I watched the BC-Minnesota game last night and I have a few comments: Is this going to be the last year of the Freeze-Out? A game as huge as this one was, and the stands looked completely empty when the game started! Maybe it was because it was the early game, but there didn't seem to be many more fans by the time the game ended. MSU-Tor wasn't shown here, so I don't know what the crowd was like for that game. BC-Minn was a game that tried desperately to be fast-paced and should have been, except for the fact that the officiating was just not very good, especially for a game of this caliber. The linesmen missed offsides calls all night, and the referee refused to let the two teams, neither of which are anywhere near "cheap", play this game out - he kept calling penalties for borderline infractions that would have been let go by 99% of the referees I know. On both teams. This tended to slow the game down since every two or three minutes something was being called. It's too bad that had to happen. This game would have been remembered as one of the best of the season had it been played in Minnesota or Boston, with some fans and a referee who knew what he was doing. Finally, to compliment this, the two guys announcing the game were THE WORST I have ever heard in my life. I don't remember their names, but I bet I'll have to suffer through them again tonight for BC-MSU. I got the feeling they were basketball announcers doing hockey for a night or two. Every shot that didn't go in the net was "no good"; on a turnover, a team moved up ice "on the fast break". They also criticized both teams for allowing the opponents to take shots from the point on the power play - God forbid! I am convinced the sum total of these guys' hockey knowledge came from watching the Kings since the Great One arrived two years ago. The first period, they were almost silent as they couldn't figure out who was who. "And now, Minnesota with the puck...and the Eagles take it away." They also let Minnesota have it for moving the puck too much on the power play and not taking shots. Every time they passed to another guy, the announcer would say, "There's a shot...there's a shot..." (shots they supposedly should have taken) Of course, what might have had just a little bit to do with the low number of shots was that BC is a very good penalty-killing team and they covered the Gophers pretty well. Hey, these are two of the best teams in the country! Don't blink your eyes, you might miss them. At any rate, this is the fourth straight time I've seen these two teams play, and the result wasn't unexpected (a close game). They match up very well, and if not for BC's great defense in the third, the Gophers would have come back to win. BC forced Minnesota to take mostly long shots which LaGrand saw, and any rebounds were knocked away quickly by the D. Stolp also played well in the Minnesota net and can probably only be faulted for Emma's goal in the first when he was a little out of position. Both of Heinze's goals (one shorthanded) in the second came about because of lackadaisical defense. Likewise, Hankinson's goal that made it 1-0 UM in the first was partly LaGrand's and partly his teammates' fault. Hankinson broke away from an Eagle behind the net and sneaked over to LaGrand's left, where he jammed in a cross-ice pass that LaGrand was a spectator on. It looked like LaGrand let the pass go because he didn't realize Hankinson was there and he probably expected the puck to just go to the corner. I think this goal helped him get his head in the game, though. I don't know if the Freeze-Out is a very big success. Measured on quality of play, it looks like it will be; measured on turnout - probably not. If the LA fans don't want college hockey, no sense in trying to force it down their throats. If you're going to get three of the top teams in US college hockey together for a tourney, at least make it someplace where REAL fans will appreciate it. I would have liked to go. - mike (a graduate, at last) p.s. enjoy the holidays, everyone! p.p.s. This is not directed at the displaced hockey fans who *did* make the game or at the fans who traveled out to LA to see their teams play.