Boys
Green Wave Wins
East Grand Forks wins Class 1A boys’ hockey championship in overtime.
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by
Heather Rule

ST. PAUL — East Grand Forks coach Tyler Palmiscno stood on the same bench a decade ago. His team had a two-goal lead late in the Class 1A championship game against Hermantown. In the blink of 17 seconds, the Hawks tied the game and forced overtime.
His message to his team was the same in 2015 as it was this past Saturday when the Green Wave’s 1-0 lead turned into a tie game in the final minute of regulation.
“I told them, ‘if we would’ve said at the first meeting of the season that you are headed to overtime with an opportunity to win a championship, would you take it? … You would’ve,’” Palmiscno said.
Like 2015, the 2025 East Grand Forks team won the state championship in overtime, beating St. Cloud Cathedral, 2-1.
The overtime hero – “East Grand Forks hero for life,” as Palmiscno put it – was senior forward Jace Van Eps, scoring 1 minutes, 46 seconds into overtime to upset the No. 2-seed and defending champion Crusaders. East Grand Forks (16-13-2) is the first 4-seed to win the Class 1A state title since Mahtomedi in 2020.
Sophomore forward Jace Panzer took the initial shot from near the blue line on the winning play, and Van Eps raced into the corner after the puck kicked out wide.
“Just try to beat the guy to the puck, and then saw out of the corner of my eye, the goalie was a little out of position,” Van Eps said. “Thought I could kind of just bank it off his leg there and see what happens. It was a win in our favor, for sure.”
Van Eps took a sharp-angle shot from behind the goal line in the corner. It seemed to fulfill the old hockey cliché: Put pucks on net, good things happen.

St. Cloud Cathedral’s Mason Layne (5) in front of the net while the puck gets past goaltender Keaton LeGrande in overtime. (MHM Photo / Rick Olson)
“I don’t really talk to these kids about throwing it on net from the corner of the rink, Jace,” Palmiscno said, in a bit in jest at the postgame press conference before turning serious. “Just get pucks on net. Panz did a really good job. Shoots it low on net from the corner of the O zone.”
The goal secured the first state championship for the Green Wave since it won back-to-back titles in 2014-15. East Grand Forks also avenged an 11-5 loss to Cathedral on Jan. 31.
The championship-winning goal was the 14th of the season for Van Eps, but he saved up most of his scoring for the postseason, scoring six goals in six games across the section and state tournaments.
For Van Eps, he said he “wasn’t too happy” with himself throughout the regular season. He also knew the gravity of the season possibly coming down to one play ending a high school career in earlier postseason games.
“Obviously, this is how we want to end it,” Van Eps said. “I think us seniors really started to realize that, just like coach said. Couldn’t be happier now.”
Tough schedule prepared EGF for the state tournament moment
Two of the past three Class 1A championship games have been decided in overtime. Mahtomedi defeated Warroad 6-5 in double overtime in 2023. East Grand Forks was battle-tested in overtime this season, too. Including Saturday’s victory, the Green Wave finish the season with a 4-2-2 overtime record. They also won their Section 8 championship in overtime, upsetting Warroad, ranked No. 1 in the season’s final Let’s Play Hockey rankings.

East Grand Forks senior Cooper Hills (15) skates by the bench to get congratulations after his second-period goal made it a 1-0 game.(MHM Photo / Rick Olson)
The Green Wave were a sub-.500 team at points during the season, starting 0-3 and then 2-5-1 in their first seven games of the season. They had another stretch from mid-to-late January when they went just 1-6. East Grand Forks faced strong competition throughout the season, facing teams like Orono, Mahtomedi and Warroad, plus Class 2A foes St. Thomas Academy, Class 2A champion Moorhead and Wayzata, which ended up as three losses during the January stretch.
“Our schedule was difficult,” Palmiscno said. “Our No. 1 goal every day is just to be the most competitive team in the state of Minnesota.
“That doesn’t mean we’re the most skilled. That doesn’t mean we’re the fastest. But we’re going to be the best version of ourselves, and we’re going to work to beat our opponent, bar none.”
The playoffs were a different beast for the Green Wave as a 10-13-2 team. A section title needed three victories, and then three more wins for a state title. They rolled to a perfect 6-0 to finish the season. Their previous season-long winning streak this season was four games in December and early January.
At the state tournament, East Grand Forks shut out Northern Lakes 3-0 in the quarterfinals. Then it pulled off an epic comeback in the semifinal, knocking off top-seed Hibbing/Chisholm 7-5. The Green Wave was down 5-2 in that game before scoring four goals in a 2:45 span on the game clock at the end of the second period and start of the third period.

St. Cloud Cathedral John Hirschfeld (6) celebrates Bo Schmidt’s (17) game-tying goal late in regulation. (MHM Photo / Rick Olson)
They finished off with another upset of St. Cloud Cathedral (20-9-2), also looking for its third overall championship. Cooper Hills gave East Grand Forks a 1-0 lead at 7:16 of the second period.
They held onto that until the final minute of regulation when Cathedral freshman Bo Schmidt tied the game with his third goal of the tournament. Cathedral outshot the Green Wave 38-31 in the game, with sophomore Noah Schindele tying his season-high mark with 37 saves.
“That was awesome to see them push through a little adversity and tie it up at the end,” said Cathedral coach Robbie Stocker. “Ultimately not enough in the end but great resilience by our group to fight back.”
Heather's love for watching hockey started when the Minnesota Wild came to town in 2000. Before that, she caught a few Minnesota Moose games as a youngster, and more recently she's kept up with the Austin Bruins and Fargo Force. She's a freelance journalist who previously worked as a news reporter in Austin and Fergus Falls, Minn. She enjoys watching sports and closely follows the Wild, Minnesota Twins, IndyCar Series, tennis and prep sports. Heather keeps up her sports blog Thoughts from the Stands. You can follow her on Twitter/X @hlrule or Instagram @hlrule.
