BOSTON โ€” UMass hockey head coach Greg Carvel values scoring chances more than shots on goal. On Friday afternoon against Merrimack in the Hockey East semifinals at TD Garden, the Minutemen had the lionโ€™s share of chances, the puck just never found the back of the net.

The Warriors, on the other hand, were opportunistic and took advantage of one of UMassโ€™ only miscues of the contest, breaking the deadlock on a partial breakaway three minutes into the third period.

Merrimack may not have dominated Fridayโ€™s win-or-go-home clash, but they didnโ€™t need to as the eighth-seeded Warriors tamed the second-seeded Minutemen, 2-0, to advance to Saturdayโ€™s Hockey East Championship.

โ€œI thought we had enough chances to score,โ€ Carvel said. โ€œBoth teams play the game heavy and do a go job staying above the puck. We had chances to score, itโ€™s not like we didnโ€™t have chances.โ€

Merrimack goalie Max Lundgren (47) looks to gain control of the puck during the Hockey East semifinal game at TD Garden in Boston, Friday, March 20, 2026. DANIEL JACOBI II / Staff Photo

UMassโ€™ chances can be traced back to the first period as it was awarded the first two power plays of the game. The Minutemenโ€™s season-long woes on the man-advantage reared their ugly head at the Garden though as they only contributed two shots on goal in the four minutes of PP time.

UMass finished the season at 19% on the power play.

Before the first intermission arrived, Jack Musa nearly buried one backdoor on an egregious turnover from the Warriors in the own zone, but the puck sailed over Merrimackโ€™s cross-bar.

The Minutemen nearly converted on a couple scrambles around Warriors goalie Max Lundgren during the second period, but yet again, a magnet appeared to be inside the rubber disk as it would not glide across the goal line.

Merrimackโ€™s early tally in the third forced UMass to play even more desperate, which in turn, caused Musaโ€™s chances to skyrocket in the final frame.

The junior earned multiple, grade-A looks in the slot throughout the final 17 minutes, but Lundgren had his number, getting his body on the puck each time.

โ€œWe should have been able to recover,โ€ Carvel said on the Warriorsโ€™ opening goal.

โ€œItโ€™s tough when, basically, the one goal of the game is kind of created by us,โ€ Carvel added.

The Minutemenโ€™s top line of Musa, Jack Galanek and Vaclav Nestrasil generated seven shots on goal, but, for what felt like the first time of 2026, luck was not on their side.

UMass forward Jack Galanek (10) chases after the puck during the Hockey East semifinal game against Merrimack at TD Garden in Boston, Friday, March 20, 2026. DANIEL JACOBI II / Staff Photo

The third period had been UMassโ€™ best of the second halfโ€“outscored opponents 21-7 entering Fridayโ€™s gameโ€“and Merrimackโ€™s worst, but the script flipped at the worst possible time for the Minutemen.

โ€œWe lost four games in the second half and three of them were 1-0,โ€ Carvel said. โ€œThat was very similar to a couple of the other losses that we had.

โ€œI liked our game,โ€ Carvel said. โ€œI thought we had enough chances. Our best players had the pucks on their stick to score goals, just couldnโ€™t find a way to get one past their goalie, who played particularly well.โ€

Ryan Ames is a sports reporter at the Gazette. A UMass Amherst graduate, he covers high school and college sports and is on the UMass hockey beat. Reach him at rames@gazettenet.com and follow him on Twitter/X...