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University of Minnesota DuluthBulldogs
Celebration (NoDak)
Clint Austin (Duluth News-Tribune)
Neal Pionk celebrates with Karson Kuhlman after Kuhlman's second-period goal Saturday
0
North Dakota UND 5-2-0)(0-2-0 NCHC
3
Winner Minnesota Duluth UMD 5-1-2)(2-0-0 NCHC
North Dakota UND
5-2-0)(0-2-0 NCHC
0
Final
3
Minnesota Duluth UMD
5-1-2)(2-0-0 NCHC
Winner
Score By Periods
Team 1 2 3 F
North Dakota UND 0 0 0 0
Minnesota Duluth UMD 0 3 0 3

Game Recap: Men's Hockey |

SPECIAL TEAMS DELIVER AS NO. 2 UMD SEALS SERIES SWEEP OF TOP-RANKED NORTH DAKOTA

Special teams were just that -- special -- for the University of Minnesota Duluth Saturday night.

The No 1 Bulldogs scored twice shorthanded and once on the power play and skated out of AMSOIL Arena with a 3-0 victory over top-ranked University of North Dakota. A sellout crowd of 6,759 witnessed UMD's first two-game series sweep of the Fighting Hawks since Jan. 27-28, 1995.

UMD, which made its 2016-17 National Collegiate Hockey Conference debut on Friday night by taking down the Fighting Hawks 5-2, did all of its scoring in the second period. That started at the 11:24 mark with a wicked wrister from the topof the left faceoff circle from sophomore right winger Karson Kuhlman that whistled past North Dakota netminder Cam Johnson while the Fighting Hawks were a man up. Four minutes later with UMD on the power play, senior defenseman Carson Soucy went top shelf for his first goal of the season. With 59 seconds to go before the intermission break, senior left winger Kyle Osterberg finished off a perfect tic-tac-toe sequence with Kuhlman and senior defenseman Willie Raskob to hike the Bulldog lead to 3-0.

That was more than enough for Bulldog rookie Hunter Miska, who posted the second shutout of his five-game career and UMD's first blanking of North Dakota in over seven years (Alex Stalock in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association Final Five tourney on March 20, 2009. Miska (4-0-0) and the Bulldogs killed off all seven of the Fighting Hawks' power play opportunities. UMD, which was outshot 30-25, went 1-for-5 with the man advantage.

"This was a big challenge for us after last night's win to see if we could take that next step," said UMD head coach Scott Sandelin, who Bulldogs improved to 5-1-2 overall. "I thought North Dakota played much harder tonight -- there wasn't a lot of room out there.  Once again, it was important to get that first goal. Our special teams came up big and our penalty killers were outstanding all weekend. Hunter had a nice game and we did enough to get a key win."

UMD, which has won nine of its last 10 games at AMSOIL Arena going back to last March, will be on the road next weekend for a pair of NCHC bouts with St. Cloud State University.







 
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