GRAND FORKS, N.D. – Eric Schierhorn spent the summer calming his goaltending style, working to stay even-keeled and unflappable for college hockey's craziest moments.
In other words, the Gophers junior worked all those hours to steel himself for nights like Friday, when No. 4 North Dakota unleashed a flurry of shots before a raucous sellout crowd of 11,862 at Ralph Engelstad Arena.
With his teammates blocking a staggering 29 shots in front of him, Schierhorn stopped 34 others headed for the net, as the No. 8 Gophers escaped with a 2-1 victory.
"It was unreal," Schierhorn said of the atmosphere for Minnesota's first game in Grand Forks since 2012. "I mean, I wish we could do this four times a year, home and home. It's the best rivalry in college hockey."
After getting a first-period goal from Rem Pitlick, the Gophers held on for dear life until Steve Johnson — of all players — stretched the lead to 2-0 with 7 minutes, 52 seconds left.
North Dakota (3-1-1) had so much puck possession going at that point, Minnesota didn't even have a third-period shot on goal until Johnson delivered his lightning strike. Pitlick crossed the blue line on a rush and saw Johnson trailing the play.
A senior defenseman, Johnson had gone 48 games without a goal, but he sent a wrist shot into the upper-left corner.
"I told him, you'll remember that one forever," Gophers coach Don Lucia said. "That was a big goal."