Minnesota
Lakeville North girls, Wayzata boys savor trip north for Hockey Day Minnesota
The Wayzata boys and Lakeville North girls hockey teams made the most of trips to Warroad for Hockey Day Minnesota, each leaving town with a victory.
Wayzata boys coach Pat O’Leary made it sound like the non-hockey portions of the annual event went well, too.
“It was awesome,” he said. “Warroad did a phenomenal job. The hotel, food, whole setup was great.”
Wayzata, ranked second in Class 2A, defeated Moorhead 5-2 on Saturday afternoon. The Trojans scored goals 2 minutes, 1 second apart in the second period, taking advantage of the game being played outdoors at the Warroad Athletic Complex and striking while the sun was difficult for Moorhead’s goalie.
“We wanted to get as many shots as we could,” O’Leary said. “… We got those two quick goals, it took the wind out of their sails and we took it from there.”
Carson Clark had three assists for Wayzata.
In the girls game, Class 2A, No. 7 Lakeville North held off Class 1A, No. 5 Warroad 4-3.
Lakeville North fell behind early, giving up a goal in the first minute to sophomore Taylor Reese. Reese also scored in the final minutes of the second and third periods, producing a hat trick.
“We responded [to that first goal] like a team that has been there before,” Lakeville North coach Buck Kochevar said. “I would have liked to have scored 10 seconds in on a 2-on-1, but we responded really well and didn’t get down. They’re never going to be perfect.”
Addie Bowlby tied it 1-1 with 1:57 left in the first period, and Lakeville North led 3-2 in the third period when ninth-grade Panthers goaltender Kaia Weiland made a save against Reese on a two-on-1 rush.
“That was turning,” Kochevar said. “She made that save with the sun in her eyes. We told the team to give her a tap and get going. We played just good enough in the third to get the victory.”
The Warroad boys, No. 1 in Class 1, defeated Roseau 6-2 in the other game of the day.
Minnetonka clamps down on Providence Academy in girls basketball
Minnetonka, ranked first in Class 4A girls basketball, turned its defense loose Saturday and defeated Providence Academy 73-48 in the Community Clash at St. Michael-Albertville High School. Providence Academy is ranked first in Class 2A.
The Skippers allowed only 14 points in the first half. They held Providence Academy guard Maddyn Greenway to 23 points; she’s averaging 32.7 points per game. Minnetonka coach Brian Cosgriff had a solution for her in Tori McKinney, a Skippers guard signed to play for the Gophers.
“It was a collective effort, but McKinney is the best defender in the state,” Cosgriff said. “It was a great matchup. Maddyn is really good offensively. McKinney is really good defensively. It was an exciting matchup.”
McKinney also scored 25 points, second on her team to Aaliyah Crump, who scored 27.
Numbers
5: Points by Aiden Grossklaus (three goals, two assists) in Woodbury’s 8-2 boys hockey victory over Forest Lake.
7: Points by Henry Lechner (four goals, three assists) in Holy Angels’ 5-4 boys hockey victory over Blake.
18: Seconds into overtime Easton Bosch scored in New Prague’s 5-4 boys hockey victory over Rochester Century/John Marshall.
51: Saves by Tegan Swanson in Eden Prairie’s 2-1 girls hockey overtime loss to Minnetonka.
60: Saves by Tyler Nesheim in Chaska’s 10-0 boys hockey loss to Minnetonka.
Minnesota
Mid-morning Minnesota winter weather update
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Minnesota
Obituary for Marcie Moe at Johnson Funeral Service
Minnesota
5 key takeaways from Minnesota’s loss to Stanford at the Acrisure Invitational
Minnesota began its Acrisure Invitational journey with some great energy against Stanford, but an injury to starting point guard Chansey Willis Jr. was too much to overcome in a hard-fought 72-68 loss. Here’s what we learned.
Minnesota has been without North Dakota transfer BJ Omot and Maryland transfer Chance Stephens in every regular-season game, while starting big man Robert Vaihola missed his second straight game on Thursday with a knee injury. Things got even more scarce after two early fouls sent Willis to the bench, and he came out of the locker room with a boot on his right ankle.
The Gophers were already not a very deep team, so taking away four rotational players is a massive issue for Niko Medved and a rebuilding program.
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With Vaihola out for the second straight game due to a knee injury, Minnesota slid Grove into the starting lineup for the first time in his college career. Nehemiah Turner did not see the floor after starting last week’s loss to San Francisco, and it was an eight-man rotation.
The Gophers coughed up 14 turnovers on Thursday night, compared to only eight for Stanford. The biggest difference was that Minnesota’s turnovers resulted in 27 Cardinal points. It’s hard to point to any other stat as the largest factor in Thursday’s result.
Reynolds was the first player off the bench for Minnesota, and he provided some serious energy to begin Thursday night’s game. He had a career-high 16 points in last week’s loss to San Francisco, and it looked like he would remain at that level against Stanford, but he struggled in the second half with six points, six rebounds, four assists and six turnovers on the night.
Asuma generated all the headlines when he opted to stay with the Gophers through the coaching change, but Grove also returned after redshirting last season. The 6-foot-9 big man from Alexandria, Minnesota, got the biggest opportunity of his college career against Stanford. He finished with five points and one rebound in 19 minutes. Medved opted to roll with Durkin in the closing lineup.
The Gophers will face Santa Clara on Friday night in the consolation game of the Acrisure Invitational.
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