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2021–22 Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey season

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2021–22 Denver Pioneers
men's ice hockey season
NCAA Division I National Champion
NCHC, co-champion
NCAA Tournament, Champion
ConferenceT–1st NCHC
Home iceMagness Arena
Rankings
USCHO#1
USA Today#1
Record
Overall31–9–1
Conference18–6–0
Home17–1–1
Road10–7–0
Neutral4–1–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachDavid Carle
Assistant coachesTavis MacMillan
Dallas Ferguson
Corey Wogtech
Captain(s)Cole Guttman
Alternate captain(s)Ryan Barrow
Bobby Brink
Justin Lee
Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey seasons
« 2020–21 2022–23 »

The 2021–22 Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey season was the 73rd season of play for the program. They represented the University of Denver in the 2021–22 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season and for the 9th season in the National Collegiate Hockey Conference (NCHC). The Pioneers were coached by David Carle, in his fourth season, and played their home games at Magness Arena. The team won the 2022 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament for their NCAA record-tying ninth national championship.

Season

Alternating streaks

After a substandard year in 2021, Denver entered the year as a bit of a mystery, particularly with how unique the previous COVID-19-shortened season had been. The Pioneers returned with many of their top players, including starting goaltender Magnus Chrona, team captain Cole Guttman and top prospect Bobby Brink. The chief unknown, however, was how well the new crop of players would mesh with the team. Denver welcomed eight new players onto the team and while graduate transfer Cameron Wright was a known quantity, the Pioneers were also adding four young players drafted by NHL teams.

Early returns were good for Denver as the team shot out of the gate with four wins to open the season. In those matches the offense was overpowering, averaging 6 goals a night and pushing the Pioneers into the top-10 rankings. The once criticism at the time was that Denver had played relatively weak teams. That logic bore out when Denver followed up the quick success with four consecutive losses, all to ranked teams. During the losing streak, Denver's offense went quiet, being limited to just a single goal in three of the games. The mounting defeats also dropped the team down the rankings, and they were nearly out of the top-15 by early November. Each loss had come on the road and Denver's return to the Magness Arena coincided with the team getting back on track. Denver followed up their skid with a seven-game winning streak that included its first victories of the year against a ranked team. Critically, the defense was also able to settle down during the stretch and allowed more than 2 goals against on just one occasion.

Golden Chrona

After concluding the first half of the regular season with a loss to Minnesota Duluth, Denver returned to action with dominating performances against Alaska. Despite vastly outplaying the Nanooks, Denver only managed one win due to subpar performances from Chrona. The mediocre play seemed to drive the Swedish netminder to up his game and he reeled off three consecutive shutouts over the succeeding two weeks. While his performance did eventually cool off, Chrona remained stout in goal and helped Denver produce another long winning streak, this time posting nine victories in a row.

Brink leading the charge

Bobby Brink had gotten off to a decent start, with 21 points in his first 16 games, but it was after returning from the winter break that he got into his groove. From December 31 to February 19, Brink scored at least one point in every game and averaged two per game. He raced to the top of the scoring lead, taking Denver to the top of the national scoring totals with average of just over four and quarter goals per game for the year. While Brink was aided somewhat by the temporary absence of Nathan Smith due to trip to Beijing for the 2022 Winter Olympics, he nevertheless became just the second player in program history and the first in 40 years to lead the nation in scoring.

Young guns

While the Pioneers were led by their upper-classmen, four freshmen were making key contributions to the team's success. Carter Mazur and Massimo Rizzo were both clicking along at more than a point-per-game pace while Sean Behrens and Shai Buium aided an already impressive group on the blueline. Each of the four would eventually end up being named to the convergence All-Rookie Team the most ever for one program in a single year.

Bumps in the road

Denver ended the regular season with a few blemishes on its record. However, due to the difficulty of their schedule, the Pioneers didn't see any real drop to their rankings and were mathematically guaranteed to make the NCAA tournament before the season was over. The small rough patch allowed North Dakota to catch up to the Pioneers in the conference standings, however, Denver was able to keep in contact with the Hawks and earn a regular season co-championship. Since the Pioneers possessed the tie-breaker, Denver was able to open postseason play against the worst team in the conference, Miami. The 3rd-ranked Pioneers made easy work of the RedHawks, outshooting their opponents 82–47 and riding their power play to two comfortable wins.

When the team travelled north to the less-friendly Xcel Energy Center, the Pioneers saw their scoring dry up entirely. In a tremendous goaltending battle between Chrona and Ryan Fanti, Denver was shutout for the first time on the season and saw their hoped for a conference championship evaporate.

Championship run

Denver was one of four western teams to receive a #1 seed for the NCAA Tournament. Due to their campus' proximity to the West Regional in Loveland, Colorado, the Pioneers were the only top seed to play any tournament games close to home.[1] Despite the advantage, the team got a tough fight from Massachusetts Lowell in the opening game. The River Hawks opened the scoring and used strong defensive play to keep the game tied well into the third period. After a penalty-filled sequence in the final frame, Denver was able to score twice and take the match 3–2. The regional final gave Denver an opportunity for revenge when it set them against Minnesota Duluth, who had knocked them out of the NCHC tournament. Similar to their prior meeting, the two teams were a match for one another early in the game and the Bulldogs managed to score first. When Cole Guttman tied the game a few minutes later, however, he ended Fanti's shutout streak that had begun more than three games earlier. The goal gave Denver the momentum entering the second but the Pioneers were unable to get another puck past the UMD netminder in the middle frame. The conference rivals remained knotted at 1-all well into the third period when the puck pin-balled around the Duluth cage before Carter Savoie was able to slip it into the cage for the eventual game-winner.

In the national semifinal, Denver met one of the championship favorites in Michigan who boasted no less than seven 1st-round draft picks. The high level of talent, however, did not stop the Pioneers from taking over the game for long stretches. The Pioneers played a nearly perfect game, outshooting the Wolverines 33–21 and not taking a single penalty in the match but were still unable to put any distance between the two teams. Denver twice took the lead in the match but Michigan tied the score on both occasions, forcing the two into overtime. 15 minutes into the extra session, the hero of the regional final, Carter Savoie, received a pass from Brink and potted the winner on his own rebound to send Denver to the championship game.

National Championship

The final game for the Pioneers came against the top team in the nation, Minnesota State. The Mavericks had been atop the national rankings since mid-January and were one of the top three teams nationally for both offense and defense. In the first two periods, Denver looked outmatched by the veteran lineup and were held scoreless on just 8 shots. Entering the third, the only glimmer of hope for the Pioneers was that they were down by just 1 goal and the team came out flying in the final frame. Ryan Barrow tied the game less than five minutes into the third period and he was soon followed by Michael Benning and Massimo Rizzo. The reversal of fortune was so sudden that Minnesota State seemed unable to get back to their game and the Pioneers carried the play for the remainder of the match. two empty-net goals sealed the game for Denver and the program skated away with its ninth national championship.

Departures

PlayerPositionNationalityCause
Hank CroneForward United StatesTransferred to Northern Michigan
Slava DeminDefenseman United StatesTransferred to Massachusetts
Jack DoremusForward United StatesGraduation (signed with Tulsa Oilers)
Jake DurflingerForward United StatesGraduate Transfer to Merrimack
Bo HansonDefenseman United StatesGraduate Transfer to Northern Michigan
Jaakko HeikkinenForward FinlandGraduation (signed with KooKoo)
Steven JandricForward United StatesGraduate Transfer to Merrimack
Corbin KaczperskiGoaltender United StatesGraduation (signed with Vermilion County Bobcats)
Griffin MendelDefenseman CanadaGraduate Transfer to Quinnipiac
Kohen OlischefskiForward CanadaGraduate Transfer to Providence

Recruiting

PlayerPositionNationalityAgeNotes
Sean BehrensDefenseman United States18Barrington, IL; selected 61st overall in 2021
Shai BuiumDefenseman United States18San Diego, CA; selected 36th overall in 2021
Matt DavisGoaltender Canada20Calgary, AB
Jack DevineForward United States17Glencoe, IL
Carter MazurForward United States19Detroit, MI; selected 70th overall in 2021
Owen OzarForward Canada21Prince Albert, SK
Massimo RizzoForward Canada20Burnaby, BC; selected 216th overall in 2019
Cameron WrightForward Canada23Richmond Hill, ON; graduate transfer from Bowling Green

Roster

As of August 12, 2021.[2]

No.S/P/CPlayerClassPosHeightWeightDoBHometownPrevious teamNHL rights
2IllinoisSean BehrensFreshmanD5' 9" (1.75 m)176 lb (80 kg)2003-03-31Barrington, IllinoisUSNTDP (USHL)COL, 61st overall 2021
3FinlandAntti TuomistoSophomoreD6' 5" (1.96 m)205 lb (93 kg)2001-01-20Pori, FinlandÄssät U20 (Nuorten SM-liiga)DET, 35th overall 2019
4IllinoisJack DevineFreshmanF5' 10" (1.78 m)163 lb (74 kg)2003-10-02Glencoe, IllinoisUSNTDP (USHL)
6MissouriMcKade WebsterSophomoreF5' 10" (1.78 m)170 lb (77 kg)2000-07-28St. Louis, MissouriGreen Bay (USHL)TBL, 213th overall 2019
7British ColumbiaBrett StapleySeniorF5' 10" (1.78 m)177 lb (80 kg)1999-02-23Campbell River, British ColumbiaVernon (BCHL)MTL, 190th overall 2018
8AlbertaCarter SavoieSophomoreF5' 9" (1.75 m)190 lb (86 kg)2002-01-23St. Albert, AlbertaSherwood Park (AJHL)EDM, 100th overall 2020
9SaskatchewanOwen OzarFreshmanF5' 9" (1.75 m)156 lb (71 kg)2000-04-05Prince Albert, SaskatchewanWaterloo (USHL)
13British ColumbiaMassimo RizzoFreshmanF5' 10" (1.78 m)176 lb (80 kg)2001-06-13Burnaby, British ColumbiaCoquitlam (BCHL)CAR, 216th overall 2019
15AlbertaCarter KingSophomoreF5' 10" (1.78 m)178 lb (81 kg)2001-08-30Calgary, AlbertaSurrey (BCHL)
16OntarioCameron WrightGraduateF6' 1" (1.85 m)189 lb (86 kg)1998-08-11Newmarket, OntarioBowling Green (WCHA)
18AlbertaRyan Barrow (A)GraduateF6' 2" (1.88 m)184 lb (83 kg)1997-02-15Banff, AlbertaLangley (BCHL)
19CaliforniaCole Guttman (C)SeniorF5' 9" (1.75 m)169 lb (77 kg)1999-04-06Los Angeles, CaliforniaDubuque (USHL)TBL, 180th overall 2017
20AlbertaMichael BenningSophomoreD5' 8" (1.73 m)178 lb (81 kg)2002-01-05St. Albert, AlbertaSherwood Park (AJHL)FLA, 95th overall 2020
21British ColumbiaReid IrwinSophomoreD6' 1" (1.85 m)178 lb (81 kg)1999-03-01Victoria, British ColumbiaSherwood Park (AJHL)
22TennesseeConnor CaponiSophomoreF5' 9" (1.75 m)186 lb (84 kg)2000-03-20Nashville, TennesseeWaterloo (USHL)
23MinnesotaLane KrenzenJuniorD5' 9" (1.75 m)183 lb (83 kg)1998-02-21Twig, MinnesotaAustin (NAHL)
24MinnesotaBobby Brink (A)JuniorF5' 9" (1.75 m)164 lb (74 kg)2001-07-08Minnetonka, MinnesotaSioux City (USHL)PHI, 34th overall 2019
25Northwest TerritoriesJack WorksSophomoreF6' 0" (1.83 m)185 lb (84 kg)2001-05-23Yellowknife, Northwest TerritoriesOkotoks (AJHL)
26CaliforniaShai BuiumFreshmanD6' 3" (1.91 m)217 lb (98 kg)2003-03-26San Diego, CaliforniaSioux City (USHL)DET, 36th overall 2021
27CaliforniaKyle MayhewSeniorD5' 7" (1.7 m)156 lb (71 kg)1997-12-25Anaheim Hills, CaliforniaFairbanks (NAHL)
28AlbertaBrett EdwardsJuniorF5' 11" (1.8 m)190 lb (86 kg)1998-09-10Grande Prairie, AlbertaDrumheller (AJHL)
30SwedenMagnus ChronaJuniorG6' 5" (1.96 m)207 lb (94 kg)2000-08-28Skellefteå, SwedenSkellefteå J20 (J20 SuperElit)SJS, 152nd overall 2018
31MissouriJack CarusoSophomoreG5' 9" (1.75 m)180 lb (82 kg)1999-06-07St. Louis, MissouriFairbanks (NAHL)
32ManitobaJustin Lee (A)JuniorD6' 0" (1.83 m)185 lb (84 kg)2000-03-14Waskada, ManitobaFargo (USHL)
34MichiganCarter MazurFreshmanD6' 0" (1.83 m)181 lb (82 kg)2002-03-28Jackson, MichiganTri-City (USHL)DET, 70th overall 2021
35AlbertaMatt DavisFreshmanG6' 0" (1.83 m)198 lb (90 kg)2001-06-16Calgary, AlbertaGreen Bay (USHL)

Standings

Conference recordOverall record
GPWLTOTWOTL3/SWPTSGFGAGPWLTGFGA
#1 Denver24186010053985541319117593
#9 North Dakota241761111537858392414111999
#6 Western Michigan2414911014384683926121138101
#11 St. Cloud State2410104121368469371815413397
#5 Minnesota Duluth *2410104112366156422216410993
Omaha24111302103265743821170123102
Colorado College24617121018488736924379116
Miami244191031175410536727294153
Championship: March 19, 2022
† indicates conference regular season champion (Penrose Cup)
* indicates conference tournament champion (Frozen Faceoff Championship Trophy)
Rankings: USCHO.com Top 20 Poll

Schedule and results

DateTimeOpponent#Rank#SiteTVDecisionResultAttendanceRecord
Exhibition
October 26:00 PMLindenwood*#13Magness ArenaDenver, Colorado (Exhibition)  W 9–1  
Regular Season
October 87:07 PMArizona State*#12Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 8–3 4,5541–0–0
October 96:07 PMArizona State*#12Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 4–3 5,6552–0–0
October 157:05 PMat Air Force*#11Cadet Ice ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado ChronaW 4–1 2,6233–0–0
October 166:07 PMAir Force*#11Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado DavisW 8–0 4,9264–0–0
October 225:00 PMat #12 Providence*#8Schneider ArenaProvidence, Rhode Island ChronaL 5–6 2,6374–1–0
October 235:00 PMat #10 Boston College*#8Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsNESNDavisL 1–5 4,5464–2–0
November 56:07 PMat #8 North Dakota#11Ralph Engelstad ArenaGrand Forks, North Dakota ChronaL 1–3 11,0584–3–0 (0–1–0)
November 65:05 PMat #8 North Dakota#11Ralph Engelstad Arena • Grand Forks, North Dakota ChronaL 1–4 11,3374–4–0 (0–2–0)
November 127:07 PM#9 Western Michigan#14Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 5–3 4,5405–4–0 (1–2–0)
November 137:07 PM#9 Western Michigan#14Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 5–2 4,9816–4–0 (2–2–0)
November 197:07 PMMiami#11Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 4–1 4,8827–4–0 (3–2–0)
November 206:07 PMMiami#11Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 7–1 4,9168–4–0 (4–2–0)
December 37:05 PMat Arizona State*#12Oceanside Ice ArenaTempe, Arizona ChronaW 6–2 8919–4–0
December 47:05 PMat Arizona State*#12Oceanside Ice Arena • Tempe, Arizona ChronaW 7–1 91110–4–0
December 106:07 PMat #5 Minnesota Duluth#11AMSOIL ArenaDuluth, Minnesota ChronaW 5–0 5,49211–4–0 (5–2–0)
December 116:07 PMat #5 Minnesota Duluth#11AMSOIL Arena • Duluth, Minnesota ChronaL 2–6 5,55811–5–0 (5–3–0)
December 317:07 PMAlaska*#8Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 7–2 4,17612–5–0
January 16:07 PMAlaska*#8Magness Arena • Denver, ColoradoAltitude 2ChronaT 4–4 OT5,26012–5–1
January 156:00 PM#15 Omaha#6Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 5–2 5,19713–5–1 (6–3–0)
January 166:00 PM#15 Omaha#6Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 4–0 4,20814–5–1 (7–3–0)
January 217:07 PMColorado College#5Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado (Battle for the Gold Pan)CBSNChronaW 5–0 5,66215–5–1 (8–3–0)
January 226:07 PMat Colorado College#5Ed Robson ArenaColorado Springs, ColoradoATTRMChronaW 4–0 3,58816–5–1 (9–3–0)
January 285:05 PMat Miami#5Steve Cady ArenaOxford, Ohio ChronaW 5–4 OT2,20417–5–1 (10–3–0)
January 293:05 PMat Miami#5Steve Cady Arena • Oxford, Ohio ChronaW 4–2 2,68218–5–1 (11–3–0)
February 47:00 PM#7 St. Cloud State#4Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 8–5 4,66119–5–1 (12–3–0)
February 56:00 PM#7 St. Cloud State#4Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 2–0 5,37520–5–1 (13–3–0)
February 117:00 PM#6 Minnesota Duluth#3Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaW 5–3 5,57221–5–1 (14–3–0)
February 126:00 PM#6 Minnesota Duluth#3Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado ChronaL 2–3 5,98421–6–1 (14–4–0)
February 185:00 PMat #6 Western Michigan#3Lawson ArenaKalamazoo, Michigan ChronaW 4–1 3,59322–6–1 (15–4–0)
February 195:00 PMat #6 Western Michigan#3Lawson Arena • Kalamazoo, Michigan ChronaL 4–6 3,60622–7–1 (15–5–0)
February 256:00 PMat Omaha#3Baxter ArenaOmaha, NebraskaCBSSNChronaL 1–5 5,21522–8–1 (15–6–0)
February 266:00 PMat Omaha#3Baxter ArenaOmaha, Nebraska DavisW 5–2 5,63023–8–1 (16–6–0)
March 47:30 PMat Colorado College#3Ed Robson Arena • Colorado Springs, Colorado (Rivalry)ATTRMChronaW 5–0 3,89124–8–1 (17–6–0)
March 57:00 PMColorado College#3Magness Arena • Denver, Colorado (Rivalry) DavisW 5–2 6,32125–8–1 (18–6–0)
NCHC Tournament
March 117:07 PMMiami*#3Magness ArenaDenver, Colorado (Quarterfinal Game 1) ChronaW 5–2 4,25526–8–1
March 126:07 PMMiami*#3Magness ArenaDenver, Colorado (Quarterfinal Game 2) ChronaW 5–1 5,21027–8–1
March 183:07 PMvs. #8 Minnesota Duluth*#3Xcel Energy CenterSaint Paul, Minnesota (Semifinal)CBSSNChronaL 0–2 10,25327–9–1
NCAA Tournament
March 247:00 PMvs. #13 Massachusetts Lowell*#3Budweiser Events CenterLoveland, Colorado (West Regional Semifinal)ESPNUChronaW 3–2 3,13828–9–1
March 262:00 PMvs. #6 Minnesota Duluth*#3Budweiser Events Center • Loveland, Colorado (West Regional Final)ESPNUChronaW 2–1 4,48729–9–1
April 75:00 PMvs. #2 Michigan*#3TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (National Semifinals)ESPN2ChronaW 3–2 OT17,85030–9–1
April 96:00 PMvs. #1 Minnesota State*#3TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (National Championship)ESPN2ChronaW 5–1 17,85031–9–1
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from USCHO.com Poll. All times are in Mountain Time.
Source:[3]

National Championship

(E1) Minnesota State vs. (W1) Denver

April 9, 2022
8:00 PM
(E1) Minnesota State1–5
(1–0, 0–0, 0–5)
(W1) DenverTD Garden
Attendance: 17,850
Game reference
Referees:
Geno Binda Jr.
Jeremy Tufts
Linesmen:
Bill Kingdon
Kevin Briganti
Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stMSUSam Morton (9) – PPSowder and Sandelin13:591–0 MSU
2ndNone
3rdDENRyan Barrow (8)Benning and Devine44:461–1
DENMichael Benning (15) – GWBuium and Wright47:332–1 DEN
DENMassimo Rizzo (12)Mazur and Lee53:343–1 DEN
DENBrett Stapley (18) – ENunassisted57:284–1 DEN
DENCameron Wright (23) – ENMazur58:005–1 DEN
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stDENMichael BenningTripping12:232:00
MSUNathan SmithRoughing15:282:00
2ndMSUBenchToo Many Men27:072:00
3rdMSUSam MortonTripping45:262:00
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
DENMagnus Chrona27160:00
MSUDryden McKay15358:22

Scoring statistics

NamePositionGamesGoalsAssistsPointsPIM
Bobby BrinkRW4114435744
Carter SavoieLW3923224537
Cole GuttmanC4119264526
Brett StapleyC4118254354
Michael BenningD4115233814
Carter MazurLW4114243844
Massimo RizzoC3912243648
Cameron WrightLW4123113412
Sean BehrensD373262912
Ryan BarrowF418132112
Jack DevineRW363161916
Shai BuiumD393151812
Justin LeeD383131630
McKade WebsterLW39681419
Carter KingF3638112
Kyle MayhewD40291119
Antti TuomistoD3518921
Connor CaponiF3641537
Reid IrwinC/D2011215
Lane KrenzenD40114
Owen OzarF210116
Jack CarusoG10000
Matt DavisG60000
Jack WorksF100000
Brett EdwardsF210000
Magnus ChronaG370000
Total175318493500

[4]

Goaltending statistics

NameGamesMinutesWinsLossesTiesGoals AgainstSavesShut OutsSV %GAA
Matt Davis627531091081.9231.96
Magnus Chrona3721872881777856.9112.11
Empty Net-21---7----
Total4124833191938937.9062.25

Rankings

PollWeek
Pre12345678910111213141516171819202122232425 (Final)
USCHO.com13 (1)12 (1)11 (1)8 (1)111114111212118765 (1)5 (1)4 (1)3 (4)3 (2)3 (2)33 (1)3 (1)3-1 (50)
USA TodayNR131181213NR1211111086 (1)6 (1)6 (2)5 (2)3 (3)3 (3)3 (1)3 (1)33 (3)2 (4)43 (5)1 (34)

Note: USCHO did not release a poll in week 24.[5]

Awards and honors

PlayerAwardRef
Michael BenningNCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player[6]
Bobby BrinkAHCA West First Team All-American[7]
Bobby BrinkNCHC Player of the Year[8]
Carter MazurNCHC Rookie of the Year[8]
Bobby BrinkNCHC Forward of the Year[8]
Magnus ChronaThree Stars Award[8]
Bobby BrinkNCHC First Team[9]
Michael BenningNCHC Second Team[10]
Carter Savoie
Sean BehrensNCHC Rookie Team[11]
Shai Buium
Carter Mazur
Massimo Rizzo
Magnus ChronaNCAA All-Tournament Team[6]
Michael Benning
Carter Savoie
Ryan Barrow

Players drafted into the NHL

2022 NHL Entry Draft

RoundPickPlayerNHL team
256Rieger LorenzMinnesota Wild
367Miko MitikkaArizona Coyotes
390Aidan ThompsonChicago Blackhawks
499Garrett BrownWinnipeg Jets
7221Jack DevineFlorida Panthers

† incoming freshman[12]

References

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