2002–03 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's ice hockey season explained

The 2002–03 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's ice hockey season was the 82nd season of play for the program and 44th in the WCHA. The Golden Gophers represented the University of Minnesota, played their home games at the Mariucci Arena and were coached by Don Lucia, in his 4th season.

Season

Fresh off of the program's fourth national title, the first in 23 years, Minnesota entered the season with high hopes. Though the team lost several key players to graduation, including Hobey Baker Award-winner Jordan Leopold, they brought in an impressive collection of young talent. Perhaps the brightest young star that had ever donned the maroon and gold to that point, Thomas Vanek debuted for the team and Gophers would need the highly-regarded Austrian to make up for the lost offensive production of the departed John Pohl and Jeff Taffe.

Though the Gophers were ranked #1 entering the year, that was due mostly to their being the defending champions. The Gophers suffered a setback when Team captain Grant Potulny was injured in the first game against Ohio State. What was initially thought to just be a fractured fibula that would keep him out for 4–6 weeks turned out to include ligament damage that would sideline Potulny for up to 4 months.[1] Without him, the team looked a little out of sorts as the roster sought to soldier on. While Minnesota never looked bad, they weren't able to consistently put together a good stretch of games in the first two months of the season. Part of the problem was that Don Lucia was still trying to find out which one of his two goaltenders deserved to be the starter. Both Travis Weber and Justin Johnson got playing time but neither was able to seize control of the Minnesota cage by mid-November. The goalie rotation continued until Johnson had a rather a poor outing against Colorado College which was followed up by a solid performance by Weber.[2] Afterwards, Weber remained in the cage and strung several good outings together, including a road sweep of long time rival Wisconsin.

While Weber established himself in the cage, the offense too had steadily come along. The Gophers had shown from the start that the team could score but they had trouble with their consistency. With Vanek at the lead, the Gophers steadily improved throughout the fall and turned themselves into one of the best offenses in the country come winter time. While the team sorted through its early-season jitters, their ranking declined. When December rolled around the team had dropped to #10, however, because the NCAA tournament had expanded to 16 teams for that season, they were still in a solid position to earn a berth. The Gophers took no chances, however, and reeled off a series of impressive wins to jump up to 4th by the time January rolled around.

The team was stymied when they began the second half of the season and went winless in three games. They arrested their fall with a win over top-ranked North Dakota and then mostly held serve over the following month and a half. Entering the final few weeks of the season, Minnesota sat 7th in the polls but had a tremendous opportunity to move up with four games against ranked teams. Minnesota went 2–0–2 in those games, which, though they did not see their ranking improve, they were able to finish in a tie for second in the WCHA standings.

Conference tournament

Because they held the tie-breaker, the Gophers received the second seed for the WCHA tournament and got to take on a bad but improving Michigan Tech squad. The Gophers won the first game fairly easily and appeared to be heading to a sweep in the second when Weber suffered an injury to his finger. Johnson was installed for the remainder of the contest and though the Gophers marched on to the semifinals, doing so without their starting goalie was not ideal.[3] Though he was initially expected to be ready for the next game, Weber was unable to play against Minnesota State–Mankato. Seeing their backup needed a hand, Minnesota's offense shelled the Maverick cage, firing 49 shots to MSU's 17. Due to a masterful performance from opposing netminder Jon Volp, however, the two still needed overtime to settle the score. Just less than 4 minutes into the extra session, Vanek scored his 26th goal of the season and sent the Gophers to the championship match.

Colorado College was all that stood between Minnesota and a conference title. The top-seeded Tigers were the favorites to win but it was the Gophers who got off to a blazing start. Potulny had a hand in all three of Minnesota's goals in the first period to build a huge lead. The Tigers fought back with two power play goals in the second half of the game along with 38 shots but Johnson held the fort and enabled the Gophers to skate away with a 4–2 win.[4]

NCAA tournament

Because they were hosting one of the four regionals, Minnesota was going to be placed in the West bracket. The WCHA championship helped Minnesota earn one of the #1 seeds and an advantageous match for the first round. Additionally, because two of the teams seeded 4th were also members of the WCHA, Minnesota was assigned to play Mercyhurst. While the Lakers won their conference tournament, they weren't considered much of a threat to the Gophers. With the return of Weber between the pipes and Potulny netting a hat-trick, Minnesota proved those sentiments correct with a resounding 9–2 victory.

Minnesota's second game was expected to be a much closer affair as they were taking on #6 Ferris State. The Bulldogs were led by Hobey Baker finalist Chris Kunitz and gave the Gophers a demonstration of his abilities when he scored twice in the first period. Fortunately for Minnesota, they scored five times in the opening frame and cruised to a 7–4 victory.

The national semifinal saw Minnesota fight and law back from the brink of disaster. Facing off against #4 Michigan, the Gophers were badly outplayed in the first period and found themselves down by a goal. A Jed Ortmeyer score after the mid-way point of the game put the Wolverines up by two and had Minnesota staring into the void. Troy Riddle cut the lead in half on a rebound from Vanek before the end of the second while a marker less than two minutes into the third from Gino Guyer tied the score. Chris Harrington took two separate minor penalties afterwards but the Minnesota penalty kill held and kept the game knotted at 2-all. Overtime was required and both teams found it difficult to get the puck on the goal. In almost 9 minutes only 5 shots were recorded but it was the last one from Vanek that counted and sent Minnesota to the championship game.

The final game of the year came against New Hampshire in a rematch from earlier in the season. Minnesota carried the balance of play but Mike Ayers put up a strong performance in goal for the Wildcats and kept his team in the game. After two periods, Minnesota was leading on the shot clock 30–16 but the teams remained tied with one goal apiece. As time went on, it was just one mistake that separated Minnesota from disaster but, as he had most of the season, Thomas Vanek stepped in as the hero. Just past the 8-minute mark, Vanek broke the tie and then assisted on a second goal just 3 minutes later. After a power play goal from Barry Tallackson, Minnesota suddenly had a commanding 3-goal lead. New Hampshire desperately tried to tie the game but they had been outmatched on the ice all night. Pulling their goalie only allowed the Gophers to score a 5th goal and ensure the team a national championship.[5] Minnesota was the first team in over 30 years to defend their national title.

Departures

Player Position Nationality Cause
Nick Angell Defenseman Graduation (signed with Milwaukee Admirals)
Goaltender Graduation (signed with Providence Bruins)
Defenseman Graduation (signed with Calgary Flames)
Mark Nenovich Defenseman Graduation (retired)
Pat O'Leary Forward Graduation (signed with Quad City Mallards)
Forward Graduation (signed with St. Louis Blues)
Forward Graduation (signed with Phoenix Coyotes)
Erik Wendell Forward Graduation (signed with Rockford IceHogs)

Recruiting

Player Position Nationality Age Notes
P. J. Atherton Defenseman 20 Edina, MN
selected 170th overall in 2002
Forward 18 Coleraine, MN
Forward 20 St. Cloud, MN
Forward 18 Bloomington, MN
Peter Kennedy Defenseman 18 Brookfield, NS
Defenseman 19 Coleraine, MN
selected 136th overall in 2002
Dustin Smieja Goaltender 18 Saint Paul, MN
Forward 18 Baden bei Wien, AUT

Roster

April 15, 2003.[6]

Season standings

Note: PTS = Points; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against

Schedule and results

|-!colspan=12 style="color:white; background:#862334; " | Regular season|-!colspan=12 style="color:white; background:#862334; " | |-!colspan=12 style="color:white; background:#862334; " | |-!colspan=12 style="color:white; background:#862334; " | |- align="center" bgcolor="#e0e0e0"|colspan=11|Minnesota Won Series 2-0|-!colspan=12 style="color:white; background:#862334; " |

NCAA Championship

(W1) Minnesota vs. (NE1) New Hampshire

Scoring summary[7]
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stalign=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINMatt DeMarchi (8)Smaagaardalign=center 10:58align=center 1–0 MIN
align=center style=";" UNHSean Collins (22) – PPMartz and Aikinsalign=center 19:41align=center 1–1
2ndNone
3rdalign=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINThomas Vanek (31) – GWKoalskaalign=center 48:14align=center 2–1 MIN
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINJon Waibel (9)Vanekalign=center 51:25align=center 3–1 MIN
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINBarry Tallackson (8) – PPGuyer and Harringtonalign=center 53:34align=center 4–1 MIN
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINBarry Tallackson (9) – ENPotulnyalign=center 58:31align=center 5–1 MIN
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stalign=center style=";" UNHColin HemingwayChargingalign=center 8:57align=center 2:00
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINKeith BallardRoughingalign=center 11:35align=center 2:00
align=center style=";" UNHJustin AikinsHookingalign=center 13:12align=center 2:00
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINGarrett SmaagaardHitting after the Whistlealign=center 18:01align=center 2:00
2ndalign=center style=";" UNHPatrick FoleyChargingalign=center 22:33align=center 2:00
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINThomas VanekCross-Checkingalign=center 23:10align=center 2:00
align=center style=";" UNHBrian YandleInterferencealign=center 35:27align=center 2:00
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINJudd StevensObstruction Holdingalign=center 38:39align=center 2:00
3rdalign=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINJon WaibelHookingalign=center 48:59align=center 2:00
align=center style=";" UNHNathan MartzRoughingalign=center 51:43align=center 2:00
align=center style=";" UNHTim HorstHookingalign=center 58:46align=center 2:00
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINJake FlemingSlashingalign=center 58:46align=center 2:00
Shots by period
Team123T
align=center style=";" New Hampshire align=center 7 align=center 9 align=center 11 align=center 27
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " Minnesota align=center 16 align=center 14 align=center 15 align=center 45
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
align=center style=";" UNH align=center 40 align=center 4 align=center 59:28
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MIN align=center 26 align=center 1 align=center 60:00

Scoring statistics

NamePositionGamesGoalsAssistsPoints
45 31 31 62 60
45 26 25 51 50
45 12 29 41 78
41 9 31 40 26
45 9 30 39 32
41 13 16 29 10
43 9 15 24 30
23 15 8 23 12
32 9 14 23 18
41 10 9 19 36
45 4 14 18 60
40 9 8 17 18
44 8 9 17 130
44 5 8 13 12
33 3 10 13 4
18 5 5 10 12
44 3 6 9 12
21 2 7 9 4
24 3 4 7 16
34 1 4 5 12
20 2 2 4 20
16 1 3 4 10
16 0 2 2 4
10 0 1 1 6
14 0 1 1 0
34 0 1 1 0
Bench - - - - - 14
Total 189 293 482 686
[8]

Goaltending statistics

NameGamesMinutesWinsLossesTiesGoals AgainstSavesShut Outs
34 1993 18 6 7 83 761 2 .902 2.50
14 764 10 2 2 37 285 0 .885 2.90
Empty Net - 3 - - - 2 - - - -
Total 45 2761 28 8 9 122 1046 2 .896 2.65

Awards and honors

Honor Player Ref
Thomas VanekNCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player[9]
Paul MartinAHCA West Second Team All-American[10]
Travis WeberNCAA All-Tournament Team[11]
Paul Martin
Matt DeMarchi
Thomas Vanek
Thomas VanekWCHA Rookie of the Year[12]
Grant PotulnyWCHA Most Valuable Player in Tournament
Paul MartinAll-WCHA First Team[13]
Keith BallardAll-WCHA Second Team
Thomas Vanek
Troy RiddleAll-WCHA Third Team
Chris HarringtonWCHA All-Rookie Team[14]
Thomas Vanek
Grant PotulnyWCHA All-Tournament Team[15]
Keith Ballard
Justin Johnson

Players drafted into the NHL

2003 NHL Entry Draft

[16]

= NHL All-Star team= NHL All-Star[17] = NHL All-Star and NHL All-Star team= Did not play in the NHL
Round Pick Player NHL team
1 5 Buffalo Sabres
3 78 Danny Irmen Minnesota Wild
3 87 Ryan Potulny Philadelphia Flyers
4 136 Mike Vannelli Atlanta Thrashers
5 165 Dallas Stars
† incoming freshman

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: USCHO . Potulny Injury More Severe Than Thought . October 18, 2002 . September 23, 2022.
  2. Web site: College Hockey Stats . Saturday, November 16, 2002 . September 23, 2022.
  3. Web site: This Week in the WCHA: March 19, 2003 . USCHO . March 19, 2003 . September 23, 2022.
  4. Web site: College Hockey Stats . Saturday, March 22, 2003 . September 23, 2022.
  5. Web site: YouTube . 2003 U of M Frozen Four Highlight . September 23, 2022.
  6. Web site: Elite Prospects . Univ. of Minnesota . September 23, 2022.
  7. News: Minnesota 5, New Hampshire 1. CollegeHockeyStats.net. 2003-04-12. 2018-05-07.
  8. News: Minnesota 2002-2003 Skater Stats . Elite Prospects . May 8, 2020.
  9. News: NCAA Division I Awards . College Hockey Historical Archives. June 11, 2013.
  10. News: Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners. NCAA.org. June 11, 2013.
  11. News: NCAA Frozen Four Records . NCAA.org . 2013-06-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120817163005/http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/frozen_4/2009/f4recs.pdf . 2012-08-17 . live .
  12. News: WCHA Awards. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 16, 2013.
  13. News: WCHA All-Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 16, 2013.
  14. News: Hockey East All-Rookie Teams. College Hockey Historical Archives. May 16, 2013.
  15. News: 2009-10 WCHA Yearbook 129-144. WCHA. 2014-06-01.
  16. News: 2003 NHL Entry Draft . Hockey DB . September 24, 2022.
  17. Players are identified as an All-Star if they were selected for the All-Star game at any time in their career.