UND HOCKEY: DU does in UND

 
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Mar 22, 2008 - 04:05:47 CDT
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - It wasn't supposed to happen the way it did, but that's OK as far as Anthony Maiani is concerned.

The Denver freshman was trying to keep the puck alive for a line change when he scooped a backhander past North Dakota goalie Jean-Phillippe Lamoureux with 1:20 left to play, snapping a 1-1 tie as the Pioneers beat the Fighting Sioux 3-1 on Friday in the semifinals of the WCHA Final Five.

"It happened to go in," said Maiani, who had raced down the right side of the rink with North Dakota's Joe Finley in his path. "It came off my stick pretty good, and I felt good about it."

Matt Glasser added an empty net goal in the closing seconds and Peter Mannino made 32 saves to send the Pioneers into the tournament final today against Minnesota.

"Now it turns into excitement," said Denver goaltender Peter Mannino, who made 32 saves and was able to hold off a pair of 5-on-3 power plays by the Fighting Sioux, including one less than five minutes into the game before a partisan Sioux crowd at the Xcel Energy Center.

"We weren't able to get one early and get ourselves in a position to carry momentum," North Dakota coach Dave Hakstol said.

Denver's Rhett Rakhshani got the game's first goal on a power play in the second period. The Sioux tied the score on a hard-working goal by Taylor Chorney early in the second period and appeared to be building steam when their late push and the roar of the crowd was stopped cold by Maiani's goal.

"For us, it was just too little, too late," said Chorney. "It took us too long to get into the game and it ended up costing us."

It was the second straight game-winning goal for Maiani. He had the only score of the Pioneers' 1-0 win over Minnesota Duluth to clinch a first-round series sweep in Denver.

The Pioneers used a man advantage to get on the board first. Rakhshani beat Lamoureux short side from a deep angle early in the second period to give the Pioneers a 1-0 lead.

North Dakota tied the score early in the second period when Chorney worked the puck free after getting his point-blank shot blocked by Peter Mannino, who let the puck get free behind him in the crease. Chorney set up the play moments earlier by keeping the puck in the zone at the blue line.

Lamoureux made 27 saves.

Tempers flared in the final minute of the first period when it appeared the Sioux had scored. Mannino made two saves and covered up beneath a pile of bodies, and after some pushing around the goal light flashed on. As referees tried to restore order, players squared off in the Denver end of the ice. Three players from each side were called for unsportsmanlike conduct, and after a long video review it was ruled that the puck never crossed the goal line.

Denver is now 3-0 against North Dakota in the Final Five, winning 2-1 in overtime in the 2005 semifinals and 4-3 in 1999 final. The Pioneers snapped a three-game losing streak to the Sioux, a skid that includes a 5-4 North Dakota win Feb 15. in Grand Forks in which Denver blew a 4-1 lead.

Denver is in the Final Five championship game for the first time since 2006 when the Pioneers beat Colorado College 1-0 for their sixth WCHA playoff title.

Minnesota 2, Colorado College 1, OT

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Mike Hoeffel's overtime goal, his second goal of the game, lifted Minnesota to the win and into the WCHA Final Five championship.

The Gophers picked up the win when a centering pass by Hoeffel from a deep angle glanced off the back of defenseman Nate Prosser and past goaltender Richard Bachman, sending most of the 16,967 fans at the Xcel Energy Center into a frenzy. It was the Gophers fourth OT game in five games.

The Gophers got 37 saves from Alex Kangas.

Colorado College broke out early in the second period on a power-play goal by Andreas Vlassopoulos, who slapped the puck past Kangas during a scrum in front of the crease. The Gophers answered 59 seconds later when Hoeffel one-timed a pass from Jay Barriball and went top shelf on Bachman.

Minnesota managed to escape the first period unscathed despite allowing 20 shots by Colorado College, which had three power-play opportunities.

Bachman made 33 saves for the WCHA regular season champion Tigers, who swept Minnesota in late October in Colorado Springs in the teams' only meetings of the season.

Minnesota is getting used to overtime. The Gophers opened their first-round series at Minnesota State, Mankato, last Friday with a double overtime loss, following that with a single-overtime victory the next night before scoring a win in double overtime on Sunday to qualify for the Final Five.

They escaped extra sessions on Thursday by beating St. Cloud State 3-2 on Mike Howe's goal with 12.7 seconds left in regulation.

With Friday's semifinal, the Gophers have played in 21 periods of hockey in five games over eight days.

The Gophers did not win in 12 regular season overtime games, but have now won three straight games that have gone an extra session.

Minnesota is the fourth team to go from the Final Five's Thursday night play-in game all the way to the final, joining Northern Michigan in 1993, Michigan Tech in 1996 and St. Cloud State in 2006. All three of those teams lost in the championship game.

The Gophers won last year's WCHA tournament title, beating North Dakota 3-2 on Blake Wheeler's overtime goal.
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UND HOCKEY: DU does in UND
Comments

SE Forty wrote on Mar 23, 2008 6:26 PM:

" Good job Denver!! "

Dave wrote on Mar 22, 2008 2:20 PM:

" Was that not the greatest game ever or what? Poor sioux "

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