Columnists
Goals For Gophers
The Gophers are seeing production from various parts of their lineup to jump out to a strong start.
by
Judd Zulgad
The line chart distributed by the University of Minnesota sports information department for the Gophers men’s hockey game against St. Thomas on Friday provided a good laugh.
The line of Jimmy Clark between wingers Connor Kurth and Matthew Wood was listed fourth. That had been one of the Gophers’ hottest lines entering the weekend and proceeded to combine for two goals and six points in a 7-1 victory over the Tommies on Friday at Mariucci Arena. A night later, it was first line winger Brody Lamb who scored three goals, all on the power play, in a 6-2 victory over St. Thomas at Xcel Energy Center.
Bob Motzko, in his seventh season as the Gophers’ coach, was asked about having such an embarrassment of scoring riches.
“The only problem we have is we have to start a line, that means one line has to be fourth,” Motzko said. “We’re trying to build it into how we have to play selfless hockey and one line after another with the attack. I love how hard they’re working. I love their compete (level) and we have four lines that can get after it.”
This comes as no surprise — at least from a talent perspective.
Talent, compete level have Gophers off to strong start
The Gophers might no longer get all of the top players in the state, but recruiting top-level talent from both inside and outside the state isn’t an issue. The challenge for Motzko is getting that talent to jell into a cohesive unit that wants to grind as much as they want to score.
This is what makes Motzko so happy about a 5-1-0 start in which his team has outscored opponents 33-12, including having seven goals three times, six goals once and five in another.
“If you’re going to win big, the compete in this sport has got to be number one,” Motzko said. “You recruited the talent. They all have a history of having that. But playing with that tenacity and grit and a ground game (forechecking) and being selfless, that’s a learned skill as well. It’s a short snapshot (of the season). I was asked how many games does it take? I said that I usually like the month of October.”
Motzko said this last Friday and the Gophers won’t play again until opening the Big Ten season against Penn State this weekend.
Spend time around the Gophers and the fact they embrace the grit and grind isn’t a surprise. Players talk about how many of them stuck around this offseason to work in the weight room and bond away from the rink. This type of talk can be cliched, but that doesn’t seem to be the case.
“It started in the summer,” defenseman Sam Rinzel said. “All the guys being in the weight room competing, trying to outlift each other or whatever it is. But we can get on each other and we can kind of hold ourselves accountable. I think that’s important for our team … we’re like glue together. So, our team is pretty close.”
The closeness of a team is important, in large part because of what Rinzel said. It enables players to hold each other accountable, without creating division.
“I think everyone on the team has good chemistry,” Wood said. “Everyone loves each other, and that’s a big part of it. Off ice, everyone is just a really good person and I think that really helps.”
Motzko has taken the Gophers to the NCAA tournament in each of the past four seasons, and two years ago his team fell short with an overtime loss in the Frozen Four championship against Quinnipiac. These Gophers are seeking their first title since 2003.
Minnesota’s four lines aren’t the only ones who can produce goals.
High-end defensemen contributing offense
Last season, the blue line combined for only nine. This season, that number is at eight through six games, thanks to four goals apiece by Rinzel, a sophomore, and Ryan Chesley, a junior. Mike Koster’s decision to return for a fifth season after missing the first month of last season because of injury was a big boost to the blue line.
“We really thought in the offseason that our d-corps was going to be much higher-end offensively,” Motzko said. “Obviously with Mikey (Koster) back, but then the three juniors, or upperclassmen, with much more confidence. And Luke Mittelstadt is playing as good as any defensemen I’ve seen in a long time. He’s not being rewarded offensively yet. And (Leo) Gruba is yet to come. So offensively we’ve got a d-corps that can push it and be led by a couple of guys right now. We felt that could happen.”
The biggest question mark is in goal, where sophomore Nathan Airey and transfer Liam Souliere split the St. Thomas series.
Souliere, who was the primary starter for Penn State the past two seasons, is the best bet to take over the full-time role. Souliere had his goals-against average rise from 2.43 to 3.38 from 2022-23 to 2023-24 and his save percentage sank from .917 to .874. Airey was the backup to Justen Close as a freshman but only played in three games.
Close and the Gophers got to the final game of the NCAA Sioux Falls Regional before losing to Boston University. This team is hoping that talent combined with work ethic can take them to a place this program hasn’t been since 2003.
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Judd Zulgad is co-host of the Mackey and Judd podcast and also Judd’s Hockey Show for SKOR North. Judd covered the Vikings from 2005 to 2010 for the Star Tribune before joining SKOR North.