UNH, which gained one of the three automatic berths to the NCAAs by capturing the Hockey East tournament title for a third consecutive year, extended its winning streak to 13 games and unbeaten streak to 19 games (18-0-1) to improve to 33-3-1 and advance to the Frozen Four. The Wildcats will play Minnesota-Duluth, a 5-4 winner vs.
Jennifer Hitchcock (
UNH goaltender Kayley Herman (
The Saints, who were 6-2 victors against UNH in last year’s NCAA quarterfinal matchup at the Whittemore Center, took a 1-0 lead at 4:39 of the opening stanza when Sabrina Harbec’s shot from the right circle deflected off a UNH defenseman’s skate to an unmarked Carson Duggan, who deposited the puck into an open net.
Midway through the first period, Guckian stopped Kelly Paton (Woodstock, Ontario) on the right circle, then slid across the crease to turn aside Jenn Wakefield’s (Pickering, Ontario) bid from the opposite circle.
Minutes later, a UNH turnover behind its own net created Duggan’s wraparound shot, but Herman maintained her position on the post for the save. With UNH on the power play at 14:20, Guckian stopped Hitchcock on a redirection in the slot and Sam Faber (
In the opening minutes of the second period, Marianna Locke maneuvered through the slot only to be denied by Herman and at the other end of the ice, an SLU turnover gave Steph Holmes (Rye, N.Y.) a chance a the top of the crease, but Guckian made the stop. The Saints quickly moved the puck up the ice and Herman denied Karell Emard from close range.
Courtney Birchard (
One minute later, SLU nearly regained the lead. Herman stopped Duggan at the right doorstep, then slid across the crease in time to deny Harbec at the left post.
The ‘Cats generated three more dangerous scoring opportunities the rest of the stanza. At 12:45, Leah Craig (
SLU carried a 2-1 lead into the third period and gained power plays at 3:37 and 6:49, but the Wildcats penalty kill – ranked No. 1 in the nation – allowed just a total of two shots while shorthanded for that four-minute span.
In the 12th minute on the UNH power play, a screened shot from the high slot by Martine Garland (
The Wildcats had one last rush in the closing seconds of regulation and Paton’s backhander from the right circle was turned aside by Guckian.
UNH is now unbeaten in its last 11 overtime games at 4-0-7; the ‘Cats are 2-0-1 in OT this season. This marked the Wildcats’ first OT game in four NCAA tourney games and the team’s first postseason overtime game since the 2005 Hockey East semifinals.
The 33 victories ties the program benchmark for single-season wins that was established by the 2006 Wildcats.







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