It's tough to imagine Adam Wilcox blocking pucks in a pair of 3-D glasses. ¶ The Gophers sophomore goalie is most recognizable in his bulky helmet with his blue eyes peering through the mask, but he's just as effective in the 3-D shades he uses for vision training.
Wilcox added vision training classes to his routine a year ago to fine-tune reflexes, tracking and visual memory that help him do more than just keep his eyes locked on the puck. The traits are several of the reasons he's become recognized as one of the best goalies in college hockey; several teammates call him as the backbone of the Gophers.
"There's glass and stuff. You do some 3-D stuff. I don't even know what it does, it just works," Wilcox said. "It's really important for me, because I consider myself a reactive goalie instead of a blocking, positional [goalie]. So it helps with that."
The Gophers are at Bemidji State this weekend for a nonconference series after winning the Ice Breaker tournament Saturday at Mariucci Arena with a 3-2 victory over New Hampshire, No. 13 this week in USCHO's weekly poll.
Mariucci Arena erupted as Wilcox stopped several of the Wildcats' last-second shots and rose to its feet when he gloved the potential game-tying goal with 7.3 seconds left. He recognized the changing direction of a deflected shot, moving right to left to save what would be New Hampshire's last shot of the night.
Co-captain Nate Condon thanked his goalie with a tap on the helmet. The Gophers student section bowed to Wilcox.
Wilcox has proved worthy of praise. His 25-8-5 record in 38 starts last season tied a team record for victories by a freshman. A 1.88 goals-against average set a single-season Gophers record. He opened the Icebreaker with a 6-0 shutout of Mercyhurst.
"What I like about Adam is he makes the timely saves," coach Don Lucia said.