With seven points, he's currently tied for the NCAA's freshman scoring lead.
"To be not even expected to play college hockey a couple months ago and then coming in here and obviously having a pretty good start and being recognized with some other really great players who were first-rounders or high draft picks, it's cool," Wyttenbach told Postmedia. "When you go into a new level, it's always, 'OK, how quickly can I get that first goal?' You never want to be worrying about those things in the back of your head, where you're hitting Game 10 and you haven't scored yet and you start overthinking and you start holding the stick too tight. So I think that aspect of it, it definitely helps me a lot.