Word: powerfully
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Junior goaltender Kyle Richter had two penalty kills on Cornell’s consecutive power plays to preserve a blank scoreboard, which Harvard was able to maintain until halfway through the second period. It was at that point that the Big Red launched an offensive attack—one that lasted less than a minute but crippled the Crimson for the remainder of the game. The first blow came 10:14 into the period, when junior Tyler Roeszler connected with teammate Nick D’Agostino to net the opening goal of the night...
...scoreless first period, Harvard killed two consecutive Big Red power plays and was able to contain the Cornell offense. Junior goaltender Kyle Richter came up strong between the pipes for the Crimson, stopping 11 first-period shots, with six coming on the penalty kill. He would go on to log 23 saves for the game...
...that stole the show early on, storming out to a two-goal lead in the first half of the game. The No. 5 Crimson (18-6-5, 13-6-3) held off the Golden Knights for the first 10 minutes, but Clarkson kept the pressure on while its first power-play unit lay dormant in the arsenal...
...knew [their] strength was their first power-play unit,” Griffin said. “They’ve got some kids who can really shoot the puck. We knew it was coming...
...that weapon when Harvard junior Liza Ryabkina got sent to the penalty box for slashing at 12:33. Sixteen seconds later, Clarkson junior Melissa Waldie found the back of the net off a rebound of sophomore Juana Baribeau’s slapshot. It was Waldie’s ninth power-play goal of the season...