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Field Hockey Demolishes Eagles

Field Hockey vs. Boston College
Lauren S. Hirshon

Harvard fights Boston College in varisty field hockey.

In a final tune-up before Saturday’s Ivy showdown with No. 7 Princeton, the Harvard field hockey team proved that it has the confidence, skill, and motivation to challenge the Tigers for this year’s Ivy League title.

The Crimson (7-4, 3-0 Ivy) put forth strong effort on both sides of the ball and pasted crosstown foe Boston College (7-7) 5-0 yesterday afternoon at Jordan Field.

The Harvard offense exploded for its highest scoring effort of the season, and the defense combined with goalies Katie Zacarian and Aliaa Remtilla to post its third shutout this year.

Harvard Coach Sue Caples found the performance of the offense to be especially encouraging heading into this weekend.

“It was certainly nice to score some goals,” said Caples. “We needed that.”

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The key goal for the Crimson came off the stick of freshman forward Tiffany Egnaczyk at an important juncture with only 50 seconds remaining in the first half.

With Harvard clinging to a 1-0 lead in the middle of a Boston College rally, freshman back Shelley Maasdorp made a beautiful pass from midfield to the top of the circle to Egnaczyk, who spun around a defender and backhanded a shot past Eagles goalie Lauren Hill.

The tally put the Crimson up 2-0 and gave the team the necessary momentum to dominate the Eagles in the second half.

Reigning Ivy League Rookie of the Week freshman midfielder Kate Gannon scored her third goal in as many games on a rebound five minutes into the second half to increase the Crimson advantage to 3-0.

Just six minutes later, Gannon struck again as she fed sophomore forward Mina Pell at the top of the circle. Pell picked up her second goal of the game on a slapshot to make the score 4-0.

Sophomore midfielder Elizabeth Andrews scored her first career goal less than a minute later on a penalty corner to round out the scoring at 5-0.

While the Harvard offense was putting the game out of reach in the second half, the Crimson defense made absolutely sure that B.C. didn’t rally back into the game.

Harvard’s defenders stifled the Boston College attack for most of the second stanza, allowing only two shots, and the Eagles didn’t manage a scoring opportunity until the 62nd minute.

The B.C. offense, led by junior forward Kim French and senior forward Gina Dinan, produced some good rushes during the first half but managed few shots as the Crimson defense came up with some key stops.

Zacarian was solid in goal, making five saves to contribute to Harvard’s second consecutive shutout. Remtilla saw her first collegiate action late in the second half and made two saves.

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