Word: ecacs
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...definitely times when we were outplayed. Luckily, we found a way to win thanks to our refusal to give up and our goaltending in Kyle Richter, who’s been our best player this year.”Richter led the Crimson (3-1-0, 3-1-0 ECAC) to its blanking of Union (2-4-2, 0-2-2), making 27 saves on the night.His efforts against the Dutchmen helped earn the Crimson back-to-back shutouts. The last time the team accomplished this feat was in February 1982, when Harvard trounced on Cornell and Princeton...
...yard freestyle, 200-yard freestyle, and the 100-yard butterfly. Victory was especially sweet for Harvard this year, as the Crimson lost, 167-131, in a close and hard-fought meet against the Big Red last year. Next Saturday, Harvard will travel down to New York for another ECAC meet at Columbia. Judging from the last trip to New York—when the Crimson suffered a close loss, 160.5-139.5—the Lions will surely be a fierce opponent for Harvard. “We need to prepare and rest a little bit,” Quinn...
...points—the points at the beginning of the season can be just as important as the ones at the end.”Two of the Crimson’s wins have come against St. Lawrence, widely considered to be one of the better teams in the ECAC, and the ranked Engineers. On the other hand, Harvard’s only loss came in the season opener against Clarkson, the team that bounced the Crimson from the ECAC playoffs last season.“Having that northern road trip [to Clarkson and St. Lawrence] as our first weekend...
...then-No. 11 Clarkson and one goal in a win over then-No. 16 St. Lawrence last weekend, Richter stopped all 28 shots that he faced in leading the Crimson to a 3-0 win in its home opener against No. 16 Rensselaer (6-3-2, 1-1-2 ECAC). “From the net on out, I thought we did a lot of good things,” said Harvard coach Ted Donato ’91. The Crimson survived an early Engineers two-man advantage before capitalizing on its own power play with under a minute...
...pretty dominant attack throughout the lineup, so I think you’re going see a lot more disparity in the scoring this year, and there’s going be some big opportunities.” Given that Harvard’s offense ranked sixth in the ECAC last season with 67 goals, the Crimson needs those scoring disparities to increase a great deal—especially since the team also allowed 65 goals. Meintel’s development as a dominant offensive threat began after he recovered from an injury that kept...