Word: goale
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...drawing first blood. Both defensive lines were too strong however to give either of the teams a really good chance to concentrate their offensive. The Bigelow twins had the Harvard forwards baffled most of the time and Learnard had a comparatively easy 20 minutes in the visitor's goal. Harvard, too, presented a strong defense and the Clubmen's famed forward line of Chase. Hilliard and Curtis had a hard time trying to break through. Several long shots by Stubbs and Cunningham provided the only scares the Crimson threw into the former University stars while H. Bigelow's lone sally...
...little past center ice that sizzled by the University Club goalie before he even saw it coming. The shot provided the margin of victory for Harvard for in the opening minutes of the final stanza Chase scored for the Red and Blue and cut the Crimson advantage to one goal...
...second stanza was little more than three minutes old when Garrison chalked up a score for Harvard. Putnam's shot had drawn Learnard out of the goal and then with the cage wide open Garrison skated down and dumped the puck in. With a one goal lead Harvard was content to protect its slim advantage but soon had two of its men occupying the penalty box. With only Stubbs, Crosby, and Cunningham on the ice the former college stars tried hard to score but their shots in most instances were wild...
...full team back on the ice again Harvard turned to the offensive and for the ensuing ten minutes gave Learnard a stiff workout. The siege on the University Club net culminated with Stubbs' tornado-like shot that later proved to be the deciding goal of the game. Before the period was over Harvard once again had only three men on the ice. This time it was Garrison, Putnam, and Crosby. But this trio staved off the four man offensive that the Clubmen sent down the ice. Harvard ended the period with only four men on the rink...
...veteran players of the Artillery team had little trouble in topping the Crimson, although Harvard started with a four goal handicap. Captain E. T. Gerry '31 was again absent from the lineup, having been out of town during the weekend. The University team was made up of the same players who competed in the first two contests of the season for the seconds, and they played on Saturday as the University team because of the absence or ineligibility of other players...