Ohio State has been the streak snapper for the University of Wisconsin women's hockey team in the last year, and things looked headed that way again for a while Friday.
The top-ranked Badgers launched an impressive turnaround in the second period to keep their season-opening run going.
Lacey Eden scored twice in Wisconsin's 4-2 victory at No. 2 Ohio State. It was the Badgers' first win in their last seven games at the OSU Ice Rink.
The Buckeyes ended Wisconsin winning streaks at 12, 15 and seven games last season and they raced out to a 2-0 lead in the first meeting this season between teams that have won the last five NCAA titles.
But the Badgers rallied in the second period and Ava McNaughton made 15 of her 31 saves in the final frame to extend the season-opening winning streak to 13 games, third-longest in team history.
Kirsten Simms turned defense to offense
Kirsten Simms made crucial plays on both ends of the ice during a Wisconsin power play, leading to the go-ahead goal in the third period. The Badgers forward stopped Joy Dunne's rush by getting her skate on the puck, then pushed it forward for Laila Edwards.
Simms raced up the right wing, tapping her stick along the way to call for a pass, and got the puck back from Edwards in the offensive zone before feeding Eden in the slot.
The Badgers unlocked scoring chances in the second period with transition skating, and it led to a breakthrough goal by Eden that started to pull them out of a 2-0 hole. Casey O'Brien drove up the left side and connected with Eden in front.
A gift allowed O'Brien to tie it later in the middle frame. Buckeyes goalie Amanda Thiele tried to cover the puck but had it roll past her; O'Brien fought off two defenders to tap it in.
Ohio State put pressure on the Badgers in the 1st
Wisconsin (13-0, 9-0 Western Collegiate Hockey Association, 27 points) allowed one first-period goal in its first 12 games. Ohio State (11-3-2, 6-3-2, 20 points) scored two goals 14 seconds apart in the opening period.
The Badgers couldn't clear the defensive zone on the first, and former Wisconsin forward Maddi Wheeler finished off a pass from Dunne. Jenna Buglioni redirected home a Dunne shot soon after.