2023–24 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season

The 2023–24 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season was the 102nd season of play for the program and the 40th in Hockey East. The Eagles represented Boston College in the 2023–24 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, played their home games at Kelley Rink and were coached by Greg Brown in his 2nd season.

2023–24 Boston College Eagles
men's ice hockey season
Hockey East Regular Season, Champion
Hockey East tournament, Champion
NCAA tournament, Runner-Up
Conference1st Hockey East
Home iceKelley Rink
Rankings
USCHO.com#2
USA Today#2
Record
Overall34–6–1
Conference20–3–1
Home16–2–0
Road12–2–1
Neutral6–2–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachGreg Brown
Assistant coachesMike Ayers
Brendan Buckley
Brent Darnell
Captain(s)Eamon Powell
Alternate captain(s)Jack Malone
Mike Posma
Gentry Shamburger
Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey seasons
« 2022–23 2024–25 »

Season

The addition of six NHL draft picks, including three first-rounders, was a huge boost to the Eagles' outlook entering the season. Despite finishing with a losing record the year before, the team was #6 in the preseason rankings because of a revamped roster in which more than half of the lineup was new players.[1] BC didn't have to wait long for their first big test when they opened the season against the defending national champions, Quinnipiac. The Eagles played well, particularly on defense, but it was Jacob Fowler who portended a good season early. The freshman goaltender stopped 29 shots en route to an overtime win and had Boston College off and running.

The offense began to get into gear after the opening match and soon the Eagles became one of the top offensive teams in the nation. This was primarily thanks to the all-freshman line of Ryan Leonard, Gabe Perreault and Will Smith who were not only a terror at even strength but helped BC produce the #2 power play in the nation. The Eagles suffered their first loss of the season when they met Denver, another championship hopeful, and the two power play goals that BC allowed convinced the team to redouble its efforts. For the remainder of the season, BC surrendered just 14 power play goals on 126 opportunities, posting the best penalty kill in the nation.[2] The team's special teams came up big in the next game when they took on a resurgent Michigan State squad and killed off 6 of 7 penalties to down the Spartans then scored two on the power play in the rematch to sweep the weekend series. By handling the #8 team in the nation, BC was able to earn its first #1 ranking of the season.

Mid-November saw the team stumble a bit as they lost a series to Maine when they scored just 4 goals in 2 games. The games showed a possible flaw with the team that the Eagles might be a bit too top heavy. After their freshman line, the Eagles had a good second line, headlined by sophomore Cutter Gauthier, but after that the scoring dropped off precipitously. The three freshman were responsible for three of the goals against the Black Bears while the fourth came on the power play. This demonstrated that the team was still vulnerable if the other three lines had off nights, but that was a very small crack in the Eagles' facade.

Over the next two and a half months, the Eagles went 12–2 and regained the #1 spot three separate times. The final time was thanks to BC taking down hated rival Boston University with a weekend sweep that saw the two teams face one another as #1 and #2 for the first time in history.[3] The first match was so anticipated that it was broadcast in Canada, an exceedingly rare event for a regular season game. The defense was key for the win in game 1 as Fowler allowed just one goal while two empty-netters turned a tight battle into a rout. More offense was needed in game two and, fortunately, BC was able to get contributions from outside the freshman line. 4 goals were enough to give BC a lead it could defend against one of the top offensive teams in the nation and firmly plant itself as the top team in the country.

Just over a week later, the Terriers were able to get revenge by knocking BC out in the Beanpot Semifinal. The Eagles weren't able to hold off the likely top pick in the upcoming NHL draft, Macklin Celebrini, for three consecutive games and lost their chance at ending the program's 8-year Beanpot drought. The team appeared to take the loss personally and played an inspired brand of hockey for the rest of the season. Boston College won their last 9 regular season games, many by wide margins, and marched into their conference playoff atop all national rankings.

At the time, the Eagles were guaranteed to receive one of the four #1 seed in the NCAA tournament but top spot would only be ensured if they kept on winning. Everything looked good for BC when they opened against Connecticut. The team had a 3-goal lead just 8 minutes into the game and then tried to cruise to the win. The Huskies, however, were not content to just lay down and led BC soar to the win. UConn scored three goals in just under 5 minutes at the start of the third to tie the game and shock the partisan crowd. Graduate transfer Jack Malone scored a few minutes later to give BC the lead once more and enabled the Eagles to escape disaster. After the narrow win, Boston College punished Massachusetts in the Semifinal. The top line scored four times and Gauthier raised his total to a nation-leading 34 when he capped off the eight-goal deluge on the power play.[4] The championship once more pitted BC vs. BU with the #1 overall seed on the line. The Eagles' power play decided the match with Boston College scoring four times on the man-advantage Smith finished the game with 4 goals and was named as the tournament MVP.[5]

With the unanimous #1 ranking in hand, Boston College entered the NCAA tournament as the prohibitive favorite. They began their climb with the best possible matchup and faced a relatively weak Michigan Tech team that had earned its appearance only by winning a conference championship. Despite being heavily favored in the game, BC was stymied in the first 40 minutes of the game. Though the team had the lead, the Eagles scored just twice on 21 shots and Tech was behind by only a single marker. However, in the third period the Huskies' game began to crumble and the superior talent on BC started to show through. Boston College scored four goals in final period, two on the power play, and ran away with the game late.[6]

In the regional final, BC faced off against Quinnipiac for the second time on the season. The Bobcats were keen to defend their championship and got a solid game from their goaltender early on. All 15 BC shots in the first period were turned aside and that allowed Quinnipiac to score the first two goals in the first two minutes of the second period. A power play allowed Leonard to cut the lead in half just seconds later while Andre Gasseau tied the score just past the halfway point of the game. The teams exchanged scores in the final minutes of the period to leave both with 3 goals each. The Bobcats scored their second power play goal of the game at the start of the third and then played an oppressive brand of forechecking that kept BC hemmed in their own end. The Eagles were hardly able to get a shot on goal over the next 15 minutes and just when it looked like the team might see their season come to an end, The Eagles were finally able to get an open look at the net and Aram Minnetian fired the puck in from the high slot. Quinnipiac turned up the pressure in overtime and with his team reeling, Greg Brown called a timeout just 2 minutes into the extra session to give the Eagles a break. The ploy worked as Boston College got back on the offensive and began to attack the Bobcat cage. A shot from the point was tipped by Colby Ambrosio and caught Quinnipiac's goaltender by surprise. He lost his balance and was unable to freeze the puck. One of the Bobcat defenders tried to clear the puck out of the crease but it landed right on the stick of Malone, who shot it right into the cage for the winning goal.[7]

Boston College was back in the Frozen Four for the first time since 2016 and were set against Michigan. The two teams were among the best offensive clubs in the nation with the Wolverines being the only team better on the man-advantage. However, Boston College was a far superior team on the defensive side of the puck and they proved as much over course of the game. Michigan was unable to get a single goal past Fowler and went empty on four power plays in the game. The stellar goaltending meant that Smith's goal, just 80 seconds into the game, stood as the winning marker but the team scored three more for good measure.[8]

The relative ease at which BC had vanquished Michigan again convinced many that the Eagles were the best team in the nation but they had one final impediment standing between them and the national championship: Denver. The Pioneers were the top scoring team in the nation but they had been relatively quiet on the offensive side of the puck in the tournament thus far. Denver had won three consecutive 2–1 decisions thanks to a surprisingly strong performance from their goaltender but they were about to face the #2 offense in the nation. However, BC quickly discovered why the Pios had reached the championship game when they were held to just 12 shots in the first two periods. Worse, Denver was able to score twice in the second to take a 2-goal lead into the third period. In the final 20 minutes, the Boston College offense awoke and began to assault the Denver cage with shot after shot. The puck got on goal 23 times in the final frame but nothing got past the Denver goaltender. Despite their furious finish, BC was shutout for the first time all season and the team watched helplessly as the Pioneers claimed the championship.[9]

Departures

PlayerPositionNationalityCause
Cade AlamiDefenseman  United StatesTransferred to Arizona State
Mitch AndresDefenseman  United StatesGraduate transfer to Robert Morris
Matt ArgentinaForward  United StatesReturned to juniors (Chilliwack Chiefs)
Mitch BensonGoaltender  CanadaGraduation (signed with Iowa Heartlanders)
Cam BurkeForward  United StatesGraduation (retired)
Jack DempseyForward  United StatesLeft program (retired)
Liam IzykForward  CanadaTransferred to Sacred Heart
Trevor KuntarForward  United StatesSigned professional contract (Boston Bruins)
Jack MoffattGoaltender  United StatesGraduation (retired)
Nikita NesterenkoForward  United StatesSigned professional contract (Anaheim Ducks)
Christian O'NeillForward  United StatesGraduation (retired)
Seamus PowellDefenseman  United StatesReturned to juniors (Dubuque Fighting Saints)
Dylan SilversteinGoaltender  United StatesReturned to juniors (Sioux City Musketeers)
Marshall WarrenDefenseman  United StatesGraduate transfer to Michigan
Henry WilderGoaltender  United StatesTransferred to Colorado College

Recruiting

PlayerPositionNationalityAgeNotes
Jamie ArmstrongForward  United States25Warwick, RI; graduate transfer from Boston University
Timmy DelayForward  United States20Hingham, MA
Drew FortescueDefenseman  United States18Pearl River, NY; selected 90th overall in 2023
Jacob FowlerGoaltender  United States18Melbourne, FL; selected 69th overall in 2023
Ryan LeonardForward  United States18Amherst, MA; selected 8th overall in 2023
Nolan JoyceDefenseman  United States20Dedham, MA
Jan KorecGoaltender  Slovakia19Bratislava, SVK
Jack MaloneForward  United States22Danville, CA; graduate transfer from Cornell; selected 180th overall in 2019
Aram MinnetianDefenseman  United States18Woodcliff Lake, NJ; selected 125th overall in 2023
Alex MusielakGoaltender  United States20Buffalo, NY
Gabe PerreaultForward  Canada18Sherbrooke, QC; selected 23rd overall in 2023
Will SmithForward  United States18Lexington, MA; selected 4th overall in 2023
Will VoteForward  United States18Arlington, MA

Roster

As of October 2, 2023.[10]

No.S/P/CPlayerClassPosHeightWeightDoBHometownPrevious teamNHL rights
1 Jacob FowlerFreshmanG6' 2" (1.88 m)214 lb (97 kg)2004-11-24Melbourne, FloridaYoungstown (USHL)MTL, 69th overall 2023
2 Eamon Powell (C)SeniorD5' 11" (1.8 m)173 lb (78 kg)2002-05-10Marcellus, New YorkNTDP (USHL)TBL, 116th overall 2020
3 Nolan JoyceFreshmanD6' 1" (1.85 m)192 lb (87 kg)2003-09-25Dedham, MassachusettsChicago (USHL)
4 Charlie LeddySophomoreD6' 2" (1.88 m)185 lb (84 kg)2004-01-11Fairfield, ConnecticutUSNTDP (USHL)NJD, 126th overall 2022
5 Drew FortescueFreshmanD6' 2" (1.88 m)170 lb (77 kg)2005-04-28Pearl River, New YorkUSNTDP (USHL)NYR, 90th overall 2023
6 Will SmithFreshmanF6' 0" (1.83 m)181 lb (82 kg)2005-03-17Lexington, MassachusettsUSNTDP (USHL)SJS, 4th overall 2023
7 Aidan HreschukJuniorD5' 11" (1.8 m)178 lb (81 kg)2003-02-19Long Beach, CaliforniaUSNTDP (USHL)CBJ, 94th overall 2021
8 Lukas GustafssonSophomoreD5' 10" (1.78 m)190 lb (86 kg)2002-12-16Atlanta, GeorgiaChicago (USHL)
9 Ryan LeonardFreshmanF6' 0" (1.83 m)192 lb (87 kg)2005-01-21Amherst, MassachusettsUSNTDP (USHL)WSH, 8th overall 2023
11 Colby AmbrosioSeniorF5' 9" (1.75 m)174 lb (79 kg)2002-08-07Welland, OntarioTri-City (USHL)COL, 118th overall 2020
12 Mike Posma (A)JuniorF6' 0" (1.83 m)183 lb (83 kg)2001-12-04Pomona, New YorkOmaha (USHL)
13 Jack Malone (A)GraduateF6' 1" (1.85 m)193 lb (88 kg)2000-10-13Madison, New JerseyCornell (ECAC)VAN, 180th overall 2019
14 Gentry Shamburger (A)SeniorF6' 0" (1.83 m)196 lb (89 kg)2000-09-29Atlanta, GeorgiaAvon Old Farms (USHS–CT)
15 Jacob BengtssonSeniorD6' 3" (1.91 m)202 lb (92 kg)1999-05-08Stockholm, SwedenWaterloo (USHL)
17 Aram MinnetianFreshmanD5' 11" (1.8 m)194 lb (88 kg)2005-03-19Woodcliff Lake, New JerseyUSNTDP (USHL)DAL, 125th overall 2023
18 Paul DaveySophomoreF6' 2" (1.88 m)195 lb (88 kg)2003-01-11Greenwich, ConnecticutDes Moines (USHL)
19 Cutter GauthierSophomoreF6' 2" (1.88 m)201 lb (91 kg)2004-01-19Scottsdale, ArizonaNTDP (USHL)PHI, 5th overall 2022
21 Oskar JellvikSophomoreF5' 11" (1.8 m)180 lb (82 kg)2003-02-08Täby, SwedenDjurgårdens J20 (J20 Nationell)BOS, 149th overall 2021
22 Will VoteFreshmanF5' 8" (1.73 m)161 lb (73 kg)2005-02-22Arlington, MassachusettsUSNTDP (USHL)
23 Will TraegerSophomoreF5' 8" (1.73 m)172 lb (78 kg)2002-04-10Mendota Heights, MinnesotaJersey (NCDC)
24 Andre GasseauSophomoreF6' 4" (1.93 m)215 lb (98 kg)2003-07-03Garden Grove, CaliforniaFargo (USHL)BOS, 213th overall 2021
25 Jamie ArmstrongGraduateF6' 2" (1.88 m)192 lb (87 kg)1998-08-07Warwick, Rhode IslandBoston University (HEA)
27 Connor JoyceJuniorF6' 0" (1.83 m)168 lb (76 kg)2001-07-06Dedham, MassachusettsConnecticut (NCDC)
28 Timmy DelayFreshmanF6' 1" (1.85 m)170 lb (77 kg)2003-06-16Hingham, MassachusettsChilliwack (BCHL)
30 Jan KorecFreshmanG6' 1" (1.85 m)185 lb (84 kg)2004-09-28Bratislava, SlovakiaDes Moines (USHL)
31 Alex MusielakFreshmanG6' 4" (1.93 m)183 lb (83 kg)2003-07-23Buffalo, New YorkKemptville (CCHL)
34 Gabe PerreaultFreshmanF5' 11" (1.8 m)165 lb (75 kg)2005-05-07Sherbrooke, QuebecUSNTDP (USHL)NYR, 23rd overall 2023

Standings

Conference recordOverall record
GPWLTOTWOTLSWPTSGFGAGPWLTGFGA
#2 Boston College †*242031101611055641346118389
#3 Boston University2418421115710453402810216397
#10 Maine241491010447667372312211994
#16 Providence241194312376658351813410083
#13 Massachusetts24121024203657623720143108105
#20 New Hampshire2412111100366956362015110690
Northeastern249141130306571361716311397
Connecticut249141111294977361519290105
Vermont247143103265281351319387106
Merrimack246171011216285351321198114
Massachusetts Lowell24417314018397836824472113
Championship: March 23, 2024
† indicates regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion (Lamoriello Trophy)
Rankings: USCHO Division I Men's Poll

Schedule and results

DateTimeOpponent#Rank#SiteTVDecisionResultAttendanceRecord
Regular Season
October 77:00 pmat #2 Quinnipiac*#6M&T Bank ArenaHamden, ConnecticutESPN+FowlerW 2–1 OT3,7001–0–0
October 137:00 pmLong Island*#4Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 4–2 7,3082–0–0
October 207:00 pmRensselaer*#3Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 6–1 5,8023–0–0
October 217:00 pm#2 Denver*#3Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerL 3–4 7,8843–1–0
October 267:00 pm#8 Michigan State*#3Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 6–4 5,1954–1–0
October 277:00 pm#8 Michigan State*#3Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 5–1 7,8845–1–0
November 37:00 pmMassachusetts Lowell#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 3–2 6,6086–1–0 (1–0–0)
November 46:05 pmat Massachusetts Lowell#1Tsongas CenterLowell, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 3–2 6,1637–1–0 (2–0–0)
November 107:00 pmat #13 Maine#1Alfond ArenaOrono, MaineESPN+FowlerL 2–4 5,0437–2–0 (2–1–0)
November 117:00 pmat #13 Maine#1Alfond ArenaOrono, MaineESPN+FowlerT 2–2 SOW5,0437–2–1 (2–1–1)
November 177:00 pmConnecticut#4Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 5–4 OT6,1278–2–1 (3–1–1)
November 187:00 pmat Connecticut#4Toscano Family Ice ForumStorrs, ConnecticutESPN+FowlerW 3–0 2,6309–2–1 (4–1–1)
November 245:00 pmat #18 Notre Dame*#2Compton Family Ice ArenaNotre Dame, Indiana (Rivalry)PeacockFowlerW 6–1 5,12610–2–1
November 261:00 pmat Harvard*#2Bright-Landry Hockey CenterBoston, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 4–1 2,90311–2–1
December 17:00 pmNortheastern#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerL 3–5 7,88411–3–1 (4–2–1)
December 28:00 pmat Northeastern#1Matthews ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 3–1 4,39212–3–1 (5–2–1)
December 94:30 pm#9 Providence#2тConte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+, NESNFowlerW 5–4 7,88413–3–1 (6–2–1)
January 127:00 pm#9 Providence#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 7–1 7,48914–3–1 (7–2–1)
January 136:00 pmat #9 Providence#1Schneider ArenaProvidence, Rhode IslandESPN+FowlerL 3–4 2,90414–4–1 (7–3–1)
January 197:00 pmat Merrimack#2J. Thom Lawler RinkNorth Andover, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 6–4 2,67415–4–1 (8–3–1)
January 211:00 pmMerrimack#2Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+, NESNFowlerW 6–2 6,64016–4–1 (9–3–1)
January 267:00 pm#1 Boston University#2Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Rivalry)ESPN+, NESN, TSN2FowlerW 4–1 7,88417–4–1 (10–3–1)
January 277:00 pmat #1 Boston University#2Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry)NESN, ESPN+FowlerW 4–3 6,15018–4–1 (11–3–1)
February 27:15 pmat Massachusetts Lowell#1Tsongas CenterLowell, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 6–1 6,42119–4–1 (12–3–1)
Beanpot
February 58:00 pmvs. #3 Boston University*#1TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot Semifinal, Rivalry)NESNFowlerL 3–4 17,85019–5–1
February 97:00 pm#17 New Hampshire#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 6–1 6,60820–5–1 (13–3–1)
February 124:30 pmvs. Harvard*#1TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot Consolation Game)NESNKorecW 5–0 21–5–1
February 167:00 pmat #11 Massachusetts#1Mullins CenterAmherst, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 5–1 8,41222–5–1 (14–3–1)
February 181:00 pm#11 Massachusetts#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 6–4 7,00823–5–1 (15–3–1)
February 237:00 pmVermont#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+, NESNFowlerW 7–1 7,24624–5–1 (16–3–1)
February 247:00 pmVermont#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 4–2 6,55925–5–1 (17–3–1)
March 17:00 pmat #17 New Hampshire#1Whittemore CenterDurham, New HampshireESPN+FowlerW 5–3 6,50126–5–1 (18–3–1)
March 35:00 pm#17 New Hampshire#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, MassachusettsESPN+FowlerW 1–0 5,40227–5–1 (19–3–1)
March 97:00 pmat Merrimack#1J. Thom Lawler RinkNorth Andover, MassachusettsESPN+KorecW 6–4 2,74728–5–1 (20–3–1)
Hockey East Tournament
March 167:30 pmConnecticut*#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Quarterfinal)ESPN+, NESN+FowlerW 5–4 6,70529–5–1
March 224:00 pmvs. #13 Massachusetts*#1TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Semifinal)ESPN+, NESNFowlerW 8–1 17,85030–5–1
March 237:30 pmvs. #2 Boston University*#1TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Championship, Rivalry)ESPN+, NESNFowlerW 6–2 17,85031–5–1
NCAA Tournament
March 292:00 pmvs. #20 Michigan Tech*#1Amica Mutual PavilionProvidence, Rhode Island (East Regional Semifinal)ESPNUFowlerW 6–1 6,98832–5–1
March 314:00 pmvs. #8 Quinnipiac*#1Amica Mutual PavilionProvidence, Rhode Island (East Regional Final)ESPN2FowlerW 5–4 OT5,83533–5–1
April 118:30 pmvs. #10 Michigan*#1Xcel Energy CenterSaint Paul, Minnesota (National Semifinal)ESPN2FowlerW 4–0 18,59834–5–1
April 136:00 pmvs. #3 Denver*#1Xcel Energy Center • Saint Paul, Minnesota (National Championship)ESPN2FowlerL 0–2 18,69434–6–1
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from USCHO.com Poll. All times are in Eastern Time.
Source:[11]

NCAA Tournament

Regional semifinal

March 29, 2024
2:00 pm
(1) Boston College6–1
(1–1, 1–0, 4–0)
(4) Michigan TechAmica Mutual Pavilion
Attendance: 6,988
Game reference
Jacob FowlerGoaliesBlake PietilaReferees:
Ryan Hersey
Nathan Wieler
Linesmen:
Tyler Liffrig
Erik Contino
(Jellvik, Powell) Cutter Gauthier (36) – 0:361–0
1–112:55 – SH – Max Koskipirtti (4) (unassisted)
(Malone, Hreschuk) Ryan Leonard (28) – GW – 26:572–1
(Malone, Powell) Connor Joyce (12) – 44:473–1
(Smith, Leonard) Oskar Jellvik (13) – 45:354–1
(Gauthier, Powell) Ryan Leonard (29) – PP – 47:585–1
(Jellvik, Leonard) Cutter Gauthier (37) – PP – 51:256–1
21 minPenalties31 min
38Shots24

Regional final

March 31, 2024
4:00 pm
(1) Boston College5–4 (OT)
(0–0, 3–3, 1–1, 1–0)
(3) QuinnipiacAmica Mutual Pavilion
Attendance: 5,835
Game reference
Jacob FowlerGoaliesVinny DuplessisReferees:
Brandon Schmitt
Nicholas Krebsbach
Linesmen:
Dana Penkivech
Jeff Schultz
0–121:19 – PPJacob Quillan (16) (Treloar, Lee)
0–221:54 – Iivari Räsänen (4) (unassisted)
(Gauthier, Powell) Ryan Leonard (30) – PP – 22:201–2
(Jellvik, Gustafsson) Andre Gasseau (12) – 31:352–2
2–335:59 – Christophe Fillion (12) (Legault, Räsänen)
(Smith, Powell) Ryan Leonard (31) – 37:553–3
3–440:18 – PPJacob Quillan (17) (Graf, Legault)
(Gauthier, Jellvik) Aram Minnetian (3) – 55:164–4
(unassisted) Jack Malone (12) – GW – 63:065–4
8 minPenalties10 min
32Shots30

National semifinal

April 11, 2024
8:10 pm
(E1) Boston College4–0
(1–0, 2–0, 1–0)
(MW3) MichiganXcel Energy Center
Attendance: 18,598
Game reference
Jacob FowlerGoaliesJake BarczewskiReferees:
Ryan Hersey
Nathan Wieler
Linesmen:
Tyler Liffrig
Erik Contino
(Leonard, Perreault) Will Smith (24) – 1:201–0
(Perreault, Gustafsson) Will Smith (25) – 32:252–0
(unassisted) Cutter Gauthier (38) – 33:143–0
(unassisted) Gabe Perreault (19) – 45:034–0
8 minPenalties6 min
22Shots32

National Championship

April 13, 2024
5:00 pm
(E1) Boston College0–2
(0–0, 0–2, 0–0)
(NE1) DenverXcel Energy Center
Attendance: 18,694
Referees:
Joe Carusone
C. J. Hanafin
Linesmen:
Ryan Knapp
Patrick Dapuzzo
Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stno scoring
2ndDUTristan Broz (17) – GWLorenz, Buckberger29:421–0 DU
DURieger Lorenz (16)Z. Buium, Behrens35:162–0 DU
3rdno scoring
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stno penalties
2ndBCMike PosmaBoarding24:312:00
3rdDUMcKade WebsterHolding41:292:00
DUJack DevineTripping52:062:00
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
DUMatt Davis35060:00
BCJacob Fowler24257:23

Scoring statistics

NamePositionGamesGoalsAssistsPointsPIM
Will SmithC4125467114
Cutter GauthierC/LW4138276518
Ryan LeonardC4131296038
Gabe PerreaultRW3619416029
Oskar JellvikC/LW4113294216
Eamon PowellD40533388
Andre GasseauC4012172927
Jack MaloneC/RW4112132512
Lukas GustafssonD413131622
Aidan HreschukD412131532
Jacob BengtssonD403111418
Jamie ArmstrongLW32571217
Aram MinnetianD4036929
Mike PosmaC/LW4126823
Will VoteRW201784
Colby AmbrosioC4026810
Drew FortescueD4044836
Charlie LeddyD3908812
Connor JoyceC352466
Gentry ShamburgerF301128
Jacob FowlerG390220
Jan KorecG40000
Will TraegerC80002
Nolan JoyceD40000
Total183319502393

[12]

Goaltending statistics

NameGamesMinutesWinsLossesTiesGoals AgainstSavesShut OutsSV %GAA
Jan Korec4136:592004451.9181.75
Jacob Fowler392326:3332618310383.9262.14
Empty Net-13:52---2----
Total412477:2434618910834.9242.16

Rankings

PollWeek
Pre1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526 (Final)
USCHO.com64 (2)3 (4)3 (1)1 (36)1 (30)4 (2)2 (6)1 (18)(4)1 (34)1 (34)1 (37)2 (12)2 (6)1 (47)1 (48)1 (24)1 (50)1 (50)1 (50)1 (50)1 (50)1 (50)2
USA Today653 (1)31 (27)1 (25)3 (2)(11)1 (18)3 (1)1 (26)1 (28)1 (28)2 (6)2 (7)1 (34)1 (34)1 (22)1 (34)1 (34)1 (34)1 (34)1 (34)1 (34)1 (34)2

Note: USCHO did not release a poll in weeks 11 or 25.[13]Note: USA Today did not release a poll in week 12.

References