7-1 overall)
2. Ohio State – .778 pts%, 21-6-0-0, 1-1 in OT, 63 points (25-6-0 overall)
3. Wisconsin – .704 pts%, 18-6-3-2, 2-0 in OT, 57 points (23-6-4 overall)
4. Minnesota Duluth – .690 pts%, 19-8-1-0, 1-1 in OT, 58 points (22-9-1 overall)
5. Minnesota State – .381 pts%, 10-17-1-1, 1-1 in OT, 32 points (14-17-1 overall)
6. Bemidji State – .298 pts%, 8-18-2-0, 1-0 in OT, 25 points (11-18-3 overall)
7. St. Cloud State – .210 pts%, 4-20-3-2, 1-1 in OT, 17 points (9-21-2 overall)
8. St. Thomas – .123 pts%, 3-23-1-0, 0-0 in OT, 10 points (5-25-1 overall)

Other WCHA Quarterfinal Pairings...
Best 2-out-of-3 / Friday, Saturday, and (if necessary) Sunday, February 25-27


#5-seed Minnesota State University at #4-seed University of Minnesota Duluth
All three games at 2:00 p.m. CT

#7-seed St. Cloud State University at #2-seed Ohio State University
Friday at 6:00 p.m. ET / Saturday & Sunday at 3:00 p.m. ET

#6-seed Bemidji State University at #3-seed University of Wisconsin
Friday at 7:00 p.m. CT / Saturday at 3:00 p.m. CT / Sunday at 2:00 p.m. CT

More information from the league is available here.


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

The Penalty Box Post - Tuesday, February 15th, 2022

The Penalty Box Post
Tuesday, February 15
th

Goals for a Goal reminder: postseason included this year!

The Gopher Women's Hockey team lit the lamp another 10 times this past weekend, including one coming on a power play. Those results bring the squad's season total to-date to 138 goals, with eighteen (18) of those on the power play!!

Our Goals for a Goal campaign collects pledges for every goal scored over the season, with an option to double your pledge for power-play tallies. We remind everyone that the program is being extended this year to include postseason goals. The collected funds will be used to support the squad's participation in a regular-season tournament in Las Vegas in 2022-2023. We encourage you to make your pledge online, or download the pledge form here and mail it in to the Golden Gopher Fund. The GGF will send out invoices following the end of the season


#1 Minnesota Golden Gophers (24-7-1, 19-6-1-1 WCHA) vs. Univ. of St. Thomas Tommies (5-23-1, 3-21-1-0 WCHA)

Thursday, February 17 at 7:00 p.m. - St. Thomas Ice Arena, Mendota Heights
Saturday, Feburary 19 at 4:00 p.m. - Ridder Arena

The Gopher Women's Hockey team concludes the 2021-2022 regular-season with its second series against its new cross-town rival, the University of St. Thomas Tommies. The home-and-home matchup will begin with a special Thursday night game, February 17 at 7:00 p.m. at the St. Thomas Ice Arena in Mendota Heights. After a day off, the series then moves to Ridder Arena for the rematch on Saturday, February 19 at 4:00 p.m.

GWH Senior Day Saturday – We encourage all fans to arrive at Ridder Arena early on Saturday as the Gopher Women's Hockey program recognizes its seniors as part of pregame festivities.

WCHA championship watch – Entering the final weekend of the regular season, Minnesota leads the WCHA standings. Regardless of other results in the conference, the Gophers can clinch the league's regular-season championship – which would be the program's 11th – by earning 4 or more standings points against the Tommies. The Gophers could also clinch with fewer points, but would be dependent on results in the Wisconsin at Ohio State series.

Last time against St. Thomas – Fourteen different Gophers recorded a point as they cruised to a sweep in their first-ever series against Tommies in January, 8-0 and 8-2. Abigail Boreen lit the lamp twice in the opener and followed that up with her first career hat trick plus an assist in the rematch. Saturday's contest also featured Savannah Norcross' first multi-goal game as a Gopher, Tristana Tatur's first collegiate point, and a 16-save shutout by Skylar Vetter. Taylor Heise also posted a 6-point weekend with a goal and 5 assists, Madeline Wethington tallied a goal and dished out 4 helpers, and Amy Potomak matched Norcross with 2 goals and 2 assists. Peyton Hemp netted a short-handed goal Saturday and a power-play goal & an assist on Sunday for 3 points. Lauren Bench stopped 11 shots in Sunday's game. UST goaltender Alexa Dobchuk made a combined 74 saves in the series.

Analyzing the Tommies – Having made the jump to Division I this past off-season, St. Thomas is going through the requisite growing pains. They currently hold the last position in the WCHA standings. That said, they have earned five victories this year, taking 7 of 12 standings points from St. Cloud State, sweeping RIT in a non-conference road series, and also getting a win over Bemidji State.

Similar to St. Cloud State, the Tommies are missing two European players due to the Winter Olympics. In UST's case, both are freshmen playing for Team Switzerland. Despite being gone since the holiday break, Nicole Vallario (#26) is still the team's top-scoring defender with 4 goals and 3 assists. Saskia Maurer (#29) was the goaltender of record in three of the Tommies' victories, posting a 3-6-0 record in her 9 starts with a 3.16 goals-against average and .917 save percentage.

Three different players lead the three primary scoring categories for St. Thomas. Freshman Abby Promersberger (#11) is the Tommies' overall scoring leader with 12 points on 5 goals and 7 assists. Junior Allie Monrean (#14) has a team-high 6 goals plus 5 assists for 11 points, while senior Anna Solheim (#19) is UST's assist leader with 8 while lighting the lamp twice herself for 10 points. Junior Luci Bianchi (#15) has also netted five goals for the Tommies while dishing out 3 assists.

Senior Alexa Dobchuk (#30) split time with Maurer during the first-half of the season, and has started all 11 games since the break; in her 20 total starts this year, she is 2-17-1 with a 4.24 GAA and an .897 SV%. Fellow senior Eryn Cooley (#35) has seen spot-duty with four relief appearances, stopping 25 of 29 shots faced in just over 35 minutes of action.

Last action for St. Thomas – The Tommies came up empty during their trip to the North Shore to face Minnesota Duluth. Alexa Dobchuk made 39 saves for UST in the opener, but goals by Gabby Krause and Anneke Linser put the Bulldogs up 2-0; Brieja Parent lit the lamp for St. Thomas but they fell short, 2-1. UMD found their scoring touch in the rematch; Naomi Rogge recorded two goals & two assists, Clara Van Wieran added two goals & an assist, and Taylor Anderson & Gabby Krause each talled a goal and two assists in an 8-1 rout. Allie Monrean lit the lamp for the Tommies, Alexa Dobchuk made another 39 saves before being relieved, and Eryn Cooley stopped 7 shots over the final 9-1/2 minutes. UMD netminders Jojo Chobak & Holly Gruber faced only 16 shots for the entire series, stopping 14.


Gophers extend winning streak to 5 with sweep of St. Cloud State

The top line of Abigail Boreen, Catie Skaja, and Taylor Heise combined for 7 goals – including all five Gopher tallies on Friday – and 7 assists to lead Minnesota to a sweep of St. Cloud State, 5-3 and 5-1. After yielding goals to the Huskies' Emma Gentry & Nicole Ness in the first period on Friday, Boreen recorded a hat trick plus 2 helpers, Skaja tallied a goal and 2 assists, and Heise tacked on an empty-netter after 3 earlier assists. SCSU's Olivia Cvar scored a late power-play goal with an extra attacker, but Lauren Bench made 14 saves for the win. Emma Polusny stopped 55 shots for the Huskies. Skaja got things started in the rematch with an unassisted tally before Cvar evened the score with another power-play goal. However, the Gophers took control after the first intermission; Savannah Norcross put Minnesota up 2-1 in the second, Olivia Knowles lit the lamp in the third, Skaja scored unassisted again with a short-handed, empty-net tally, and Ella Huber added her first-career short-handed goal on the same penalty kill. Knowles posted a 3-point game, recording two assists to go with her goal. Makayla Pahl made 19 saves and earned an offensive assist on Huber's goal, while Sanni Ahola stopped 42 shots for the Huskies.


Brown earns special recognition after nomination from team

In a special recognition before this past Saturday's contest, Minnesota senior captain Emily Brown was honored as the “PNC Achiever of the Game”. The PNC Achievers program celebrates achievement among student-athletes and showcases student success through its honors and recognition program. Honorees are selected by designated panels at each respective school, and selection criteria requires each honoree to have distinguished themselves in the classroom and in their community through academic achievement, community service and student leadership. As of last November, the program is currently active at nearly 20 schools and universities across the markets PNC Bank serves. Brown was nominated by her teammates and coaching staff for her academic accomplishments, community service, and demonstration of GWH team values! Congratulations, Emily!!


2022 Winter Olympics Gold Medal Game – USA vs. Canada
Wednesday, February 16 at 10:10 p.m. US Central
Television coverage on NBC


For the fourth-straight Winter Olympics and sixth overall, the U.S. and Canada Women's Ice Hockey teams will battle for the gold medal. Team USA is the defending Olympic champion after winning the 2018 Gold Medal Game 3-2 in a shootout, but the Canadians are 7-2 against the Americans over the last seven months, including the 2021 IIHF Women's World Championship and pre-Olympic exhibition action. Canada claimed the 2021 World Championship gold medal with a 3-2 overtime victory.

We wish good luck to the eight Gopher Women's Hockey representatives playing as members of Team USA: Megan Bozek, Hannah Brandt, Dani Cameranesi, Amanda Kessel, Abbey Murphy, Kelly Pannek, Lee Stecklein & Grace Zumwinkle.


Bronze Medal Game: Finland vs. Switzerland, Wednesday at 5:30 a.m. CT –
Team Finland, including incoming Gopher freshman Nelli Laitinen, will look for its fourth Olympic bronze medal and second-straight. They take on a Swiss team looking for their second Olympic medal. This is a rematch of the 2021 Women's World Championship bronze medal game, which Finland won 3-1. The game will be streamed through NBC's peacocktv.com subscription service, with a replay on USA Network Wednesday afternoon at noon CT.


Semifinal recaps

Canada 10, Switzerland 3 – Marie-Philip Poulin lit the lamp twice, Claire Thompson recorded a goal and 2 assists, and Sarah Nurse dished out four helpers as the Canadians outshot the Swiss 61-13. Switzerland netminder Andrea Braendli was relieved less than 10 minutes into the contest after yielding 4 goals in a span of just 2:05, though teammate Lara Stalder made a showing with two goals and an assist.

USA 4, Finland 1 – Hannah Brandt's pass across the slot found Cayla Barnes, who buried the power-play goal to open the scoring in the second period. Hilary Knight and Hayley Scammura extended the American lead to 3-0. Susanna Tapani netted an extra-attacker goal for the Finns with 26 seconds remaining, but Abby Roque tacked on an empty-netter for Team USA with Amanda Kessel earning an assist. Alex Cavallini made 25 saves and was named the U.S. Player of the Game, while Finland's Anni Keisala stopped 38 shots.


Around the WCHA...

Last weekend – In a 2-2 game late in the third period Friday night, Ohio State pulled their goaltender in search for a regulation victory at Bemidji State; however, a save off the goal line by Beavers goaltender Kerigan Dowhy – her 51st stop in the contest – rebounded to teammate Paige Beebe, who launched the puck down the ice and into the empty net with 0.3 seconds remaining and the 3-2 BSU upset. OSU responded in force in the rematch as eight different Buckeyes lit the lamp for an 8-1 victory and the series split; Clair DeGeorge recorded 2 goals and 3 assists over the weekend.

Daryl Watts posted a 9-point series with 4 goals and 5 assists, Casey O'Brien added 3 goals and an assist, and Makenna Webster tallied a goal and 4 helpers as Wisconsin rolled over Minnesota State, 5-2 and 7-2. Kelsey King recorded 2 goals & 2 assists and Brittyn Fleming had 2 goals & an assist for the Mavericks.

Upcoming games – Minnesota Duluth & St. Cloud State have three games remaining, all against each other; as mentioned last week, they will play a make-up game in St. Cloud this afternoon (Tuesday, Feb. 15) before squaring off in Duluth on Friday and Saturday. Also on Friday and Saturday, Wisconsin and Ohio State will battle in Columbus while Minnesota State hosts Bemidji State in Mankato.

Standings:
1. Minnesota – .795 pts%, 19-6-1-1, 0-3 in OT, 62 points (24-7-1 overall)
2t. Ohio State – .760 pts%, 19-6-0-0, 1-1 in OT, 57 points (23-6-0 overall)
Wisconsin – .760 pts%, 18-4-3-2, 2-0 in OT, 57 points (23-4-4 overall)
4. Minnesota Duluth – .680 pts%, 17-8-0-0, 1-1 in OT, 51 points (20-9-0 overall)
5. Minnesota State – .333 pts%, 8-17-1-1, 1-1 in OT, 26 points (12-17-1 overall)
6. Bemidji State – .321 pts%, 8-16-2-0, 1-0 in OT, 25 points (11-16-3 overall)
7. St. Cloud State – .208 pts%, 4-18-2-1, 1-1 in OT, 15 points (9-19-2 overall)
8. St. Thomas – .133 pts%, 3-21-1-0, 0-0 in OT, 10 points (5-23-1 overall)


Copyright © 2022 Power Play Club, All rights reserved.

Follow the Gopher women's hockey team and all Univ. of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics at www.gophersports.com. You can also find the Gopher women's hockey team on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GopherWomensHockey and on Twitter at twitter.com/GopherWHockey.

The Penalty Box Post - Wednesday, February 9, 2022

The Penalty Box Post
Wednesday, February 9th

U. of M. lifts vaccine mandate; mask requirement remains

The University of Minnesota announced yesterday that it will not extend its temporary policy requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccination or proof of a negative, third-party COVID-19 test. The policy runs through events occurring today (Wednesday, Feb. 9) but expires after that.

The university reiterated, though, that its face covering policy does remain in place, with all guests attending an indoor Gopher Athletics event on campus being required to wear a well-fitted mask.


Goals for a Goal – season total continues to build!!

With four games left in the regular season and the postseason yet to come, the count of goals scored by the Gopher Women's Hockey team continues to increase. Through last weekend, the team has lit the lamp 128 times. Of those, seventeen (17) have come on the power play!!

Our Goals for a Goal campaign collects pledges for every goal scored over the season, with an option to double your pledge for power-play tallies. The collected funds will be used to support the squad's participation in a regular-season tournament in Las Vegas in 2022-2023. We encourage you to make your pledge online, or download the pledge form here and mail it in to the Golden Gopher Fund. The GGF will send out invoices following the end of the season.


#1 Minnesota Golden Gophers (22-7-1, 17-6-1-1 WCHA)
vs.
St. Cloud State Univ. Huskies (9-17-2, 4-16-2-1 WCHA)

Friday, February 11 at 3:00 p.m. Herb Brooks National Hockey Center, St. Cloud
Saturday, Feburary 12 at 3:00 p.m. Ridder Arena

The Gopher Women's Hockey team continues its push toward the playoffs with two home-and-home series to conclude the regular season, the first coming against the St. Cloud State University Huskies. Action begins with an afternoon matinee on Friday, February 11 at 3:00 p.m. at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud. The series then moves to Ridder Arena for the rematch on Saturday, February 12 at 3:00 p.m.

Time change reminder – We provide a reminder that the start time on Friday is a change from the original schedule. We hope many of you can make the drive up to St. Cloud on Friday afternoon.

Last time against St. Cloud State – Taylor Heise opened Minnesota's November series against St. Cloud State with her third short-handed goal of the season, and led the Gophers with 2 goals and 3 assists in a weekend sweep, winning 6-2 and 5-1.

The Huskies' Emma Gentry tied the opening contest in St. Cloud later in the first period, but Audrey Wethington, Olivia Knowles, Abigail Boreen, and Heise lit the lamp in the second stanza to open a 5-1 lead, and SCSU's Addi Scribner and Minnesota's Gracie Ostertag traded power play goals in the final 20 minutes. Emily Brown, Ostertag, and Boreen put Minnesota up 3-0 after one period of the rematch at Ridder Arena, and Emily Oden made it 4-0 before Mackenzie Bourgerie tallied for St. Cloud State. Crystalyn Hengler added a power play goal in the final frame. Oden dished out 3 assists in the series to accompany her goal, and Catie Skaja recorded 4 helpers.

Between the pipes, Makayla Pahl made 23 saves on Friday while Skylar Vetter stopped 20 shots on Saturday. Huskies netminder Sanni Ahola made a combined 66 saves in the two contests.

Analyzing the Huskies – St. Cloud State sits 7th in the WCHA standings with a 4-16-2 conference mark. While they've gone 2-2 against Minnesota State, they are 1-3 against Bemidji State and 1-2-1 against St. Thomas. The Huskies did post a 5-1-0 record in non-conference play, but those wins came against Lindenwood (x2), RPI (x2), and Penn State.

The Huskies find themselves missing two European players due to the Winter Olympics. Finnish senior Jenniina Nylund (#81) is third in total scoring for the team despite having played just 16 games for them, recording 15 points on 7 goals and 8 assists. Czech junior Klara Hymnlarova (#12) has 2 goals and 3 assists in 12 games with the Huskies.

Sophomore Emma Gentry (#20) is the run-away team leader in goals, having lit the lamp 14 times, nearly a quarter of the team's total of 57; adding in her 5 assists, she has 19 points. Junior Taylor Lind (#13) is the Huskies' overall scoring leader with 22 points, coming on 7 goals and 15 assists. Junior Olivia Cvar (#91; 7g, 3a) and junior Courtney Hall (#17; 2g, 8a) each have 10 points.

Sophomore Sanni Ahola (#1) has seen a slight majority of action between the pipes for SCSU; she's 5-11-0 in her 16 starts, with a 3.83 goals-against average and .894 save percentage. Graduate student Emma Polusny (#32) is an experienced veteran for the Huskies; she has a 4-6-2 record in 12 starts this season, with a 2.82 GAA and .925 SV%. Senior Karlie Ries (#30) and freshman Sky Hughes (#33) have not seen any action this year.

Last action for St. Cloud State – The Huskies led St. Thomas 2-0 in both games of their home-and-home series this past weekend. Allie Cornelius and Olivia Cvar (SH) scored in the second period of the opener in St. Cloud. However, four-straight penalties by SCSU led to third-period goals by the Tommies' Megan Cornell (5-on-3), Abby Promersberger (PP), and Anna Solheim (5-on-3); Alexa Dobchuk made 33 saves in total to earn UST the 3-2 victory. Moving to Mendota Heights for he rematch, Emma Gentry and Nicole Ness put the Huskies up by two but St. Thomas' Maija Almich cut that lead in half before the second intermission. The Tommies would get no closer, as Allison Green pushed the SCSU lead back to two with 1:07 to play. UST's Allie Monrean lit the lamp with 16 second left, but St. Cloud State earned the 3-2 win and the series split.

The Huskies are also coming off of a mid-week rescheduled game against Ohio State yesterday (Tuesday, 2/8) in St. Cloud. Liz Schepers completed a hat trick over the first two periods for the Buckeyes, though they led only 3-2 after 40 minutes thanks to SCSU goals by Gentry and Taylor Lind. But OSU struck 3 more times in the third stanza; Lexi Templeman & Brooke Bink each recorded a goal and an assist, and Schepers lit the lamp a fourth time to defeat the Huskies, 6-2.


Gophers sweep Bemidji State

Twelve different Minnesota players found the scoresheet as they defeated Bemidji State, 7-0 and 5-2, at Ridder Arena this past weekend. Taylor Heise led the way with 2 goals and 3 assists in the series, maintaining her NCAA lead in total scoring with 51 points and tallying her nation-leading 4th short-handed goal. Abigail Boreen and Savannah Norcross each tallied 2 goals & 2 assists, while Audrey Wethington, Catie Skaja & Amy Potomak each added a goal and 2 assists. Peyton Hemp lit the lamp twice on Friday night for her first career multi-goal game. Emily Brown recorded her 80th career point with an assist Friday, then tallied point #81 with a goal on Saturday. For Bemidji State, Taylor Nelson and Greysen Myers each lit the lamp shortly following Gopher goals to knot the score 1-1 and 2-2 on Saturday, but Norcross put Minnesota up for good.

Lauren Bench earned both victories, posting a 26-save shutout Friday before stopping another 27 shots on Saturday. BSU's Kerigan Dowhy made 43 saves in the opener, while Hannah Hogenson stopped 42 shots in the rematch.


Brown, Hemp latest Gophers to earn weekly honors!!

Senior captain Emily Brown and freshman Peyton Hemp were honored as the WCHA Defender & Rookie of the Week, respectively, for their performances against Bemidji State. In addition to passing the career 80-point mark with her goal and assist, Brown blocked 4 shots, posted a plus-5 rating on the ice, and played in her 157th and 158th career games with the Gophers. Hemp's pair of goals were accompanied by a plus-2 rating in the series, earning her a second weekly award this season. Congratulations, Emily and Peyton!!


Olympic Update: Canada defeats U.S. in preliminary play;
Finland earns 3rd seed & Sweden qualifies for quarterfinals

Minnesota Women's Hockey representative contributed to Team USA's performance in the preliminary-round contest against Canada yesterday, with Dani Cameranesi scoring and Kelly Pannek & Amanda Kessel recording assists, but the Canadians won in come-from-behind fashion, rattling off three-straight goals for a 4-2 victory. With the win, Canada took the top spot in Group A and the #1 seeding for the playoff round, which begins Friday (Beijing time).

Prior to their head-to-head meeting, the American and Canadian squads each won their other three Group A games. Team USA defeated Finland 5-2, ROC (Russia) 5-0, and Switzerland 8-0. Canada steamrolled their opponents, topping Switzerland 12-1, Finland 11-1, and ROC 6-1. Finland also fell to Switzerland, 3-2, but a 5-0 win over ROC yesterday propelled them into a third-place finish in the group. Through tiebreakers, ROC finished 4th and Switzerland 5th; ROC defeated the Swiss 5-2 in group play.

Japan claimed the top spot in Group B, earning standings points in all four of their games; they defeated Sweden 3-1 and Denmark 6-2, fell to China 2-1 in a shootout, but won a shootout over the Czechs, 3-2. The Czech Republic won their opener over China 3-1, topped Sweden 3-1, but were upset by Denmark 3-2. After their losses to Japan and the Czech Republic, Sweden defeated China 2-1 and Denmark 3-1 to advance to the playoff round. The Chinese and Danes were eliminated (China won their head-to-head meeting 3-1).

Quarterfinal match-ups (times listed are U.S. Central Time):

  • United States vs. Czech Republic – Thursday, February 10 at 10:10 p.m.

  • Canada vs. Sweden – Friday, February 11 at 7:10 a.m.

  • ROC vs. Switzerland – Friday, February 11 at 10:10 p.m.

  • Finland vs. Japan – Saturday, February 12 at 2:40 a.m.


Gophers at the Winter Games (* indicates career Olympic firsts):

  • Amanda Kessel (USA) – 2 goals, 4 assists, 6 points (U.S. scoring leader)

  • Kelly Pannek (USA) – 2 goals*, 3 assists, 5 points

  • Nelli Laitinen (FIN) – 1 goal*, 2 assists*, 3 points*

  • Megan Bozek (USA) – 3 assists, 3 points, +7 rating

  • Dani Cameranesi (USA) – 1 goal, 1 assist, 2 points

  • Hannah Brandt (USA) – 2 assists, 2 points

  • Josefin Bouveng (SWE) – 1 goal*, 1 point*

  • Grace Zumwinkle (USA) – 1 goal*, 1 point*

  • Abbey Murphy (USA) – 1 assist*, 1 point*

  • Lee Stecklein (USA) – +3 rating


Around the WCHA...

Last weekend – Before their make-up game in St. Cloud yesterday, Ohio State cruised to series sweep of Minnesota State in Mankato, 5-0 and 7-1. Gabbie Rosenthal tallied 3 goals and 2 assists, Liz Schepers notched 6 points on a goal and 5 assists, Paetyn Levis added 2 goals and 3 assists, Jenna Buglioni lit the lamp 3 times, and Amanda Thiele stopped a combined 41 shots. Jessica Kondas scored the lone goal for the Mavericks and Calla Frank made 79 saves.

Elizabeth Giguere scored twice and Jojo Chobak stopped all 45 shots she faced as Minnesota Duluth shut out Wisconsin 3-0 to open their series, UMD's first win in Madison in over 11 years. But Daryl Watts recorded a hat trick in the rematch, scoring on a power play, at even strength, and short-handed, and Kennedy Blair made 26 saves on 27 shots in a 5-1 Badgers victory and the series split.

Upcoming games – The other three weekend series will also feature Friday and Saturday action; Ohio State remains on the road with a visit to Bemidji State, St. Thomas heads north to face Minnesota Duluth, and Wisconsin hosts Minnesota State. The schedule also includes one more make-up game as well, as St. Cloud State hosts Minnesota Duluth next Tuesday afternoon (Feb. 15).

Standings:
1. Ohio State – .783 pts%, 18-5-0-0, 1-1 in OT, 54 points (22-5-0 overall)
2. Minnesota – .778 pts%, 17-6-1-1, 0-3 in OT, 56 points (22-7-1 overall)
3. Wisconsin – .739 pts%, 16-4-3-2, 2-0 in OT, 51 points (21-4-4 overall)
4. Minnesota Duluth – .652 pts%, 15-8-0-0, 1-1 in OT, 45 points (18-9-0 overall)
5. Minnesota State – .361 pts%, 8-15-1-1, 1-1 in OT, 26 points (12-15-1 overall)
6. Bemidji State – .306 pts%, 7-15-2-0, 1-0 in OT, 22 points (10-15-3 overall)
7. St. Cloud State – .227 pts%, 4-16-2-1, 1-1 in OT, 15 points (9-17-2 overall)
8. St. Thomas – .145 pts%, 3-19-1-0, 0-0 in OT, 10 points (5-21-1 overall)


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