PHILADELPHIA – The rivals appear naturally drawn to one another. So much so they found their way onto the same ice when the regular-season schedule wouldn't allow it.
It took six months, four postseason victories and a trip to Philadelphia to make it happen, but North Dakota and the Gophers will get their rivalry matchup with a berth in the national championship game on the line.
The former WCHA members will meet in Thursday night's NCAA Frozen Four semifinal at Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia.
This meeting was very much willed into existence after college hockey's conference shake-up split the old rivals following 66 years of consecutive meetings. Gophers goaltender Adam Wilcox said throughout the season that assistant coach Grant Potulny touched on the idea that the two teams would find a way to meet in the NCAA tournament.
Potulny, a Grand Forks, N.D., native who scored the winning goal in overtime for the Gophers in the 2002 NCAA final against Maine, said North Dakota is the rival a Minnesota player wants to face.
Gophers co-captain Kyle Rau made that clear during Wednesday's Frozen Four interview sessions with media.
"I think it's one game that when we moved to the Big Ten I was certainly going to miss. … It's one of those games you see on the schedule and you kind of circle it. All games are important, but this one was the biggest one," Rau said. "Now we get to play them [in the Frozen Four]. It's awesome."
The rivalry began to heat up in the 1940s and 1950s, days when North Dakota featured mostly Canadian players and Gophers almost entirely players from Minnesota. The rivalry matured when the two teams began meeting in the playoffs. But this season the neighboring programs were separated by new conferences, the Gophers moving to the Big Ten and North Dakota to the National Collegiate Hockey Conference.