Bemidji State's Frozen Four run ends

NCAA Men's Frozen Four: Miami Red Hawks v Bemidji
Bill Loupee #28 of the Miami Red Hawks gets a shot past Matt Dalton #1 of the Bemidji State Beavers during the NCAA Men's Frozen Four Semifinal game on April 9, 2009 at the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C. The Miami Red Hawks defeated the Bemidji State Beavers 4-1.
Elsa/Getty Images

The crowd was pumped up in this ballroom at Bemidji State, where hundreds of students, alumni and community members gathered to watch the game on a giant projector screen.

Karen Swedberg, a junior business administration major at BSU said the Beaver's appearance in the Frozen Four was like David and Goliath. She said it means the hockey program now has national stature.

"Some of my friends are from Washington and when they came here, their relatives didn't know where Bemidji was," she said. "And now our name is out there, and they're like, 'Oh, Bemidji. I get it now.' So it's pretty huge."

BSU hockey has been the talk of this northwestern Minnesota community ever since last month, when the Beavers upset second-ranked Notre Dame and then did the same to Cornell University.

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Frozen Four
Ryan Cramer #15 of the Bemidji State Beavers takes a shot as Cameron Schilling #5 of the Miami Red Hawks defends during the NCAA Men's Frozen Four Semifinal game on April 9, 2009 at the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C. The Miami Red Hawks defeated the Bemidji State Beavers 4-1.
Elsa/Getty Images

Those unlikely wins clinched a spot in the Frozen Four championship.

Frozen Four fever has been contagious in Bemidji. There are signs in businesses all over town supporting the team.

Beaver t-shirts, caps and hoodies have been flying off the shelves. Some businesses closed early Thursday so employees could watch the game.

Mike Curfman, BSU's head women's basketball coach, said everyone loves an underdog, and the Beavers got the community fired up.

"It's almost like a buzz in the air, you know, just kind of an excitement everywhere you go... It was kind of unexpected, but what a great benefit to this community," he said. "(There is) just a lot of positive energy right now with what they've done."

Beaver fans
BSU students, alumni and community members watch the NCAA hockey Frozen Four semi-final game Thursday on a projection screen on the BSU campus.
MPR Photo/Tom Robertson

It was just three years ago that BSU officials considered dropping the school's hockey program altogether. That's because the Beavers are part of Division I's shrinking Collegiate Hockey America, a conference set to disband in 2011.

The Beavers are hoping to get into the more prestigious Western Collegiate Hockey Association.

That conference includes larger schools like the University of Minnesota, the University of North Dakota and the University of Denver. None of those teams made it as far as BSU this season.

Drager DeLapp, a BSU alumni from Bemidji, said even though the team lost, he's thrilled that they made it to the Frozen Four.

"Hey, our boys played really well. We got our name out there," he said. "People now know where Bemidji is at, and they're going to do it again next year, only next year they're going to go all the way."

BSU officials say the national exposure gives them more clout for recruiting hockey players.

Plus, there's something else on the horizon. Last week, officials from the university and the city of Bemidji broke ground on a brand new, $59 million Regional Events Center at the south end of Lake Bemidji.

The 4,000 seat arena will be the new home for Beaver hockey when the facility opens next year.