Though it was her only tally on the evening—Gunn denied each of her other nine shots—she would add an assist on freshman Jenn Sifers’ goal to give Harvard a 4-1 lead at 10:30 in the third period and was lurking somewhere on the ice when the Crimson banged home four of its five scores, giving her plenty to rib Gunn about.
Golden Goalies
For the second straight week, an opposing netminder recorded more than 50 saves against Harvard’s prolific offense. And for the second straight week, the Herculean effort wasn’t enough.
One week removed from Bertagna Award winner Lisa Davis’ 59 saves on 63 shots—third-best all time in BC history—the Crimson peppered Gunn with 56 shots, while allowing the Huskies just 11 attempts on net.
“We had a feeling that we were probably going to be able to take a few shots,” Harvard coach Katey Stone said. “But those are the kinds of games that are great for goaltenders because they just get hotter and hotter and hotter.”
Coming off a 9-2 drubbing at then-No. 10 New Hampshire in which she was pulled after allowing five goals in two periods, Gunn looked shaky early, allowing freshman Caitlin Cahow to bang home a loose puck in front of the net just 1:39 into the first period.
But following Ruggiero’s tally, Gunn settled in between the pipes, negating the Crimson attack until 5:18 had gone by in the third and allowing Northeastern to claw its way back into the game at 2-1 despite being outshot 38-8 at the end of the second.
The flash of brilliance dissipated almost as quickly, as sophomore Jen Raimondi slapped a one-timer past Gunn at 5:18, paving the way for Harvard’s three-goal final frame.
Second Bananas
Harvard’s victory last night marks the sixth time in as many years that the Crimson has been crowned the best in Boston. During that stretch BC and Northeastern have split runner-up honors, with the Eagles playing second fiddle to Harvard in each of the previous two Beanpots.
“This never gets old,” Stone said. “Playing the Beanpot never gets old. It’s a huge tournament. Everyone knows it’s for bragging rights in Boston but it’s more than that. It’s an opportunity to play for something in the middle of February and only four teams get that opportunity in women’s college hockey.”
The Huskies last took home the coveted prize in 1998, defeating the Crimson 5-4 for their third straight trophy. The Eagles have never won the tournament.
Since the women’s Beanpot’s inception in 1979, either Harvard or Northeastern has competed for the title in all but one final—the 1981 showdown between BC and BU—with the two competing head-to-head 17 times—the Huskies holding an 11-6 advantage.
—Staff writer Timothy J. McGinn can be reached at mcginn@fas.harvard.edu.