2023–24 Boston University Terriers men's ice hockey season

The 2023–24 Boston University Terriers Men's ice hockey season was the 102nd season of play for the program and 40th in Hockey East. The Terriers represented Boston University in the 2023–24 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, played their home games at Agganis Arena and were coached by Jay Pandolfo in his 2nd season.

2023–24 Boston University Terriers
men's ice hockey season
NCAA Tournament, National Semifinal
Conference2nd Hockey East
Home iceAgganis Arena
Rankings
USCHO.com#3
USA Today#3
Record
Overall28–10–2
Conference18–4–2
Home14–2–0
Road10–4–2
Neutral2–4–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachJay Pandolfo
Assistant coachesJoe Pereira
Kim Brandvold
Brian Daccord
Captain(s)Case McCarthy
Alternate captain(s)
Boston University Terriers men's ice hockey seasons
« 2022–23 2024–25 »

Season

Long before the start of the season, Jay Pandolfo pulled off a recruiting coup by getting top prospect Macklin Celebrini to commit to BU.[1] With Celebrini, as well as several NHL draft picks being added to a club that had just made the Frozen Four, Boston University was seen by many as the prohibitive favorite for the national championship and entered the season with the #1 ranking.[2] Despite much of the attention being focused elsewhere, much of BU's success would depend upon the success of transfer Mathieu Caron. The former Brown netminder was an experienced college starter but had yet to play as many games or as difficult a schedule as he was sure to face with the Terriers.

The team had a less than stellar start, dropping two of their first three games while Caron appeared like he wasn't ready for prime time. However, by the end of October, both he and the defense settle down and the team started looking like the championship contender that many were expecting. Wins over top teams like North Dakota, Maine and Quinnipiac allowed the Terriers to climb back towards the top of the polls and they were in the top 5 by the time they paused for the winter break.

Upon their return, the team picked up right where they had left off and continued to pile up the wins. By late January, the Terriers were on a 12–1 run and set to take on cross-town rival Boston College. For the first time in the history, the two teams would meet ranked as the top two teams in the nation and the match was broadcast in both the United States and Canada (an extreme rarity for a regular season game).[3] Unfortunately for the Terriers, the team was unable to solve the BC defense and fell 1–4 in the first game (thanks to two empty-net goals). The second match saw a bit more offense but BU was unable to get a lead in the match. The Eagles used the nation's #2 offense to great effect and scored 4 goals on just 25 shots. The sweep dropped BU down to #3 but they didn't have long to wait to get revenge as the Beanpot was just a week away.

Celebrini got BU an early lead with 2 goals before seven minutes had elapsed. After BC cut the lead in half, the Terriers scored twice more, this time thanks to Luke Tuch, and took a commanding lead with just 15 minutes left in the match. BU had to fend off a furious comeback attempt and surrendered two markers but managed to hold onto their lead and advance to the tournament championship. In another internationally televised game, BU widely outplayed Northeastern but they weren't able to get any separation from the Huskies. Despite outshooting NU 23–8 in the first two periods, BU was only a goal ahead goin into the third. The Huskies raised their level of play and tied the match in the final frame to force overtime. Again, in the 3-on-3 extra session, BU was obviously the better of the two, keeping control of the puck for most of the overtime. With under 30 seconds to play, Tom Willander misplayed a loose puck and Northeastern was able to get a clean shot from the left circle that beat Caron and win in a stunning upset.[4]

Though disappointed by the loss, BU was still a virtual lock to make the NCAA tournament and they got right back to their winning ways. The team redoubled its efforts on defense and finished the year with 5 straight wins. The Terriers entered the playoffs as the #2 team in the nation and were guaranteed a #1 seed in the NCAA tournament no matter what happened in the conference playoffs. BU's first postseason game gave them another chance at revenge when Northeastern arrived for the quarterfinal match. The Huskies season was on the line but that didn't stop the Terriers from building a 3-goal lead with a strong second period. The team began to show some nerves when Northeastern scored twice to cut the lead down to 1 but Celebrini ended the come back attempt with his 30th goal of the season just 26 seconds later to turn the game's momentum. After ending the Huskies' season, BU headed to the TD Garden where another rival, Maine, awaited. Caron played a strong game in goal stopping 32 of 33 shots with the only Black Bear marker coming on the power play. BU, on the other hand, was more economical with their offense and scored four times on 18 shots. Celebrini assisted on three scores, including the empty net goal with under 30 seconds to play.[5]

The championship game set BU against BC for the fourth time that season and the #1 seed was once again on the line. However, the Terriers got into penalty trouble in the game and BC made them pay. The Eagles scored four goals on the man-advantage and there was little BU could do to overcome that self-inflicted handicap.[6] The loss left Boston University as the #2 team and, due to a confluence of NCAA seeding rules, forced the Terriers to be placed into the West Regional bracket.[7]

Opening the tournament 1,000 miles from home, the Terriers took on RIT. The Tigers got off to a quick start but Caron kept the puck out of the goal in the first 10 minutes. BU was able to score twice in the first to take a solid lead but a power play goal from RIT halved the lead by the time the first intermission rolled around. BU then dominated play in the middle period and were able to double their lead heading into the third. After Jack Harvey scored the 5th goal for the Terriers, the team pulled back their offense and tried to just bleed the clock down. the two teams each scored in the final 5 minutes but that didn't chance the game's outcome and BU moved on to the regional final.[8]

Facing the team that had eliminated them the year before, BU got off to a decent start against Minnesota but that were not able to solve the Gopher goaltender for the first quarter of the game. Minnesota, on the other hand, seemed to have Caron's number and scored twice in the first period. Shortly after their second goal, Quinn Hutson had the puck knocked off of his stick but it rolled towards the goal. The puck somehow leaked through the pads of the Minnesota netminder for BU's first of the game. The lucky break caused the floodgates to open in the second period and BU scored three times. A third Minnesota goal left BU with a 1-goal lead but they managed to defend their advantage well in the third. Both teams had chances in the final period but neither was able to score until Minnesota pulled their goaltender. BU collected 2 empty-net goals in the final two minutes to take the game and made the frozen four for the second year in a row.[9]

Luke Tuch opened the scoring with a short-handed marker in the first. Denver continued its unexpected run of strong defense to limit the Terriers afterwards, however, that was a sideshow for the main feature of the game. The Terriers never got a single power play in the game while Denver went on the man-advantage four separate times. Several times in the match, obvious infractions by the Pioneers were missed and each provoked increasingly loud groans from the crowd. Towards the end of the game, head coach Jay Pandolfo was so irate with the officials that he could be heard screaming on the telecast. The only thing that kept BU in the game was a sensational game from Caron that saw the goaltender make multiple miraculous saves. BU had several chances to score both in regulation and overtime but they could not get a second goal into the Denver cage. Eventually, the team's luck ran out and a hard shot from the right circle slipped through Caron's legs for the winning goal.[10]

Departures

PlayerPositionNationalityCause
Jamie ArmstrongForward  CanadaGraduate transfer to Boston College
Matt BrownForward  United StatesGraduation (signed with Lehigh Valley Phantoms)
Brian CarrabesForward  United StatesTransferred to Minnesota State
Drew CommessoGoaltender  United StatesSigned professional contract (Chicago Blackhawks)
John CopelandDefenseman/Forward  United StatesGraduation (signed with Worcester Railers)
Sean DriscollDefenseman  United StatesGraduation (retired)
Vinny DuplessisGoaltender  CanadaTransferred to Quinnipiac
Domenick FensoreDefenseman  United StatesGraduation (signed with Carolina Hurricanes)
Lachlan GetzDefenseman  United StatesTransferred to Michigan Tech
Jay O'BrienForward  United StatesGraduation (signed with Toronto Marlies)
Ethan PhillipsForward  United StatesGraduate transfer to Western Michigan
Patrick SchenaGoaltender  United StatesGraduation (retired)
Wilmer SkoogForward  SwedenGraduation (signed with Charlotte Checkers)

Recruiting

PlayerPositionNationalityAgeNotes
Mathieu CaronGoaltender  Canada23Abbotsford, BC; transfer from Brown
Aiden CelebriniDefenseman  Canada18Vancouver, BC; selected 171st overall in 2023
Macklin CelebriniForward  Canada17Vancouver, BC
Mick FrechetteDefenseman  United States19Weston, MA
Jack GortonForward  United States21Granite Springs, NY
Henry GrahamGoaltender  United States23Manhattan, NY; transfer from Massachusetts
Doug GrimesForward  United States21Brookline, MA
Jack HarveyForward  United States20Stacy, MN; selected 193rd overall in 2023
Nick HowardGoaltender  United States25Burlington, MA; transfer from Saint Anselm
Jack HughesForward  United States19Westwood, MA; transfer from Northeastern; selected 51st overall in 2022
Shane LachanceForward  United States20Burlington, MA; selected 186th overall in 2021
Gavin McCarthyDefenseman  United States18Clarence Center, NY; selected 86th overall in 2023
Tom WillanderDefenseman  Sweden18Stockholm, SWE; selected 11th overall in 2023

Roster

As of September 21, 2023.[11]

No.S/P/CPlayerClassPosHeightWeightDoBHometownPrevious teamNHL rights
2 Gavin McCarthyFreshmanD6' 1" (1.85 m)185 lb (84 kg)2005-06-02Clarence Center, New YorkMuskegon (USHL)BUF, 86th overall 2023
3 Tristan AmonteJuniorF6' 0" (1.83 m)177 lb (80 kg)2000-02-01Norwell, MassachusettsPenticton (BCHL)
4 Ty GallagherJuniorD6' 0" (1.83 m)190 lb (86 kg)2003-03-06Clarkston, MichiganNTDP (USHL)BOS, 217th overall 2021
5 Tom WillanderFreshmanD6' 1" (1.85 m)179 lb (81 kg)2005-02-09Stockholm, SwedenRögle BK (SHL)VAN, 11th overall 2023
7 Case McCarthy (C)GraduateD6' 1" (1.85 m)202 lb (92 kg)2001-01-09Clarence Center, New YorkNTDP (USHL)NJD, 118th overall 2019
8 Cade Webber (A)SeniorD6' 7" (2.01 m)215 lb (98 kg)2001-01-05Meadville, PennsylvaniaPenticton (BCHL)CAR, 99th overall 2019
9 Ryan GreeneSophomoreF6' 1" (1.85 m)180 lb (82 kg)2003-10-21Paradise, Newfoundland and LabradorGreen Bay (USHL)CHI, 57th overall 2022
10 Nick ZabanehSeniorF5' 10" (1.78 m)188 lb (85 kg)2001-03-27Toronto, OntarioGreen Bay (USHL)
11 Luke Tuch (A)SeniorF6' 2" (1.88 m)210 lb (95 kg)2002-03-07Baldwinsville, New YorkNTDP (USHL)MTL, 47th overall 2020
12 Jack HarveyFreshmanF5' 10" (1.78 m)176 lb (80 kg)2003-03-31Stacy, MinnesotaChicago (USHL)TBL, 193rd overall 2023
13 Dylan PetersonSeniorF6' 4" (1.93 m)203 lb (92 kg)2002-01-08Roseville, CaliforniaNTDP (USHL)STL, 86th overall 2020
14 Mick FrechetteFreshmanD6' 2" (1.88 m)205 lb (93 kg)2003-10-27Weston, MassachusettsDexter Southfield (USHS–MA)
15 Lachlan GetzSophomoreD6' 3" (1.91 m)190 lb (86 kg)2002-02-01Northfield, IllinoisChilliwack (BCHL)
16 Jeremy WilmerSophomoreF5' 8" (1.73 m)155 lb (70 kg)2003-08-16Rockville Centre, New YorkTri-City (USHL)
17 Quinn HutsonSophomoreF5' 10" (1.78 m)170 lb (77 kg)2002-01-01North Barrington, IllinoisMuskegon (USHL)
18 Shane LachanceFreshmanF6' 5" (1.96 m)218 lb (99 kg)2003-08-30Andover, MassachusettsYoungstown (USHL)EDM, 186th overall 2021
19 Jack PageJuniorD6' 4" (1.93 m)194 lb (88 kg)2001-11-27West Chester, PennsylvaniaRockets (NCDC)
20 Lane Hutson (A)SophomoreD5' 9" (1.75 m)155 lb (70 kg)2004-02-14North Barrington, IllinoisNTDP (USHL)MTL, 62nd overall 2022
21 Devin KaplanSophomoreF6' 3" (1.91 m)204 lb (93 kg)2004-01-10Bridgewater, New JerseyNTDP (USHL)PHI, 69th overall 2022
22 Aiden CelebriniFreshmanF6' 1" (1.85 m)195 lb (88 kg)2004-10-26Vancouver, British ColumbiaBrooks (AJHL)VAN, 171st overall 2023
23 Doug GrimesFreshmanF6' 3" (1.91 m)205 lb (93 kg)2002-04-18Brookline, MassachusettsLincoln (USHL)
25 Sam Stevens (A)GraduateF6' 1" (1.85 m)186 lb (84 kg)2000-04-27Montreal, QuebecSioux Falls (USHL)
26 Jack GortonFreshmanF6' 3" (1.91 m)200 lb (91 kg)2002-02-13Granite Springs, New YorkVictoria (BCHL)
27 Jack HughesJuniorF6' 0" (1.83 m)165 lb (75 kg)2003-11-02Westwood, MassachusettsNortheastern (HEA)LAK, 51st overall 2022
28 Thomas JarmanSeniorD6' 3" (1.91 m)190 lb (86 kg)2001-04-09Gibsonia, PennsylvaniaMaryland (NAHL)
29 Nick HowardGraduateG6' 0" (1.83 m)210 lb (95 kg)1998-02-01Burlington, MassachusettsSaint Anselm (NE–10)
30 Henry GrahamSeniorG6' 0" (1.83 m)181 lb (82 kg)2000-07-25Manhattan, New YorkMassachusetts (HEA)
62 Mathieu CaronJuniorG6' 0" (1.83 m)190 lb (86 kg)2000-03-29Abbotsford, British ColumbiaBrown (ECAC)
71 Macklin CelebriniFreshmanF6' 0" (1.83 m)190 lb (86 kg)2006-06-13Vancouver, British ColumbiaChicago (USHL)

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 77:05 pmat Bentley*#1Bentley ArenaWaltham, MassachusettsFloHockeyCaronW 3–2 OT2,2001–0–0
October 137:00 pmat New Hampshire#1Whittemore CenterDurham, New HampshireESPN+, NESNCaronL 4–6 6,0701–1–0 (0–1–0)
October 147:00 pmat USNTDP*#1Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Exhibition)ESPN+GrahamL 2–8 4,815
October 207:00 pmat Notre Dame*#6Compton Family Ice ArenaNotre Dame, IndianaPeacockCaronL 1–4 4,3871–2–0
October 216:00 pmat Notre Dame*#6Compton Family Ice ArenaNotre Dame, IndianaPeacockCaronW 8–2 4,5082–2–0
October 277:00 pm#19 Massachusetts#9Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 5–2 5,1723–2–0 (1–1–0)
October 287:00 pmat #19 Massachusetts#9Mullins CenterAmherst, MassachusettsESPN+CaronT 3–3 SOW4,5893–2–1 (1–1–1)
November 37:00 pm#3 North Dakota*#9Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 3–2 4,3904–2–1
November 47:00 pm#3 North Dakota*#9Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronL 4–5 OT4,9684–3–1
November 107:15 pmat Massachusetts Lowell#9Tsongas CenterLowell, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 3–2 5,7485–3–1 (2–1–1)
November 117:00 pmMassachusetts Lowell#9Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 6–1 4,8196–3–1 (3–1–1)
November 177:00 pm#9 Maine#8Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry)ESPN+, NESNCaronW 3–2 4,3937–3–1 (4–1–1)
November 186:00 pm#9 Maine#8Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry)ESPN+CaronW 5–4 5,8588–3–1 (5–1–1)
November 225:00 pm#3 Quinnipiac*#5Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 3–2 5,2969–3–1
November 258:00 pmvs. #16 Cornell*#5Madison Square GardenNew York, New York (Red Hot Hockey)ESPN+CaronL 1–2 15,2899–4–1
December 17:30 pmat Merrimack#4J. Thom Lawler RinkNorth Andover, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 4–1 2,73410–4–1 (6–1–1)
December 26:00 pmMerrimack#4Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 5–2 5,74711–4–1 (7–1–1)
December 297:00 pmat Yale*#2Ingalls RinkNew Haven, ConnecticutESPN+CaronW 6–1 2,87112–4–1
January 57:00 pmSimon Fraser*#2Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Exhibition)ESPN+LacroixT 1–1 SOW2,701
January 97:00 pmNortheastern#2Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 4–3 OT4,24813–4–1 (8–1–1)
January 137:00 pm#16 New Hampshire#2Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 3–0 5,35914–4–1 (9–1–1)
January 197:00 pmat Vermont#1Gutterson FieldhouseBurlington, VermontESPN+CaronW 5–1 3,64015–4–1 (10–1–1)
January 207:00 pmat Vermont#1Gutterson FieldhouseBurlington, VermontESPN+CaronW 5–2 3,48616–4–1 (11–1–1)
January 267:00 pmat #2 Boston College#1Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Rivalry)NESN, ESPN+, TSN2CaronL 1–4 7,88416–5–1 (11–2–1)
January 277:00 pm#2 Boston College#1Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry)NESN, ESPN+CaronL 3–4 6,15016–6–1 (11–3–1)
January 306:30 pmat Northeastern#3Matthews ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPNU, TSNCaronL 3–4 OT4,00916–7–1 (11–4–1)
February 27:00 pmat #18 New Hampshire#3Whittemore CenterDurham, New HampshireESPN+CaronW 6–3 6,50117–7–1 (12–4–1)
Beanpot
February 58:00 pmvs. #1 Boston College*#3TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot Semifinal, Rivalry)NESNCaronW 4–3 17,85018–7–1
February 97:00 pmMerrimack#3Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsNESN, ESPN+CaronW 7–1 5,40419–7–1 (13–4–1)
February 127:30 pmvs. Northeastern*#3TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot Championship Game)NESN, TSN3, TSN5CaronL 3–4 OT19–8–1
February 167:00 pmat #10 Providence#3Schneider ArenaProvidence, Rhode IslandESPN+CaronT 2–2 SOL2,86519–8–2 (13–4–2)
February 177:00 pm#10 Providence#3Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 5–2 5,85620–8–2 (14–4–2)
February 237:00 pmat Connecticut#2Toscano Family Ice ForumStorrs, ConnecticutESPN+CaronW 6–1 2,69121–8–2 (15–4–2)
February 247:00 pmConnecticut#2Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 6–0 5,85722–8–2 (16–4–2)
March 77:00 pmat #11 Providence#2Schneider ArenaProvidence, Rhode IslandESPN+CaronW 4–2 2,49823–8–2 (17–4–2)
March 94:00 pmVermont#2Agganis ArenaBoston, MassachusettsESPN+CaronW 6–1 5,59724–8–2 (18–4–2)
Hockey East Tournament
March 167:30 pmNortheastern*#2Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Quarterfinal)ESPN+CaronW 4–2 5,45525–8–2
March 227:30 pmvs. #7 Maine*#2TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Semifinal, Rivalry)ESPN+, NESNCaronW 4–1 17,85026–8–2
March 237:30 pmvs. #1 Boston College*#2TD GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Championship, Rivalry)ESPN+, NESNCaronL 2–6 17,85026–9–2
NCAA Tournament
March 285:00 pmvs. #17 RIT*#2Denny Sanford PREMIER CenterSioux Falls, South Dakota (West Regional Semifinal)ESPNUCaronW 6–3 5,69127–9–2
March 305:30 pmvs. #7 Minnesota*#2Denny Sanford PREMIER CenterSioux Falls, South Dakota (West Regional Final)ESPNUCaronW 6–3 6,11328–9–2
April 115:00 pmvs. #3 Denver*#2Xcel Energy CenterSt. Paul, Minnesota (National Semifinal)ESPN2CaronL 1–2 OT 28–10–2
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from USCHO.com Poll. All times are in Eastern Time.
Source:[12]

NCAA tournament

Regional semifinal

March 28, 2024
4:00 pm
(1) Boston University6–3
(2–1, 2–1, 2–1)
(4) RITDenny Sanford Premier Center
Attendance: 5,691
Game reference
Mathieu CaronGoaliesTommy ScarfoneReferees:
Bruce Vida
Brady Johnson
Linesmen:
Tyler Landman
Nathan Voll
(M. Celebrini, Kaplan) Lane Hutson (14) – 11:561–0
(unassisted) Ryan Greene (12) – 13:012–0
2–115:40 – PP – Elijah Gonsalves (20) (Wilde, Cassaro)
(L. Hutson, Kaplan) Sam Stevens (9) – 28:163–1
3–235:20 – Gianfranco Cassaro (18) (Nicholson)
(Peterson, Zabaneh) Macklin Celebrini (32) – GW – 37:014–2
(Lachance, Willander) Jack Harvey (6) – 41:295–2
(Willander, Zabaneh) Dylan Peterson (8) – EN – 55:466–2
6–359:03 – Cody Laskosky (4) (Catalano, Blom)
6 minPenalties6 min
33Shots31

Regional final

March 30, 2024
5:30 pm
(1) Boston University6–3
(1–2, 3–1, 2–0)
(2) MinnesotaDenny Sanford Premier Center
Attendance: 6,113
Game reference
Mathieu CaronGoaliesJusten CloseReferees:
Cameron Lynch
Jason Williams
Linesmen:
Steve Drain
John Rey
0–17:19 – Jaxon Nelson (19) (Brodzinski, Rinzel)
0–217:47 – Bryce Brodzinski (14) (Pitlick)
(unassisted) Quinn Hutson (18) – 18:011–2
(M. Celebrini, Harvey) Shane Lachance (13) – 21:172–2
(M. Celebrini, Lachance) Jack Harvey (7) – 25:253–2
3–329:20 – Aaron Huglen (14) (Lamb, L. Mittelstadt)
(Peterson, C. McCarthy) Lane Hutson (15) – GW – 35:364–3
(Willander) Case McCarthy (4) – EN – 58:155–3
(M. Celebrini) Sam Stevens (10) – EN – 59:286–3
0 minPenalties0 min
38Shots28

National semifinal

April 11, 2024
4:00 pm
(W1) Boston University1–2 (OT)
(1–0, 0–1, 0–0, 0–1)
(NE1) DenverXcel Energy Center
Attendance: 18,598
Game reference
Mathieu CaronGoaliesMatt DavisReferees:
Colin Kronforst
Andrew Bruggeman
Linesmen:
Samuel Shikowsky
Tommy George
(G. McCarthy) Luke Tuch (10) – SH – 7:451–0
1–135:21 – Tristan Lemyre (2) (Matikka)
1–271:09 – GW – Tristan Broz (16) (Behrens)
10 minPenalties2 min
34Shots29

Scoring statistics

NamePositionGamesGoalsAssistsPointsPIM
Macklin CelebriniC3832326418
Lane HutsonD3815344924
Quinn HutsonRW4018183635
Ryan GreeneC401224366
Jeremy WilmerLW386303619
Luke TuchLW3910203010
Shane LachanceLW4013142712
Tom WillanderD384212512
Devin KaplanRW375182334
Dylan PetersonC358122073
Jack HughesC387121912
Sam StevensF401071734
Nicholas ZabanehC40881636
Jack HarveyF2078154
Case McCarthyD3945910
Aiden CelebriniD3615620
Cade WebberD3806630
Gavin McCarthyD3814541
Ty GallagherD3705514
Doug GrimesRW232132
Mick FrechetteD70222
Nick HowardG10000
Max LacroixG10000
Thomas JarmanD10000
Henry GrahamG20000
Tristan AmonteF80000
Mathieu CaronG400002
Total163285448460

[13]

Goaltending statistics

NameGamesMinutesWinsLossesTiesGoals AgainstSavesShut OutsSV %GAA
Nick Howard10:06000000-0.00
Henry Graham25:160000201.0000.00
Max Lacroix211:120000601.0000.00
Mathieu Caron402402:25281029410172.9152.35
Empty Net-15:57---3----
Total402434:56281029710252.9142.39

Rankings

PollWeek
Pre1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526 (Final)
USCHO.com1 (17)1 (26)6 (1)99985 (1)4(8)2 (8)2 (9)2 (3)1 (12)1 (40)333 (11)2222223
USA Today1 (16)2 (16)6 (1)9888552 (6)2 (7)2 (5)2 (3)1 (27)1 (25)333 (2)22222223

Note: USCHO did not release a poll in weeks 11 and 25.[14]
Note: USA Today did not release a poll in week 12.

References