{"id":8222,"date":"2007-03-18T16:39:51","date_gmt":"2007-03-18T21:39:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/03\/18\/badgers-top-umd-to-repeat-as-ncaa-champs\/"},"modified":"2010-08-23T11:55:25","modified_gmt":"2010-08-23T16:55:25","slug":"badgers-top-umd-to-repeat-as-ncaa-champs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/recaps\/2007\/03\/18\/badgers-top-umd-to-repeat-as-ncaa-champs\/","title":{"rendered":"Badgers Top UMD to Repeat as NCAA Champs"},"content":{"rendered":"
Twenty-seven years after participating in Team USA’s 1980 “Miracle On Ice,” Wisconsin coach Mark Johnson returned to Lake Placid for the first time in a competitive setting at the Herb Brooks Rink.<\/p>\n
“I’ve got a pretty good little streak going,” he said, smiling, after Wisconsin won.<\/p>\n
With stifling defense and timely goal scoring, his Badgers captured a second consecutive national championship, with a 4-1 win over Minnesota-Duluth.<\/p>\n
“27 years ago I walked away from this city with something special,” Johnson said. “And if I can do something similar for this team, then I know that whenever they hear ‘Lake Placid’ they can look down at their ring and they will have memories that will last them for the rest of their lives.”<\/p>\n
The Badgers received a goal and two assists from tournament Most Outstanding Player Sara Bauer, who finished with six points in the Frozen Four. Wisconsin goalie Jessie Vetter had her NCAA scoreless streak snapped, but made 17 saves in the victory. Wisconsin exploded for three goals in the second period, including an exclamation point just 10 seconds after the only Minnesota-Duluth goal.<\/p>\n
“We weren’t able to contain them,” said Shannon Miller, head coach at Duluth, about Wisconsin’s top forwards. “They’re a great team, with lots of depth and a great coaching staff. They are a quality opponent.”<\/p>\n
“During a game like this, you are just so excited to play,” said Bauer. “And that energy really carried us.”<\/p>\n
On the other hand, the Bulldogs, perhaps worn down from the grueling double overtime affair on Friday night with Boston College, didn’t have much zip in their skates.<\/p>\n
“All year long I’ve pushed and encouraged the kids to dig deeper and play harder, and that’s what got us into this game,” said Miller. “But it was obvious to me watching my team from the locker room, from the bench, on the ice that we had just a half tank.”<\/p>\n
This was the first time UMD has lost a NCAA final — the Bulldogs have three championships from the three previous times they have played in the last game of the season.<\/p>\n
Duluth’s Kim Martin got the nod in net today, starting for the first time in this NCAA tournament, and finished with 20 saves.<\/p>\n
After Friday night’s win over BC, Miller was asked about playing Wisconsin, a known foe, in the title game. “We have to avoid penalties,” Miller said then. “We know we can play with them when it is 5 on 5.”<\/p>\n
Sure enough, the first goal in the game, for Wisconsin, was a power play goal. With Tawni Mattila off for body checking, Wisconsin went on the attack. The first power play unit gave way to the second, and just before the power play expired, the first power play unit again took the ice.<\/p>\n
The line swap paid off immediately, as Sara Bauer won the ensuing faceoff in the Duluth zone, passed the puck ahead to a streaking Jinelle Zaugg, who scored her third goal of the Frozen Four, with just two seconds remaining on the power play. Zaugg was later named to the All-Tournament team.<\/p>\n
The Bulldogs had to be a little concerned, as Wisconsin goalie Jessie Vetter had yet to allow a goal in this year’s NCAA Tournament. They could take heart, though, because in both last week’s quarterfinals and Friday’s semi, UMD had overcome deficits before going on to win the game.<\/p>\n
Wisconsin increased its lead in the second period with a goal scored in the middle of a Wisconsin line change. Taking advantage of some Wisconsin pressure, Jinelle Zaugg quickly switched with Erika Lawler, to get some fresh legs on the ice. Lawler then took a pass from Meghan Duggan, and took a shot that Martin initially stopped, but snuck through to inch across the line.<\/p>\n
A third goal a few minutes later seemed to seal the game. Duluth was applying a little pressure, when Wisconsin defender Meaghan Mikkelson got control of the puck and skated it to center ice. Mikkelson passed off to Sara Bauer, who skated unmolested into the UMD zone, and roofed a shot over Martin’s shoulder.<\/p>\n