Hill-Murray and Mahtomedi Battle to 1-1 OT Tie; Northfield Edges Orono 4-3 in Wednesday Night Thrillers

Wednesday Night Hockey: Overtime Thriller and Comeback Victory Highlight December 3rd Action

In a pair of exciting matchups on Wednesday, December 3rd, Minnesota high school hockey delivered exactly what fans crave: a defensive masterclass that went to overtime and an offensive shootout that came down to the final buzzer. Here’s how the night unfolded.


Hill-Murray and Mahtomedi Skate to 1-1 Overtime Stalemate

In a defensive masterclass at the St. Croix Valley Recreation Center in Stillwater, Hill-Murray and Mahtomedi played to a 1-1 tie that required overtime to settle—though neither team could find the game-winner in the extra frame.

This was goaltending at its finest. Both netminders—Grayson Hanggi for Hill-Murray and Jackson Chesak for Mahtomedi—were absolutely stellar, each posting identical stat lines: 27 saves on 28 shots for a .964 save percentage. When you see numbers like that, you know you’re watching something special.

How It Went Down

Hill-Murray struck first when Landon Sampair found the back of the net at 15:24 of the opening period on an even-strength tally. The Pioneers carried that 1-0 lead into the first intermission, but Mahtomedi wasn’t about to roll over.

The Zephyrs answered back in the second period when Devin O’Donnell evened things up at 10:12, with helpers from Brayden Fuerst and Ryker Dunbar. That goal proved to be the equalizer, and despite both teams’ best efforts through the remainder of regulation and into overtime, neither could break the deadlock.

By the Numbers

  • Shots on Goal: Dead even at 28-28—a perfect mirror of how evenly matched these teams were
  • Power Plays: Hill-Murray went 0-for-2 while Mahtomedi was 0-for-3. Special teams couldn’t crack the code tonight.
  • Penalties: Hill-Murray took 3 penalties for 6 minutes; Mahtomedi had 2 penalties for 4 minutes

This was one of those games where a tie feels appropriate. Both teams played hard, both goalies were phenomenal, and neither squad deserved to lose. Sometimes hockey just works out that way.


Northfield Rallies Past Orono 4-3 in Home Ice Thriller

While the first game was all about defense and goaltending, the nightcap at Northfield Ice Arena was a back-and-forth offensive showcase that saw the home Raiders edge out the visiting Orono Spartans 4-3.

Northfield outshot Orono 43-29 on the night, but it took every bit of that offensive pressure to hold off a determined Spartan squad that refused to go quietly.

The Star of the Show: Jackson Knight

Orono’s Jackson Knight (#34) put on an absolute clinic, recording a hat trick performance with 2 goals and 1 assist for 3 points. Knight was all over the ice, creating chances and finishing them. Despite the loss, he was undoubtedly the most dangerous player on the ice for the Spartans.

Jake Thalhuber (#6) chipped in with 2 assists, while Blake Tichy (#8) added a goal to round out Orono’s scoring.

Northfield’s Balanced Attack

The Raiders got contributions from multiple sources, which proved to be the difference. Michael Steward (#9) led the way with 2 goals, while Philip Benjamin (#13) had a goal and an assist for 2 points.

But the real story was the playmaking. Ashton Pumper (#3) and Christian Whiteman (#11) each dished out 2 assists, setting up their teammates for quality scoring chances all night long. When you get that kind of unselfish play and puck distribution, good things happen.

Period-by-Period Breakdown

  • 1st Period: Northfield 1, Orono 0 – The Raiders drew first blood
  • 2nd Period: Orono 2, Northfield 1 – The Spartans flipped the script with a 2-goal frame
  • 3rd Period: Northfield 2, Orono 1 – The Raiders regained control when it mattered most
  • Final: Northfield 4, Orono 3

Special Teams Made the Difference

Both teams found success on the power play, but Northfield was slightly more efficient:

  • Orono: 1-for-4 on the power play (25.0%)
  • Northfield: 1-for-3 on the power play (33.33%)

Between the Pipes

Max Lewin got the start for Orono, playing 51 minutes and facing a barrage of rubber. He made 39 saves on 43 shots (.907 save percentage) and kept his team in the game despite being outshot significantly.

On the other end, Gavin Winter earned the win for Northfield with 26 saves on 29 shots (.897 save percentage). While his numbers weren’t quite as gaudy as Lewin’s, he made the saves when his team needed them most.


The Takeaway

Wednesday night gave us everything you could want from high school hockey: a defensive battle that showcased elite goaltending, and an offensive shootout that came down to the wire. Hill-Murray and Mahtomedi proved that sometimes the best result is no result at all, while Northfield showed the value of balanced scoring and home-ice advantage.

Jackson Knight’s 3-point performance for Orono was the individual highlight of the night, but it was Northfield’s depth and the goaltending excellence from both games that will be remembered when the dust settles.

That’s Minnesota high school hockey for you—every night brings something different, and every game matters. Stay tuned for more coverage of the 2025-26 season!

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