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Brown's combination of two fast-skating Canadian forwards and a brilliant goalie turned a possible 5 to 4 Crimson victory into a 6 to 5 overtime defeat in last night's hockey feature at the Arena.
It was the stickwork of Johnny Casey and Tony Malo that sank four of Brown's six scores, while all night long goalie Don Whiston was stopping the Crimson's steady attack. And on several occasions the Harvard defense left notminder Phil Clark with the tough task of facing the Bruin forwards all alone.
Clark, the squad's sophomore goalie, played almost the entire game. He took over for starter Johnny Chase at 1:05 of the opening period when Chase was hit just below the left eye by a wicked drive and was forced to retire for three stitches.
Passing Attack
A strong Crimson passing attack dominated the first 13 minutes of play with Captain Dave Key opening the scoring with a shot from far our on the left. At 12:32, Doug Anderson sank another long one and gave Harvard a 2 to 0 lead.
First scoring on a Harvard penalty. Brown had made it a 4 to 2 game by the middle of the second period. But at 19:36 Jack Carman got the first of two goals by starting and finishing a beautiful quadruple pass play that over came goalie Whiston.
Crimson Led 5 to 4
Two goals at 4:11 and 11:34 in a fast and rough third period gave the Crimson its 5 to 4 lead. Both times Dave Key fed the puck to his first-line wings, Carman and Bill Garrity, who closed in for goals on short shots.
But five minutes later Malo's score on a loose rebound in the Crimson goal mouth forced the game into overtime. After seven battling minutes of the ten-minute extra-play period, Priestley sent the puck through Clark from a scrimmage 10 feet from the nets.
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