Word: penaltiesã
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...advantage time. He took the puck at the blue line, then skated a loop around the back of the net and through the left circle before beating Cornell goaltender Ben Scrivens through traffic at 15:42. But less than five minutes into the third frame, a pair of Harvard penalties??including freshman Chad Morin’s five-minute major and game misconduct for head-butting—set up a Big Red 5-on-3, during which Cornell’s Mark McCutcheon beat netminder Justin Tobe high to tie the score. “[Morin...
...handle the puck. While it was bouncing, Brine dove into the play and between her touch and Martin’s inability to find the puck, floated the puck over the goal line for the third score. The refereeing crew did not just ring up Duluth on the penalties??though the Bulldogs took the vast majority—as the Crimson were whistled six times. “I think it’s what we’ve been used to,” Stone said. “I don’t know if they?...
...order to win hockey games.” Vermont killed seven penalties in the second and third periods, while the Crimson dealt with five of its own, including a five-minute major and game misconduct on senior Kevin Du. “[The ref] called way too many penalties?? captain Dylan Reese said. “I thought it was ridiculous. [For] both teams—he was calling everything. If you touched a guy, he called a penalty.” With both teams receiving an approximately equal proportion of the whistles, Reese felt that the constant...
...score,” Reese said. “It cost us the game in the end.” The Crimson’s lack of discipline hurt it again in the final frame. Needing to recover from a 3-2 deficit, Harvard instead committed four penalties??including a major penalty awarded to junior center Paul Dufault at 12:46 for hitting from behind—that limited its offensive chances. Yale made the most of Dufault’s penalty, tallying two man-advantage goals—including a 5-on-3 score with Crimson sophomore...
...game’s first four minutes en route to four first-period offenses of its own. “Emotionally and physically, we were a little bit drained coming in,” Donato said. “I think that showed up with a couple of lazy penalties??hooking, holding in the offensive zone, those types of things.” While the first period included numerous power plays and three separate stretches of 5-on-3 play, both teams’ penalty kills rose to the challenge under the heavy workload. Harvard, in particular...