The image of hats raining down on Mariucci Arena's ice was stuck in Travis Boyd's mind Saturday night. The Gophers senior had two goals for the fourth time this season and was scheming a way to get three.
"As weird as it seems, I knew I had been at two [goals] before and I wasn't able to get the third, so on the bench I was thinking, 'You know what, I'm going to go after it here,' " Boyd said.
He didn't waste this chance. After scoring his second goal of the game just 9 seconds into the second period, Boyd got his first college hat trick on his next shot, 14 minutes later, in a 6-2 victory over Ohio State.
The hats that actually made it over the glass and onto the ice formed more of a sprinkle, but Boyd embraced the experience by raising his arms and taking in a moment for which he waited four years.
Boyd was right — it might have been weird for someone who had only 13 goals in three seasons, during which he has been playing catch-up physically, to take the game into his own hands. However, this is the new Boyd, a maturing leader who seems to be making the right decisions for a team in need of direction.
He has doubled his career total with 13 goals this season as the Gophers head into a crucial Big Ten weekend series against No. 12 Michigan. The Wolverines have four elite forwards leading the nation's top offense, and the Gophers will need someone like Boyd to help keep up with the Big Ten's first-place team while trying to shake the funk that pushed them out of the polls for the first time since 2011.
"Last year, especially in the second half, I was starting to show people what I was capable of offensively, and this year I had a good start and really thought I was going to have a great year," Boyd said. "Right now, I'm playing with confidence … and hopefully we can turn the season around here."
Boyd, a Hopkins native who played two years with the U.S. national developmental program in Ann Arbor, Mich., had plans to finish what would have been his last year of high school playing junior hockey until the Gophers called. They wanted him to join a short list of 17-year-old freshmen — like Nick Bjugstad and Jordan Schroeder — who fast tracked through high school and got to college early. Boyd arrived in 2011 but, for the next two years, he played a supporting role. He was in 34 games as a freshman, and played every game the past two seasons, however his early entry into college made it difficult for him — at a slight 5-11 — to keep up with the older and bigger bodies around him.