Gov. Mark Dayton was among the frustrated Minnesota hockey fans who couldn't find last year's Women's Frozen Four on television. The event was viewable only on NCAA.com.
After watching the Gophers lose to Clarkson 5-4 in the championship game held in Hamden, Conn., Dayton went onto his Facebook page to vent.
"My eyes are still cross-eyed from trying to follow the puck on a 4"x6" screen, via an NCAA computer link," he wrote last March. "It's disgraceful that no national or local television station televised the game for the National Championship."
One year later, the Women's Frozen Four is returning to the Gophers' home rink, and tickets to 3,400-seat Ridder Arena have been sold out for months. Once again, the games won't be televised, so the only way to watch without a ticket will be NCAA.com's stream.
Minnesota faces Wisconsin in Friday's first semifinal, followed by Boston College vs. Harvard, with the winners advancing to Sunday's championship game.
The top-seeded Gophers are trying to reach their fourth consecutive national title game, so there is no mistaking their prominence within the sport. But the game of women's hockey, established as an NCAA varsity sport 15 years ago, struggles with securing a steady audience.
The Gophers soared in popularity in 2013, when they capped a 41-0 season with wins over Boston College and Boston University in the Women's Frozen Four at Ridder Arena. Those games weren't televised either, and scalpers outside the rink were getting $65 for general admission tickets — 10 times face value.
Last season, several Gophers headed to the Olympics, and when Team USA lost a 3-2, overtime heartbreaker to Canada for the gold medal, the ratings showed that 4.9 million people watched on NBC, with another 1.2 million watching online.