2023–24 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's ice hockey season explained

The 2023–24 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's ice hockey season was the 83rd season of play for the program and 11th in the NCHC. The Fighting Hawks represented the University of North Dakota in the 2023–24 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, played their home games at Ralph Engelstad Arena and were coached by Brad Berry in his 9th season.

Season

With so many changes to the team's lineup, North Dakota was a complete mystery at the start of the season. Senior transfer Ludvig Persson was the only goaltender on the roster with any experience but his performance over the last two years had been less than stellar. However, how much of that was a result of his own shortcomings rather than his team's poor defense was unknown. To help out their new goaltender, North Dakota's entire defense had to be replaced. Not a single blueliner from '23 returned to the team but the revamped group was not completely devoid of experience. Four incoming defenders were transfers who had already seen their fare share of college action. Up front, the situation wasn't quite as desperate but North Dakota still had several new forwards for '24.

North Dakota debuted their new team by hosting the Ice Breaker Tournament and demonstrated that their training camp had been put to good use. The team won the tournament with many of the new players performing well, particularly Hunter Johannes who finished with 3 goals (2 on the penalty kill). The Fighting Hawks suffered their first defeat of the year the following week but they did manage to earn a split with #1 Minnesota in a continuation of their long-standing rivalry. By the beginning of November, The team was being supplied with goals from several players but had yet to find the heart of their offense. Jackson Blake took matters into his own hands and went of a tear that lasted the rest of the season. The sophomore had led the team in scoring the year before but now took his offense to a new level. Blake sparked the offense in November, scoring in seven of eight games and guiding the team on an eight-game winning streak. As the victories piled up, North Dakota rose to #1 in the nation and looked strong even when they lost to #3 Denver at the beginning of December.

Just before the winter break, the Hawks ran into a hot goalie and lost consecutive games against Colorado College. For the first time all season, the team showed a weakness and lost three 2–3 decisions (all in overtime). TO make matters worse, Persson suffered an injury over Christmas and the team had to turn to untested Hobie Hedquist when they began the second half of the season.[1] Despite some jitters in the first few games, Hedquist played well in relief and helped to the Fighting Hawks back on track and Persson eventually was able to work himself back into the lineup. With the offense continuing to fire on all cylinders, the team remained atop the conference standings and got back up to #2 in the national polls by the beginning of February.

In the middle of the month, North Dakota suffered its worst weekend of the season and were swept by Colorado College for a second time. The lopsided losses called Persson's health into question but he answered with two shutouts over the next four weeks to quell any worries.[2] As the team entered the final week of the season, North Dakota had already wrapped up the top seed for the NCHC tournament and were eyeing one of the four 1-seeds for the NCAA tournament. While losing the season finale to Omaha didn't help their case, North Dakota suffered a bigger loss during the week when Persson went down to injury for a second time.

At the opening of the tournament, UND hosted the worst team in the conference, Miami, and had a relatively easy time dispatching the RedHawks. The offense was on full display while Hedquist got to work himself back into game condition with his first action in almost a month. Unfortunately, Persson was still unable to play when the team headed to Saint Paul so the Hawks had to rely on Hedquist to get them over the hump against Omaha. Despite scoring first, North Dakota was unable to get on track offensively and eventually the Maverick offense took over. UND Found itself down 1–3 near the end of the second and, though they were able to score twice more, Omaha kept up the pressure and pumped three more into the goal in the third. The loss dropped North Dakota to 2–7 in NCHC semifinals and prevented any chance of the Hawks getting a 1-seed.[3]

The Hawks slipped down to 6th in the PairWise ranking which caused them to be sent to the Midwest Regional where they faced Michigan in the opening round. While North Dakota had one of the top offenses in the nation, their opponents were even better on offense. North Dakota would have to hope the return of Persson would allow their defense to rise to the challenge. At the start, at least, thing looked to be going in North Dakota's favor. Johannes opened the scoring less than 5 minutes into the game while Persson only had to stop 4 shots in the first period. Michigan picked up the pace in the second, tying the score in the opening minutes but Blake was able to get his team back into the lead before the midway point. Unfortunately, while North Dakota had the lead, they were unable to add to their advantage. The Hawks entered the final period with their narrow lead but soon found themselves in trouble. Less than a minute into the period, Persson tried to kick a slow-rolling puck away from the crease but it rebounded off of Keaton Pehrson's skate and into the cage. 90 seconds later, Persson was unable to control a rebound and Michigan pounced on it to grab their first lead of the game. The Wolverines continued to press and with less than 10 minutes to play, they increased their lead when Persson was unable to stop a one-timer on a rush. North Dakota fought desperately to tie the game and Jackson Kunz did his part by firing a rebound short-side. In the final 5 minutes, however, the Hawks were unable to solve Michigan's goaltender and North Dakota's season came to a close.[4]

Departures

Luke Bast Defenseman Transferred to Minnesota Duluth
Judd Caulfield Forward Graduation (signed with Anaheim Ducks)
Matteo Costantini Forward Transferred to Western Michigan
Drew DeRidder Goaltender Graduation (signed with Cincinnati Cyclones)
Michael Emerson Forward Departed mid-season (returned to Chicago Steel; later transferred to Merrimack)
Ty Farmer Defenseman Graduation (signed with Allen Americans)
Ethan Frisch Defenseman Graduation (signed with San Jose Barracuda)
Gavin Hain Forward Graduation (signed with Iowa Heartlanders)
Jakob Hellsten Goaltender Transferred to New Hampshire
Chris Jandric Defenseman Graduation (signed with Rochester Americans)
Brent Johnson Defenseman Transferred to Ohio State
Defenseman Signed professional contract (Ottawa Senators)
Cooper Moore Defenseman Transferred to Quinnipiac
Nick Portz Forward Transferred to St. Cloud State
Mark Senden Forward Graduation (signed with Charlotte Checkers)
Ryan Sidorski Defenseman Graduation (signed with Milwaukee Admirals)

Recruiting

Nate Benoit Defenseman 20 Concord, NH
selected 182nd overall in 2021
Cameron Berg Forward 21 West Fargo, ND
transfer from Omaha; selected 125th overall in 2021
Logan Britt Defenseman 24 Crystal Lake, IL
graduate transfer from Sacred Heart
Michael Emerson Forward 19 Yorktown Heights, NY
selected 190th overall in 2023
Hobie Hedquist Goaltender 20 Heron Lake, MN
Hunter Johannes Forward 25 Eden Prairie, MN
graduate transfer from Lindenwood
Tanner Komzak Defenseman 21 North Vancouver, BC
Jake Livanavage Defenseman 19 Gilbert, AZ
Keaton Pehrson Defenseman 24 Lakeville, MN
graduate transfer from Michigan
Jayden Perron Forward 18 Winnipeg, MB
selected 94th overall in 2023
Ludvig Persson Goaltender 23 Göteborg, SWE
transfer from Miami
Garrett Pyke Defenseman 24 Etobicoke, ON
graduate transfer from Alaska
Abram Wiebe Defenseman 20 Mission, BC
selected 209th overall in 2022
Bennett Zmolek Defenseman 21 Rochester, MN
transfer from Minnesota State

Roster

As of August 21, 2023.[5]

1.Michael Emerson departed the team on January 11, 2024 to return to the Chicago Steel[6] before transferring to Merrimack[7] in the offseason.

Schedule and results

|-!colspan=12 style=";" | Exhibition|-!colspan=12 style=";" | |-!colspan=12 style=";" | Regular Season|-!colspan=12 style=";" | |-!colspan=12 style=";" |

NCAA tournament

See main article: NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament.

Regional semifinal

Scoring statistics

40 22 38 60 26
39 13 26 39 8
40 20 17 37 8
40 18 16 34 34
40 5 24 29 6
39 3 22 25 14
31 12 7 19 29
37 9 10 19 4
40 9 10 19 12
39 11 7 18 8
40 8 9 17 18
40 7 7 14 10
39 6 6 12 18
36 1 10 11 13
40 1 9 10 27
35 0 8 8 10
33 0 8 8 22
30 3 3 6 16
26 2 1 3 8
34 0 3 3 0
16 1 1 2 0
19 0 1 1 4
1 0 0 0 0
4 0 0 0 0
6 0 0 0 2
7 0 0 0 0
Total 151 243 394 303
[8]

Goaltending statistics

34 2022:27 21 11 2 85 803 5 .904 2.52
7 382:14 5 1 0 16 153 0 .905 2.51
Empty Net - 14:02 - - - 4 - - - -
Total 40 2418:43 26 12 2 105 956 5 .901 2.60

Rankings

See main article: 2023–24 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings.

PollWeek
Pre 1 234567891011121314151617181920212223242526 (Final)
USCHO.com77543 42 1 2 1 44465 2 2 2 335458
USA Hockey87544442 1 44475222 53354588
Note: USCHO did not release a poll in weeks 11 or 25.[9]
Note: USA Hockey did not release a poll in week 12.

Awards and honors

Jackson BlakeAHCA West First Team All-American[10]
Jackson BlakeNCHC Player of the Year[11]
Jackson BlakeNCHC Forward of the Year[12]
Jackson BlakeNCHC First Team[13]
Ludvig PerssonNCHC Second Team[14]
Jake LivanavageNCHC Third Team[15]
Garrett Pyke
Cameron Berg
Riese Gaber
Jake LivanavageNCHC Rookie Team[16]

2024 NHL Entry Draft

See main article: 2024 NHL Entry Draft.

1 18 Chicago Blackhawks
1 30 New York Rangers
3 76 Colorado Avalanche
7 207 Pittsburgh Penguins
† incoming freshman[17]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ludvig Persson Returns to Practice . Grand Forks Herald . January 10, 2024 . May 22, 2024.
  2. Web site: UND Closely Monitoring Lidvig Persson's Workload as Season Progresses . Grand Forks Herald . February 22, 2024 . May 22, 2024.
  3. Web site: North Dakota Comes Up Empty Again in St. Paul . College Hockey News . March 22, 2024 . May 22, 2024.
  4. Web site: North Dakota vs Michigan - NCAA College Hockey - Highlights - March 29, 2024 . YouTube . May 22, 2024.
  5. Web site: 2022–23 Men's Hockey Roster.
  6. Web site: 2024-01-11 . Freshman Michael Emerson leaves UND hockey team . 2024-02-26 . Grand Forks Herald . en.
  7. Web site: 2024-03-18 . Carolina draft pick Michael Emerson commits to Merrimack out of the transfer portal . 2024-08-06 . The Mack Report . en.
  8. News: Univ. of North Dakota 2023-2024 Skater Stats . Elite Prospects . December 20, 2020.
  9. Web site: USCHO Division I Men's Poll . USCHO.com . November 26, 2019.
  10. News: Top 25 men’s college hockey players earn distinction as CCM/AHCA Hockey All-Americans for 2023-24 season . USCHO.com . April 12, 2024 . April 12, 2024.
  11. Web site: NCHC Unveils 2023-2024 Individual Award Winners . nchchockey.com . Michael . Weisman . March 21, 2024 . March 21, 2024.
  12. Web site: NCHC Unveils 2023-2024 Individual Award Winners . nchchockey.com . Michael . Weisman . March 21, 2024 . March 21, 2024.
  13. Web site: NCHC Unveils 2023-2024 All-Conference Teams . nchchockey.com . Michael . Weisman . March 13, 2024 . March 13, 2024.
  14. Web site: NCHC Unveils 2023-2024 All-Conference Teams . nchchockey.com . Michael . Weisman . March 13, 2024 . March 13, 2024.
  15. Web site: NCHC Unveils 2023-2024 All-Conference Teams . nchchockey.com . Michael . Weisman . March 13, 2024 . March 13, 2024.
  16. Web site: NCHC Reveals 2023-24 All-Rookie Team . nchchockey . Michael . Weisman . March 12, 2024 . March 13, 2024.
  17. News: NCAA player rankings, selections in 2024 NHL Draft . USCHO.com . June 29, 2024.