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Statistically, this should never have happened. The Terriers are unspectacular offensively, and scoring four goals on one of the nation’s hottest goaltenders (BU??€™s Sean Fields) should have ensured a victory, especially since Harvard entered the game ranked second nationally in team defense, allowing 2.17 goals per game, and Grumet-Morris had the nation’s second-highest save percentage...
Harvard had dug itself smaller holes in the first, twice falling behind the Terriers, but each time it responded. Trailing 1-0 after BU??€™s Brian Collins broke the ice, junior forward Tim Pettit stole the puck along the boards behind the Terriers’ net. He looked up and found sophomore linemate Brendan Bernakevitch open between the circles, and Bernakevitch fired a quick shot by Fields only 28 seconds after Collins’ tally...
After assuming the lead, the Crimson continued to control play, outshooting the Terriers by eight and winning 28 faceoffs to BU??€™s three in the second period...
...nearly five minutes on the power play to begin the second. And while BU didn’t score, having to kill such a long penalty took a physical toll on some of the Crimson’s key players—which could have played a role in BU??€™s game-changing three-goal burst early in the third...
...difference between perimeter and point-blank shots was apparent against Cornell. Facing the best goaltender in the country, Dave LeNeveu, and the Big Red’s suffocating defense, Harvard settled for perimeter shots for the first half of the contest. And a good goaltender like LeNeveu or BU??€™s Sean Fields—one of the best netminders in Hockey East—will stop that first shot...