
LAS VEGAS — The Big Ten conference has had a banner start to 2026, winning national championships in football, men’s and women’s basketball, wrestling and women’s hockey.
Michigan and Wisconsin came to Sin City to add another title for the conference in men’s hockey. The University of Denver had other ideas.
David Carle and the Pioneers slew both Big Ten Goliaths to remind everyone that DU remains the premier men’s college hockey program. The 11 national titles are more than any other program, but this is three in five seasons, with a fourth Frozen Four in there as well.
“A lot has been made of, like, haves and have-nots coming into college athletics and college hockey,” Carle said after the Pios defeated Wisconsin, 2-1, Saturday afternoon in the title game. “To me, we’re the thing that everybody wants. You want a smaller school who doesn’t have this behemoth budget and fan base and alumni base to still be able to be successful. I think we’re the proof of concept that it’s still possible.
“Yes, do we have advantages over other places? I am not sitting up here crying poor that we don’t have things. But we are a small institution. We are very committed, though, to our hockey program and making it a great experience for our student-athletes, our fans and our alumni. You don’t have to be big in hockey to be good. You have to invest and you have to care and have the right people to do great things. In a sport landscape, in college athletics, I think a place like Denver should really be celebrated.”
Adapting and thriving
There have been drastic, sweeping changes to college athletics during this run of Pios excellence. The transfer portal, Name, Image and Likeness deals and revenue sharing have changed college sports. Hockey added an extra seismic wrinkle before this season, allowing players from Canada’s three major junior leagues to be eligible.

Carle and the Pios continue to adjust and thrive with each change. Defenseman Eric Pohlkamp led this DU team in scoring and was a Hobey Baker finalist. Two years ago, he transferred from Bemidji State.
The CHL superstars who came to college hockey this year were the talk of the sport. Gavin McKenna and Jackson Smith at Penn State, Porter Matrone and Cayden Lindstrom at Michigan State, Cole Reschny and Keaton Verhoeff at North Dakota — all are recent or future NHL first-round picks.
Two former CHL players made the biggest plays Saturday night in the championship game. Kyle Chyzowski scored the title-winning goal in the third period. Johnny Hicks was the MVP of the Frozen Four, the NCAA Regional in Loveland and the NCHC Frozen Faceoff.
Both were in the WHL last year. Both are undrafted players. Now, they are NCAA champions.
“Just the standard we have every single day in the practices and how we treat each other, how people treat us in Denver,” said senior Samu Salminen, the team’s No. 1 center and also a transfer two years ago from UConn. “It’s a very special place to be. I feel like every single person who steps in that locker room, they know what it’s all about, and that’s winning. It’s all about team-first mentality. We don’t have individuals in this team. If we do, that’s a short run for those guys. I feel like our whole team has bought into that really well the whole year.”
‘Bigness doesn’t win championships all the time’
NHL teams have come calling for Carle, a 36-year-old coach with three NCAA championships and two World Junior Championship gold medals on his resume. With a 16-3 record, he has as many NCAA titles as NCAA tournament losses. He’s won as many titles as George Gwozdecky and Jim Montgomery combined.
He’s passed on multiple NHL jobs, and signed a multi-year contract extension with the school before this season. As long as he wants to be in Denver, Carle and the Pioneers plan to remain at the top of the sport.

Pohlkamp and junior Boston Buckberger could sign NHL contracts and move on. Three seniors need to be replaced.
The biggest question is whether both goalies, Hicks and fellow fabulous freshman Quentin Miller, will be here next fall or if the latter decides to transfer. But the Pios are expected to be loaded again next season.
Defenseman Ryan Lin, a potential top-10 pick in the 2026 NHL draft, committed to the Pios earlier this month. DU is also considered a finalist for defenseman Landon DuPont, the potential No. 1 pick in the 2027 draft, who wants to play college hockey next season. They also have three players from the USA Hockey National Team Development Program committed.
The rules of engagement have changed. The Pioneers’ place in the sport has not.
“I think we’re seeing that money doesn’t buy everything,” Carle said. “Bigness doesn’t win championships all the time, at least in our sport. Maybe that’s changing. Everybody seems to think it is, could, or will. I will tell you we will do our damnedest in our conference and in Denver to make sure that it doesn’t happen that way.
“We’re really proud to represent the NCHC, the best league in college hockey. If you’re a kid that wants to win and develop, we think it’s the best place to be.”




