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Inaugural Hockey City Classic a hit at Soldier Field

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They hadn’t played seven minutes of Game 1 before the sport of hockey had its first sun field, with the announcement coming that the teams would alternate directions in the third period — 10 minutes going one way, 10 minutes going the other — due to the glare.

Notre Dame ultimately exercised its option to nix the end-switching plan — but then Wisconsin and Minnesota did their own third-period shuffle thanks to ice quality, a bit of improvisation in everything.

“The shadows were tough on the other end,” Irish goalie Steven Summerhays said. “It was more just keeping the flow of the game the same. We didn’t want to change anything.”

Ice crews were on early and often, apparently using something that shot fire into the ice in order to keep it from cracking, the most ironic repair method in history. Sun was a non-factor for Game 2, which started around 3:30 p.m., but ice conditions became the concern by twilight.

“When we first came out for the first period, the ice was pretty good,” Minnesota defenseman Nate Schmidt said. “It was quick, it was fast, our guys got into it right away. Obviously by the third period, when we split, it was getting choppy in one half.”

But if the NHL wants an administrative, bottom-line opinion on how Soldier Field held up as a possible future Winter Classic host, count Jack Swarbrick as a yea vote.

“I can’t imagine a better venue to put this in, because of the intimacy of the stadium,” the Notre Dame athletic director said. “When I walked in, that was the first thing that struck me — you don’t feel like you’re watching this game from the moon.”

As for the hockey, Mario Lucia and then Costello scored to provide a two-goal Notre Dame advantage. Miami’s Kevin Morris cut the deficit in half midway through the final frame, but the RedHawks couldn’t equalize with the goalie pulled in the final minute or so.

In the second game, Wisconsin broke the game open with three second-period goals in a span of three minutes and change, tallies by Kevin Schulze, John Ramage and Sean Little to take a commanding 3-0 lead. Minnesota answered with a Seth Ambroz goal early in the third period and a Zach Budish goal late, but couldn’t find the equalizer as time ran out.

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