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M. Hockey Notebook: Futility on the Power Play Dooms Men’s Hockey to Mediocre Start

GOOSE EGGS
Brenda Lee

Assistant captain TYLER KOLARIK (16) notched six power-play goals last year, but hasn’t been able to score on the man advantage this year.

ITHACA, N.Y.—In what has become a telltale sign of Harvard’s mediocre start, Saturday night’s 1-0 loss at Cornell marked the fifth time this season in which the Crimson has scored fewer power-play goals than its opponent.

Harvard is 1-3-1 in those games, as compared with 3-1-0 when it has scored more goals on the man advantage. The loss at Lynah Rink marked the second time in three games that Harvard went 0-for-6 on the power play.

Meanwhile, Cornell scored once in its three chances.

“The difference was that they beat us on specialty teams,” Harvard coach Mark Mazzoleni said. “When you don’t win the specialty-team battle, many times you lose the game. We didn’t win the specialty-team battle, and that cost us the game.”

The team’s power-play ills began in the season-opening loss to Brown and have quickly turned into an epidemic. Harvard is only 7-for-41 on the power play this season, sixth-best in the ECAC. Last season, it was a league-leading 37-for-156 (23.7 percent).

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Harvard’s biggest problem against the Big Red was that less than half of its 45 shots made it to the net. Cornell blocked 14, many coming on Harvard power plays.

“We’re having a lot of issues with getting our shots blocked,” senior winger Tim Pettit said. “I don’t know if we’re not waiting for the guy to get out of the shot lane or if we’re not shooting the puck quickly [enough].

“It’s going to be a matter of moving our feet more on the power play and not just having guys stay in position.”

The players on this year’s first power-play unit—Pettit, junior Tom Cavanagh, senior Tyler Kolarik, senior Dennis Packard and junior Noah Welch—combined for 19 man-up goals one year ago, even though neither Cavanagh nor Packard saw regular time on the first unit. Pettit had seven power-play goals. Kolarik has six, and Welch has two.

This season, Cavanagh has two power-play goals. Packard has one. Pettit, Kolarik and Welch have zero.

Without graduated seniors Dominic Moore ’03 (10 power-play goals) and Brett Nowak ’03 (two), Pettit and Welch have drawn the attention of penalty kills this year—including Cornell’s—and haven’t yet been able to produce.

“Pettit and Welch shoot the puck so well that we knew we had to take those guys away,” said Big Red coach Mike Schafer. “There were some big blocked shots out there.”

That wasn’t Harvard’s only problem. Often, it couldn’t maintain possession in the Cornell zone long enough to establish its set.

“Sometimes we were dumping it in and not getting the puck, and sometimes we weren’t making good dumps and it was getting sent right back out of the zone,” Packard said. “We weren’t getting set up, and we weren’t getting it through.”

Harvard’s most frustrating power play came in the third period, after Cornell’s Shane Hynes scored at 5:09. Chris Abbott went off for tripping 29 seconds later, but the only shot on goal during the ensuing power play came from Abbott’s twin brother Cam, who stole a pass from Pettit to Welch and had his breakaway chance turned aside by Harvard junior goaltender Dov Grumet-Morris.

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