The Harvard hockey team is back in town.
Two near-capacity crowds showed up at Bright Center this weekend to see for themselves why the road reports from the first half of the hockey season have been less than promising.
They didn't find out.
The Crimson lived up to its preseason expectations--wiping out Clarkson, 6-1, and St. Lawrence, 3-2 in overtime, to make Bill Cleary Harvard's all-time winningest coach and give the team its first back-to-back wins all season.
Mike Vukonich scored his second goal of the night with 1:04 left in overtime to lift Harvard over the Saints Saturday, while a C.J. Young hat trick the night before provided the paint for the Crimson's whitewash over Clarkson.
"We've got a lot of winners in this locker room" said Young, who also scored the game-tying goal against the Saints Saturday. "It only takes so many slaps in the face before you stop thinking about it and really start working hard."
The sweep puts Harvard's ECAC record at 6-5-1 (6-7-1 overall) and lands the Crimson in a four-way tie for second place in the league with Princeton (6-4-1), St. Lawrence (6-4-1) and Clarkson (6-4-1).
League-leading Colgate is ahead of the pack by only one point, but the standings can be deceptive. While Harvard has 13 points in 12 games and the Tigers, Saints and Golden Knights have the same number in 11 efforts, Colgate has amassed its 14 points in only eight ECAC outings--which gives the Red Raiders a big head start heading into the second stretch.
"If the teams continue to be inconsistent [the league race] is going to go right down to the wire," Clarkson Coach Mark Morris said. "Harvard's had its bad moments, we just had one here...I wish I had the answers."
St. Lawrence Coach Joe Marsh doesn't have any solutions either. He's been as frustrated as Cleary over his team's inconsistent play--the Saints (6-9-2 overall) have gone up and down all season. Saturday, they went up and down all game.
"We didn't play consistently," said
Marsh, whose team squandered two one-goalleads. "I thought we were with them most of theway, but we had lapses. We didn't even get a shotoff in overtime."
Joe Day capitalized on a scramble in front ofthe net to put SLU up, 1-0, 17:27 into thecontest. Vukonich responded with a power-play goaljust over a minute later for a 1-1 tie that lastedinto the third period.
The Crimson, which has had trouble forecheckingthis season, had a big breakdown in the third togive SLU the edge. John Massoud broke out of thezone quickly, leaving the Harvard defense behindand forward Pete Ciavaglia alone to protect thenet. Martyn Ball took a turnaround shot in thezone for the 2-1 lead.
Then the Harvard line of Young, Vukonich andjunior John Murphy--which had threepicture-perfect goals over the weekend--worked alittle more magic, as Vukonich and Murphy set upYoung at the 18:16 mark to send the game intoovertime.
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