Word: daigneau
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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CANTON, N.Y.—As the third period of Friday’s game against Clarkson began, Harvard goaltender John Daigneau leaned his head against the glass behind the visiting bench, just for a moment. After two periods in net and four goals allowed, Daigneau had been yanked in favor of Justin Tobe, the Crimson’s backup for eight of its first nine games. Now, for the first time since Nov. 4, Daigneau was watching the game from the bench. “Johnny was tired,” said Harvard coach Ted Donato...
...lamp—but BU netminder John Curry fended off his shot as time expired. “[The Terriers] were still on their high from tying the game there late, and they came after us pretty good,” said senior and Harvard goaltender John Daigneau. “But we responded and put some pressure [on them] and almost got one at the end.” Despite BU’s sustained attack in the second and third periods, it seemed as if the Crimson (6-2-1, 5-2-0 ECAC) would be able...
...Yale’s second goal was no different. After sophomore Paul Dufault put the Crimson up 2-1 with 8:06 elapsed in the second period, Yale responded just over a minute later with an unassisted goal from senior Jeff Hristovski. Harvard senior goalie John Daigneau never saw the puck coming on the equalizer—the open shot whizzed past his right shoulder and beat him top shelf. Yet when the Crimson did get its chances, it was unable to make the most of them, missing multiple opportunities before scoring. “We got some good chances...
...contest against Boston College, when Harvard tallied three goals on the same number of shots.The Crimson also allowed its first shorthanded goal of the season against Yale, when Bulldog captain Christian Jensen took a feed from linemate Jeff Hristovski on a 2-on-1 and beat Harvard netminder John Daigneau stick-side with a shot off the post.But the Crimson’s power play recovered somewhat against the Bears, with senior forward Dan Murphy notching a man-advantage tally and sophomore winger Dave Watters scoring Harvard’s first goal just seconds after a Brown penalty expired...
Defense wins championships. If this popular sports mantra is true, then the Crimson, for the first time all season on Sunday, looked to have its eyes on the prize. Senior goaltender John Daigneau posted the first shutout of his career to spur Harvard’s gritty and defense-dominated 2-0 win yesterday over Brown (2-4-0, 2-4-0 ECAC). The defense, led by Daigneau, powered the Crimson’s victory—a strange turn of events for a team usually so dependent on its offensive firepower. It is a positive sign for a squad...