Word: pucks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...played on the 1910 championship team and it will be hard to find two men who will work so well together in the forward line. Kalbfleisch developed into one of the best goal tenders of the season. He was both clever in stopping shots and quick in clearing the puck. Blair played efficiently in breaking up the attack...
...Kilner 1914 were substitutes this season and will undoubtedly find a place on the team next year. From the Freshman seven, R. B. Cowan and R. B. Peacock are the only players who appear to be of 'Varsity calibre this year. Both are fast skaters, handle the puck well, and should make strong bids for positions on the team. With such a strong nucleus and so many promising candidates the outlook for the 1913 seven is of the brightest sort...
...work progressed the weakness of the forward line became more and more noticeable. There was no one who could carry the puck as Hornblower did a year ago, and there was not the same coLcerted action among the players. Huntington was as fast as ever and extremely valuable in following back, but Duncan seemed neither as fast nor as clever as last year, when his chief value to the team was his ability to knock in rebounds. One reason for this is that this year there is no forward who can get all the way up the rink...
...team was now at almost top form--Sortwell had shown much improvement on the wing, Huntington's following back was beyond criticism and the defence was almost impregnable. The two great defects of the organization were; first, the defence had difficulty in getting the puck out of the corners; and second, there was no one man who could dribble the puck through a whole team...
...forward line was weakened somewhat on this account. Pierce at right wing also seemed to have suffered a setback and hardly held up his end against Baldwin. The defense, too, was not shining as brilliantly as usual and had a tendency to rush at the man carrying the puck and, when attempting to get the puck out of the corners or out from behind the cage, tried to accomplish the desired result more by brute strength than cleverness...