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Providence Awaits Men’s Hockey in NCAA Opener

Sophomore defenseman Viktor Dombrovskiy shoots in Harvard’s Mar. 10 ECAC quarterfinal win against Yale. The Crimson hope its high-flying offense will fast-track a win against the Friars Friday.
Sophomore defenseman Viktor Dombrovskiy shoots in Harvard’s Mar. 10 ECAC quarterfinal win against Yale. The Crimson hope its high-flying offense will fast-track a win against the Friars Friday. By Thomas W. Franck
By Spencer R. Morris, Crimson Staff Writer

The Harvard men’s hockey team has not lost a game since students began arriving back on campus for the spring term. During this two-month window, the squad has celebrated a Beanpot championship, an Ivy League title, a Cleary Cup, and an ECAC playoff crown.

Now, for the third straight year and the fifth time under coach Ted Donato ’91, it’s NCAA tournament time for the Crimson with the ultimate prize on the line—a national championship. But just 60 minutes of hockey could put an abrupt end to Harvard’s memorable ride.

On its way to achieving several milestones, Harvard has bested both conference rivals and local adversaries—Boston University, Cornell, Quinnipiac, and Yale among its triumphs. This Friday, however, the No. 2 Crimson (26-5-2, 16-4-2 ECAC) will clash with a much less familiar foe—one last seen in 1984—as it embarks on its quest for the Division I title.

“It’s been a special year, very fun to be a part of,” senior forward Sean Malone said. “But at the same time, this is going to be our toughest game of the year…. You’re going to face adversity in single-game eliminations, and I think we’re prepared for it.”

The Crimson icemen enter their 24th NCAA tournament in program history as the East Regional’s top seed and will battle No. 13 Providence—in Providence, R.I.—at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center on Friday afternoon. This season marks the first time since 1983 that Harvard holds a No. 1 seed in the tournament’s regional round.

“It’s one game, so you have to be able to stay away from major mistakes and major penalties,” Donato said. “But I think this group has handled adversity really well…. That’s what we’re going to have to do in a one-game set.”

Following the Crimson’s clash with the Friars, No. 15 Air Force will compete with No. 8 Western Michigan for the other spot in Saturday’s East finals. All three of these Regional foes are foreign to Harvard, as no current Crimson player has ever faced any of them. What’s more: Coach Donato, across his four-year playing career and 13 seasons as bench boss, has never encountered these squads either. But the team is taking the challenge in stride.

“Sometimes you get sick of playing the same teams over and over again,” Malone said. “You just become too familiar with teams…. I think this is good for us.”

Coach Donato also weighed in on playing against some untraditional competition.

“That’s the challenge you earn: to play in the national tournament, to play with refs you’ve never seen and teams you haven’t played against,” Donato said. “It poses challenges as far as knowing exactly which way a team is going to come at you, or some of the strengths they may have.”

While Providence is certainly less familiar to Harvard than an ECAC rival, the Crimson does have some insight on the Friars since their head coach, Nate Leaman, served as a Harvard assistant from 1999 to 2003.

“We know how his teams are led, and they play extremely hard,” Donato said. “They’re very disciplined—very physical—and so we know it’s going to be a great challenge.”

The Crimson hopes to avoid an eighth straight NCAA first-round exit Friday against Providence (22-11-5, 12-7-3 HEA), who comes into its tournament opener on almost two weeks’ rest after being eliminated by Notre Dame in the quarterfinal round of the Hockey East playoffs.

Despite the Friars’ forgettable performance in their conference tournament, the effective home team in this weekend’s East Regional kick-off boasts season wins over St. Lawrence, Vermont, UMass-Lowell (two), and current No. 1 overall Denver.

Providence has proven they can be giant-killers, just two years removed from its upstart NCAA tournament title run, which, incidentally, saw the fourth-seeded Friars emerge from East Regional play en route to capturing the program’s first and only Division I title.

Excluding games against the Fighting Irish, Providence has put together a 3-1-2 record against this year’s tournament teams. Pairing that with the Friars’ experience in both the NCAA tournament and at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center, where they have posted a 7-5-1 all-time record, Providence poses a constant threat.

“Any team that we play moving forward, we’re going to have to take very seriously,” junior goalie Merrick Madsen said. “A lot of those guys on the team now were on [the 2015 NCAA Championship] team…. They get it, and the older guys probably let the younger guys know what’s going on.”

Among other factors, “older guys” have also been the key to Harvard’s success all year. On the ice, the Crimson’s eight soon-to-be graduates have significantly outpaced all senior classes in scoring with 185 combined points, 39 more than second-place Boston College. Perhaps more important, though, is the culture and leadership these Harvard skaters have brought to the team.

“[The seniors] were willing to really take a look at how they were perceived both around college hockey and around campus, and how they could change that to get the perception that they wanted,” Donato said. “They’ve…held each other accountable to a really high level.”

Co-captain Alexander Kerfoot and his cohort of impactful fourth-years will have work cut out for them on Friday night in Providence, but they should expect assistance from their underclassmen. In particular, sophomore Ryan Donato—the team’s goal scoring leader—is coming off a two-goal showing in the ECAC championship game. The Crimson is undefeated this season when the Ivy League Player of the Year records a point or finishes with a plus rating.

Jumping out to an early lead against the Friars will be a team goal for Harvard; especially in an elimination game, playing from behind in a hostile environment against a physical, defensively sound team is a death wish.

Besides, the Crimson is 19-2-0 on the season when opening the scoring and 26-3-0 when leading at any point in the game, so Harvard likely feels no need to try anything new in that regard.

“We have to get after it right from the hop,” Kerfoot urged. “When you get down in games like this, especially to a team like Providence who can pack it in and play well defensively, it’s hard to come back.”

Although it has been over three decades since Harvard and Providence last faced off, the Crimson possesses the all-time series edge over the Friars, 17-9-1, and has emerged victorious in the teams’ previous four encounters.

With a positive result in Friday’s matinee, Harvard would face the winner of the No. 15 Air Force and No. 8 Western Michigan bout to decide which club will pack its bags for Chicago’s Frozen Four in two weeks’ time. If the Crimson happens to be the Illinois-bound team, it would mark Donato’s first trip to the Frozen Four from behind the bench. A Harvard hockey all-timer in his own right, Donato is one of three coaches in this year’s NCAA tournament to have won the Division I crown as a player.

Staff writer Spencer R. Morris can be reached at spencer.morris@thecrimson.com.

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