Was it just three weeks ago that the race for the MacNaughton Cup seemed academic?<\/p>\n
Entering the weekend of Jan. 14-15, Wisconsin held an eight-point lead in the WCHA standings. But that was before the Badgers’ “Black Wednesday,” when goaltender Brian Elliott went down with an injury in practice.<\/p>\n
Since then, UW has lost four straight games to Denver and Minnesota, while the Pioneers and the Gophers also won their other intervening games, making the WCHA race a three-way dead heat with eight league games remaining in the regular season for each team.<\/p>\n
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Phil Kessel scored the Gophers’ insurance goal Saturday against his hometown Badgers (photo: Jason Waldowski).<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
Based only on the schedule ahead, the Badgers would still seem to be the favorites, with all of its contests against teams in the bottom half of the league standings — though hard-charging St. Cloud State may soon change that.<\/p>\n
Denver and Minnesota have tougher roads ahead, including a head-to-head series the weekend of Feb. 17-18. Apart from that, though, the Gophers’ path is similar to the Badgers, with second-division opponents the rest of the way. DU, meanwhile, must take on North Dakota and archrival Colorado College before the first round of the playoffs hit.<\/p>\n
Wisconsin, though, will need a shot of confidence to get its bearings back — and part of that will need to be the return of Elliott, still expected to be a couple of weeks away.<\/p>\n
Freshman Shane Connelly was thrown to the wolves in his first collegiate duty, performing credibly in his debut against DU (one goal on 23 shots in a 1-0 loss) before giving up three goals or more in each of his next three outings, something Elliott had done just twice all season before going down.<\/p>\n
Few would blame Connelly — who was put in a near-impossible situation — for the Badgers’ troubles, not when UW scored just seven goals in front of him in those four games, but Elliott may have proved his value to the Badgers even more effectively by his absence than he had shown when he was on the ice.<\/p>\n
Getting It Right<\/h4>\n
By now, you might already know the facts.<\/p>\n
During Friday’s game between Michigan and Michigan State at Munn Arena, Spartan defenseman Ethan Graham launched a blast that passed clean through the Wolverine net. No goal was the eventual ruling on the play, setting off a chain reaction of controversy that still echoes.<\/p>\n