Word: quinnipiac
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...stats sheet for Friday night’s game against Quinnipiac will tell you that 17:33 into the second period, freshman Alex Biega scored the game-winning goal, with junior Mike Taylor contributing an assist. What it doesn’t say, however, is that it was Taylor’s highlight-reel puckhandling that allowed the play to develop, leading to perhaps the most important goal of the season for the Harvard men’s hockey team and a victory over the top-ranked team in the ECAC. “When you lose some games, mentally...
...lost the puck about five times on the blue line in the third period, because everyone wants to be Wayne Gretzky.”This defeat brings near-perfect symmetry to Harvard’s play this weekend. On Friday night, it was the Crimson who defeated Quinnipiac 4-2 despite surrendering two goals to the Bobcats in the first 11 minutes.The Crimson returns to the ice tomorrow night against Vermont at the Bright Hockey Center...
...Harvard women’s hockey team, it was not turkey but the prospect of defeating Quinnipiac and Princeton to claim the top spot in the ECAC that made mouths water this Thanksgiving weekend. And two Crimson rookies may have been the hungriest of all. Freshman defender Cori Bassett scored her first collegiate goal and assisted three other scores for Crimson (9-1-0, 9-1-0 ECAC) in a 6-1 triumph over Quinnipiac (4-11-0, 3-8-0) Friday night in Northford, Conn. Then in Saturday night’s matchup in Princeton, N.J., rookie netminder Christina...
...Quinnipiac may have boasted the ECAC’s best record heading into Friday night’s contest at the Bright Hockey Center, but it was the Harvard men’s hockey team who played like contenders.The last-place Crimson (3-7-0, 2-6-0 ECAC) combined efficient passing, a solid physical game, and some skillful stickhandling to upset the No. 20 Bobcats (7-4-2, 4-2-1) by a score of 4-2 and snap a three-game losing streak.“Harvard definitely was prepared to play tonight,” Quinnipiac coach...
Coming off two hard losses, the Harvard women’s basketball team looked to start anew in the home opener against Quinnipiac. However, the same problems that plagued the team in the first two contests appeared in full force on Wednesday at Lavietes. The Crimson (0-3) proved to be its own enemy as too many turnovers and early foul trouble helped the visitors to an 82-74 victory, marking the Crimson’s third straight defeat in the young season. Harvard appears to have found a pattern early in the season: start out strong, taking a commanding...