After last Saturday's three-overtime loss to the Gophers, North Dakota women's hockey coach Brian Idalski called them "arguably the best women's team of all-time."
This weekend, Minnesota can seal the debate. The Gophers are 39-0 heading into the Women's Frozen Four at Ridder Arena. They'll meet Boston College in Friday's semifinals, with the winner advancing to play either Boston University or Mercyhurst in Sunday's championship.
Since the NCAA started crowning a women's hockey champion in 2001, no Division I team has finished a season undefeated. Wisconsin came closest in 2007, when it won the national title with a 36-1-4 record. The Gophers' 2004 NCAA title team — led by Natalie Darwitz and Krissy Wendell — went 36-2-2. Why is this year's team so dominant? Here are five reasons:
1. Star power
This is the first time all three finalists for the Patty Kazmaier Award, given to the nation's top player, have come from the same team. They're all Gophers — Amanda Kessel, Noora Raty and Megan Bozek — and there is no clear favorite.
Kessel leads the nation with 44 goals and 53 assists. The junior forward is one of the fastest players in the women's game and combines that speed with good hands and smart decision-making.
Raty leads the nation in goals against average (0.88 per game). The senior is a two-time Olympian from Finland, and the higher the stakes, the better she seems to play. She was named MVP at last season's Frozen Four.
Bozek is the nation's second-leading scorer among defensemen with 20 goals and 35 assists. She has one of the hardest slapshots in the women's game and can take the puck end-to-end, Bobby Orr style, to create offense.
2. Depth
Those three players get most of the attention, but the entire roster is talent-laden. Freshman center Hannah Brandt is the nation's third-leading scorer, with 31 goals and 49 assists.