Word: vaillancourt
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...Harvard coach Katey Stone said. “She has gotten so much better. She is so quick that she will come out of nowhere.” In an 11-0 rout of RPI on Saturday and a similar 10-0 drubbing of Union a day later, Vaillancourt had the perfect opportunity to showcase her speed, along with her other skills, in a stunning return to the Crimson (2-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC) after spending the last year training with Team Canada and playing in the 2006 Winter Olympics. From this weekend’s barrage...
When Sarah Vaillancourt made her much-anticipated return to Bright Hockey Center on Saturday in No. 7 Harvard’s season-opener after a year-long absence to participate in the Olympics, the question was: will Sarah Vaillancourt notch a hat trick? Yesterday, when the Crimson (2-0-0, 2-0-0 ECAC) took to the ice against conference doormat Union (2-4-0, 0-2-0) the question was: how quickly will Sarah Vaillancourt notch a hat trick? The answer, amazingly, was less than 21 minutes. Fresh off a three-goal, eight-point effort...
...minutes and 11 seconds for Harvard’s returning Olympians to register a point each for the women’s hockey team.It took just fewer than 57 more minutes for them to notch an additional 13 points and the first win of the 2006-2007 season.Sophomore Sarah Vaillancourt, fresh from her gold-medal run with Team Canada at the Torino Winter Games, scored the first and last goal in a 11-0 romp over Division-I newbie Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) at Bright Hockey Center on Saturday. The Crimson finished with a flurry of scoring, netting six scores...
...trio of Olympians, who missed all of last year to participate in the Winter Games, and all three figured in the scoring this weekend. Senior co-captain Julie Chu notched the game-winner at 3:57 of the second period on an assist from sophomore Sarah Vaillancourt, who took home a gold medal after playing with Team Canada in Turin last winter. Vaillancourt also led the team with 10 shots. Chu’s U.S. national squad teammate, junior Caitlin Cahow, got in on the act when she set up senior Katie Johnston for a breathing-room score...
...wound up—given its gritty post-season performance—a vindication.Harvard started the 2005-06 season having lost its top five scorers from a year ago: record-setting forward Nicole Corriero and all-star defenseman Ashley Banfield to graduation, and Julie Chu, Caitlin Cahow, and Sarah Vaillancourt to represent their countries in the Winter Games. “We lost a lot to graduation and it takes time to replace a Corriero, an Ashley Banfield,” Stone said in a preseason interview. “We’re going to rely...