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An ECAC men's hockey tournament without a Harvard/Rensselaer match-up is like an NFC championship game that isn't Dallas/San Francisco.
For the fifth straight season, the Crimson and Engineers will be squaring off against each other in the ECAC tournament, which starts tonight at 7:30 p.m. at Bright Hockey Center.
"It's only fitting--we always play them," Harvard coach Ronn Tomassoni said.
Tomorrow's second game of the best-of-three quarterfinals will start at 7 p.m., and Sunday's third game (if necessary) will also begin at 7 p.m.
The first team to accumulate three points (two wins or a win and a tie) will head out to Lake Placid, N.Y. for the semifinals next Friday. There is no overtime tonight or tomorrow, but sudden-death overtime will be played Sunday if the score is tied after regulation.
When people talk about Harvard in the ECAC tournament, it's hard not to mention some of the games against RPI. Two of them especially stand out in the minds of this year's team.
There was last year's ECAC tournament final, which the Crimson won, 3-0, at Lake Placid. That game was perhaps the top highlight in Harvard's 24-5 season.
Then there was the big disappointment three years ago. RPI--a big underdog--came into Bright Hockey Center and shocked ECAC regular-season champion Harvard in a 4-3 overtime quarterfinal thriller. Because of that game, the ECAC changed to its current best-of-three format.
"That was my freshman year, and we don't want to see a repeat of that," captain Ben Coughlin said. "At least it's two out of three; no more onegame series."
Consistently Inconsistent
Both Harvard and RPI have had inconsistent season. Neither team has won more than three games in a row all year, but neither team has lost more than three in a row.
Harvard struggled early, got hot in December and January, went ice cold (no pun intended) in February and looked to be back in top form last weekend against St. Lawrence and Clarkson.
RPI, on the other hand, started 7-3 but has gone 2-5-3 over its last 10 games.
One of those five losses occurred two weeks ago at Houston Field House in Troy, N.Y. Harvard delivered the home team a 5-3 loss in one of its best performances of the season.
The Crimson played disciplined hockey and got the overly-aggressive Engineers to wear out a path to the penalty box. Harvard's power play clicked three times in the opening 20 minutes--the first two goal by senior sparkplug Steve Martins--and Harvard would never look back.
The other match-up between Harvard and RPI this season went the other way. RPI took control of the game on November 27, builing a 3-1 lead in the third at Bright. However, Harvard tied the game on goals by freshman Doug Sproule and sophomore Stuart Swenson.
But tragedy struck in the final minute. Engineer Eric Healey's shot from the point went through traffic and beat Harvard junior netminder Tripp Tracy with 23 seconds left to give the visitors the 4-3 win.
"We've had two great games with them," Tomassoni said. "Those are two games that have had flow--they haven't been penalty-marred, penalty-filled."
Playoff Keys
For Harvard to defeat RPI in the quarterfinal series, it must do two things: stay out of the penalty box and forecheck well so that it can take advantage of its speed.
Too many times this season the Crimson has had to play shorthanded seven, eight, nine times a game. While the penalty killing units are operating at an impressive 85.7 percent rate, Harvard has tired out and been victimized at later points in the game following all those penalty kills.
Martins especially has to stay out of the sin bin. He is the victim of the most vicious assault of anyone in the league, and he unfortuanetely is sent to the penalty box far too often for retaliation (and phantom retaliation) penalties, depriving the Crimson of its best offensive weapon.
"Martins is the premier player in the league," Tomassoni said. "The abuse he takes out there no one should have to take. It's wrong."
Harvard's biggest strength is its speed. In Martins and juniors Brad Konik and Tom Holmes, Harvard has three of the quickest skaters in the league.
If the Crimson can get the forecheck going and send these players out on breaks, Harvard's offense should be fine. Harvard was back in peak form last weekend even though it lost to league-champion Clarkson due to some sensational Clarkson goaltending.
"We need to use our speed and beat their defensemen, because we can do that if we concentrate," Coughlin said.
So the playoffs are here.
If Harvard wins this weekend, it's off to Lake Placid. If it loses, then the season's over.
Let the games begin!
HARVARD
Head Coach: Ronn Tomassoni, 5th season
Captain (s): Ben Cbughlin
1994-95 Record: 14-31-1 Overall, 12-9-1 ECAC (3rd Place)
Series History: Harvard, 29-17-1
ECAC Tournament Titles: 5
RPI
Head Coach: Dan Fridgen, 1st season
Captain (s): Adam Bartell
1994-95 record: 16-13-3 Overall, 10-9-3 ECAC (6th Place)
1994-95 vs. Harvard: 1-1-0
EACA Tournament Titles: 2
1994-95 RPI STATS Player GP G A Pt PP PM< /B> Bryan Richardson 31 23 20 43 13 30 Craig Hamelin 29 14 27 41 7 32 Tim Regan 30 8 19 27 3 86 Wayne Clarke 28 14 12 26 4 28 Jeff O'Connor 27 10 13 23 1 46 Eric Healey 32 11 11 22 3 31 Patrick Rochon 32 4 18 22 1 54 Kelly Askew 27 6 15 21 2 60 Adam Bartell 30 3 14 17 1 28 Eric Perardi 30 6 11 17 0 46 Jeff Matthews 29 8 7 15 0 14 Jon Pirrong 31 3 9 12 0 56 Jeff Brick 28 4 5 9 4 44 Pat Brownlee 31 1 6 7 0 18 Chris Maye 30 1 6 7 1 10 Bryan Tapper 27 3 3 6 0 72 Doug Battaglia 31 1 4 5 0 57 Chris Kiley 26 0 4 5 0 6 Ken Kwasniewski 13 2 1 3 0 0 Mike Tamburro 22 0 1 1 0 4 Chris Aldous 30 0 1 1 0 4 Mike Rolanti 3 0 0 0 0 0 Bryan Masotta 13 0 0 0 0 10 Tim Spadafore 4 0 0 0 0 0 Rensselaer 32 122 207 329 4 0 744 Opponents 32 117 206 323 42 666 Goalie GP W L T GAA Sv% Tamburro 22 10 7 3 3.26 .9 03 Masotta 13 5 6 0 4.26 .870 Spadafore 4 1 0 0 2.57 .93 3 Rensselaer 32 16 13 3 3.57< Tab>.893 Opponents 32 13 16 3 NA
1994-95 HARVARD STATS Player GP G A Pt PP PM< /B> Steve Martins 26 14 21 35 7 85 Cory Gustafson 28 10 16 26 2 24 Ben Coughlin 28 5 20 25 3 34 Brad Konik 27 10 13 23 3 28 Kirk Nielsen 28 13 7 20 3 22 Perry Cohagan 27 8 12 20 1 34 Ashlin Halfnight 22 5 14 19 1 40 Bryan Lonsinger 26 8 9 17 5 12 Jason Karmanos 28 6 10 16 1 32 Tom Holmes 28 2 13 15 0 43 Doug Sproule 28 7 2 9 4 26 Jeremiah McCarthy 23 3 6 9 2 4 Henry Higdon 28 3 5 8 0 20 Joe Craigen 26 3 5 8 1 6 Geordie Hyland 19 1 7 8 0 20 Peter McLaughlin 28 1 6 7 0 44 Michel Breistroff 23 1 5 6 1 30 Geb Marett 14 0 0 0 0 18 Marco Ferrari 12 0 0 0 0 8 Brian Famigletti 5 0 0 0 0 0 Keith McLean 4 0 0 0 0 0 Tripp Tracy 25 0 0 0 0 2 Steve Hermsdorf 5 0 0 0 0 0 Harvard 28 104 174 278 34
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