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Back in his home state, Ben Meyers has a special night in Avalanche regular season finale

Playing at Xcel Energy Center for the first time since he was a Delano high schooler five years ago, Colorado Avalanche rookie forward Ben Meyers had his own cheering section of former Gophers teammates in his return to Minnesota.

NHL: Carolina Hurricanes at Colorado Avalanche
Colorado Avalanche center Ben Meyers.
Ron Chenoy / USA Today Sports

ST. PAUL — The shy smile was familiar, even if the dark blue hoodie looked out of place on Ben Meyers. The former Minnesota Gophers captain looked comfortable at a podium across the hall from the Colorado Avalanche locker room and smiled as he talked about his new life, playing hockey for a paycheck.

Less than a month earlier, Meyers, 23, had played a college hockey game at the Frozen Four for the Gophers, then elected to forgo his remaining college eligibility. He signed with Colorado a few days later, after numerous NHL teams — including the hometown Minnesota Wild – expressed interest in the talented free agent.

“It’s a hard decision, but at the end of the day it’s a hard decision to sign with any team,” Meyers said on Friday, as he prepared to play in his fifth NHL game. “I just kind of went with my gut and felt like it was the best opportunity for me to continue to develop.”

Ben Meyers Avalanche
Ben Meyers met with the Denver media at Ball Arena on Thursday, April 14, 2022 after signing a two-year entry-level contract with the NHL's Colorado Avalanche.
Contributed / Colorado Avalanche

Colorado will enter the playoffs as the top seed in the Western Conference, and is among the favorites to hoist the Stanley Cup. Although one way or another, Friday would be Meyers’ final game of the season. Because he was a free agent and signed a contract after the NHL trade deadline had passed, he cannot skate in the playoffs. Meyers is fine with being a spectator, for now, as the Avalanche hope to play well into June.

“It’s unusual because they can’t really have plans for me to play in the playoffs,” he said. “It’s unusual but I think everybody knows what’s going on and it’s all worked out well. I’ve had a great experience.”

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Meyers had been in the lineup for four of the eight games Colorado had played since signing him. The highlight, prior to Friday’s Minnesota homecoming, was most certainly his NHL debut. On April 16, in a home game against the Carolina Hurricanes, Meyers not only donned the burgundy and blue sweater for the first time, but capped off his debut with his first NHL goal in a 7-4 Colorado win.

NHL: Colorado Avalanche at Winnipeg Jets
Colorado Avalanche center Ben Meyers (59) is chased down by Winnipeg Jets center Jansen Harkins (12) in the first period April 24, 2022 at Canada Life Centre.
James Carey Lauder / USA Today Sports

“Just playing in your first game is an incredible experience and to score that first goal, you can’t script it too much better than that,” Meyers said. “You can’t even describe that feeling. Something you think about your whole life and then it comes true. It’s tough to put into words.”

It’s frankly not easy to put this season into words when one looks back on all that has transpired for Meyers since he put on a Gophers sweater with a captain’s C on it last fall. He led the team offensively despite missing five games while he went to China to skate for Team USA at the Winter Olympics. Upon returning he was the catalyst as the Gophers won the Big Ten title and was named the conference’s player of the year.

Minnesota vs University of Massachusetts, UMASS, NCAA
Minnesota forward Ben Meyers (39) lifts the puck past UMass goaltender Matt Murray in overtime for the game-winning goal of an NCAA Tournament opening round matchup Friday, March 25, 2022, at the DCU Center in Worcester, Mass.
Contributed / University of Minnesota Athletics

In the NCAA playoffs, Meyers scored the overtime winner versus UMass in round one and set up two of his team’s three goals in a regional final win over Western Michigan, sending Minnesota back to the Frozen Four for the first time since 2014. In Boston the team went one-and-done, but Meyers was one of three finalists for the Hobey Baker Award before returning to his home state to field NHL contract offers.

Friday’s game was his first at Xcel Energy Center since the Class A Minnesota State Hockey Tournament opener in 2017, when Meyers’ and his second-seed Delano High School teammates were upset by Monticello in round one. This time, when he came out on the ice for warmups, a dozen former Gophers teammates were pressed up against the glass in the corner of the rink, cheering his every move.

Colorado’s playoff position was set, so the Avalanche rested several regulars and started Meyers at left wing. By contrast, it was a game that the Wild needed to win for home ice in the opening playoff round versus St. Louis, but even the Minnesotans who routinely cheer for the green and red team were hoping for a kind of split decision on the ice.

“It’s unbelievable. He deserves every second of it, but getting to watch him do his thing at the X, there’s nothing really better than that,” said Gophers forward Mason Nevers. “We’re hoping that the Wild can get one point to get home ice, but hopefully a Benny Meyers OT goal or something.”

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Alas, the on-ice heroics were not part of the script on this night. The Avalanche fell behind early. The Wild clinched home ice. Arena announcer Adam Abrams said Meyers’ name just twice – for the starting lineup, and when the rookie went to the penalty box to serve a five-minute major called on defenseman Kurtis MacDermid.

With those dark clouds in the past, Meyers got on a plane bound for Denver, where they average 245 sunny days per year. He said that has been the best part of his brief time in Colorado thus far – the weather. But his brief time back in Minnesota was pretty cool too.

READ MORE MINNESOTA GOPHERS COVERAGE:
The duo coached together at Hamline for six seasons and under Brad Frost with the Minnesota Gophers for a season. They take over a Pioneers program that was among Minnesota's best in 2022-23.
The New Prague native is a two-time U18 gold medalist and was a prep standout before producing 146 points in 160 games over five seasons in maroon and gold.
In an unexpected move, the two-time national champion player will not be back with the U of M after two seasons working for head coach Brad Frost and helping her alma mater to the Frozen Four.
With much of his offense returning, we expect coach Bob Motzko will add three forwards, three defensemen and a goalie to a roster that was within a few minutes of winning the NCAA title in April.
After leading the Gophers offensively in his final college season, some thought NHL success was inevitable for the Finnish forward. After battling injuries in the AHL, he is back in Europe.
Larson has international experience from his stint as an Olympic assistant coach in 2022, while Miller will be working his seventh World Juniors for Team USA, and looking for his third gold medal.
A prep state champion as a sophomore, Begley spent parts of the last two seasons in the NAHL, most recently with the Wisconsin Windigo where he was the team's top-scoring defenseman.
Starting next season, men's and women's season-ticket holders for the Minnesota Gophers will be able to return seats they cannot use and get credit for future season ticket purchases.
The defenseman originally from southern California was a four-year regular on the U of M blue line, and a first-round pick of Buffalo in 2019.
Transfers from St. Lawrence, Princeton and UMD will help bolster the Gophers on the back end next season as they try to find a way back to the Frozen Four and repeat as WCHA tourney champs.
The Minnesota Gophers center led the team in scoring on the way to a Big Ten title and a trip to the NCAA title game, and recently announced he will return for a sophomore college hockey season.
Fargo native Trent Wiemken has gone 8-1-1 in the Robertson Cup playoffs as the mainstay goalie for the Austin Bruins playoffs while working with former Minnesota Gophers goalie Nick Lehr's coaching.

“Just to come into this building, being here before, and this is my hometown, so it’s definitely special,” Meyers said.

Jess Myers covers college hockey, as well as outdoors, general sports and travel, for The Rink Live and the Forum Communications family of publications. He came to FCC in 2018 after three decades of covering sports as a freelancer for a variety of publications, while working full time in politics and media relations. A native of Warroad, Minn. (the real Hockeytown USA), Myers has a degree in journalism/communications from the University of Minnesota Duluth. He lives in the Twin Cities. Contact Jess via email at jrmyers@forumcomm.com, or find him on Twitter via @JessRMyers. English speaker.
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