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Pucksters Claw, Are Scratched by Tigers

Men Clinch Ivy Title, 4-2

Last night, the Harvard men's hockey team wrapped up its fifth consecutive Ivy league title by defeating Princeton, 4-2, in an intensely-fought battle before 2059 screaming enemy faithful at Baker Rink in Princeton, N.J.

That much is hardly surprising.

Both Ivy League titles and narrow victories over Princeton are becoming rituals for the icemen.

"This was a great win for us," said Crimson Coach Bill Cleary. "I think five Ivy titles in a row is quite a feat."

It was Harvard's first outright title since the 1981-'82 season.

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What was surprising about the victory was where the primary Harvard firepower came from.

Not from the firing line of Scott Fusco, Lane Macdonald and Tim Smith, or even from the Killer B's--Allen Bourbeau and Tim Barakett.

Would you believe from the fourth line, the Killer C's of Peter Chiarelli, Greg Chalmers, Josh Caplan and honorary member Craig Taucher?

Though Taucher's name doesn't begin with a "C", and he didn't even score, it was his two first-period assists that got the Crimson roling.

In his first shift of his first varsity game, the first time he touched the puck no less, the freshman stole a Princeton pass at the hosts' blue line and promplty fed Chiarelli going the other way. Chiarelli proceeded to beat Tiger goalie David Shea with a wrist shot just 5:41 into the contest.

But the Killer C's weren't finished--not even for that shift.

Just 13 seconds later, Taucher set up Chalmers for a wide-open stuff-in, his first score since returning to the Crimson lineup after a semester's leave just three games ago.

Though Harvard now carried the momentum and Crimson netminder Grant Blair was in good form, a string of penalties allowed Princeton repeated opportunities to get back into the game.

With just 37 seconds to go in the period, and Bourbeau sitting in the sin bin for the second time in five minutes, Princeton Co-Captain Cliff Abrecht took advantage of the man-up opportunity by beating Blair with a strong slapshot from the left point.

To open the second period, the Tigers replaced Shea with Dave Marotta in the net and immediately capitalized on their momentum, knotting the game at two when Dan Titus intercepted Crimson defenseman Butch Cutone's pass at the Harvard blue line and flicked a high wrist shot past Blair.

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