Word: regular-season
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Instead, the ECAC rewards its top regular-season performers by re-seeding after each round of play, matching the top seed with the lowest remaining one and thereby ensuring that the No. 1 team—this year Cornell—has the smoothest road to a potential title. Should the majority of opening-round winners be culled from seeds five through eight, the Crimson and Colgate will both, because of that pairing method, face sub-.500 opponents separated by one to three points at season?...
...double whammy Mass.-Lowell, BU, and Maine each suffered was enough to boost Harvard from a low No. 3 seed to a low No. 2. But with regular-season play drawing to a close nationwide this weekend and plenty more high-profile matchups capable of dropping the Crimson right back down, Harvard’s skaters will certainly be watching the results...
Somehow, it all turned out all right. Despite mustering just a tie against Vermont and an overtime loss to Dartmouth, the No. 11 Harvard men’s hockey team, traveling for its final two regular-season games, managed to secure second place in the ECAC...
Corriero led the way on offense with a five-point effort in her final regular-season game. A pair of goals brought her total to 49 on the year, within two of tying the Division I single-season record...
...pissed, for example, that this year’s Harvard team will not finish with 20 regular-season wins. The Crimson hasn’t done that since 1988-89, when the program won 24 games in the regular season en route to a national championship. This year, Harvard triumphed in the hard games, felling Boston College, Boston University, Maine, Vermont, and Cornell, top-15 teams all of them. So what kept Harvard from 20 wins season? Losses to teams like Merrimack and the aforementioned St. Lawrence, mediocre teams that played their biggest games against the Crimson...