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Icewomen Undefeated in Maine

Crimson Beats Bowdoin, 5-3; Ties Colby 2-2

By Jessica Dorman

For the past two weekends, the Harvard women's hockey team had taken to the road and had its hopes crushed.

A 2-0 shutout by Princeton on February 9 and a 2-1 loss to Cornell on the 17th were enough to knock the Crimson out of Ivy League title competition.

That's why this weekend--Friday's 5-3 victory over Bowdoin and Saturday's 2-2 Colby tie--felt so good.

"It was the best weekend road trip of the month," Harvard goalie Tracy Kimmel said.

Make that the best weekend road trip of the year.

Not since Saturday, December 1, when the icewomen travelled to Vermont and pounded the Catamounts, 12-6, has a weekend journey yielded a win.

Harvard's record now stands at 11-8-1, and although the Ivy crown is no longer within reach, the Cantabs could finish their season on an upswing.

The Crimson travels to Dartmouth Wednesday, eager for revenge on a 6-3 January loss, and then returns home on March 2 for a rematch against UVM.

"I was very, very pleased with the weekend," Harvard Coach John Dooley said. "Both of those teams were sky-high to face us."

Both Bowdoin and Colby were playing their final contests of the year, resulting in some high emotions. "Since it was their last games, it was great to screw them up," Crimson Tri-Captain Genie Simmons said.

At Colby, in particular, the highly partisan crowed became a factor in the game.

"There were about 25 male fans, they must have been from a frat or something, and they were really obnoxious and vocal," Simmons said. "When they [Colby] scored their second goal, they threw about 20 oranges and tennis balls onto the ice."

One of the oranges hit Kimmel in the facemask, causing the officials to issue a warning to Colby, saying that one more instance of fan interference would result in a penalty.

Despite the fans' antics, however, the games themselves were worthy of the officials' and players' full-time attention. "Both of those games were outstanding--really physical, which is something we're not used to," Dooley said.

After Bowdoin opened up the scoring Friday just two minutes into the contest. Dinny Starr notched Harvard's first goal with an assist from center Liz Ward at 8:00. Simmons followed up a second Polar Bear tally with an unassisted shot at 14:15.

In the second period, Starr assisted on both Crimson goals, which were scored by Ward and Julie Sasner.

The two teams traded off goals in the final stanza, as Sasner tallied at 4:59, making her the only Cantab to score twice on the night.

Not, however, the only one who should have scored twice.

Ward had a goal disallowed by the officials, a quickly preview of the following afternoon, when Starr had one called back as well.

"You go a whole season and have may be one disallowed goal," Dooley said. "We had one called on us each day--it's unbelievable.

Nevertheless, the outcome of Friday's game wasn't affected by the call as Harvard skated off safely with the 5-3 decision. The Crimson wasn't so lucky the next afternoon.

Freshman Karen Carney put the Cantabs on top first, at 1:35 of the opening period, teaming up with Simmons on the goal.

Colby goals by Captain Anne Boatright and Tanya Mead, the latter setting off the barrage of oranges, gave the White Mules a 2-1 lead that they refused to relinquish well into the third period.

However, with only five minutes remaining in the game, Simmons drove the puck past Colby netminder Susan Edwards, with Carney assisting.

"It was really exciting, because then we played in overtime," Simmons said.

But when neither team had scored after the first overtime period, the game was called as a 2-2 tie.

All the more frustrating, of course, because of Starr's earlier disallowed goal.

"One official had pointed it as a goal; the other guy, who was off the angle, disallowed it," Dooley explained. "I didn't say anything at the time because I didn't think it had gone into the net."

The questionable call may have contributed to the Crimson tie, but the team wasn't complaining.

Although Simmons admitted that "ties are unsatisfying," the Crimson was happy to have a weekend road trip end without a loss.

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