The hubbub coming into Tuesday's No. 1 vs. 2 clash at Mariucci Arena had to do with the fact that Don Lucia, the longtime coach of the Gophers, would be coaching against his youngest child, Mario, a freshman at Notre Dame and a Wild prospect.
But midway through the first period, that story line sailed through the window when it became apparent that this indeed was a showdown between the nation's top two teams.
What looked like a potential Gophers romp early became a tight-checking defensive struggle before Minnesota added an empty-netter and prevailed 4-1 to stop the Fighting Irish's six-game winning streak.
"We didn't want to play a racehorse game against them," Don Lucia said. "We wanted to play a patient game. Look at both teams defensively, neither gives up much."
The Irish (14-5), which entered as the second-best defensive team in the country (1.61 goals a game), gave up two goals in the first 7 1/2 minutes and a season-high four to the third-best offensive team in the country (3.65 goals a game).
With Erik Haula sidelined until at least the North Dakota series, speedy Nate Condon, who grew up playing center but has played mostly wing at Minnesota, moved to second-line center between Sam Warning and Zach Budish. Each player scored a goal and had an assist.
"Anytime you have scoring on multiple lines, it's easier on the ice," Condon said. "[Nick Bjugstad's] line struggled a little bit. They didn't get the bounces they needed. Luckily our line had a good night."
Christian Isackson also scored and freshman Adam Wilcox, making his 17th consecutive start, was a rock as usual with 22 saves to improve to 13-2-3. His 1.60 goals-against average ranks sixth in the nation and his .806 winning percentage is second.