Big acts return to the Frozen Four this year.
Boston College, North Dakota, Minnesota and proven up-and-comer Union will be on display for college hockey's biggest weekend. Big names mean big numbers and extra attention in Philadelphia.
"It's going to be pretty close to a sellout crowd there," Boston College coach Jerry York said. "You've got marquee names, and that's going to draw a lot of interest."
It'll be a big change from last year's finale in Pittsburgh. Three programs were making their first appearance in the Frozen Four, and eventual national champion Yale was making its second.
This year's field has a combined 67 Frozen Four appearances. Boston College leads with 24, the Gophers have 21, North Dakota 20 and Union two.
Attendance held up well for last year's newcomers, although it was a struggle to fill the CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh for Thursday night's semifinals. With Boston College's Hobey Baker Award favorite Johnny Gaudreau playing in his hometown, and the historic rivalry between North Dakota and the Gophers on tap for the semifinals, filling seats and TV ratings shouldn't be a problem this year.
"From a TV standpoint, obviously having North Dakota, Minnesota and Boston College is great," Gophers coach Don Lucia said. "Union was in the Frozen Four two years ago and they're an outstanding team. … I think it'll be two outstanding games in the semifinals."
Hobey finalists named
St. Cloud State senior forward Nic Dowd is one of three Hobey Baker Award finalists. The field was cut down from 10 on Tuesday, eliminating Gophers goaltender Adam Wilcox.