Minnesota’s 2026 boys’ state hockey tournament wasted no time delivering drama with Day 1’s Class A quarterfinals and Day 2’s opening Class AA slate, showcasing everything from goalie duels to offensive explosions. The eight winners from those first two days all advanced by leaning into district identities. Some suffocated opponents defensively, while others overwhelmed teams with waves of pressure.
Hibbing/Chisolm set the tone early in the tournament, turning a tight opener against Dodge County into a statement win built on patience and a second-period surge. After a scoreless first, the Bluejackets broke through and never looked back, cashing in on extended zone time late in the middle frame to grab full control. Their ability to wear down Dodge County and then finish chances in bunches gave them the look of a top seed comfortable in a grind-it-out tournament game.
Mahtomedi followed with a familiar script: another one-goal nail-biter against St. Cloud Cathedral, another late-game poise test passed. The Zephyrs are perennial March fixtures and leaned on structure and timely defending to edge Cathedral in a low-scoring thriller that turned on a few critical plays around the net. It was the kind of game that doesn’t always make highlight reels but wins brackets. Mahtomedi once again proved it knows how to manage that fine line.
Delano brought a different flavor, blending skill with a clear physical edge in a 6-2 win that swung on momentum and the Halonen-led top group. An early 2-0 burst put the Tigers ahead, but their response after Mankato West tied it separated them. Delano reset, reclaimed the middle of the ice, and then blew the game open in the third. With multiple Halonens driving the attack, Delano looked like a team that could change with one dominant shift.
Warroad closed out Day 1 with a methodical 5-0 shutout of Northern Lakes that was equal parts patience and power. After a scoreless first, the Warriors erupted in the second and third, riding breakaway finishes from Gavin Andersen and Ryan Shaugabay before their depth forwards and a standout freshman defender, Ayven Hontvet, piled on. The clean sheet, backed by a locked-in defensive effort and opportunistic transition game, reinforced Warroad’s status as a program built for state-tournament pressure.
Day 2 shifted to Class AA, where traditional powers and new-school contenders began carving their paths toward Saturday night.
Minnetonka looked every bit like a top seed, surging into the semifinals with a performance defined by depth, pace, and a strong push as the game wore on. The Skippers dictated tempo, rolled four lines, and steadily squeezed the life out of their quarterfinal opponent to punch their ticket to Friday.
Rosemount provided the most dramatic AA storyline, winning a back-and-forth quarterfinal that swung multiple times before the Irish finally landed the last punch. In their first state trip in program history, Rosemount matched Grand Rapids’ energy and then found a way late, capitalizing on key chances and leaning on composure in a tense third period. It was the kind of emotional, momentum-heavy win that can galvanize a locker room heading into the semifinals.
Moorhead rounded out the early AA action by advancing behind a balanced, north-style effort built on structure and goaltending. Though their quarterfinal did not feature the same wild swings as Rosemount’s, the Spuds controlled enough of the key areas and closed the door when it mattered to move on.
They got a pair of goals from Max Cullen, and Joey Cullen also contributed with a goal of his own. The Cullen brothers are the sons of former Minnesota Wild star Matt Cullen. The Spuds’ path forward will demand more offensive pop, but the baseline of defensive reliability is firmly in place.
In the final game of the night between the sixth-seeded Andover Huskies and the third-seeded Edina Hornets, Bode McConnell put on a show to start the game with a hat trick in the first period. The Hornets overwhelmed the Huskies all night, outshooting their opponent two to one, and punched their ticket to Friday’s game with a 3-1 victory.
Across two days, the Class A winners brought a blue-collar edge, while the AA victors flashed depth and heavy-program pedigree, setting up a semifinal Friday that feels loaded with contrasting styles and storylines. If the opening rounds are any indication, the rest of the 2026 tournament is set to live up to the event’s reputation as Minnesota’s purest showcase of high-stakes high school hockey.
Think you could write a story like this? Hockey Wilderness wants you to develop your voice, find an audience, and we’ll pay you to do it. Just fill out this form.