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Watch: USCHO analyzes Boston College’s win over Michigan in the Men’s Frozen Four

ST. PAUL, Minn. — USCHO’s Ed Trefzger and Derek Schooley, head coach at Robert Morris, break down Boston College’s 4-0 win over Michigan in the 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four semifinals.

Boston College blanks Michigan for spot in NCAA championship game

Boston College’s Cutter Gauthier, right, celebrates his goal with teammate Ryan Leonard during Thursday’s Frozen Four semifinal game against Michigan (photo: Brad Olson).

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Top-seeded Boston College is one stop closer to its first national title since 2012.

The high-octane Eagles offense showed exactly why it has been the favorite for much of the season, defeating Michigan 4-0 in their Frozen Four semifinal game on Thursday night at Xcel Energy Center.

And it was the Eagles’ big-time players who stepped up in key situations. Freshman phenom Will Smith scored a pair of goals, sophomore Cutter Gauthier scored his nation-leading 38th of the season and freshman Gabe Perreault added a fourth to propel the Eagles (34-5-1) to Saturday’s national title game against Denver.

Boston College led 1-0 after the first period, thanks to some big saves from goaltender Jacob Fowler and an early goal from Smith and their vaunted freshman line.

BC got an early highlight-reel goal from Smith after Perreault picked up a loose puck deep in his own zone and hit Ryan Leonard with a cross-ice stretch pass deep behind the Michigan defense. Smith also snuck in behind the Michigan defenders and easily beat Michigan goaltender Jake Barczewski to finish off the bang-bang-bang play just 1 minute, 20 seconds into the game.

But in general, Michigan seemed to control the pace of the game and had a few more grade A scoring chances. The Wolverines outshot the Eagles 9-6 in the first 20 minutes, with Fowler flashing some nice leather a few times to keep it scoreless.

Boston College got a chance to extend its lead a little later in the period when Michigan’s Mark Estapa was called for a boarding penalty midway through the first. That opportunity was short-lived, however, as Leonard was called for a hook on Michigan’s Tyler Duke 35 seconds into their man advantage. Neither team was able to generate much on their brief power-play chances.

BC got another power play opportunity shortly after this, when Estapa again went to the box, this time for a trip at the 4:10 mark. However, Michigan’s penalty kill unit, which came into the game ranked 45th in the country, held the Eagles off the scoreboard.

The Eagles had a chance to go up 2-0 early in the second period. About 90 seconds into the middle frame, Leonard was able to carry the puck into the slot and escape a number of defenders but Barczewski made a sprawling save to deny Leonard.

The Wolverines, who came into the game having converted on 34.5% of their power plays, had its first real chance on the advantage in the second period. BC’s Gauthier was called for interference but BC’s penalty kill, which also happens to be the best in the country, was up to the task and didn’t let the Wolverines have any good chances.

Michigan’s failure to convert on that power play chance would haunt it later in the period. Although it appeared the Wolverines would get their second power play chance a few minutes later when BC’s Drew Fortescue was called for a trip, that chance was short-lived. About 30 seconds after Fortescue went into the box, Michigan’s Duke was also whistled for a trip, negating the power play and opening up a lot of 4-on-4 ice for the dangerous Eagles offense.

BC made Michigan pay. First, Smith scored a goal that is the definition of “lucky bounce” when he skated around behind the Michigan goal and sent the puck into the slot for what was an attempt at a centering pass. However, the puck missed its intended target (Gauthier) and instead hit a Michigan defender before trickling in between Barczewski’s legs.

Less than a minute later, BC struck again. This time Gauthier stripped the puck from a Michigan defender at the blue line and took it coast-to-coast for a no-doubter.

If the game wasn’t over when BC took the 3-0 lead on Gauthier’s breakaway, Perreault shoved the dagger in for good early in the third. Five minutes into the final frame, Perreault scored an unassisted wraparound goal to make it 4-0 — his third point of the game, adding to the two assists he had on earlier goals.

That’s not to say Michigan didn’t have its chances to get back in the game late. The Wolverines outshot the Eagles 17-8 in the third, and had one final power play opportunity midway through the period. However, none of their scoring chances seemed to be true threats to the Eagles, who seemed to be most interested in letting the clock tick off.

Both teams were held without a power play goal; Michigan went 0-for-4 and BC was 0-for-3.

Fowler finished the game with 32 saves for the Eagles and recorded his third shutout of the season. Barczewski stopped 18 shots.

Boston College opens up 3-goal lead over Michigan through 2 periods of Frozen Four semifinal

Boston College’s Will Smith scores in the first period against Michigan (photo: Jim Rosvold).

ST. PAUL, Minn. – After grinding out a 1-0 lead in the first period, top-ranked Boston College gave itself some breathing room in the second period on Thursday night.

The Eagles scored two late 4-on-4 goals to give themselves a 3-0 lead over Michigan after 40 minutes of play in their Frozen Four semifinal game at Xcel Energy Center.

The Eagles led 1-0 after the first period, thanks to some big saves from goaltender Jacob Fowler and an early goal from Will Smith and their vaunted freshman line.

BC got an early highlight-reel goal from Smith after his teammate Gabe Perreault picked up a loose puck deep in his own zone and hit Ryan Leonard with a cross-ice stretch pass deep behind the Michigan defense. Smith also snuck in behind the Michigan defenders and easily beat Michigan goaltender Jake Barczewski to finish off the bang-bang-bang play just 1 minute, 20 seconds into the game.

But in general, Michigan seemed to control the pace of the game and had a few more grade A scoring chances. The Wolverines outshot the Eagles 9-6 in the first 20 minutes, with Fowler flashing some nice leather a few times to keep Michigan scoreless.

Boston College got a chance to extend its lead a little later in the period when Michigan’s Mark Estapa was called for a boarding penalty midway through the first. That opportunity was short-lived, however, as Leonard was called for a hook on Michigan’s Tyler Duke 35 seconds into their man advantage. Neither team was able to generate much on their brief power-play chances.

BC got another power play shortly after this, when Estapa again went to the box, this time for a trip. However, Michigan’s penalty kill unit, which came into the game ranked 45th in the country, held the Eagles off the scoreboard.

The Eagles had an early chance to go up 2-0 early in the second period. About 90 seconds into the middle frame, Leonard was able to carry the puck into the slot and escape a number of defenders but Barczewski made a sprawling save to deny Leonard.

The Wolverines, who came into the game having converted on 34.5% of their power plays, had their first real chance on the advantage in the second period. BC’s Cutter Gauthier was called for interference but BC’s penalty kill, which also happens to be the best in the country, was up to the task and didn’t let the Wolverines have any good chances.

Michigan’s failure to convert on that power play chance was costly later in the period. Although the Wolverines got their second power play chance a few minutes later when BC’s Drew Fortescue was called for a trip, that chance was short-lived. About 30 seconds after Fortescue went into the box, Michigan’s Duke was also whistled for a trip, negating the power play and opening up a lot of 4-on-4 ice for the dangerous Eagles offense.

BC made Michigan pay. First, Smith scored a goal that is the definition of “lucky bounce” when he skated around behind the Michigan goal and sent the puck into the slot for what was an attempt at a centering pass. However, the puck missed its intended target (Gauthier) and instead hit a Michigan defender before trickling in between Barczewski’s legs.

Less than a minute later, BC struck again. This time Gauthier stripped the puck from a Michigan defender at the blue line and took it coast-to-coast for a no-doubter.

The Eagles went into the intermission up 3-0 and had also turned the tables on Michigan’s momentum, outshooting them 8-6 in the second period.

Boston College, Michigan play for spot in title game: live stats

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Boston College leads Michigan after first period of Frozen Four semifinal

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Boston College needed its difference-makers to be in the right place at the right time in the first period on Thursday night.

Although the top-seeded Eagles led 1-0 after the first period, it took some big saves from goaltender Jacob Fowler and an early goal from their vaunted freshman line to fend off a feisty Michigan squad in their Frozen Four semifinal game at Xcel Energy Center.

The Eagles got an early highlight-reel goal from freshman Will Smith after his teammate Gabe Perreault picked up a loose puck deep in his own zone and hit Ryan Lenoard with a cross-ice stretch pass deep behind the Michigan defense. Smith also snuck in behind the Michigan defenders and easily beat Michigan goaltender Jake Barczewski to finish off the bang-bang-bang play just 1 minute, 20 seconds into the game.

But in general, Michigan seemed to control the pace of the game and had a few more grade A scoring chances. The Wolverines outshot the Eagles 9-6 in the first 20 minutes, with Fowler flashing some nice leather a few times to keep it scoreless.

Boston College got a chance to extend its lead when Michigan’s Mark Estapa was called for a boarding penalty midway through the first. That opportunity was short-lived, however, as Leonard was called for a hook on Michigan’s Tyler Duke 35 seconds into their man advantage. Neither team was able to generate much on their brief power-play chances.

BC got another power play shortly after this, when Estapa again went to the box, this time for a trip. However, Michigan’s penalty kill unit, which came into the game ranked 45th in the country, held the Eagles off the scoreboard.

5 numbers to know from Denver’s victory over Boston University in the Men’s Frozen Four

Denver goalie Matt Davis makes a save on Boston University’s Macklin Celebrini on Thursday (photo: Jim Rosvold).

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Here are five numbers to know from Denver’s 2-1 overtime win over Boston University in Thursday’s NCAA Men’s Frozen Four early semifinal game:

.972 is pretty darn good

Denver goalie Matt Davis has given up just three goals on 106 shots in the NCAA tournament for a .972 save percentage in three one-goal games. Davis came into the Springfield Regional with a .908 save percentage.

The record for a minimum of two NCAA games is held by UMass’ Filip Lindberg with .9865 in 2021. He’s followed by Cornell’s Ken Dryden at .9861 in 1967.

First shorty

Luke Tuch’s short-handed goal to give Boston University a 1-0 lead was the first of his four-year career with the Terriers, coming in his 121st game. It was the third short-handed tally allowed by Denver in its last nine games.

The last shorty in the Frozen Four was by UMass forward Philip Lagunov to go up 3-0 over St. Cloud State in the 2021 championship game in Pittsburgh.

BU scored only once in four games this season, all resulting in losses.

It only takes two

Denver has not scored fewer than two goals in any game this season. The Pioneers have needed only two in their last three contests.

Both Springfield Regional games saw 2-1 wins by DU, first over UMass in two overtimes, and against Cornell to advance to the Frozen Four. The Pioneers are 12-0 this season when holding opponents to one goal or fewer.

8.86 combined average goals per game

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Denver’s No. 1 offense and Boston University’s fourth best have averaged a combined 8.86 goals per game this season.

Bookmakers expected a high-scoring game and set the over/under — expected combined goals scored — at seven. By the end of the second period, in-game over/under had dropped to 4.5 and to 3.5 midway through the third.

15 comebacks

Getting scored upon first hasn’t rattled Denver much. With Thursday’s win, the Pioneers have gone 15-4-2 this season when their opponent scores first. That was in contrast to Boston University, which was 21-4-0 this season entering Thursday’s semifinal.

Photos: Top shots from Denver’s win over Boston University in Men’s Frozen Four semifinals

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Here are photos from Denver’s 2-1 overtime victory over Boston University in the first NCAA Men’s Frozen Four semifinal on Thursday at Xcel Energy Center.

Watch: USCHO analyzes Denver’s overtime win over Boston University

ST. PAUL, Minn. — USCHO’s Ed Trefzger and Derek Schooley, the head coach at Robert Morris, analyze Denver’s 2-1 overtime win over Boston University in the NCAA Men’s Frozen Four semifinals Thursday at Xcel Energy Center.

Broz’s overtime goal lifts Denver past Boston University, into Frozen Four title game

Denver celebrates Tristan Lemyre’s second-period goal against Boston University (photo: Jim Rosvold).

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Denver’s Tristan Broz fired a low, hard shot between the legs of Boston University goaltender Mathieu Caron at 11:09 of overtime as the Pioneers knocked off the Terriers 2-1 on Thursday to earn a spot in Saturday’s national championship game.

The play began in the Boston University zone as Devin Kaplan couldn’t handle a pass through the slot area. That sent Denver up ice on a 3-on-2 with Broz carrying the puck across the line. Thinking shot, he fired a low rocket that hit the net bottom and bounced out so quickly many in the crowd didn’t realize it had gone in.

The goal ended a thrilling opening game where Boston University had countless opportunities early to extend an early one-goal lead. Denver persevered, tied the game in the second and found a way to win in the extra session.

It was Denver’s third straight 2-1 victory in the NCAA tournament and second that ended in overtime.

Power plays were the story of the game. The Terriers put Denver on the man advantage four times, including three times in the third.

Denver took just one penalty, a matching minor in overtime, meaning Boston University’s power play never saw the ice.

The Terriers began the game fast as Kaplan was stopped on a one-timer by Denver goaltender Matt Davis (33 saves) just 45 seconds in. Denver didn’t have a shot until 5:50 of the first, but that led to Carter King with a great look on a rebound that BU’s Caron (27 saves) stopped.

Seconds later, the Terriers took the game’s first penalty but instead of Denver’s power play capitalizing, BU scored short-handed.

Kaplan flicked a quick pass to Luke Tuch that sent him past the Pioneers defense on a breakaway. Tuch ripped a shot up high for his first career short-handed goal at 7:45.

Through the middle frame, the Terriers continued to hold a strong territorial advantage but a mental mistake by All-American defenseman Lane Hutson allowed Denver to strike back.

Behind his net, Hutson made a blind pass that was perfectly anticipated by Miko Matikka. He intercepted the puck and fed quickly to a wide-open Tristan Lemyre, who fired the puck five-hole on Caron at 15:21 to even the score. The goal came on just the eighth Pioneers shot of the game.

That goal gave Denver life, and the Pioneers hemmed the Terriers in their zone for the remainder of the second. With 23.4 seconds left, it looked as if Aidan Thompson would give the Pioneers their first lead when Davis made a perfect stretch pass to spring a 2-on-1. Appearing to be beat, Caron reached behind him for a glove save that robbed Thompson, sending the game to the third tied at 1.

Caron remained sharp in the third with his biggest save coming on Denver’s scoring leader Jack Devine as a Denver power play ended. A rebound popped right to Devine’s stick and he made a move past Caron, but the junior netminder reached his arm across to stop the puck with 9:13 left.

At the other end of the ice, it wasn’t so much the goaltender stealing the show, but the post. Lane Hutson took a feed from Macklin Celebrini with 3:33 left and ripped it off the inside of the post.

Boston University led in shots through regulation, 25-23, but Denver outshot the Terriers in the third, 12-5.

Watch the goal that sent Denver to the NCAA championship game

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Tristan Broz fired a shot through Boston University goalie Mathieu Caron’s pads in overtime, sending Denver to the NCAA Men’s Frozen Four championship game with a 2-1 win on Thursday at the Xcel Energy Center.

Here’s video of the goal that sent the Pioneers past the Terriers.

Photos: Top shots from Boston College’s win over Michigan in Men’s Frozen Four

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Here are photos from Boston College’s 4-0 win over Michigan in the Men’s Frozen Four semifinals on Thursday at Xcel Energy Center.

Denver, Boston University need overtime to decide Frozen Four semifinal

Denver and Boston University were tied 1-1 after regulation in the Frozen Four semifinals (photo: Jim Rosvold).

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Boston University’s Luke Tuch scored short-handed in the first and Denver’s Tristan Lemyre took advantage of a Terriers mistake in the second as BU and Denver were tied after regulation play in the opening semifinal of the 2024 Men’s Frozen Four on Thursday.

Denver began the overtime period with a 47-second power play after BU’s Dylan Petersen was whistled for boarding at 18:47 of the third.

Power plays were the story of the game. The Terriers put Denver on the man advantage four times, including three times in the third.

Denver did not take a penalty through regulation.

The Terriers began the game fast as Devin Kaplan was stopped on a one-timer by Denver goaltender Matt Davis just 45 seconds in. Denver didn’t have a shot until 5:50 of the first, but that led to Carter King with a great look on a rebound that BU’s Mathieu Caron stopped.

Seconds later, the Terriers took the game’s first penalty but instead of Denver’s power play capitalizing, BU scored short-handed.

Kaplan flicked a quick pass to Tuch that sent him past the Pioneers defense on a breakaway. Kaplan ripped a shot up high for his first career short-handed goal at 7:45.

Through the middle frame, the Terriers continued to hold a strong territorial advantage but a mental mistake by All-American defenseman Lane Hutson allowed Denver to strike back.

Behind his net, Hutson made a blind pass that was perfectly anticipated by Miko Matikka. He intercepted the puck and fed quickly to a wide-open Lemyre, who fired the puck five-hole on Caron at 15:21 to even the score. The goal came on just the eighth Pioneers shot of the game.

That goal gave Denver life, and the Pioneers hemmed the Terriers in their zone for the remainder of the second. With 23.4 seconds left, it looked as if Aidan Thompson would give the Pioneers their first lead when Davis made a perfect stretch pass to spring a 2-on-1. Appearing to be beat, Caron reached behind him for a glove save that robbed Thompson, sending the game to the third tied at 1.

Caron remained sharp in the third with his biggest save coming on Denver’s scoring leader Jack Devine as a Denver power play ended. A rebound popped right to Devine’s stick and he made a move past Caron, but the junior netminder reached his arm across to stop the puck with 9:13 left.

At the other end of the ice, it wasn’t so much the goaltender stealing the show, but the post. Lane Hutson took a feed from Macklin Celebrini with 3:33 left and ripped it off the inside of the post.

Boston University led in shots through regulation 25-23 but Denver outshot the Terriers in the third 12-5.

Denver, Boston University tied after two periods in Frozen Four semifinals

Denver goalie Matt Davis covers the puck while players push after a whistle in Thursday’s national semifinal (photo: Jim Rosvold).

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Boston University’s Luke Tech scored short-handed in the first and Denver’s Tristan Lemyre took advantage of a Terriers mistake in the second as BU and Denver were tied through two periods of play in the opening semifinal of the 2024 Men’s Frozen Four.

The Terriers began the game fast as Devin Kaplan was stopped on a one-timer by Denver goaltender Matt Davis just 45 seconds in. Denver didn’t have a shot until 5:50 of the first, but that led to Carter King with a great look on a rebound that BU’s Mathieu Caron stopped.

Seconds later, the Terriers took the game’s first penalty but instead of Denver’s power play capitalizing, BU scored short-handed.

Kaplan flicked a quick pass to Tuch that sent him past the Pioneers defense on a breakaway. Kaplan ripped a shot up high for his first career short-handed goal at 7:45.

Through the middle frame, the Terriers continued to hold a strong territorial advantage but a mental mistake by All-American defenseman Lane Hutson allowed Denver to strike back.

Behind his net, Hutson made a blind pass that was perfectly anticipated by Miko Matikka. He intercepted the puck and fed quickly to a wide-open Lemyre, who fired the puck five-hole on Caron at 15:21 to even the score. The goal came on just the eighth Pioneers shot of the game.

That goal gave Denver life, and the Pioneers hemmed the Terriers in their zone for the remainder of the second. With 23.4 seconds left, it looked as if Aidan Thompson would give the Pioneers their first lead when Davis made a perfect stretch pass to spring a 2-on-1. Appearing to be beat, Caron reached behind him for a glove save that robbed Thompson, sending the game to the third tied at 1.

Boston University leads Denver after one period on Tuch’s short-handed goal

Boston University’s Luke Tuch scores a short-handed goal in the first period against Denver (photo: Jim Rosvold).

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Thanks to a Luke Tuch short-handed goal, Boston University held a 1-0 lead over Denver through one period in the opening semifinal of the 2024 Men’s Frozen Four.

The Terriers began the period fast as Devin Kaplan was stopped on a one-timer by Denver goaltender Matt Davis just 45 seconds into the game. Denver had its own grade A opportunity at 5:50 when Carter King had a great look on a rebound that BU’s Mathieu Caron stopped.

Seconds later, the Terriers took the game’s first penalty but instead of Denver’s power play capitalizing, BU scored short-handed.

Kaplan flicked a quick pass to Tuch that sent him past the Pioneers defense on a breakaway. Kaplan ripped a shot up high for his first career short-handed goal at 7:45.

Boston University held a distinct territorial advantage in the opening frame, evident by a 10-3 advantage in shots.

A short-handed breakaway gives Boston University the first goal of the 2024 Men’s Frozen Four

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Luke Tuch’s short-handed breakaway in the first period Thursday provided the first goal of the 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four.

Tuch scored 7:45 into the first period to give Boston University a 1-0 lead over Denver in the national semifinals.

Here’s a look at the goal.

Boston University, Denver open the Men’s Frozen Four: live stats

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Watch: USCHO’s Jim Connelly, Derek Schooley preview Men’s Frozen Four semifinals

ST. PAUL, Minn. — What will it take for Boston University, Denver, Boston College and Michigan to get to the NCAA championship game? USCHO’s Jim Connelly and Derek Schooley, head coach at Robert Morris, discuss some of the factors ahead of Thursday’s NCAA Men’s Frozen Four semifinal games.

Thursday replay on demand: USCHO Frozen Four Live! at 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four

USCHO podcasts are going on the road, and you can join us for live broadcasts during the 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four in St. Paul, Minn., including Thursday from noon until 2 p.m. CT.

USCHO Frozen Four Live! with Ed Trefzger, Jim Connelly and Derek Schooley will have live events featuring special guests and giveaways on four days at Tom Reid’s Hockey City Pub, 258 7th St W, near the Xcel Energy Center.

Scheduled guests are:

12:20 p.m. Doug Christiansen, ECAC
12:40 p.m. Heather Weems, NCHC
1:00 p.m. Don Lucia, CCHA
1:20 p.m. Adam Augustine, Big Ten
1:40 p.m. Andrew Mahoney, Boston Globe

 

Replay:

Here’s rest of the week’s schedule (all times Central):

Friday, April 12: 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Saturday, April 13: 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

If you won’t be in St. Paul, check out the podcast from wherever you are on our site, on Apple Podcasts, in your favorite podcast app, or on Spreaker.

Check out all of USCHO’s college hockey podcasts, including USCHO Weekend Review and USCHO Edge, plus our entire podcast archive.

How to watch and listen to Thursday’s 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four semifinals

ST. PAUL, Minn. — The 2024 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four begins Thursday with the national semifinals.

Boston University plays Denver at 4 p.m. CT at Xcel Energy Center. The second game between Boston College and Michigan is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. CT.

Both games are on ESPN2 and ESPN+ for subscribers, with John Buccigross and Colby Cohen on the call.

Westwood One has rights to radio broadcasts. Brian Tripp, Dave Starman and Shireen Saski are the radio voices.

Disrupting strong offenses key as Boston University, Denver eye Frozen Four opener

Boston University’s Macklin Celebrini, right, ranks second in the country in scoring heading into Thursday’s Frozen Four semifinal against Denver (photo: Brad Olson).

ST. PAUL, Minn. — It takes more than a strong offense to win championships.

For No. 2 overall seed Boston University and No. 3 overall seed Denver, set to face off in the first NCAA Men’s Frozen Four semifinal Thursday, defense isn’t typically the first thought. But it just might come down to who has the better overall play. Disrupting the other team’s rhythm will be what it takes.

Staying focused on the ultimate goal and having a short memory was the key for BU after a blowout loss to archrival and top overall seed Boston College in the Hockey East championship on March 23.

Head coach Jay Pandolfo credited the short turnaround and the long trip halfway across the country to Sioux Falls, S.D., for the regionals the next week as a big part of his team’s success in advancing to St. Paul.

“We were certainly disappointed but we knew we weren’t done,” he said. “Our guys, they took it upon ourselves to move on.”

Macklin Celebrini leads the way for the Terriers as the nation’s No. 2 scorer (32 goals, 32 assists). While the talented 17-year-old Hobey Baker Hat Trick finalist is expected to be the top overall pick in the next NHL draft, he insisted Wednesday that his focus is bringing home the program’s sixth national championship and first since 2009.

The same goes for his teammates. So what will it take to keep pace with Denver’s top-ranked offense of 4.71 goals per game?

“I think for us it’s dictating the way we want to play,” said defenseman Case McCarthy. “I think when we’re playing our style, we’re hard to deal with.

“[Denver is] a deep team. We’ve just got to make sure we manage the game,” Pandolfo said. “We’ve got to make sure that we’re staying above the puck, make sure our reloads are really good, make sure our gaps are good for our D so they don’t have a lot of time and space.”

For the Pioneers, that mighty offense was held in check in the Springfield Regional. But DU qualified for its second Frozen Four in the last three years by winning in a way it couldn’t early in the season — defense.

Denver practices Wednesday at the Xcel Energy Center. The Pioneers play Boston University on Thursday in the NCAA Men’s Frozen Four semifinals (photo: Jim Rosvold).

The Pioneers won a pair of 2-1 games over UMass and Cornell in their regional without having to put up big offensive numbers like they did March 22-23 when they took the NCHC Frozen Faceoff championship in the same building they’re playing in this week, the Xcel Energy Center.

They know they’re capable of lighting the lamp any time they want, and the improvement of their defense in the second half to complement the scoring makes them a tough out. But they’re not about to underestimate a skilled Terriers team as they pursue their 10th title.

“We want to play Denver hockey,” forward McKade Webster said. “We want to make them come through us, want to play a 200-foot game stopping on pucks and make them come to us.”

“Every team [here] has offensive weapons,” said Pioneers coach David Carle. “Limit their
opportunities and time and space the best we can, and I think our team showed how committed they are to team defense.”

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