BOSTON – From Blue Bricks to Johnny B's, from the Tav on the Ave to the Circle Inn, fans in the Mankato area were ready Saturday night to party like there's no tomorrow.
Same thing in TD Garden and along Causeway Street, too, because the Minnesota State Mavericks were about to become national champions.
A dominant two periods of hockey at the NCAA men's Frozen Four had produced a 1-0 lead for Minnesota State, which had held Denver, the team with the highest national goals per game at 4.27, to eight shots on goal through 40 minutes. With Hobey Baker Award winner Dryden McKay in goal, surely the Mavericks would hold on for their first national championship as a Division I program. What could go wrong?
Well, this being Minnesota sports, everything.
Shortly after Benton Maass and Andy Carroll had back-to-back shots that nearly produced a two-goal lead in the third period, Denver defenseman Mike Benning fired a shot on McKay. The netminder couldn't control the rebound, and forward Ryan Barrow quickly beat McKay to tie it 1-1 at 4:46 of the third.
Only 40 seconds later, Mavericks forward Sam Morton — whose first-period power-play goal gave MSU a 1-0 lead — drew a tripping penalty. Though the Mavericks killed the penalty, Denver still had possession of the puck, and Benning wired a laser over McKay's right shoulder for a 2-1 lead at 7:33.
Quick as a hiccup, the script flipped, and Denver was on its way to a 5-1 victory.
"Couldn't stop the bleeding,'' Mavericks coach Mike Hastings said. "They score a power-play goal to get it to 2, and we start chasing the game a bit.''