Word: ecacs
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...Princeton’s Mark Magnowski slotted an empty-netter with less than two minutes remaining in the ECAC championship game, he may as well have been slamming his stick in the collective gut of the Harvard men’s hockey team. With a 4-1 victory over the No. 16 Crimson (17-14-4) on March 22 at the Times Union Center in Albany, N.Y., the No. 15 Tigers (22-13-0) ended Harvard’s season and extended their own, clinching the ECAC tournament title and the accompanying NCAA bid. While Princeton lost...
...last 10 games, one could certainly say that the No. 16 Harvard (17-13-4) men’s hockey team is on a roll. Its latest victory came March 21, as the Crimson rolled over archrival No. 20 Cornell (19-14-4) in the semifinals of the ECAC championship tournament. “This is great,” Harvard coach Ted Donato ’91 said in a postgame press conference. “But our guys came here with one thing in mind, and that’s to win the ECAC.” Despite...
...said. “I was really impressed by how well they handled all the pressure.” This meet marked the end of a perfect season for the Crimson swimmers, who finished with a 9-0 record and the Ivy League regular season, EISL regular season, and ECAC and EISL meet championships under their belt. For Rathgeber, however, the NCAA competition was a bittersweet way to end his four-year swimming career at Harvard due to the more individual nature of the competition. “It’s always tough to go to this meet because...
...Four semifinals with all the odds stacked in its favor. While the game was played in a neutral location in Duluth, Minn., Harvard was the team with the No. 1 ranking, having cruised to a 32-1-0 season in which the team won the Beanpot, swept through the ECAC playoffs, and trounced Dartmouth, 5-1, in the first round of the NCAA Tournament...
...narrowly topped Cornell twice this season, but the Crimson is disregarding the past tonight, counting not on its past success against the Big Red, but instead on the brilliant play of those who have carried the team thus far this year. With a trip to the Bank of America ECAC Hockey Championship on the line tonight in Albany, N.Y., Harvard’s challenge is simple: outscore the No. 20 Big Red (18-13-3) or go home. For Crimson hockey, already predisposed to view competition against its long-standing rival as its version The Game, the prospect of sending...