Denver and Notre Dame Skate to 2-2 tie in Season-Opener in South Bend

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Notre Dame Freshman Goalie Dylan St. Cyr had 46 saves as the game’s first star. Photo Courtesy: University of Notre Dame

University of Denver sophomore all-American Henrik Borgström scored both goals, but the #1 ranked defending NCAA Champion Pioneers had to settle for a 2-2 tie with the #4 ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish in a re-match of last year’s NCAA hockey semifinal before a near-capacity crowd of 4,478 fans at Notre Dame’s Compton Family Ice Arena in South Bend, Ind.

The Pioneers (0-0-1), playing in their season opener, did get an extra sense of reward with a fourth-round, post-overtime shootout win on a top-corner wrist shot by freshman Kohen Olischefski, but that was all for fun, as the NCAA does not recognize shootout wins in regular season play.

The Irish, (2-0-1), who had the benefit of two prior games last weekend, can be excited that a game in which they were badly outshot by DU, resulted in a tie.

“I was really happy,” said DU coach Jim Montgomery after the game. “I thought that was by far the best first game, in my five years here, that this Denver team has played. I thought we played fast and possessed pucks. In the second period, you know, you’re playing a top-five team. [Notre Dame] came back and they got into the game and then it was a really…for the first game of the year…that was a great hockey game. The exciting part is that hopefully we can grow from this and get better. There’s a couple areas we weren’t great at, but overall I was really happy with our effort and our execution.”

A tension-filled third period was filled with heroics in the final minutes, and as the game wound down, it looked like the Pioneers would win it, as they had three times as many final period shots as the Irish. Borgström’s power-play goal (his second goal of the game) at the 14:38 mark of the third period had sent the Pioneers ahead 2-1 on a gorgeous cross-ice feed from winger Troy Terry, who had split two Notre Dame defenders to set up Borgström on the doorstep, as the Pioneer bench erupted with excitement.

However, the Denver lead didn’t last long, as the Irish were able to equalize the game at 2-2 with Andrew Oglevie’s own power-play goal from between the circles with 4:39 remaining in the third period, the result of an interference penalty call on DU’s Blake Hillman that Montgomery questioned after the game.

The Pioneers, using superior speed, outshot Notre Dame in all three periods of regulation time for a 46-22 total, including 21-7 in the third period, but the heavier Notre Dame squad had the better shot opportunities in the overtime, outshooting the Pios, 7-2 in the extra five minutes, including one shot that clanked off the DU crossbar that almost ended the game as a Notre Dame victory.

The game had started out as a first-period track meet, with up-and-down action with no penalties and no icing calls. While the Pios dominated the shots in the opening frame, it was the Irish who drew first blood with a Jack Evans goal, which came from a juicy rebound of ND’s Cam Morrison’s long wrist shot at the 14:01 mark, a rebound that had bounced off DU goalie Tanner Jaillet’s leg pad straight to Evans in front of the DU goal.

But the Pios took that Irish punch to the nose personally, and roared back just 15  seconds later, as Borgström combined for for a nifty give-and-go with Adam Plant to tie at the game at 1-1. Borgström had carried the puck into the ND zone, dropped a pass to Plant, who ripped a perfect pass back to Borgström, who had faded into the ND left face-off circle. As Plant’s pass arrived, the Finnish sensation rifled a one-timer high into the Notre Dame goal to beat Irish goalie Dylan St. Cyr to silence the ND crowd from the celebration of Evans’ goal that was being announced to the crowd at the same time Borgström tied the game for the Pioneers.

The 1-1 tie scoreline held up until the third period, with the Irish getting increasingly physical in an attempt to slow down the faster Pioneers.

“[Denver] had a lot of shots,” said Notre Dame coach Jeff Jackson after the game. “But until maybe the third period at times, I thought that Dylan (St. Cyr) didn’t have to make great saves. He had to make some late in the game, which is really important for a good goaltender. I thought we did a good job without the puck, but we could do a better job with it. That would be my big takeaway from tonight’s game.”

St. Cyr is the son of Manon Rheaume (the first female goalie to play in an NHL exhibition game back in the 1990s), was voted first star in the game with his 46 saves on the night. Borgström was named second star by scoring both Pioneer goals to open what figures to be his final Pioneer season before joining the Florida Panthers, who selected him in the First Round of the 2016 NHL Draft.

The Pioneers also got strong play from wing Liam Finlay, who had seven shots on goal and center Tyson McLellan, who went 13-3 in the face-off circle.

DU and Notre Dame play in the series finale tomorrow at 4 pm MT, with the telecast on NBC Sports Network.

 

 

 

10 thoughts on “Denver and Notre Dame Skate to 2-2 tie in Season-Opener in South Bend”

  1. As a fan, that was a great game to watch, up until the point that ND tied it on what looked to be a pretty shaky make-up call after they called two straight penalties on Notre Dame. The Pios out-hustled ND all night save foe overtime, when ND came alive. ND got some great goaltending from St. Cyr and a couple of very fortunate rebounds to set up it’s goals, whereas DU’s goals were more the result of pretty plays.

    The freshmen looked pretty good for a first game. Mitchell handled his PP responsibility, Olischefski bagged a shoot-out top-corner snipe and looked dangerous on the fourth line. Barrow got beat up a few times, but kept bouncing back. Durflinger is little, but had some nice moments with Tyson McLellan, his junior linemate before both came to DU. Heikennen played well, but I’m not not sure why he isn’t playing with Borgstrom. And Mendel and Fear played decently together considering how big and inexperienced they are at this level.

    Monty was right – this was a better start than I expected considering Hammond is out, and a number of DU kids are playing their first college hockey game that counts against a final four team, on the road, with the most famous fight song in America playing in their ears. It’s a lot to ask of any player, and they did a nice job tonight…

    1. Barrow looked a bit overwhelmed. Jaako looks like a grittier version of Borgstrom, but with still-decent hands. Putting them together would be worthwhile…plus keeping Finlay there gives DU the Fin(n) Line…

  2. Damn good effort tonight. Too bad the shoot out doesn’t count for much, except a sense of victory. DU skated hard the whole night, showing the relentless style that served them well last year. Fear looked good out there, and Mitchell does not look like a freshman at all. I expect great things from him. Borgstrom hasn’t missed a beat, and it was nice to see Terry’s classic “beat two defenders, drive to the net, and dish to an open player for a goal.” Jailett was very good, too, with some clutch saves. Although it was a tie, it was an auspicious start for DU. What a bonus to have both these games on TV.

  3. As a fan, that was a great game to watch, up until the point that ND tied it on what looked to be a pretty shaky make-up call after they called two straight penalties on Notre Dame. The Pios out-hustled ND all night save foe overtime, when ND came alive. ND got some great goaltending from St. Cyr and a couple of very fortunate rebounds to set up it’s goals, whereas DU’s goals were more the result of pretty plays.

    The freshmen looked pretty good for a first game. Mitchell handled his PP responsibility, Olischefski bagged a shoot-out top-corner snipe and looked dangerous on the fourth line. Barrow got beat up a few times, but kept bouncing back. Durflinger is little, but had some nice moments with Tyson McLellan, his junior linemate before both came to DU. Heikennen played well, but I’m not not sure why he isn’t playing with Borgstrom. And Mendel and Fear played decently together considering how big and inexperienced they are at this level.

    Monty was right – this was a better start than I expected considering Hammond is out, and a number of DU kids are playing their first college hockey game that counts against a final four team, on the road, with the most famous fight song in America playing in their ears. It’s a lot to ask of any player, and they did a nice job tonight…

    1. Barrow looked a bit overwhelmed. Jaako looks like a grittier version of Borgstrom, but with still-decent hands. Putting them together would be worthwhile…plus keeping Finlay there gives DU the Fin(n) Line…

  4. Damn good effort tonight. Too bad the shoot out doesn’t count for much, except a sense of victory. DU skated hard the whole night, showing the relentless style that served them well last year. Fear looked good out there, and Mitchell does not look like a freshman at all. I expect great things from him. Borgstrom hasn’t missed a beat, and it was nice to see Terry’s classic “beat two defenders, drive to the net, and dish to an open player for a goal.” Jailett was very good, too, with some clutch saves. Although it was a tie, it was an auspicious start for DU. What a bonus to have both these games on TV.

  5. That interference call was a “political” we should call one on Denver just to even things up a bit. it’s part of the hockey culture.

  6. The Hillman penalty was absolutely a make-up call. DU knew it was coming. I don’t really blame the refs, who called a very nice game overall.

    What has me excited about this DU team was that it got almost 50 shots on goal against a top 5 team, on the road, in the very first game of the season. If DU can generate that kind of offensive effort all season long, they are going to usually score 4-5 goals per night on most goalies, which will translate to many victories this year.

  7. That interference call was a “political” we should call one on Denver just to even things up a bit. it’s part of the hockey culture.

  8. The Hillman penalty was absolutely a make-up call. DU knew it was coming. I don’t really blame the refs, who called a very nice game overall.

    What has me excited about this DU team was that it got almost 50 shots on goal against a top 5 team, on the road, in the very first game of the season. If DU can generate that kind of offensive effort all season long, they are going to usually score 4-5 goals per night on most goalies, which will translate to many victories this year.

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