When Taylor Heise, Grace Zumwinkle and Abby Boreen finished their Gophers careers, they took lots of things with them. The pride of winning WCHA regular-season and tournament championships. Memories of multiple NCAA tournament appearances.
And goals. The three combined for 76 last season, a whopping 43% of the Gophers’ output. With all of them moving on to pro hockey, coach Brad Frost knew he had to alter his team in a way that went well beyond the names on the uniforms.
“I still remember our first meeting this year,” Frost said. “We said, ‘We have to be comfortable in 1-0, 2-1 games, knowing we lost so much scoring. And I think our coaching staff has done a remarkable job of changing how we play.”
That shift helped the No. 5 Gophers find their way back to the NCAA tournament, beginning with Saturday’s quarterfinal at fourth-ranked Clarkson. Without a wealth of firepower to rely on, they have concentrated on sound defensive structure, discipline and attention to detail. That’s carried the Gophers to a 27-9-2 record, with only one of those losses to a team other than top-ranked Ohio State or No. 2 Wisconsin.
A victory Saturday would send them to their 16th appearance in the Frozen Four next weekend in Durham, N.H. To get there, the Gophers will have to beat the nation’s No. 1 defensive team in a game that’s likely to be low-scoring and tight — just the kind they have come to embrace in a season of change.
“I think in past years, we weren’t really built well to play in those tight-scoring, low-scoring games,” Frost said. “We had a ton of offense. And when your offense isn’t scoring all of a sudden, you squeeze the sticks a little tighter, and it gets a little harder.
“For this team to be as successful as we have been this year, I think it’s quite an achievement. I’m ecstatic with where our group is at.”
Last season, the Gophers led NCAA Division I with 4.54 goals per game. They are still among the highest-scoring teams in the country, ranking sixth this season even though their average output has dropped to 3.50.