The Pioneers’ performance at St. Cloud featured a bit of a Jekyll and Hyde performance this past weekend.
On the one hand, Denver lost an overtime game to the NCHC-rival Huskies in which it allowed the most shots it had all season (43). One night later, DU bounced back for a 3-1 victory.
Here are some pluses and minuses and the weekend’s three stars:
Plus
The Pioneers bounced back in convincing fashion, locking down one of the conference’s better offensive teams. The defense played a huge role in that. “I thought our D core played possibly their worst game of the year (Friday) night since the first weekend at least, and they really responded with a great effort tonight,” coach Jim Montgomery said after Saturday’s game. “It’s hard to contain a team like St. Cloud to one goal, and it’s hard to take away time and space on this expansive ice sheet.”
Minus
For some reason the Pioneers again struggled with a Friday night road game, whether it was focus, effort, puck luck, whatever, it just didn’t seem to be there, and it added pressure on Saturday.
Plus
DU salvaged a road split in a place it’s not easy to win at. Montgomery and many of his coaching peers will tell you a road split in a conference as tough as the NCHC is not a horrible thing IF you can sweep your home series.
Minus
The Pioneers have just two home series left (Omaha this weekend and St. Cloud next month) and a home-and-home with Colorado College. They have to travel to Miami, which gave them fits at Magness Arena before finishing the season at Omaha, where they swept a year ago and started their second half tidal wave.
Plus
Dylan Gambrell scored a goal for the first time in 10 games. The sophomore adds so much in so many phases of the game it can be easy to overlook the fact he is a supremely gifted offensive talent. With Troy Terry out, possibly through the end of the regular season, the Pioneers will need Gambrell to turn on the red light more than a few times.
Minus
The offense remained a bit inconsistent. Look at the totals the past four weekends: three goals (at Providence), 11 (vs. Arizona State), seven (all in one game after a bagel vs. Western Michigan) and five (at St. Cloud State).
Three stars
- Dylan Gambrell. The sophomore tied the score on Saturday and may have been the Pioneers’ best player. He added an assist on Henrik Borgstrom’s goal Friday.
- Tanner Jaillet. Despite being pulled after two periods Friday, he finished the weekend with 65 saves and only three goals allowed.
- The defense. One night after giving up 43 shots, the group rebounded in a big way Saturday. As a bonus, freshman Michael Davies scored a clinching goal with the first assist from Adam Plant.
Honorable mention: Liam Finlay, the freshman went for a goal Friday and had an assist Saturday, and was plus-2 for the weekend. An offensive awakening by the skilled newcomer would be a massive help for DU.
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