Word: pucks
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...last Tuesday.“Martin was playing great in front of us,” Brine said. “We had confidence going on the ice knowing that. We just knew that all we had to do was kill these two five-on-threes and get the puck out.”As the Providence power play seemed to be reaching the height of its intensity, Brine went to her knees to wrest the puck away from the Friars, clear it past two blue lines, and allow Harvard and Martin a reprieve from the onslaught...
...three points each in the Wildcats’ last win, a 5-0 rout of Vermont, and Faber currently ranks 13th in the nation for points per game. “I think they have some great forwards that are fairly shifty and have the ability to put the puck away well,” said Harvard co-captain and forward Julie Chu of the Wildcat frontline. But with sophomore forward Jenny Brine leading the nation in goals and Chu currently first in points per game, not to mention explosive sophomore winger Sarah Vaillancourt, the Crimson may have the edge...
...Cahow said. “It usually goes to the player who has made the effort—maybe she’ll make the first pass and then three passes later a goal is scored or she’ll make a great backchecking effort, take the puck away, and give it to someone else to score.”Just look at this weekend’s recipients—sophomore Sarah Vaillancourt and Cahow. In Friday’s matchup, Vaillancourt may have wristed a terrific score against star UMD netminder, Kim Martin, but her greatest contribution...
...more of those.”But the Huskies would not be stopped, as UConn’s Kristen Russell retaliated by slamming in the game-winning goal 16:46 into the third period.“We got unlucky and didn’t clear the puck to the corners like we know how to do,” Sifers said. “But it came at the end of the game with only three minutes left, and it’s really difficult to come back.”With a minute and a half left...
...only once this season—to Minnesota—and boasted a 1.03 goals against average heading into the contest. The key goal came just past halfway through the game in response to the Bulldogs’ first goal. While on the powerplay, sophomore Sarah Vaillancourt had the puck behind the net to the left. As she skated around, keeping possession, she found senior forward Liza Solley in front of the net, who knocked home the puck in a tight hole between Martin’s left arm and the post for a 2-1 Harvard advantage. For Harvard...