Watch: High School Hockey Fans Celebrate So Hard They Shatter Two Panes Of Glass

Some high school hockey fans in — would you believe? — Minnesota got so fired up they wound up breaking not one, but two panes of glass… and it was only the second period.

High school hockey is a lot of fun, and student sections can get wild. I've never experienced one firsthand, but that was because I spent my high school years out on the ice saucing some crispest breakout passes the Central Pennsylvania Interscholastic Hockey League has ever witnessed.

Still, I've seen what they can do, and nowhere are people more crazy about high school puck than in the State of Hockey.

Rochester Century/John Marshall and Lakeville South met up for a section final Thursday night, and you can bet that the barn was rocking.

With more than 12 minutes left in the second period, Rochester found the back of the net to go up 2-0.

A big game calls for a big celebration, and while there was still a long ways to go before the final horn, the Rochester fellas moved the celly over to the student section where some of their school chums got a little too involved.

They broke not one, but two panes of glass and even did Grover Cleveland style by shattering two, non-consecutive.

Impressive. Those kids who went crashing through the glass like NJ Devil at a kids' party, just became the stuff of legend in their high school.

Everyone was reportedly okay, but that mess needed to be cleaned up, and the glass replaced before they could get back to playing that game. Which, by the way, Rochester needed to win, or they would never live down a celebration like that for a second-period tally to go up by two.

Fortunately, the game got going again, albeit with two shorter panes of glass.

When it was all said and done, Rochester wound up on top by final score of 4-1.

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Matt is a University of Central Florida graduate and a long-suffering Philadelphia Flyers fan living in Orlando, Florida. He can usually be heard playing guitar, shoe-horning obscure quotes from The Simpsons into conversations, or giving dissertations to captive audiences on why Iron Maiden is the greatest band of all time.