Denver lost their two-game NCHC Regular Season lead in the standing after a weekend sweep by St. Cloud State. Following a Friday 7-3 defeat, the Pioneers were shutout 2-0 Saturday night. The teams are now tied atop the NCHC standings. It was a battle, according to head coach David Carle, “This was tightly contested. Not much open ice. It was a challenge all weekend long. We got better this weekend. We’ll be better for it.” Continue reading Penrose Cup Race Knotted after 2-0 Loss at St. Cloud State
Category Archives: Hockey
Pioneers Open St. Cloud State Series with 7-3 Clunker
Calling tonight’s road series opener against #4 St. Cloud State (17-6-0, 9-4-0 NCHC) a night to forget would be an understatement for the #3 Denver Pioneers (16-6-0, 10-3-0 NCHC). Everything that could go wrong, especially late in the second and into the third period, did, Magnus Chrona was pulled after six goals in the third period, and DU’s confounding, bad penalty kill gave up three power play goals in five chances. Continue reading Pioneers Open St. Cloud State Series with 7-3 Clunker
Miami Sees Changes in NCHC Governance & Will Resist Arizona State Membership
Before last weekend’s DU men’s hockey series against the Miami Redhawks at Magness Arena, we came across an interesting article in the View From The Glass blog interview with Miami Athletic Director David Sayler. In a frank discussion, Sayler covered a number of topics including conference affiliation, structural challenges to the NCHC, and the decision on whether to add Arizona State to the NCHC. Here is a summary of the interview: Continue reading Miami Sees Changes in NCHC Governance & Will Resist Arizona State Membership
Alumni Council Announces Pregame DU-CC Hockey Event
The University of Denver Alumni Council announced a pregame event before the DU-CC battle for the Gold Pan game at Ball Arena. The reception will be held at Brooklyn’s at Ball Arena on Friday, January 27th. Continue reading Alumni Council Announces Pregame DU-CC Hockey Event
Tristan Broz Scores Four, Pioneers Dominate Second Period Again to Sweep RedHawks
In years when the Pioneers are contending for national titles – and it certainly seems it’s every year lately – consistent success in the second period always seems to be one of the key reasons why. In 2017, Jim Montgomery’s national champion Pioneers outscored their opponents an incredible 70-27 while a year ago, David Carle’s 2022 national champion Pioneers outscored theirs 68-22. If you’re noticing a theme, there’s a good reason: when you dominate the second period consistently, you win a lot of games. That theory was on full display this weekend at Magness Arena as the #4 Denver Pioneers (19-5-0, 10-2-0 NCHC) blasted the Miami RedHawks (7-13-2, 2-9-1 NCHC) with 10 second-period goals, six on Friday and four on Saturday, en route to the sweep and 7-0 victory in game two. The sweep, aided by Carter King’s hat trick on Friday and Tristain Broz’s four goals on Saturday, also widened the gap between first-place Denver and second-place St. Cloud State to six points at the halfway mark of NCHC play. Continue reading Tristan Broz Scores Four, Pioneers Dominate Second Period Again to Sweep RedHawks
Denver Hockey Explodes With 6-Goal Second Period, Shutting Out Miami 7-0
The University of Denver Pioneers exploded for six unanswered goals in the second period, with five of those goals in the first eight minutes of that frame, enroute to an easy 7-0 shutout victory over the Miami (Ohio) Red Hawks in the opener of an NCHC series on Jan. 13 at Magness Arena.
Sophomore Carter King led the way for the Pioneers with a three-goal hat trick and Casey Dornbach and Carter Mazur each added a goal and an assist to lead the Denver explosion. McKade Webster and Aidan Thompson also scored for Denver (18-5-0, 9-2 NCHC) in the blowout win. DU senior goalie Magnus Chrona stopped all 20 shots in the shutout victory, his second of the season
“It was a great second period,” said DU coach David Carle after the game in what was perhaps the understatement of the season to date. The #4th ranked Pioneers had not erupted in a single period like that since last year’s National Championship game, when the Pios scored five goals in the third period to win the 2022 NCAA title over Minnesota State, 5-1.
“We a little looked like last year,” said Carle, perhaps referring to that 2022 title game. “The [goal] explosion was great and it was a good all-around effort for us.”
The first period was up-and-down hockey with no goals for either team, but DU began to establish puck possession. The Pioneers came close with a pair of breakaways that were saved by Miami netminder Ludvig Persson. Some DU fans had the sense that dam would eventually break, as the Pioneers were a step faster than Miami all night and certainly had the more skilled lineup from top to bottom.
Those DU fans didn’t have to wait long for the Pioneer goals in that frenetic second period, as DU scored three straight times in the first 1:48, and the Pioneers never looked back. Mazur set the tone by scoring his 17th goal of the year just 26 seconds into the period, converting a perfect feed from Massimo Rizzo on a 2-on-1 with a slick move around Persson for the Pioneers, a goal that would be the eventual game-winner. DU kept its foot on the gas, scoring two more goals in rapid succession, with McKade Webster batting-in Rieger Lorenz’ rebound after it hit the post behind Persson on the power play, followed seconds later by Aidan Thompson’s fortunate marker when the puck took a funny bounce off the glass right to Thomspon for a virtually open net goal to send the Pioneers up, 3-0 all before the first two minutes of the period had elapsed.
Smelling blood and with many in the crowd of 5,528 fans on still on their feet, DU drove-in more dagger goals, with Carter King scoring twice in 40 seconds just six minutes into the period to make it 5-0, and chasing Persson to the showers in the process, as Persson’s Miami teammates were now completely flustered and downcast as DU simply romped over the Red Hawks.
Denver kept scoring as Casey Dornbach blasted a wrister at 15:05 of the second past new Miami goalie Logan Neaton, who had replaced Persson. The period ended with DU up 6-0 and the DU fans standing and roaring in approval as the Pioneers left the ice for the break.
Poetically, King would later complete his DU hat trick on a pretty 2-on-1 conversion on a backhand high over Neaton at 4:15 of the third period, making the final score 7-0 Pios.
“This is time of year where we’re well ingrained into our process as we are all building toward playoff hockey,” said Carle.
With CC’s 4-2 upset win over second place St. Cloud State in Minnesota, DU’s NCHC first-place lead has extended to six points over the Huskies, with DU now with 26 points and SCSU having 20 points in second place.
DU goes for the series sweep Miami again at 6:00 PM MT Saturday night.
Denver Hockey Efficiently Dumps UAF, 7-2 to Salvage Home Split
The old saying that “Revenge is best served cold”, was indeed served on the chilled ice of Magness Arena Saturday night, as the Denver Pioneers avenged a 3-1 Friday loss to the University of Alaska Fairbanks Nanooks with an efficient 7-2 Saturday night victory before an enthusiastic home sellout crowd of 6,254 to salvage a non-league split. Seven different DU players scored goals for the Pioneers, who could only manage one goal on Friday night.
While the final 7-2 score may look like a blowout, the game was actually close for 50 of 60 minutes before Denver (17-5-0) broke open a 4-2 game in the third period scoring three straight goals to put the game away over the final 10 minutes.
Denver fell to fifth in the national pairwise with the split, and will certainly lose its number one ranking when next week’s national polls come out, but the home fans left satisfied after Denver’s surgical win on Saturday.
“I liked our competitiveness tonight,” said DU Coach David Carle, after Saturday’s win in contrast to DU’s lackluster play in Friday’s 3-1 loss. “We took advantage of our opportunities tonight…and we grew as a team over the weekend.”
The Pioneers were actually outshot in the Saturday contest by the scrappy Alaskans, 30-24, with UAF outshooting DU in each of the three periods. But the Pioneers were far more lethal on their offensive chances, burying seven goals on just 24 shots, a scoring percentage of about 30% in a sport where good teams normally score on about 10% of their shots.
On Friday night’s 3-1 loss to UAF, DU Captain Justin Lee took a crucial major 5-miunte boarding penalty that ended up being the difference in the game, as UAF scored twice on his major en route to the win, but on Saturday, Lee had atonement on his mind. So just 2:39 into Saturday’s game, Lee took a puck at UAF blue line, skated hard into the crease, shot once and then batted-in his own rebound off the pads of UAF goalie Matt Radonsky to stake the Pioneers to an early 1-0 lead, which got the DU fans into the game. That goal was the tone-setter for Denver, as the Pioneers were able to later build a 3-1 first period lead on later goals, after Alaska’s Payton Matsui had whizzed into the DU zone unmarked to tap in a crossing pass from Anton Rubstov to tie the score at 1-1 at 5:01.
DU answered twice after the Matsui’s first period goal, first with a Massimo Rizzo tally at 6:04 (a crease rebound of a Carter Mazur shot) and Jack Devine, who scored the eventual game-winner by blasting a one-timer from the lower face-off circle into a wide open net on a great cross-crease feed from Carter King at 12:04 of the first for a power-play goal — a rarity from the DU second PP unit.
With no scoring in the second period, the Pioneers would it make it 4-1 Denver just 4:51 into the third on McKade Webster power play tally, his fourth goal of the season.
UAF crept back into the game at 9:51 mark of the third when Matsui beat Denver goalie Magnus Chrona high to the glove side on a slick pass from Brady Risk at 10:07, but then the Pioneers broke the game open by dominating the final 10 minutes by scoring three times unanswered. Jared Wright sunk the dagger in by completing a nifty 2-on-1 on a pass from Tristan Broz at 12:05 to make it 5-2, and the Pioneers were able to add a pair of extra insurance goals with an empty-netter from Mazur at 14:44 to go up 6-2 and a final DU tally by King at 16:59 of the third to make the final 7-2.
Denver third-string goalie Jack Caruso got the opportunity to play four minutes of mop-up duty at the end of the third, and Sean Behrens had two assists for Denver in his return from winning a bronze medal for Team USA in the World Junior Tournament in Canada.
The game also marked the 100th college game for DU goalie Magnus Chrona, who had 28 saves in the contest, including a few great ones in the scoreless second period to keep DU on top.
The Pioneers will face Miami (Ohio) in NCHC league play next weekend at Magness Arena.
Pioneers Get Outplayed by Nanooks in Return from Holiday Break
Even the best teams have a bad game or two every year. Sloppy passes, no communication, disjointed play…sometimes anything that can go wrong does. In their return from their three-week holiday break, the #1 Denver Pioneers (16-5-0, 8-2-0 NCHC) laid an egg. No part of their game worked well and their opponent, the Alaska Fairbanks Nanooks (11-8-2), skated them out of their own building. The visitors claimed a 33-20 shots on goal advantage and, if it was tracked, their offensive zone time would have dwarfed Denver’s. The Pioneers are no strangers to post-holiday break duds (remember Providence in 2016-17? Princeton? The tie vs these same Nanooks last year?) and tonight’s 3-1 loss that ended their seven-game winning streak ranks right up there among the worst of them. Continue reading Pioneers Get Outplayed by Nanooks in Return from Holiday Break
DU Hockey Alumnus Deane Hansen Passes Away
Tragedy and sadness have touched the Pioneer hockey program once again this holiday season with the suicide of University of Denver alumnus Deane Hansen, 60, who played four seasons for the Pioneers between 1980 and 1984. Continue reading DU Hockey Alumnus Deane Hansen Passes Away
DU Hockey Alumnus Faces Family Cancer Battle

Rhett Rakhshani, a DU 2010 all-American hockey player who played most of his pro hockey in Europe, is now facing a huge battle. His young wife Sharlene, 31, was recently diagnosed with aggressive stage four cancer. The Rakhshani family has decided to return to California (his home state) to begin Shar’s treatments, forcing Rakhshani, 34, to pause his hockey career. The family has three young girls – Stella age six, Scarlett age four, and Georgia, age two. Continue reading DU Hockey Alumnus Faces Family Cancer Battle