Word: daigneau
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...weekend, Krantz surprised rookie netminder Kyle Richter with a long-range shot from the blue line to tie the score at two goals apiece. And 364 days earlier, it was also Krantz who pounced on a dribbling puck near the Harvard blue line, firing the equalizer past goaltender John Daigneau ’06. The eerie similarities don’t stop there. In 2005, forward Topher Scott notched the gamewinner for Cornell just 2:33 after Krantz’s goal. Friday, center Michael Kennedy netted the deciding score 2:36 after the equalizer. Almost the only thing that...
...Harvard squad entered the season without a cemented starting netminder, thanks to the graduation of Hobey Baker finalist Dov Grumet-Morris ’05, a four-year starter for the Crimson. Coach Ted Donato ’91 experimented with then-junior Justin Tobe and John Daigneau ’06, and the latter eventually won the job. Despite little playing experience before the 2005-2006 season, Daigneau posted solid numbers between the posts—including a 2.48 goals-against average and 19-10-2 record—and led his team to the NCAA tournament, where Harvard...
...Harvard was expected to relinquish its position at the top of the ECAC. According to critics, the Class of 2005 was too crucial to the team’s success. But the Class of 2006 held its own as captain Peter Hafner, leading goalscorer Dan Murphy, and goaltender John Daigneau (right)—the winner of the John Tudor Memorial Cup as the team MVP—guided the Crimson to an Ivy League title, an ECAC championship, and a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament.POWER STROKE For yet another season, Harvard dominated the competition in the Eastern...
...predicted to suffer severely from the graduation of the Class of 2005.“I don’t think anyone expected us—outside of the team—to do as well as we did,” said senior goaltender and team MVP John Daigneau. “Unfortunately, we fell under the curse or whatever everyone was saying, but we were ECAC champs, and to get a two seed [in the NCAA tournament] was unbelievable for us.”The Crimson kicked off its season in nerve-wracking fashion. After going...
...Weiland award for devotion and spirited play, while sophomores Paul Dufault and J.D. McCabe, a forward and a blueliner respectively, split the Donald Angier award for improvement. Defenseman Brian McCafferty took home the George Percy award for the team’s top rookie, and senior goaltender John Daigneau was presented the banquet’s last piece of hardware, the John Tudor Memorial Cup for the most valuable player. After three frustrating years on the bench, Daigneau earned the starting job this season and racked up 19 wins, the third-best single-season win total in Harvard hockey history...