With Iowa up four goals early in the third period, the 6-foot-6, 228-pound Tinordi got into a shoving match with the 5-foot-8, 173-pound Rau a couple of feet in front of the Admirals net.
It wasn't as much a shoving match as much as it was two guys cross-checking the living daylights out of each other to gain position in front of the goal.
"[Tinordi] was doing a number on him," said Iowa coach Tim Army. "He kept getting up, he kept fighting off and we talk about that a lot. If you can establish position, you have to kind of roll off the defenseman, almost like a pass rusher. You gotta keep rolling him off and he stayed with it then had the skill level to bang it in. That pushed the game out of reach."
Despite giving up nearly a foot in height and 50 pounds, Rau got the last laugh against the Admirals captain, when Matt Bartkowski's point shot hit Rau and landed on the blade of his stick. Rau looked down and shoveled the puck into the net for a 5-0 lead and the dagger.
"That was sick," said Wild defenseman Nate Prosser, himself no stranger to net-front battles.
Still not ready to backdown, Rau skated by Tinordi and let him know that he had just put the puck in the net past his goalie.
"Those [defensemen] can get away with anything in front of the net, but you give it back to them and they get mad," Rau said. "But after a battle like that, it feels good."
Despite his size, Rau has developed a knack for scoring from those close-in areas. Typically reserved for the bigger, stronger players in front, Rau has become adept at moving in and out of those dirty zones near the goal mouth.