Word: three-goal
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Harvard’s next goal, but an even strength effort again from Michaud. In a set-up very similar to his first goal, the freshman collected a pass from the left to the right, this time from defenseman Ian Tallett, and ripped a shot from the point past Fisher with 2:43 remaining in the period. The significance of Michaud’s first and second goals did not escape his teammates, and the Harvard players on the ice mobbed the freshman in a congratulatory hug.With a comfortable three-goal lead, the Crimson seemed content to contain the Bobcats...
...hands of the Terrapins after valiantly mounting a comeback attempt.Down by three during the first half, MacLaughlin capped a quick Crimson run to tie the game at four in the waning minutes of the second quarter. Playing a game of cat-and-mouse, Maryland pulled away again by three in the third, only to see the Crimson pull back within one. The Terrapins pulled away yet again—this time for good—en route to the team’s three-goal victory. “We were really excited from how we performed on Saturday...
...watched Harvard explode into a three-goal lead in the first seven minutes in that round one contest, I played “spot the Harvard fans” from the rafters of the TD Banknorth Garden only to find either whole sections of empty seats or rabid Husky fans perplexed that they really had no one in the crowd to heckle...
...Facing a three-goal deficit with a little over three minutes to play, the Crimson needed a spark to turn the game in its favor...
...Ukraine.”Junior Jenny Brine also scored for Harvard, putting away her own rebound in the first period to even the score at 1.McGill scored again in the second before the Crimson rattled off three straight goals to take the lead for good.HARVARD 3, MCGILL 2With a three-goal lead in hand midway through the second period of Friday’s game, the Crimson appeared to be on its way to an easy rout. But the Martlets made it interesting, taking advantage of what Stone called a “lack of intensity” from Harvard...