Harms scores two as Bemidji State romps over North Dakota

The last time Bemidji State defeated North Dakota in Grand Forks was in 1970.

Friday Night, the Beavers erased North Dakota’s home ice series-winning record it held for the past 44 years.

In a game of turnovers and odd-man rushes, Bemidji found a rhythm in its first game of the season to defeat North Dakota in a 5-1 battle in front of 11,865 at Ralph Engelstad Arena.

Both teams erupted with energy as the puck dropped, but Bemidji’s Brendan Harms set the tone with a short-handed goal at 11:26 of the first period that would only fuel a hungry Beavers team.

“That short-handed goal — obviously, it gives you a lot of momentum,” BSU coach Tom Serratore said. “We end up popping one right there. I think you could feel that energy right on the bench. It was nice to get the 1-0 lead on the road.”

The lead magnified when Harms caught a pass from Gerry Fitzgerald in front of the net and slipped a shot past Zane McIntyre (24 saves) at 9:09 of the second period

North Dakota struggled to create chances, giving away the puck and falling victim to an eruption of goals from Bemidji that began with a Markus Gerbrant goal on a rebound. Sam Rendle followed with a shot that beat McIntyre five-hole.

“I thought we had good patience with the puck,” Serratore said. “Sometimes, good fortune hits when you win races to loose pucks, and I think that’s what happened. Again, obviously we were a little puck lucky, but I think hard work allows you to be puck lucky at times.”

Cam Johnson (4 saves) replaced McIntyre in the net. Just 15 seconds into his collegiate career, Johnson let a puck slip behind him when Charlie O’Connor fired a bad-angle shot from the side of the net that put the Beavers up 5-0 at 17:50 of the second period.

Nick Schmaltz secured the lone goal for North Dakota when he dished in a rebound past Michael Bitzer (25 saves) at 13:08 of the third, but it wasn’t enough to match a determined BSU team.

“I think it’s a testament to our guys right there,” Serratore said. “I think the biggest thing is we rolled four lines and we had 40-second shifts and we got into a good groove. We got into a good rhythm and we really competed hard. We won a lot of races to loose pucks and we kept pucks alive. As the game wore on, I think we got better and better.”

It was a different story for North Dakota.

For the first time since a 7-5 home-opener loss against Minnesota in 2001 —- the first-ever game played at Ralph Engelstad Arena —- North Dakota opened its season without a victory.

“We got out-competed,” UND coach Dave Hakstol said. “They were a focused, hungry team and we were not tonight —- bottom line. That’s on me.”

Despite its winning performance in an 4-0 exhibition win less than a week prior to Friday, North Dakota will use Friday as a stepping stone to improve for Saturday’s match-up.

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