First, to set the record straight: Freshman phenom Elizabeth Giguere, whose overtime, breakaway goal Sunday gave Clarkson another NCAA women's hockey championship, is not related to the goalie who spoiled the Wild's 2003 playoff run.
Her dad's name is Jean-Sebastien Giguere, but … different guy.
"A lot of people have asked me that before," she said. "No he's not [the goalie]. Sorry."
That's probably a relief for Minnesota hockey fans. They had already seen Clarkson beat Colgate 2-1 at Ridder Arena for its third NCAA title in five years, clearly establishing a dynasty rivaling the Gophers' run of four titles over the past seven years.
After upsetting Minnesota for the 2014 championship and Wisconsin for the 2017 title, Clarkson was the favorite this time as the No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. But the Golden Knights (36-4-1) needed overtime to win all three tournament games.
The odyssey started with a 2-1 nail biter against Mercyhurst, which ended on a Giguere move with cartoon-like brilliance. She had the puck on a 2-on-2 and made a toe drag that caused both Mercyhurst defenders to collide into their goalie, leaving an open net for the tap in winner.
"If you watch the Mercyhurst goal, there's not a lot of players who can make that play and just see it develop the way that she did," Clarkson coach Matt Desrosiers said.
In Friday's semifinal, Clarkson and Ohio State were scoreless deep into overtime, when Giguere delicately lifted a saucer pass, over a defenseman's stick, right to speedy Loren Gabel, for the game winner.