For as long as they can both remember, Minnesota State alumni Wyatt Aamodt and Sam Morton have dreamed of playing in the National Hockey League.
The two MSU hockey standouts saw those dreams realized last month, when Aamodt was called up to the Colorado Avalanche and Morton made his debut with the Calgary Flames. Both seasons for the Flames and Avalanche have since ended.
“I was excited,” said Aamodt about getting the call. “I was getting older and I was starting to wonder if my opportunity was going to come. Then I got the call. It’s a special moment when it happens.”
Morton’s experience was similar: “I was watching Netflix late at night and I got a call from the (Calgary) Wranglers GM that I was moving up. It was shocking but it was super exciting.”
Aamodt, a native of Hermantown, was a four-year letterwinner for the Mavericks as a defenseman who graduated in 2022. He ranked second among MSU defensemen in goals in 2021-22 and was first among all Mavericks’ skaters with 56 blocked shots. Aamodt, who was MSU’s captain during the 2021-22 season, helped MSU win four consecutive regular-season conference championships during his career. He was also part of both the 2021 and 2022 Frozen Four teams.
“I signed with the Avalanche two days after we lost in the Frozen Four my senior year,” Aamodt said. “I was assigned to their AHL affiliate, the Colorado Eagles, where I played three years before getting called up last month.”
Aamodt said the jump from college to the Eagles was an adjustment, as was the move up from the Eagles to the Avalanche.
However, the adjustment wasn’t much of an issue for Aamodt, as he notched his first NHL goal in just his second career game.
“Each level you get to the players are bigger, faster, stronger,” he said. “I wasn’t too nervous to join the Avalanche. I had some buddies on the team that I had played with with the Eagles. They showed me the ropes.”
Morton, who is from Lafayette, CO, graduated from MSU in 2024. He was the team captain his senior season and played in 102 career games, finishing with 44 goals and 32 assists.
Morton suffered a season-ending torn ACL early in the 2022-23 season, which was supposed to be his final year of college hockey. Despite MSU going through a coaching change during the 2023 offseason, Morton decided to return to the Mavericks for one final year. He delivered an incredible season in 2023-24 despite coming off the knee injury, leading the CCHA with 24 goals. He earned CCHA Player of the Year honors, before jumping into his pro career.
This season, in his first full year with the Calgary Wranglers, he played in 70 games, scoring 20 goals with 24 assists before getting called up.
“I played in the last game for the Flames before the season ended,” Morton said. “Now I’m still in Calgary working with the strength coaches. They told me to have a good offseason, compete hard and to try to make the team next September.”
Aamodt and Morton are pretty good friends, having played two seasons together at MSU, both of which ended at the Frozen Four. They were among the first calls to each other when they received the call-ups.
‘He was glad for me and I was glad for him,” said Aamodt. “We’ve been friends since college.”
Morton wanted to pick Aamodt’s brain as soon as he was notified: “I definitely used him as a resource. We were both having similar experiences.”
Aamodt and Morton are the 23rd and 24th former MSU players to skate in an NHL game, respectively.