News

‘Deal with the Devil’: Harvard Medical School Faculty Grapple with Increased Industry Research Funding

News

As Dean Long’s Departure Looms, Harvard President Garber To Appoint Interim HGSE Dean

News

Harvard Students Rally in Solidarity with Pro-Palestine MIT Encampment Amid National Campus Turmoil

News

Attorneys Present Closing Arguments in Wrongful Death Trial Against CAMHS Employee

News

Harvard President Garber Declines To Rule Out Police Response To Campus Protests

In "Other" Final Four, "Other" Lakers Superior

The Hockey Notebook II

By Alvar J. Mattei

The rink on which the NCAA Final Four was played was supposed to be advantageous to fast-skating teams. But the larger ice sheet in the Olympic Center in Lake Placid, N.Y., did not make much difference at all.

Not only was there not a single two-on-one or three-on-two goal in games that mattered, but the overtime goal by Lake Superior State against St. Lawrence in the title game came from a pileup resembling a rugby scrum.

The Lakers captured their first NCAA Championship with a 4-3 victory over the Saints last Saturday.

Penalties--lots of them--were called all weekend, especially in games in which Maine was involved. John Galipeau--the same referee who missed a flagrant kick by RPI's Bruce Coles in the first round of the ECAC playoffs in Cambridge--refereed the Maine-Lake Superior semifinal last Thursday and had a tough night.

No Beast From The East: You have to wonder about the Hockey East conference. In 1988, Hockey East was looking to end two years of playoff impotence. The top-ranked Maine Black Bears would be the chief catalyst.

But Lowell was knocked out of the playoffs in the first round. So was Northeastern (by Division II Merrimack). Although Maine won its second-round series over Bowling Green (the first Hockey East playoff victory since 1985), it was dumped by Lake Superior State in Lake Placid.

A final note: it was good to see that no returning Olympic hockey players were on the roster of the participants in the national championship game.

It Can't Be: The 1987-88 Harvard hockey campaign began, as it has for the last four leap years, with a game with the U.S. Olympic hockey team. The past three games were, of course, blowouts. But it wasn't always that way.

In fact, the Crimson beat Team USA, 5-2, in the Boston Garden on November 24, 1975. Below are excerpts from William E. Stedman Jr.'s game story which ran in The Crimson the following day:

"If last night is any indicator, the Russian hockey team won't have to worry much about the Americans...a not-too-polished Harvard squad dumped the Olympians...

"The Olympic offense could not best Crimson goaltender Brian Petrovek more than twice, despite 34 shots during the game. Petrovek, who was cut from the Olympic team this summer, put in a very solid performance against the team that spurned his talents...

"For the Olympic squad, it was a night they would probably like to forget, especially with the Olympic Games just three months away."

Team USA went on to finish fourth in the Olympics.

The Chalkboard: Both Harvard varsity hockey teams have scored some great goals in the course of the season. John Murphy tallied while falling down against Brown in January. Char Joslin skated around three Colby players to get a goal in December. Ted Donato scored while crashing into the goalpost against RPI. And for slapshot artistry, Julie Sasner is without peer.

But which can be called Goal Of The Year? After careful thought, there can be no other than Sasner's overtime goal against Princeton.

This goal was not just Sasner's effort; the shot itself was a wristshot from 15 feet out. The goal was set up by a roller-coaster sequence of events.

Harvard got caught on a line change. Freshmen Mollie Marcoux (M) and Shari Wolkon (W) skated two-on-zero on junior Jennifer White (29). The game could have been over right there, but White came up with a critical save.

graphic

The puck wound up on the stick of Julia Trotman (8) who cleared it short of the goal line. Icing was waved off.

Brita Lind (11) gave chase, splitting two Princeton defensemen (D) for possession of the puck. Lind then slid a pass to a trailing Sasner (15) for the goal.

Kudos: To seniors Steve Armstrong and Don Sweeney and sophomore C.J. Young for making the All-Ivy first team. The rest of the first team consists of Cornell's Trent Andison, Chris Norton and Corrie D'Alessie along with John Messuri of Princeton who copped the Ivy Player of the Year.

Other Harvard players making the All-Ivy team were Jerry Pawloski (second team), and Andy Janfaza and John Devin (honorable mention).

Other honors voted by the league's six head coaches went to Peter Ciavaglia and D'Alessio, sharing Ivy League Rookie of the Year honors.

Quickies: Harvard Co-Captain Julie Sasner copped the MVP trophy for the annual ECAC Women's All-Star Game. The game, played a week after the ECAC women's hockey tournament, was held in Bright Hockey Center and was won by Sasner's team, 6-4...Harvard and Olympic hockey player Lane MacDonald recorded a 30-second spot for the NCAA recently. The message warned against drugs and alcohol...Philadelphia Flyer goalie Ron Hextall's goal last December against the Boston Bruins had a parallel in the college hockey ranks--but better. Jim Tortorella, who played goal for Maine in the late 1970s, scored (get this) a shorthanded goal for the Black Bears while the opposing goalie was still in the net...Thanks to *** Morris at Alaska-Fairbanks for her input this year for The Hockey Notebook II. Thanks also to Julie Woltjen at Alabama-Huntsville, Joe Bertagna '73 and Steve Armstrong for cross-checking the Clarkson mascot.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags