AA Quarterfinal: #5 Eden Prairie vs. #4 Blaine
Posted: Sat Feb 28, 2015 1:15 pm
#5 EDEN PRAIRIE VS. #4 BLAINE
-Two big suburban schools wrap up the Tourney quarterfinals. Blaine won a December meeting 8-3, which was their only meeting this decade. They’re 1-1 against each other at State, with Eden Prairie winning a 2009 semifinal and Blaine winning a 1999 consolation game.
Eden Prairie (18-9, #4, 1-seed in 6AA)
State appearances: 8 (2 in a row)
Championships: 2 (2009, 2011)
Key section wins: 1-0 over #12 Benilde-St. Margaret’s, 2-1 (OT) over #14 Minnetonka
-The Eagles are the bad boys of this year’s Tourney, escaping the 6AA minefield despite three suspensions following their semifinal win over Benilde. They are led by two superb forwards, junior Michael Graham (16) and Casey Mittelstadt (11), one of the state’s finest talents and only a sophomore. They aren’t especially deep offensively, but the D corps does have a lot of good options, and is led by seniors Andy Aguilar (6) and Brady Schoo (2). Like so many recent good Eden Prairie teams, they’ll look to ride their top guns to victory.
Blaine (22-5-1, #7, 1-seed in 5AA)
State appearances: 11 (first since 2011)
Championships: 1 (2000)
Key section win: 8-1 over 2-time defending champion Centennial
-The Bengals return to State after a few years of playoff frustration, and seek to end 5AA’s run of 5 straight two-and-outs. They have a decent shot: they’re undefeated in their last 17, and bring serious size and physicality to the table. First-year coach Chris Carroll relies on his three big forwards, Riley Tufte (27), Luke Notermann (17), and Easton Brodzinski (22), but they’ve done a good job of spreading the love across two quality lines. Jesse Slawson (24) has had a productive year, while Jon Kallestad (32) won the goalie job down the stretch. When teams do get past their relentless forecheck, they can be soft in back, and this will be the key for Eden Prairie.
-Two big suburban schools wrap up the Tourney quarterfinals. Blaine won a December meeting 8-3, which was their only meeting this decade. They’re 1-1 against each other at State, with Eden Prairie winning a 2009 semifinal and Blaine winning a 1999 consolation game.
Eden Prairie (18-9, #4, 1-seed in 6AA)
State appearances: 8 (2 in a row)
Championships: 2 (2009, 2011)
Key section wins: 1-0 over #12 Benilde-St. Margaret’s, 2-1 (OT) over #14 Minnetonka
-The Eagles are the bad boys of this year’s Tourney, escaping the 6AA minefield despite three suspensions following their semifinal win over Benilde. They are led by two superb forwards, junior Michael Graham (16) and Casey Mittelstadt (11), one of the state’s finest talents and only a sophomore. They aren’t especially deep offensively, but the D corps does have a lot of good options, and is led by seniors Andy Aguilar (6) and Brady Schoo (2). Like so many recent good Eden Prairie teams, they’ll look to ride their top guns to victory.
Blaine (22-5-1, #7, 1-seed in 5AA)
State appearances: 11 (first since 2011)
Championships: 1 (2000)
Key section win: 8-1 over 2-time defending champion Centennial
-The Bengals return to State after a few years of playoff frustration, and seek to end 5AA’s run of 5 straight two-and-outs. They have a decent shot: they’re undefeated in their last 17, and bring serious size and physicality to the table. First-year coach Chris Carroll relies on his three big forwards, Riley Tufte (27), Luke Notermann (17), and Easton Brodzinski (22), but they’ve done a good job of spreading the love across two quality lines. Jesse Slawson (24) has had a productive year, while Jon Kallestad (32) won the goalie job down the stretch. When teams do get past their relentless forecheck, they can be soft in back, and this will be the key for Eden Prairie.