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Vermont Blanks Slumping Icemen

By Bradford E. Miller

In a season which has been marked by as many ups and downs as a typical Wall Street Friday, the Harvard men's hockey team once again suffered a crash of large proportions in its own rink this past Saturday night.

In fact, Harvard (12-11-1 overall, 10-7-1 ECAC) suffered a 5-0 shut-out loss at Bright Hockey Center to the ECAC's seventh-place team, Vermont (15-11-2, 8-8-2).

"Obviously, we're in a slump," coach Ronn Tomassoni said.

The game began with Tomassoni reinserting the original offensive lines Harvard used in its successful pre-exam-period games, but nothing seemed to work the entire night.

"We're trying a lot of things, but unfortunately the buttons we're pressing aren't working," Tomassoni said.

But in the broad scheme of things, the Crimson ended the weekend in much better shape than one might think. First-place Clarkson lost both of its games as well, creating a first-place tie with Brown, who defeated Dart-mouth and Vermont.

Harvard still holds third place in the ECAC, although it's just one precarious point above this Friday's opponent, RPL.

"It seems like no one wants to win anything [in the ECAC]," Tomassoni said. "So it's not too late to turn it around."

The glaring statistic on the night was definitely the Crimson's power play. Harvard was an anemic 0-for-11 on the night-including two wasted five-on-three chances-as nothing seemed to go right.

"We got our shots on net [on our power play], but when you're in a slump, pucks just don't go in the net," captain Ben Coughlin said.

Vermont's scoring began halfway into the first period, when Eric Perrin capitalized on a Crimson defensive lapse to slam the puck home for a 1-0 Catamount lead.

Harvard then had two different power plays, including one minute of five-on-three play, but it could not tie up the game.

Late in the first stanza, Vermont went on the power play again, and the Catamounts clicked again. Only six seconds into the man advantage, J.C. Ruid took a pass right in front of the net from the nation's assist leader-Martin St. Louis-and made the score 2-0 Vermont.

The second period brought out more of Harvard's trouble on the power play, its nemesis all season long.

Not only did Harvard fail to cash in with the man advantage, but also there were times when Vermont mounted scoring opportunities on its own, such as a two-on-one rush which would have tallied another, had the puck not deflected off Coughlin's skate.

The tide could have turned when Harvard killed off a five-minute major, but Vermont continued to apply the pressure.

With time winding down in the second period, Vermont again went on the power play. Ruid hurt the Crimson a second time. The 6-4 forward tipped Mike Larkin's shot from the point to extend the Catamount lead to 3-0.

The goal sent the numerous Catamount supporters into a frenzy, as they could sense Vermont's dominance Saturday night. In fact, the Vermont fans often drowned out the Bright Center faithful with their "Let's go Cats" chants.

Harvard's best chance of the night occurred with :02 left in the second period and a face-off in the Vermont end. The puck immediately slid into Vermont's crease, and as time expired a Crimson player finally got the puck past goalie Tim Thomas for once. But the officials ruled that the horn had sounded, and Harvard entered the third period down by three.

The third period wrought much of the same, as Harvard's power plays continued to come up empty, and Thomas continued to turn away shot after shot.

Harvard's effort was stronger in the third period, but still it wasn't enough. Tripp Tracy was pulled for an extra attacker as time wore down. Catamount Matt Stelljes iced the puck from inside his own zone, and as luck would have it, the puck found the empty net for a 4-0 Vermont advantage.

Still, the Catamounts were not done, and with 25 seconds left Vermont again cashed in on a two-on-one break for the final 5-0 score.

"I thought we had a good third period with regards to our effort," Coughlin said. "We weren't able to put anything in, but we just have to keep trying."

With the losses by the league's top team, the Crimson still remains in relatively good shape. But with four games left in the regular season and the Crimson four points behind the leaders, time is starting to run out.

"There is still plenty of time, and we just have to stay in it together," Tomassoni said. Vermont  5 Harvard  0

VERMONT, 5-0 at Bright Hockey Center Vermont  2  1  2  --  5 Harvard  0  0  0  --  0

First Period Ver--Perrin 22 (St. Louis, Ducharme) 10:51. (PP) Ver--Ruid 8 (St. Louis, Larkin) 18:16. (PP)

Second Period Ver--Ruid 9 (Larkin, St. Louis) 19:36. (PP).

Third Period Ver--Stelljes 8 (Hamllton, Thomas) 18:58. (EN) Ver--Ducharme 12 (Patterson) 19:35.

Saves: Ver--Thomas 8-13-14 35; Har-Tracy 8-7-9 24.,

Power Play: Ver--3-9; Har-0-11.

Attendance: 2,888

VERMONT, 5-0 at Bright Hockey Center Vermont  2  1  2  --  5 Harvard  0  0  0  --  0

First Period Ver--Perrin 22 (St. Louis, Ducharme) 10:51. (PP) Ver--Ruid 8 (St. Louis, Larkin) 18:16. (PP)

Second Period Ver--Ruid 9 (Larkin, St. Louis) 19:36. (PP).

Third Period Ver--Stelljes 8 (Hamllton, Thomas) 18:58. (EN) Ver--Ducharme 12 (Patterson) 19:35.

Saves: Ver--Thomas 8-13-14 35; Har-Tracy 8-7-9 24.,

Power Play: Ver--3-9; Har-0-11.

Attendance: 2,888

First Period Ver--Perrin 22 (St. Louis, Ducharme) 10:51. (PP) Ver--Ruid 8 (St. Louis, Larkin) 18:16. (PP)

Second Period Ver--Ruid 9 (Larkin, St. Louis) 19:36. (PP).

Third Period Ver--Stelljes 8 (Hamllton, Thomas) 18:58. (EN) Ver--Ducharme 12 (Patterson) 19:35.

Saves: Ver--Thomas 8-13-14 35; Har-Tracy 8-7-9 24.,

Power Play: Ver--3-9; Har-0-11.

Attendance: 2,888

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