Word: scored
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Despite the disparity of the score, Cornell only had a 29-27 shot advantage over the Crimson. Harvard goaltender Kyle Richter had 21 saves on the game before being substituted by replacement netminder, junior Ryan Carroll who made three saves in the final ten minutes of the game. On the other end of the ice, the Big Red’s Ben Scrivens made 26 saves in keeping the Crimson offense at bay. Scrivens, a senior, was recently unanimously named to the All-Ivy League first team after leading the Ancient Eight with a 2.43 goals-against average...
Greening put Cornell on the scoreboard early in the first period, but Harvard was quick to respond, recording its sole goal only five minutes later. D’Agostino put the Big Red in the lead for good with his score to close the first period, finishing a rebound off of a shot from teammate Mike Devin...
Shortly after, the Big Red proved that it didn’t need a fast break to score, as Melanie Jue capitalized on chaos around the crease, squeezing her stick around Crimson freshman Kaitlin Spurling for a fourth goal that looked almost like an accident...
...Cornell used its two-score lead in the first to generate the necessary momentum to put the game away in the second...
...even the score could not spark a Harvard comeback, for in the 15th minute of the second period, the Big Red’s Kendice Ogilvie scored off a pretty feed from the corner from Karpenko—besting junior backup netminder Kylie Stephens and taking away any momentum the Crimson had regained...