News

Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search

News

First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni

News

Ryan Murdock ’25 Remembered as Dedicated Advocate and Caring Friend

News

Harvard Faculty Appeal Temporary Suspensions From Widener Library

News

Man Who Managed Clients for High-End Cambridge Brothel Network Pleads Guilty

Cutone Out for Season

The Hockey Notebook

By Nick Wurf

Doctors determined yesterday that Harvard men's hockey defenseman Butch Cutone will have to sit out the remainder of the season.

Cutone, last year's Ivy League Rookie of the Year, was diagnosed as having a bone tumor two weeks before the Crimson's first game and underwent successful bone transplant surgery a week later.

Although Cutone is fully mobile and has been skating for three weeks, the doctors are worried that a hit to the new bone could aggravate the injury and cause permanent damage.

The new bone is protected only by a thin shell, and the doctors advised the sophomore not to play until next September, when the bone will have sufficiently hardened.

* * *

Senior-Bill Cleary credits last Monday's goal against Dartmouth to reserve netminder John Devin.

Looking for a lucky stick before the game, Cleary asked the freshman for some advice.

Devin pointed to one and informed Cleary that it had more goals in it than any other stick in his pile.

Clearly grabbed the stick and asked Devin exactly how many goals the chosen stick had in it.

Devin quickly explained that the stick had just "one goal, the only goal in the whole pile."

Cleary, with only two goals in his career before this year, has never exactly enjoyed the offensive reputation of his father, Crimson Coach Bill Cleary.

In other words, Bill "The Shot" he isn't.

But the senior blueliner got the last laugh when he lit the lamp after a 200-ft. end to end rush in the second period with his lucky one-goal stick.

* * *

With a goal and three assist against Dartmouth. Scott Fasco upped his team leading point total to 44. Fusco also moved into a tie for eighth place on the all time career scoring list with 135 points.

Sharing eighth place with the junior is his older brother Mark, who was appropriately enough on hand Monday night at Bright Center to see the Dartmouth-Harvard battle.

The younger Fusco should be able to climb as high as third by the end of the season, if he maintains his present pace of just under three-points-a-game.

The former Olympian will also move onto the all-time single-season scoring list soon and could move into that top five, at least.

* * *

Fusco has also scored or earned an assist point in all but the Crimson's first game for a total of 14 straight games with a point.

Linemate Tim Smith, however, leads the squad in that category with a point in all 15 games. Both Fusco and Smith are well short of the Harvard record of 24 held by Bob Cleary and the ECAC record of 32 held by, among others RPI's Adam Oates.

* * *

In the never-taking-the-easy-way department, junior Rob Ohno scored his second goal of the year against Dartmouth.

His tally came when the Crimson was shorthanded, as it was when he tallied his first goal.

* * *

Elsewhere in the ECAC last weekend, RPI swept its games with Vermont to up its record to 11-1. Harvard remains a half-a-game behind the Engineers at 10-1-1. At 10-2, Clarkson is one game behind RPI.

But while the top three remains the same, a fierce battle for fourth place and the last home-ice spot in the ECAC quarterfinals is developing.

* * *

In his last three complete games, junior goalie Grant Blair has allowed only three goals.

Blair, who had been playing well but without great distinction earlier in the year seems to have regained the fine edge that made him Ivy Co-Player of the Year in 1983-84.

* * *

With games Friday night at Yale, Saturday night at Brown and Monday night at the Garden against Boston University in the Beanpot, the Crimson is looking at three games in four days.

That's the toughest stretch of the season for the icemen.

The Hockey Notebook Appears Every Thursday in The Harvard Crimson

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

Tags