Now we know what the Gophers men's hockey team is capable of.
It took half a season of up-and-down, often unbalanced play to discover it, but Sunday night in winning their 13th Mariucci Classic by making mincemeat of defending national champion Boston College, the Gophers treated their fans to the type of inspired, strong hockey they can put together.
In handing the No. 1 team in the country an astonishing 8-1 drubbing -- Boston College's most lopsided defeat in almost 17 years -- the fourth-ranked Gophers looked every bit the national title contender. On their big ice surface, the Gophers skated circles around the team that ended their 2011-12 season in the Frozen Four.
"Humble pie for us," Boston College coach Jerry York said one night after becoming the winningest NCAA coach in history. "Alabama-Huntsville is clearly a different team than Minnesota. It was a whole new level here tonight."
The Eagles (12-3-1), who have made 10 Frozen Fours since 1998, hadn't lost by more than six goals since a 10-0 loss to New Hampshire on Feb. 24, 1996.
"It was just one of those nights that went our way," Gophers coach Don Lucia said. "We've all been in games like that where it just starts to break, pucks start to go in, and all of a sudden the avalanche comes.
"I'm proud of our guys. It's an outstanding team we beat. But it's one night."
For the first time in a long time, Florida Panthers first-round pick Nick Bjugstad looked dominant. The Blaine native scored a career-high four points -- two goals and two assists -- and came close to a hat trick several times.