
Hutson brothers send BU men's hockey to third straight Frozen Four with 3-2 overtime win against Cornell
03/29/2025 09:29 PM
For one brief moment, the Huntington Center was silent. Quinn Hutson didn't even realize it.
"I just threw one on net, and I just kinda froze," Quinn said.
Hutson's shot from the blue line hit the net behind Cornell goaltender Ian Shane — and for a brief moment, the Huntington Center was silent.
Then, the crowd exploded. Shane's helmet hit the ice, and his teammates knelt down beside him. The Boston University men's hockey team emptied the bench and mobbed the corner of the ice. The Terriers were headed to St. Louis.
"For the past few years, we were really confident in ourselves. It could have gone any way this year," Quinn said. "We’re battling. I wouldn’t say much has changed. We're just all coming together at the right time again."
Quinn's game-winning overtime goal to defeat Cornell 3-2 on Saturday evening in the Toledo Regional Final sent the Terriers (23-13-2) to their third-consecutive Frozen Four in head coach Jay Pandolfo's third year at the helm.
"It starts with our leadership group," Pandolfo said. "Those guys understanding what it takes and what it means to get to this point leads our younger players, and I think it’s really important. It's a special group, and I'm proud of them."
In as evenly matched of a game as one will find, the Terriers, whose inconsistency has been a hallmark, started the game "ready to play," Pandolfo said.
An unorthodox first period lasted nearly an hour with two video reviews, a pair of fluky goals and a five-minute major. The Big Red (19-11-6), playing with house money after Thursday's 4-3 upset of No. 2 overall seed Michigan State, established a defensive presence early.
The Terriers took a tripping penalty less than two minutes in. Cornell answered with a penalty of their own, but nothing came of the early back-and-forth play.
After the Big Red killed the penalty, forward Dalton Bancroft fired a shot on goaltender Mikhail Yegorov. Instead, the puck hit linemate Ryan Walsh, deflecting it into the net. While initially waved off for a hand pass, video review overturned the ruling for a 1-0 Cornell lead at 7:35.
"We come from behind in a lot of games all year," Quinn said. "We don’t get nervous when we go down."
Just over a minute later, BU's Matt Copponi drove through the heart of the Cornell defense, pushing the puck towards Shane. He stretched his left leg out to stop the initial shot, but the puck deflected off a Cornell skate and into the net. Copponi's second tournament goal, scored at 8:47 of the first, evened the game at 1-1.
The Big Red began to push, and BU, the NCAA leader in penalty minutes, took a slashing penalty credited to Jack Hughes. Cornell kept applying pressure with six straight shots, but Yegorov held strong, ending the night with 37 saves.
After a scuffle late in the first, Walsh was assessed a five-minute major for face-masking after a review. As the period expired, however, Devin Kaplan took a slashing penalty to nullify two minutes of the man-advantage.
The second period was mundane in comparison. The Big Red killed off the rest of the major penalty, successfully keeping BU's top-five power play quiet.
Each team had its respective push with a bevy of chances. Shane, who made several point-blank saves, ended with 40 on the game.
After Cornell took a penalty at the end of the second period, the Terriers' lethal power play struck 34 seconds in the third period.
Cole Hutson circled the offensive zone before sniping a goal into the top shelf from an near-impossible angle. Hutson's sixth point of the tournament gave BU a 2-1 edge.
"When he wants to try to take the game over, he’s capable of it," Pandolfo said. "He’s tough to defend. Until you play against him, you don’t know what to expect."
After Cole downplayed the goal in the press conference, Pandolfo added, "He called his number there on that play. I’m just gonna tell you right now," with a smile.
Hutson, who was named Regional's Most Outstanding Player, has been a part of all but five of BU's 11 goals this tournament. The NCAA freshman points leader took blame for the team's struggles midway through the season.
"I like to think I've done decent," Cole said when asked about his second-half performance. "I don’t think I’ve quite owed it fully back to the team yet, and hopefully we can chase down a National Championship."
When Cornell's back was against the wall in the regional semifinals, the team continued to play its style of hockey while Michigan State was caught on its heels. The Big Red had the formula to come back, but could they execute it twice?
Copponi took a tripping penalty at 11:08, and while the Terriers killed it off, Cornell had all the momentum they needed.
With the puck bouncing around the BU zone, Cornell's Jack O'Leary collected it and whipped it past Yegorov. Cornell head coach Mike Schafer's miracle retirement run had one more push with the game-tying goal at 14:30.
The Huntington Center's edition of Red Hot Hockey was going to overtime.
As bonus hockey began, Cornell fired off a number of grade-A chances on Yegorov. Then, on the other end of the ice, Quinn Hutson rifled a shot from the top of the offensive zone that broke past Shane at 6:25 of overtime.
The top line of Ryan Greene-Shane Lachance-Quinn Hutson was on the ice at the time of the overtime winner — all three contributed a point to the game-winning goal.
"That’s what you learn about our players and our team," Pandolfo said. "I knew that they wanted to get that goal back, and they did."
The Terriers will play in the Frozen Four in St. Louis with the first semifinal game scheduled for April 10, against winner of the Allentown Regional Final between UConn and Penn State.
"When you have success two years in a row and get to the Frozen Four, it’s a big deal," Pandolfo said. "But when you don’t finish a job off, it’s disappointing, and you want to have that opportunity again."