Minnesota
Lu'Cye Patterson looks to lead Gophers men's basketball the way he led at Minnesota Prep Academy
On a spring afternoon in northeast Minneapolis, Lu’Cye Patterson sat in a weight room surrounded wall-to-wall with pictures of himself and fellow Minnesota Prep Academy alums now at the Division I level.
His father co-founded the Minneapolis prep school. Patterson helped put it on the basketball map.
The 6-2, 210-pound fifth-year senior was never recruited by the Gophers out of high school, but after stops at Missouri State and Charlotte, he transferred home for his final college season.
“It was kind of like a no-brainer for me to spend my last year here,” Patterson said. “And help get Minnesota back to where it’s supposed to be.”
The Gophers brought more excitement to their raised floor with last season’s 19-win NIT team, but a roster exodus put the responsibility on newcomers like Patterson and a few returners to keep the momentum going.
Patterson talked to the U’s leading scorer — Dawson Garcia, a fellow Minnesotan — about building the home state Big Ten program into a contender. Patterson also felt a strong connection to fourth-year Gophers coach Ben Johnson, a family friend going way back.
“He’s been a friend for 35-plus years,” Patterson’s father, Lucas, said of growing up with Johnson in Minneapolis. “We had been together for a long time playing on the same [youth] teams and all of that.”
Even before the Gophers coach saw a familiar name in the transfer portal, Johnson witnessed the young Patterson’s journey and growth from grade school to through four years of college.
“He’s a kid who I’ve known almost his entire life having grown up with his dad,” Johnson said. “I just really love his skill and IQ. Being a coach’s kid, to get a guy with his feel and skill level coming off a good year is only going to help our program and what we’re trying to do.”
Career full circle
After he visited the Gophers in April, Patterson’s phone kept buzzing with messages from other programs. Getting to play at Williams Arena, though, meant his career would come full circle. It was an easy decision.
“I definitely had a lot of schools texting from the highest level,” Patterson said. “But I knew the reason I hit the portal. It was to come home and play in front of my family.”
They watched him take off on the Minnesota basketball scene in 2018, leading Brooklyn Center as a sophomore to the school’s first state tournament in 35 years. From there, he transferred to Minnesota Prep Academy to play a tougher national prep schedule for his last two years of high school.
Patterson’s father and Donnell Bratton, a pastor in St. Paul, co-founded Minnesota Prep six years ago out of Jerry Gamble Boys and Girls club in north Minneapolis. The online-based school has 13 students now — just enough for one basketball team — and shares facilities at Mill City Church in northeast Minneapolis.
More than a dozen former players from Minnesota Prep will be at Division I schools, including Antonio Chol (Rutgers), Tavion Banks (Drake), D.J. Jefferson (Tennessee/Longwood) and Brenden Moss (Kent State).
Many college-preparatory schools field teams that exist outside the traditional high school system. The competition level can be much tougher. So is the lifestyle. Rarely is time not spent studying, training and traveling to out-of-state tournaments. Patterson’s brother, Jalyn, is a senior now at Minnesota Prep.
“It already had me ready for college,” Lu’Cye Patterson said. “The traveling, the going to school online, the competition. Some of these guys I played are even in the NBA now.”
Point guard needs
The 19-win Gophers caught Patterson’s eye when they needed another point guard to replace Big Ten assist leader Elijah Hawkins, who transferred to Texas Tech this spring.
Joining returning starter Mike Mitchell Jr., Patterson opens summer practice this month as one of four newcomers for the Gophers in the backcourt. That also includes transfers Brennan Rigsby (Oregon), Caleb Williams (Macalester) and Femi Odukale (New Mexico State) and top high school recruit Isaac Asuma.
“I like the way Ben Johnson lets his guards play,” Patterson said. “I feel like he gives his guards a lot of freedom to make mistakes, play their game and contribute to the team to help them win.”
Patterson is more of a score-first floor leader. He developed that confidence offensively after 82 career starts, including 56 games at Charlotte the past two seasons in the American Athletic Conference.
Earning all-league second-team honors last season, Patterson had eight games of 20 points or more, highlighted by a 27-point effort in a regular season-ending win over East Carolina. He also had 16 points in an upset of nationally ranked Florida Atlantic and 14 points against Duke last season.
Patterson’s scoring average improved each year in college from 2.5 points his first season at Missouri State to a team-best 14.6 points per game in 31 games last season for Charlotte. He shot just 12.5% from three-point range as a freshman but then 37% combined the past two seasons.
“He’s just a player who has just grinded from the start,” Johnson said. “Players who have a passion for it, who have great work ethic and talent find a way [to succeed] over time.”
Despite dealing with a bad ankle, Patterson put up career numbers last season and feels healthier than ever after losing 20 pounds. After focusing more on his body, he’s ready to take another step with his game.
“A lot of kids get recruited off their physical gifts, but they haven’t been through the gantlet of developing,” Lucas Patterson said. “Lu’Cye has been training and been able to sharpen his sword. He’s ready to contribute here right out of the gate.”
Minnesota
McCarron has goal, assist in debut, Wild defeat Golden Knights | Minnesota Wild
Pavel Dorofeyev had a goal and an assist, and Mitch Marner scored for the Golden Knights (29-20-14), who have lost four of their past five. Akira Schmid made 20 saves.
“It’s a lot of the same, right? We get behind. We have a bad stretch. One becomes two, becomes three,” Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy said. “We should be better than that. We’re more of a veteran group.”
Zuccarello put the Wild up 1-0 at 5:18 of the second period, scoring on a breakaway after a Noah Hanifin turnover with a wrist shot over Schmid’s glove that went bar down.
Bogosian pushed the lead to 2-0 at 8:07 with a slap shot from the top of the right face-off circle that beat Schmid to the blocker side.
McCarron scored to extend it to 3-0 just 18 seconds later at 8:25. Brock Faber sent a wrist shot on net from the right point, and McCarron tipped it in as he battled in front.
“Just throw it there and let him make a play. That’s obviously a big boy, and he showed he’s got skill to go with it,” Faber said. “He played great. That’s a really, really big add for us.”
Dorofeyev cut the deficit to 3-1 with a power-play goal at 2:17 of the third period, roofing a backdoor pass from Jack Eichel over Gustavsson’s glove from in tight for his team-leading 30th of the season.
Minnesota
Minnesota Wild 2026 trade deadline report card: Grading Bill Guerin’s moves
The Athletic has live coverage of the NHL trade deadline.
Movement since Dec. 12
In: Quinn Hughes, Michael McCarron, Bobby Brink, Jeff Petry, Robby Fabbri, Nick Foligno
Out: Marco Rossi, Zeev Buium, Liam Ogren, David Jiricek, Vinnie Hinostroza, 2026 first-round pick, 2026 seventh-round pick, 2028 second-round pick
Grade: A+
The Wild’s heavy lifting was done with their mid-December blockbuster for Quinn Hughes, who has absolutely been a game-changer for the franchise.
President of hockey operations and general manager Bill Guerin paid a hefty price — most notably dealing Marco Rossi and top prospect Zeev Buium — but Hughes has changed everything for Minnesota, from their breakouts and offensive generation to how they’re seen around the league: as legitimate Cup contenders.
With Hughes’ puck-moving prowess, plus two play-driving wingers in Kirill Kaprizov and Matt Boldy, there was less pressure on the Wild to go out and get a No. 1 center — at least, for now. The Wild tried, of course, pursuing the likes of Vincent Trocheck, Robert Thomas and Ryan O’Reilly.
But with the price points too high, Guerin elected to punt until the summer, saving his precious few trade chips to potentially land a bigger fish. Meanwhile, he added depth to make the roster thicker.
The Wild basically overhauled their bottom six.
Michael McCarron brings size, snarl and strong faceoff ability to the fourth line and the penalty kill. Think of what kind of force a fourth line of Marcus Foligno, McCarron and Yakov Trenin could be in a playoff series. Bobby Brink brings speed and skill to the middle six, plus he fits Minnesota’s defensive identity and forecheck. He’s a third-line right winger who could move up the lineup.
Robby Fabbri is a four-time 15-goal scorer who is open to any role and whose experience can help in the room.
Foligno, the former Columbus Blue Jackets and Chicago Blackhawks captain, is another potential fourth-liner/depth piece who may not play much, but Chicago is doing the veteran a solid to give him a chance to chase the Cup with his brother, Marcus. Nick Foligno has played center all year, so that gives the coaching staff options.
Up front, these additions mean the Wild won’t have to dip into AHL Iowa for the likes of Ben Jones or Tyler Pitlick if injuries arise.
Jeff Petry (for a seventh-round pick) is an experienced, right-shot defenseman who is OK being a seventh or eighth defenseman. He’ll help in case Jared Spurgeon, Brock Faber or Zach Bogosian gets hurt, and is someone they’re more comfortable with than the options they have in Iowa, including David Spacek. The move makes more sense now that the Wild have dealt David Jiricek to the Philadelphia Flyers for Brink.
The Wild didn’t make any flashy moves at the deadline — the Hughes addition brought plenty of that — meaning Guerin and company still have useful assets they can parlay into a bigger move this offseason.
This is still a really good team and a Cup contender. Guerin showed some patience here, and time will tell whether the Wild reward his faith. — Joe Smith
What they’re saying
Brink’s former USA Under-18 coach John Wroblewski: “With Brink, I feel you get an underrated competitor who has untapped potential as an offensive catalyst. He has a unique way of finding quiet ice and then consistent handles and deliveries of the puck, whether shooting or passing. He reminds me of a young Sam Reinhart in the way he plays the game, and I think this is a great get. That he’s a Minnesota native and great kid are added bonuses.”
Marcus Foligno on playing with brother Nick: “Just crazy. It’s a crazy moment in our family, and just to know you’re going to play with your brother is a dream come true. I’ve got the shakes going right now. He wants to be a part of this group and to play with me, obviously. He feels kind of invested in this group for a while now. He just wants to help out any way he can. And hopefully, it’s a long ride.”
Blues coach Jim Montgomery on the addition of Hughes: “He’s such a dynamic player and now he gives them three dynamic players. To me, Kaprizov and Boldy are extremely dynamic, and they have support players with those three. I mean, it’s a really good hockey team. They’re playing a great brand of hockey. They’re hard to defend, and (Hughes) just makes them even harder.”
Nashville coach Andrew Brunette on how Hughes changes the Wild: “They were a really good team without him. And obviously, he’s a game-changer. He’s arguably the best — one of the best — guys back there. He probably changes the whole flow of the game for them. He plays 30 minutes for them. The way he breaks the puck out is as good as there is in our league. They were a really good team, and now they’re arguably a top two or three team in the league.”
Marcus Foligno on McCarron: “He’s always been a guy with the Predators who has done a really good job against our top lines, especially in Nashville. We always seemed to have been having tough games because he takes on a lot of minutes against guys like Kaprizov and (Joel Eriksson Ek), where he can counter pretty well against them. So to have him on our team now is great. I always liked the way he protected pucks. He’s responsible; rarely gets caught cheating the game. So to have that reliable guy that’s up the middle as well, big faceoff scenarios, it’ll help us out so much more now. It will be fun to play with him once I’m back.”
Guerin on Fabbri: “He’s a competitive guy. He’s always had speed. He’s a high-character kid. When I spoke to (Blues general manager) Doug Armstrong about him, he raved about his character and what type of person he is. I think he just needs a real good opportunity to play, and he’s been through a lot in his career, and he keeps fighting through, and he’s established himself as a solid NHL player. Sometimes it’s a change of scenery that can rejuvenate you or get you going again. I think a lot of times guys just need a different opportunity.”
What it means for the team’s lineup
There are two versions of this: the Wild lineup immediately after the deadline, and the one that includes injured players Marcus Foligno and Marcus Johansson. That will give a clearer picture of how the deadline adds fit.
At this point, the lineup looks like:
Kaprizov-Hartman-Zuccarello
Tarasenko-Eriksson Ek-Boldy
Trenin-Yurov-Brink
N. Foligno-Sturm-McCarron
Extra: Fabbri
Injured: M. Foligno, Johansson
Hughes-Faber
Brodin-Spurgeon
Middleton-Bogosian
Hunt-Petry
Gustavsson
Wallstedt
But for the playoffs, assuming a return to health, it could look like:
Kaprizov-Hartman-Zuccarello
Johansson-Eriksson Ek-Boldy
Tarasenko-Yurov-Brink
M. Foligno-McCarron-Trenin
Extras: Sturm, N. Foligno, Fabbri
Hughes-Faber
Brodin-Spurgeon
Middleton-Bogosian
Hunt-Petry
Gustavsson
Wallstedt
Trade grades
The trade: Wild get defenseman Quinn Hughes. Canucks get forward Marco Rossi, forward Liam Öhgren, defenseman Zeev Buium and a 2026 first-round draft pick.
Corey Pronman’s Wild grade: B-
Shayna Goldman’s Wild grade: A
Dom Luszczyszyn’s Wild grade: A
The trade: Wild get center Michael McCarron. Predators get a 2028 second-round draft pick.
Harman Dayal’s Wild grade: C+
The trade: Wild get forward Bobby Brink. Flyers get defenseman David Jiricek.
Corey Pronman’s Wild grade: B+
Harman Dayal’s Wild grade: B+
The trade: Wild get forward Nick Foligno. Blackhawks get future considerations.
James Mirtle’s Wild grade: B
Sean Gentile’s Wild grade: B-
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