Word: katey
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...victory, sending the team into the semifinals against St. Lawrence next Friday. The matchup had been a tight one all weekend, with sharp play from both squads, and every game decided by a single goal. “We match up really well,” Harvard coach Katey Stone said. “Particularly this year, we’ve matched up really well with them. We knew it was going to be close.” The second overtime was evenly played. The Crimson took six shots to the Golden Knights’ five, but that extra shot...
...Crimson. “Her shot is unreal,” Angela Ruggiero ’02-’04 said before the 2003-2004 campaign. “I’m anxious to see how Jen Raimondi is going to do,” Harvard coach Katey Stone commented when asked in October of 2003 who she was focusing on for the upcoming season. “I think she did a lot of great things for us last year, really transitioned [from high school] well…I think that kid’s going...
...Raimondi said. The final tally came on the only shot that Harvard (14-11-4, 10-6-4 ECAC) managed on Clarkson (21-12-1, 12-8-0) in the overtime frame. With a faceoff in the Crimson offensive zone and 18 seconds on the clock, Harvard coach Katey Stone called a play to try to push through the all-important score. “It didn’t quite go as planned, but luckily we got the puck back,” Raimondi said. “Wilson just threw it on net and the puck luckily bounced...
...last seven—came when the women of the class of 2006 graced the ice at Bright for potentially the last time.“I thought we moved the puck well and played faster than we had been,” Harvard coach Katey Stone said. “But more importantly, we played with intensity and a sense of urgency today.”Captain Carrie Schroyer opened the game on a positive note for the Crimson when she netted the eventual game-winner at just over two minutes into the contest. Classmate Jennifer Raimondi...
...that will serve as lifetime tokens of their two-week trip to the Winter Games in Turin in the Italian Alps, to the peak of competition in women’s hockey, to the heights of athletic immortality. For Harvard viewers, especially those familiar with the recent exploits of Katey Stone’s women’s hockey teams, there were a few familiar visages among the bunch. There was Sarah Vaillancourt, a sophomore-to-be, gleeful after helping Canada—a squad which included former Crimson standout Jennifer Botterill ’02-’03?...