CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Not only did the Cornell men's hockey team beat rival Harvard on Saturday night, it beat the Crimson at its own game.
Cam Donaldson and
Tristan Mullin scored on the man advantage, and the Big Red kept the Crimson's nation-leading power play to just one goal in securing a 2-1 victory at Bright-Landry Hockey Center.
The victory not only helped 16th-ranked Cornell (6-5; 4-2 ECAC Hockey; 4-1 Ivy League) salvage two key league points on the road, it allows the Big Red to enter a lengthy semester break above .500 while several key contributors recover from injuries.
And not to be forgotten, the effort also avenges a lackluster performance in a 4-1 loss to Harvard just one week prior at The Frozen Apple.
"It was one of the grittiest wins I've been a part of as a head coach for a long time, 24 years," said
Mike Schafer, the Jay R. Bloom '77 Head Coach of Men's Hockey at Cornell. "To see these guys, with our top two centers out and
Mitch Vanderlaan played on one leg today. … Guys that are key contributors to our hockey team that are out. The guys stepped up."
At the front of the line was sophomore goaltender
Austin McGrath, who made 23 saves to earn his first collegiate victory in just his second start. Harvard (4-4-2; 2-3-2 ECAC Hockey; 2-2-2 Ivy League) opened the scoring in appropriate fashion with Jack Rathbone's power-play goal just 5:30 into the game, but McGrath made a point-blank stop on Nathan Krusko at the 9:51 mark and Rathbone's open shot from the high slot four minutes later.
"It's really huge. There's a little confidence going into break with a big win and getting back to the way we like to play – hard, competing and really gritty," said McGrath, who made 10 stop in the third period. "So it was big to get in a game like that before we got off for a while."
Cornell's power play struggled on two opportunities in the first period, but quickly made amends by capitalizing on both of its chances during a dominant second period in which the Big Red had a 19-4 advantage in shots on goal. Donaldson's fifth goal of the season tied the game at 7:01, then Mullin's tenacious pursuit of a rebound about six minutes later pulled the Big Red ahead for good.
The proverbial icing on the cake came in the third period, when the Big Red successfully killed off two more Harvard power plays. The Crimson entered the game converting on 40% of its chances on the man advantage. Rathbone's goal marked the first time this season Cornell conceded a power-play goal in the first period. The Big Red had 15 straight kills in the opening period of its first 10 games this season.
"It's a huge win, obviously. We're down those guys, but they'll be back. And at the same time, there are no excuses and other guys have to step up," Mullin said. "Everyone has to play their role. Tonight just goes to show what can happen when we all step up. And that's what we needed."
The Big Red's Lineup:
How The Goals Were Scored:
Cornell's 1st Goal
1st period, 5:30 • Rathbone 3 (Marino, Kerfoot) (pp) • Harvard 1, Cornell 0
• On the nation's top power play's first chance of the night, the Crimson worked a flawless trip through the neutral zone into the Cornell end. Marino worked the puck across from the right point to the left. With the forward on that side collapsed down low to help with the rush, Rathbone had acres of space to wind up and drill a shot past the glove of a screened McGrath.
Cornell's 1st Goal
2nd period, 7:01 • Donaldson 5 (Mullin, Vanderlaan) (pp) • Cornell 1, Harvard 1
• A series of crisp passes set up the strike on the man advantage, with Barron's pass from the right circle to Vanderlaan in the left circle followed by a one-touch to Mullin in the shot for a one-timer. Except Mullin shattered his stick attempting the shot, and the puck dribbled past the charging defender. With Lackey already falling to the ice, Donaldson was open on top of the crease to make a move to his forehand and flip the puck into the wide side.
Cornell's 2nd Goal
2nd period, 13:18 • Mullin 2 (Vanderlaan, Barron) (pp) • Cornell 2, Harvard 1
• After winning a scrum off a faceoff to Lackey's left, Cornell quickly turned to offense when a defender aggressively stepped on Barron along the outside right hash. Barron spun away and quickly took a shot that was kicked by Lackey directly into the path of Vanderlaan on the opposite side. His backhand hit a defender's skate and popped off Lackey's shoulder before settling down in the crease for Mullin to flip in.
Up Next:
• The Big Red is idle for five weeks for the final exam period and the holiday season, resuming action Jan. 4-5 with a pivotal ECAC Hockey road trip to Princeton and Quinnipiac, respectively.