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DU Pioneers win 11th national championship at Frozen Four behind Johnny Hicks’ 29 saves

The freshman sensation in net carried the Pioneers early before two late goals delivered DU a record-extending national title

Johnny Hicks #31 of the Denver Pioneers celebrates with Garrett Brown #5 and Boston Buckberger #9 after the victory against the Wisconsin Badgers in the NCAA Division I men's ice hockey championship game at T-Mobile Arena on April 11, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Johnny Hicks #31 of the Denver Pioneers celebrates with Garrett Brown #5 and Boston Buckberger #9 after the victory against the Wisconsin Badgers in the NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey championship game at T-Mobile Arena on April 11, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
DENVER, CO - SEPTEMBER 25: Denver Post Avalanche writer Corey Masisak. (Photo By Patrick Traylor/The Denver Post)
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LAS VEGAS — Matty, meet Johnny.

Two years after Matthew Davis put together a legendary run to help the University of Denver claim its record 10th national title, Pioneers freshman Johnny Hicks has done the same to capture No. 11.

Hicks made 29 saves, carrying his club for more than 45 minutes before the Pios finally sprung to life in a 2-1 victory Saturday afternoon at T-Mobile Arena against Wisconsin. This came two nights after a 49-save effort to outlast No. 1 national seed Michigan in a double-overtime semifinal win.

“I feel like I’m kind of at a loss for words,” Hicks said. “I’m just so proud of this group. We worked so hard for this and now that it’s here, it’s amazing.”

Still just 5-foot-10 regardless of how tall he has stood when it mattered for the Pios, Hicks is now 16-0-1 as the DU starter. The Pioneers finished this season on a 17-game winning streak, and the last two victories were equally improbable.

DU has now won three of the past five national titles, reaching the mountaintop in 2022, 2024 and 2026. The Pioneers’ 11 titles are now two more than any other NCAA program.

“It is in the walls,” Pios defenseman Cale Ashcroft said. “It’s the people that come through this program. We’re pushing each other to be better. We all have the same goals. At the start of the year, it is said that we want to win a national championship, and we’ll do anything to do it.”

Senior forward Rieger Lorenz found a breakthrough for the Pios at 7:31 of the third period. Kristian Epperson, who set up Kent Anderson’s double-overtime winner two nights ago, sent the puck to Garrett Brown for a slapshot from near the left circle. Lorenz battled in front and found just enough space to shovel home the rebound for his 17th goal of the season.

Freshman Kyle Chyzowski scored the championship winner at 14:08. He got a piece of a Boston Buckberger shot for his 13th goal of the year — and his third straight NCAA tournament contest with a tally.

Quinn Finley #19 of the Wisconsin Badgers looks to shoot the puck between Johnny Hicks #31 and Eric Jamieson #15 of the Denver Pioneers during the first period of the NCAA Division I men's ice hockey championship game at T-Mobile Arena on April 11, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Quinn Finley #19 of the Wisconsin Badgers looks to shoot the puck between Johnny Hicks #31 and Eric Jamieson #15 of the Denver Pioneers during the first period of the NCAA Division I men's ice hockey championship game at T-Mobile Arena on April 11, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

It had been all Wisconsin to that point. The shots on goal were 25-6 in favor of the Badgers before Brown’s shot. Wisconsin clearly looked like a fresher team for the first 45 minutes, dominating in both possession time and the shot clock, but Hicks continued to write his incredible story by keeping DU in this one.

“He’s the best goalie in college hockey,” Ashcroft said. “Not much else to say about it. He’s undefeated. He’s phenomenal. He works so hard, so it’s awesome to see him have this success.”

Freshman center Vasily Zelenov put Wisconsin on the board at 6:24 of the opening period. He skated into the Pios zone on the left side and wired a wrist shot through a screen to beat Hicks. A seventh-round pick by the Buffalo Sabres in the 2024 NHL draft, it was Zelenov’s sixth goal of the season.

The Pioneers reached the title game with an instant classic, a double-overtime 4-3 win on Thursday against top-seeded Michigan. Hicks made 25 of his 49 saves after Clarke Caswell scored with 2:46 remaining in regulation to even the score at 3-3. Wisconsin played in the earlier game Thursday, knocking off No. 2-seeded North Dakota with a 2-1 victory.

Wisconsin, like DU, had a mid-season swoon. The Badgers lost six straight contests at one point — weekend sweeps by Penn State, Michigan State and Minnesota. They also lost 7-1 to Ohio State in the Big Ten tournament, but rebounded to win the Worcester Regional with a stunning comeback win against No. 3 seed Michigan State in the regional final.

But, just when it seemed like Wisconsin’s unlikely championship story was being written, DU just found a way.

“That’s a great question,” forward Kieran Cebrian said when asked how the Pios always seem to do that. “I think everyone in here trusts each other. We all want to play for each other and keep it going. I think the belief we have in each other is the biggest thing.”

Denver forward Kyle Chyzowski (16) celebrates after scoring against Wisconsin in the third period of the championship game at the NCAA Frozen Four men's college hockey tournament Saturday, April 11, 2026, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)
Denver forward Kyle Chyzowski (16) celebrates after scoring against Wisconsin in the third period of the championship game at the NCAA Frozen Four men's college hockey tournament Saturday, April 11, 2026, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)

The Pios finish the season at 29-11-3. DU was stuck in a 1-6-1 funk when starting goaltender Quentin Miller went down with an injury early in a Jan. 24 game against St. Cloud State. Hicks came in, helped the Pios to a 6-0 win, and outside of some cramping issues the next weekend, took off to become one of the great stories in college hockey this season.

When he gets a moment to start scrolling through his phone, Hicks will probably have a text massage from Davis waiting for him — one Denver hockey legend to another.

“We’ve been texting throughout the last few weeks,” Hicks said. “He’s just been wishing me the best of luck. It’s means a lot to have a relationship with a goaltender like that. Same with Magnus Chrona (the 2022 champion netminder), he’s been in touch as well.

“I’m just very grateful.”

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