Word: goale
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...completing the kick, but Northeastern keeper Stephanie Gordon guessed correctly and made a leaping save to give her Huskies an early advantage.No less significant than Rhodes’ injury was one to forward Katherine Sheeleigh two weeks ago at Dartmouth. The sophomore, who finished second on the team in goals and points and picked up a spot on the Ivy League First Team, started both halves of Friday’s matchup but departed for good in the 53rd minute. Leone did not send her out for a penalty kick in the decisive round.“She just didn?...
...ball deflected off her hands into the side of the net, barely going in the goal.The Crimson was still in charge of its own destiny, as senior forward Erin Wylie stepped into the box. After having one of her best games of the season—she tallied a goal and an assist on the night—she looked to put a capper on her stellar performance. But her shot went wide, giving Northeastern an opportunity to seal the game on its next attempt. The Huskies did not blink, winning the penalty shootout 4-2.The team was strong...
...share of the Ivy title on the line for the Crimson in The Game.The pick would never have been necessary without a furious Penn comeback that made a snoozer into a thrilling contest. After the Crimson converted one of Barnes’ interceptions into a 20-yard field goal by junior kicker Patrick Long to make the score 17-0 with 6:55 remaining in the third quarter, the Quakers offense came to life. Statistically among the worst units in the Ivy League, Penn’s offense marched 74 yards on 12 plays behind third-string quarterback Keiffer Garton...
...said Crimson coach Ted Donato ’91. “From the net on out, we did an excellent job. We really played as a committed hockey club all weekend.” Freshman Matt Hoyle posted his first career shutout against the Saints, who average 3.14 goals a game. The rookie notched 29 saves overall and helped kill seven St. Lawrence power plays. “Our defense was really huge for us all weekend, and obviously when you give up 4-on-3s, 5-on-3s, as many power plays as we did, the old adage...
...defense came in the last part of the second period and carried through the intermission into the third. Harvard had committed two penalties and faced a 5-on-3 situation for 1:30. It was imperative for the defense to be perfect, as the Crimson’s one-goal lead left no room for error. “That was a huge [penalty] kill,” said Harvard coach Ted Donato ’91. “Jim Fraser, Alex Biega, Chad Morin, and Matt Hoyle I think really dug down deep. They were blocking shots. That?...