Word: hockeyed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
ITHACA, N.Y.—Much like Michael Jordan repeatedly saved his best for the Utah Jazz, Cornell blueliner Doug Krantz is developing a knack for crushing the spirits of the Harvard men’s hockey team. In many ways, the Crimson’s late collapse in Friday’s 3-2 defeat could be compared to Harvard’s 4-3 loss to the Big Red on November 11, 2005—almost exactly a year ago. In both games, the Crimson held a late lead. On Friday, senior Kevin Du potted a power-play...
...coach Ted Donato ’91 elected to start freshman netminder Kyle Richter against powerhouse Boston College last Tuesday, Richter responded by posting a shutout, a performance that earned him a second consecutive start on Friday night against Cornell. On Saturday, however, the Harvard men’s hockey team returned to its regular rotation in net, with senior Justin Tobe getting the call against Colgate. While Richter was impressive against the Eagles, collecting 36 saves, he seemed to lose his edge in the final minutes of the matchup with the Big Red. With the Crimson...
After leading the Harvard men’s hockey team to its first victory of the season last Tuesday against then-No. 3 Boston College, goalie Kyle Richter was named the ECAC Rookie of the Week yesterday. The freshman posted 36 saves for the Crimson in a 4-0 upset of the Eagles. Harvard’s first win of the season was also Richter’s first shutout and first collegiate victory. In front of Richter, the Crimson defense held Boston College scoreless in eight power-play opportunities. Harvard coach Ted Donato ‘91 said that...
Missing some of its top players, the one-loss Harvard women’s hockey team appeared vulnerable for a time Saturday night as one-win Cornell pressured hard in the third period of a tied game. And then the floodgates opened. The No. 8 Crimson (5-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC) poured in four goals in six minutes—including three in 55 seconds—to ice the Big Red (1-6-1, 1-3-0 ECAC) in a 5-2 victory in the Bright Hockey Center. “Katie Johnston scored the third goal...
With the prestigious Four Nations Cup drawing top players to Ontario this weekend, the No. 8 Harvard women’s hockey team found itself in a familiar position on Friday night at Bright Hockey Center—taking the ice without leading scorers Julie Chu and Sarah Vaillancourt and defensive anchor Caitlin Cahow, all three of whom took last season off to compete in the Olympic Games. However, the Crimson (5-1-0, 5-1-0 ECAC) refused to let the loss of their three stars translate to a loss in the standings, as the team skated...