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Evan Marinofsky | sifoeeprocess.com | April 9, 2021

5 observations from an unforgettable Frozen Four semifinals

UMass' Garrett Wait scores in overtime to take down Minnesota Duluth

First, there was a game-winning goal with 53.2 seconds left in regulation. Then there was an OT-winner. 

It's safe to say the 2021 Frozen Four semifinals was the definition of thrilling. 

Before the attention shifts to Saturday night鈥檚 national championship between UMass and St. Cloud State, let鈥檚 take a look back at the five most memorable storylines from the Frozen Four semifinals. 

1. UMass turned things up to a whole new level in overtime 

For the majority of the first three periods Thursday night, Minnesota Duluth dominated the stat sheet. The Bulldogs didn鈥檛 seem to have too much trouble getting to the scoring areas and when the roles were reversed and it was the Minutemen in the offensive zone, UMass was kept to the outside. Minnesota Duluth led in shots, 36-15, when regulation finished up. 

Then overtime came and UMass turned things up a notch or three. 

The Minutemen smothered the Bulldogs in the offensive zone, cycling the puck and tiring out the opposition enough to get the puck to the net. That culminated in Bobby Trivigno protecting the puck behind the net, wrapping it around and finding Garrett Wait on the doorstep to poke it past goalie Zach Stejskal. 

LIVE UPDATES: Follow the entire tournament here

UMass head coach Greg Carvel attributed the domination in overtime to one specific thing. 

鈥淚 think Duluth ran out of gas because they didn鈥檛 run four lines,鈥 Carvel said. 鈥淭he one thing about this team is they know what makes them good, and when they smelt blood in the water, I just thought they took it up a notch.鈥 

UMass outshot the Bulldogs 10-2 in overtime. The shot attempts were even more lopsided: 30-6 UMass. 

2. Kyler Kupka and Nolan Walker stepped up huge in Easton Brodzinski鈥檚 absence 

The biggest question facing St. Cloud State heading into the semis was how will the Huskies fare without Easton Brodzinski? The senior led the Huskies in goals with 13 this season. 

St. Cloud State answered that question in a big way, putting up five goals and overcoming Minnesota State鈥檚 comeback from down 3-1. 

The heart of the scoring came from Kyler Kupka鈥檚 promotion from the fourth line to the first line, replacing Brodzinski next to Nolan Walker and Micah Miller. 

Kupka potted the Huskies鈥 second goal of the game. Walker earned the primary assist on it after dancing through two Mavericks defenders before dishing it to Kupka. 

Walker tipped home the game-winner with 53.2 seconds left. Kupka was the player who passed it to Seamus Donohue at the point. 

The new trio worked against Minnesota State. It鈥檚 safe to say head coach Brett Larson probably won鈥檛 be moving Kupka back to the fourth line. 

3. Matt Murray was the reason UMass forced overtime 

As stated above, Minnesota Duluth had UMass on the ropes for the first, second and much of the third period. By regulation鈥檚 end, the Bulldogs peppered UMass goalie Matt Murray with 38 shots. He stopped 36 of them. 

What made his performance so impressive was he wasn鈥檛 supposed to be the starter in Thursday night鈥檚 game. 

BRACKET SZN: Take a look at how UMass and St. Cloud State got to the title game

It鈥檚 well-documented at this point, but because Filip Lindberg was forced to stay in Amherst, Massachusetts, due to COVID-19 protocol, Matt Murray was thrust back into the starter鈥檚 job. 

Murray carried the starting job for much of the first half of the season. But when Lindberg returned from injury, the Finnish goalie went on a tear, going on to lead the nation in goals against average (1.33) and save percentage (.946). Thursday was Murray鈥檚 first game since Jan. 18. 

鈥淚t was the goaltending that I was concerned about,鈥 Carvel said after the win Thursday night. 鈥淛ust that Matt hadn鈥檛 played in so long. He鈥檚 a good goalie and he made the saves he needed to tonight.鈥 

Murray鈥檚 best save came to start the third period when he extended his left pad and stoned Nick Swaney of a goal that would鈥檝e put the Bulldogs up 3-1. 

UMass has quite the decision on its hands for the national championship game: Murray or Lindberg? 

4. St. Cloud State showed its resilience 

Minnesota State looked to be doing the same thing to St. Cloud State it had done to Quinnipiac in the first game of regionals 鈥 rally to win after being down 3-1. That鈥檚 how it went for two and a half periods Thursday night. 

After St. Cloud State jumped out to the early 3-1 lead, Minnesota State stormed back with two in the back half of the second period and then took the lead to begin the third. 

This time, however, Minnesota State wouldn鈥檛 come away with the win. St. Cloud State fought back with two in the third period 鈥 one midway through to tie it and the other with 53.2 seconds left to win it. 

St. Cloud State showed resilience against Minnesota State

鈥淚t felt like we had to play a little rope-a-dope tonight,鈥 Larson said of his team鈥檚 5-4 win Thursday night. 

This isn鈥檛 the first time the Huskies were resilient this season. Their entire year has been a statement on resilience. In the , they were in the 鈥渙thers receiving votes鈥 section. Most didn't pick St. Cloud State as a tournament team, let alone one of the final two standing. 

They've also had to overcome Brodzinski鈥檚 injury. The Huskies did it against BC and, as stated earlier, they did it Thursday against Minnesota State. 

UMass will have its hands full Saturday in the title game with St. Cloud State. One thing is for certain: Don鈥檛 ever count out the Huskies. 

5. UMass gets added boost with Filip Lindberg and Carson Gicewicz returning 

The news came out just minutes after Garrett Wait鈥檚 winner crossed the goal line, but it still counts as the Frozen Four. 

UMass announced Filip Lindberg, Carson Gicewicz and Henry Graham had cleared COVID-19 protocols and were traveling to Pittsburgh for the national title game. 

STORYLINES: Which storylines ended up coming to fruition in the Frozen Four? 

Stating the obvious here, but that鈥檚 a huge boost for the Minutemen. For starters, they won鈥檛 have to dress assistant equipment manager Zac Steigmeyer as the back-up. That鈥檚 a sigh of relief for the UMass coaching staff. 

Most importantly, though, UMass gets its leading goal scorer back, as well as its starting goaltender. 

While Murray stood strong for UMass in between the pipes, the loss of Gicewicz was noticeable. For much of Thursday鈥檚 game, the Minutemen struggled to get anything going offensively. Gicewicz is 6-foot-3 and 213 pounds 鈥 his size and ability to win puck battles completes his line. It was also dearly missed against Minnesota Duluth. 

But now UMass gets Gicewicz back, as well as Lindberg. It鈥檚 welcome news as the program enters its second consecutive title game. 

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