Word: corriero
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...Then, Corriero makes the one move Cote hadn’t planned on. Instead of taking the shot, she slides the puck to her right side. There Sarah Vaillancourt is waiting to shoot it past Cote’s right shoulder, where she can see a gaping hole...
...There are some situations where I had the puck and at other times, I might have shot it,” Corriero said. “But I think that when we start to play together as a line and when we’re moving the puck and playing unselfishly—that’s when we’re our most dominant...
...third time on the night that Corriero has recorded an assist. For someone who has scored 36.8 percent of all of Harvard’s goals (49 of 133), she knows enough when to take the shot and when to set it up. With 77 points, she has accounted for 57.9 percent of all of Harvard’s scoring. While the number is big, it’s dropping—a sign that the rest of the Crimson is starting to make the attack a great deal more balanced. No further sign of this is needed than Friday...
...spend time thinking about Corriero, then Vaillancourt will score a goal. If we spend time thinking about Vaillancourt, then Corriero or Chu will score a goal,” Dartmouth coach Mark Hudak said following Friday night’s game. “If we spend all our time thinking about those three, another line will score a goal...
Corriero’s assist on Vaillancourt’s goal bears a striking resemblance to the team’s evolution this season, one in which Corriero bore most of the weight for most of the early games. But as the season progressed, Harvard won more games, Corriero has had more help, and the Crimson’s prospects are looking brighter, going 13-0-2 in 2005, winning twice over rival Dartmouth and garnering both ECAC and Ivy titles. Harvard has accomplished this feat only twice before, in 1999 and 2003. One season led to a national championship...