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Tourney run ends in OT

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Tourney run ends in OT

JEFF SCHORFHEIDE/Herald photo

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by Kevin Hagstrom
Monday, March 31, 2008

Irony set in at the Kohl Center, and for Wisconsin, it wasn’t sweet.

A night after getting the bounces and responding to critics with a 6-2 victory over Denver in the Midwest Regional semifinals Saturday night, the Badgers gave up a third-period lead and couldn’t catch a break in a 3-2 overtime loss to North Dakota Sunday in the regional final.

For Wisconsin, no bad bounce proved more costly than the one in overtime.

Freshman Kyle Turris — after losing a faceoff — blocked the initial shot out in front of the net, but the rebound went right to the stick of UND’s Andrew Kozek. Wisconsin goaltender Shane Connelly was shielded on the play and the junior forward took advantage.

Kozek slipped the puck past Connelly to send the Sioux to its fourth consecutive Frozen Four.

“It stings a little bit tonight because we were so close,” Wisconsin coach Mike Eaves said.

Overtime was set up by UW’s inability to hold a third-period lead, which was uncharacteristic of the Badgers. Wisconsin has come from behind to win or tie 13 games this season and had outscored its opponent 49-23 this season in the final frame. Instead, it was North Dakota that scored back-to-back third-period goals to erase a 2-0 deficit.

Senior center Rylan Kaip scored at the 3:33 mark of the third and junior forward Ryan Duncan followed 47 seconds later with a goal of his own to bring the Sioux back and take the momentum away from Wisconsin.

“Being a veteran team, North Dakota stayed on it and got themselves back in the game,” Eaves said.

Wisconsin got the start it wanted for the second consecutive night, jumping out to a 1-0 lead early in the second period when sophomore defenseman Jamie McBain buried Turris’ pass from the right of the crease.

Cody Goloubef put the Badgers up 2-0 on a bizarre play. The freshman defenseman slapped a shot from the point that hit off the backboards and ricocheted back into play where it hit off North Dakota goaltender Jean-Philippe Lamoureux’s leg and went in.

But for the amount of chances Wisconsin had in the first two periods, including a clean breakaway by sophomore forward Michael Davies that was turned aside by Lamoureux and four shots that clanked the posts, the Badgers felt like they missed out on an opportunity to put the game away.

“We couldn’t get that next goal that maybe would have given us a little bit more of a spread, that would have been harder to come back from,” Eaves said.

Questioned by many for making the NCAA Tournament with a sub-.500 record, Wisconsin, behind two goals from Davies — including the ever-important first tally of the game — came out with a chip on its shoulder Saturday against Denver.

“We were just out there to prove a lot of people wrong,” Davies said.

After Denver cut the UW lead to 2-1 with a power play goal off the stick of Andrew Thomas, Wisconsin responded in a span of 60 seconds with two third-period goals of its own.

Goloubef clanked a slap shot off the left post that, after bouncing off the back of goaltender Peter Mannino on the deflection, trickled into the net.

Sophomore forward John Mitchell then turned a hustle for a loose puck into a breakaway, on which he split two Pioneer defensemen and then Mannino’s pads.

“I just caught the defense off-guard. I was able to knock it out of the zone and they weren’t ready for it,” said Mitchell, who was happy to have redeemed himself after missing on an earlier chance out in front when the Badgers held a 2-1 lead. “It just kind of worked out.”

Connelly played brilliantly, making 30 saves, including several of the acrobatic variety. The posts also looked kindly upon the Badger junior, as they turned aside four Denver shots.

“We had our chances,” Denver coach George Gwozdecky said. “We had a number of great opportunities to score.”

“We put a lot of bodies in front of Connelly,” Denver forward Andrew Thomas added. “Unfortunately, we couldn’t put it in.”

Connelly’s confidence was also aided by a UW penalty kill that kept Denver off the board, despite having to play the entire two minutes in its defensive zone.

“It helped me get into the game real early,” Connelly said.

Wisconsin scored first for just the 14th time this season (11-3 in those games) when Davies grabbed a deflection off Mannino’s left pad and pushed into a wide-open net.

McBain used a deflection of his own to Wisconsin a 2-0 lead at 8:15 of the second period.

Denver cut the lead to 4-2 on a goal from Tom May, but the difference proved to be too much to overcome.

Davies and Drewiske capped the scoring with a breakaway goal and empty netter, respectively, for Wisconsin.


Anonymous (March 31, 2008 @ 2:29pm):

Word on the street is that Kyle Turris is signing with the Coyotes today. Get on that, Herald Sports.

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