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Golden Knights End an Era of Harvard Hockey

Clarkson Edges Icemen, 3-2, to Eliminate Crimson From ECAC Playoffs

By Daniel L. Jacobowitz

Trailing 3-2 with 1:48 remaining in its season, the Harvard men's hockey team searched for a miracle--like Peter Ciavaglia's sudden-death overtime goal to beat Colgate on December 2, or Ted Donato's slapshot goal with five seconds to play to force overtime with Rensselaer on December 8--anything that would draw the Crimson even with Clarkson and keep alive Harvard's hopes of advancing to the ECAC finals.

But, consistent with the Crimson's 1-6 record in its one-goal games this season, Harvard could not slip past the solid Golden Knights defense and fell to Clarkson, 3-2, in front of 9034 Saturday night at the Boston Garden. The Golden Knights advanced to face north country rival St. Lawrence--which nipped Cornell, 4-3, in overtime in the other ECAC semifinal--in last night's ECAC final.

First-seeded Clarkson (24-7-2 overall, 15-5-2 ECAC) kept Harvard's league-leading offense away from the net all game long by attacking the Crimson forwards at center ice and forcing Harvard (14-12-3 overall, 13-7-2 ECAC) into a dump-and-run game.

"We knew we wanted to hem up their big guns," Golden Knights Coach Mark Morris said. "We got them off of their game by clogging up center ice. If you can do that, you force them to dump the puck."

"They like to carry the puck," Morris continued, "and if you let them pick up speed, it's tough to stop them. But if you create a lot of obstacles, you can cut down your opponent."

The obstacles at Morris's disposal--chief of which were defenders Dave Tretowicz and Sylvain Lapointe--blanked Harvard's fantastic four of Ciavaglia (Hobey Baker nominee and ECAC Player of the Year) Mike Vukonich, Ted Donato and Ted Drury for over 58 of the contest's 60 minutes. Tretowicz and Lapointe back-checked aggressively and effectively stick-checked the puck away from Harvard forwards on key chances.

The Crimson could not score until 4:39 into the third period, ending a five-period Garden scoring draught.

But Crimson Coach Ronn Tomassoni wasn't buying into the idea that the Garden's small dimensions and pock-marked ice surface were the primary cause for Harvard's offensive difficulties.

"Both teams have to play on it," Tomassoni said. "It was the third game of the day, and the ice wasn't in good shape, but that's no excuse."

A swift Clarkson offense, led by right wing Scott Thomas and center Dave Trombley, is a more likely explanation of the Golden Knights success and Harvard's demise. The two wheeled into the Harvard zone and launched shot after shot at Harvard netminder Chuckie Hughes, who saved 28 on the night.

But even Hughes couldn't stop everything. With 29 seconds to play in the second period, Thomas redirected a Tretowicz slapshot from the right point past Hughes to give Clarkson the game's first score.

But Harvard knotted the game on a score set up by the Crimson third line's smooth passing. Tim Burke raced down the left flank, outskating Golden Knights defender Mikko Tavi across the blue line, and slipped the puck across to Steve Flomenhoft, who backhanded the puck by Clarkson netminder Chris Rogles to even the game, 1-1.

Harvard's momentum was short-lived, however. The Crimson's Jim Coady was called for hooking just three minutes after the goal and the Golden Knights found an opportune moment to break out of its zero-for-10 slump on the man advantage.

Wing Mike Casselman drove down the left flank from Hughes, leaving the puck for a trailing Thomas, who flipped it into the Crimson net to make it 2-1 with 11:55 to play in the contest.

"It just felt good to get a power play goal again," Thomas said. "We knew we could do it. It was just a matter of time."

"That was a big one," Tomassoni said. "We thought we had tied it up and were back in control, but no."

Clarkson continued to press ahead using perimeter passing and hard forechecking to ground the puck into the Crimson end.

But it was on a fast-break goal that Clarkson tallied the game-winner. Trombley took the puck from teammate Jeff Torrey and skated untouched into the Harvard zone. Trombley bolted towards Hughes and gave Clarkson a 3-1 lead on a shot that deflected off Brian McCormack's stick.

Harvard closed the gap when Vukonich, on a feed from Ciavaglia, made the score 3-2 with just under two minutes remaining, but it was the last goal Harvard would score in the 1990-91 season. Golden Knights, 3-2 at Boston Garden HARVARD  0-0-2--2 Clarkson  0-1-2--3

First Period: No scoring. Penalties--H, Lou Body (hitting from behind) 9:02; H, Body (interference) 14:21.

Second Period: 1, C, Scott Thomas 23 (Craig Conroy, Dave Tretowicz) 19:29. Penalties--C, Mike Casselman (hooking); H, Peter Ciavaglia (roughing) 10:57; C, Martin d'Orsonnens (roughing) 10:57; H, Jim Coady (hitting after the whistle) 14:21; C, Sylvain Lapointe (hitting after the whistle) 14:21; C, Steve Dubinsky (interference) 16:20.

Third Period: 2, H, Steve Flomenhoft 12 (Scott Barringer, Tim Burke) 4:39; 3, C, Thomas 24 (Casselman, Ed Henrich) 8:05 ppg; 4, C, Dave Trombley 28 (unassisted) 15:03; 5, H, Mike Vukonich 32 (Rich DeFreitas, Ciavaglia) 18:12. Penalties--H, Coady (hooking) 7:06.

Saves: H--Chuckie Hughes 10-8-10--28; C--Chris Rogles 4-10-6--20

Power Play: Harvard 0-2; Clarkson 1-3.

Attendance: 9034

First Period: No scoring. Penalties--H, Lou Body (hitting from behind) 9:02; H, Body (interference) 14:21.

Second Period: 1, C, Scott Thomas 23 (Craig Conroy, Dave Tretowicz) 19:29. Penalties--C, Mike Casselman (hooking); H, Peter Ciavaglia (roughing) 10:57; C, Martin d'Orsonnens (roughing) 10:57; H, Jim Coady (hitting after the whistle) 14:21; C, Sylvain Lapointe (hitting after the whistle) 14:21; C, Steve Dubinsky (interference) 16:20.

Third Period: 2, H, Steve Flomenhoft 12 (Scott Barringer, Tim Burke) 4:39; 3, C, Thomas 24 (Casselman, Ed Henrich) 8:05 ppg; 4, C, Dave Trombley 28 (unassisted) 15:03; 5, H, Mike Vukonich 32 (Rich DeFreitas, Ciavaglia) 18:12. Penalties--H, Coady (hooking) 7:06.

Saves: H--Chuckie Hughes 10-8-10--28; C--Chris Rogles 4-10-6--20

Power Play: Harvard 0-2; Clarkson 1-3.

Attendance: 9034

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