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...rest of the period, and all of the next, the Crimson carried the play to the Elis, even though it could not score. Although Yale had a few good chances, goalie Nate Corning, who registered his first shutout, was able to handle them...

Author: By Hiller B. Zobel, | Title: Hockey Team Upsets Bulldogs, 4.0 | 3/5/1951 | See Source »

Wooden tallied when the Crimson defense failed to clear the puck from in front of its own cage. He streaked in, stole the disc and and boat Nate Corning from ten feet out. The losers pressed desperately for the remainder of the contest but could not beat Princeton's close-checking defense...

Author: By Malcolm STRACHAN Ii, ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR, DAILY PRINCETON | Title: Princeton Beats Crimson in Hockey Game by One Point | 2/26/1951 | See Source »

...couldn't get going. After Joe Kittredge drew first blood early in the opening period, the Huskies dominated the play for the rest of the game, and Harvard seemed to lose both spirit and fight. Although Husky netminder Ray Picard kicked out 27 shots, 13 more than his rival Nate Corning, the Crimson passing and stickhandling was sloppy and uncoordinated in the Northeastern zone. And whenever they did get a chance at the goal, Picard starred at stopping the puck...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Basketball, Hockey Teams Lose to Columbia, Northeastern | 2/7/1951 | See Source »

...different Harvard team took the ice in the last period. Lack of practice during exams told, and all the scrappiness and precision disappeared. B.C. beat Crimson goalie Nate Corning five times out of 12 shots, while Eagle Joe Carroll was kicking out 10. Weiland took out his goalie with a minute to play, but the six Crimson forwards couldn...

Author: By James M. Storey, | Title: B.C. Dumps Sextet, 10-9 | 2/6/1951 | See Source »

...best thing Minnesota had to offer was its goalie, Bob Moran, who stopped 42 shots Friday and 33 tonight. He was the only defense that the Gophers could rely on. Nate Corning, seen in Crimson nets for the first time by this observer, looked like the steadlest goalie the Crimson has had since the war. His stops totalied only 24 Friday and 22 tonight; but he made them when they counted. His only fault scemed to be an inability to hug the pipes as tightly as he should have on shots from the side. Two tonight went between his pads...

Author: By Charles W. Bailey, CRIMSON MIDWEST CORRESPONDENT | Title: Midwestern Reporter Praises Passing, Shooting of Sextet | 1/8/1951 | See Source »

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