2024 championship game rematch

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The Denver Pioneers will face the Boston College Eagles this Sunday in a rematch of last season’s NCAA Division I men’s championship game. The winner of this Regional Final game will earn a return trip to the 2025 Frozen Four in St. Louis.

In the seventy-seven-year history of the NCAA hockey tournament, there have only been seven other instances of a Division I men’s championship game rematch occurring in the tournament the following season. Of those seven games, the runner-up from the previous season won the rematch all seven times.

The first time this occurred was in the second-ever tournament in 1949 when Dartmouth defeated Michigan 4-2 in the semifinals. The Indians – as they were known as at the time – avenged a championship loss to the Wolverines from the inaugural tournament. The most recent occurrence took place in 2021 when UMD met UMass in the 2021 Frozen Four semifinals. The Bulldogs had defeated UMass in the 2019 championship game. However, the 2020 tournament was canceled due to COVID so the 2021 game counted as a next-tournament rematch. The Minutemen outlasted the Bulldogs 3-2 in overtime in that game.

Three of these rematches throughout the years took place in the championship game and one in the now defunct third place game. The full list of championship rematches are as follows:

  • 1949: Dartmouth defeated Michigan 4-2 in the Semifinals
  • 1951: Boston University defeated Colorado College 7-4 in the Third Place Game
  • 1975: Michigan Tech defeated Minnesota 6-1 in the Championship Game
  • 1976: Minnesota defeated Michigan Tech 6-4 in the Championship Game
  • 1995: Boston University defeated Lake Superior State 6-2 in the Regional Final
  • 2001: Boston College defeated North Dakota 3-2 in overtime in the Championship Game
  • 2021: UMass defeated UMD 3-2 in overtime in the Semifinals

The Pioneers are the three seed in the Manchester Region while the Eagles are the number one overall seed in the tournament. Based on seeding alone, there’s a good chance this trend continues. But if there’s anything we’ve learned from the NCAA hockey tournament it’s that you can never count out a lower seed. And more importantly, you can never count out the program that leads all colleges in the number of hockey championship trophies.