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Botterill, Ruggiero Named Kazmaier Finalists

Jennifer Botterill is women’s college hockey’s best forward. Angela Ruggiero is women’s college hockey’s best defenseman. Thus far, the two have worked together to make Harvard the best team in women’s college hockey.

But when the 2003 Patty Kazmaier Award is announced on March 22, only one of the Harvard captains can win the honor bestowed on the most outstanding player in women’s college hockey this season.

The USA Hockey Foundation announced on Friday that Botterill, Ruggiero and Minnesota-Duluth junior Jenny Potter are the three Kazmaier finalists. The 13-member committee—comprised of several coaches, a handful of journalists and a USA Hockey representative—will decide the winner, who will be announced at a banquet in Duluth during the 2003 NCAA Frozen Four.

Botterill and her former linemate Tammy Shewchuk ’00-’01 were both Kazmaier finalists in 2001. Harvard is both the only school to have two Kazmaier finalists in a single season and the only team to win the award twice. A.J. Mleczko ’97-’99 won in 1999 and Botterill received the honor in 2001.

The two finalists, along with coach Katey Stone, stressed that the Kazmaier is really a team award.

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“It says a lot for our team to have two people there because it’s all about the people you’re playing with—they got us there,” Botterill said.

And while both players were honored by their nomination, both stressed that an NCAA championship is more important. Botterill personally experienced the bittersweet emotion of winning the Kazmaier in 2001 a day after being eliminated by Duluth in the national semifinals.

“I’m real excited—it’s definitely an honor to be in the top three in the country,” Ruggiero said. “You hope for the best, but the most important thing here is a national championship.”

Botterill and Ruggiero have each been a force on both ends of the ice this season. With 42 goals and 60 assists in 28 games this season, Botterill is on pace to break A.J. Mleczko’s single season-scoring record of 114 points. Ruggiero has broken her own scoring records for a defenseman with 26 goals and 50 points in 30 games this season. Only teammates Julie Chu and Botterill have scored more points per game this season.

“It’s an honor to be there, especially being a defenseman,” Ruggiero said. “Defensemen don’t get that much recognition unless you’re putting up points.”

Botterill and Ruggiero have both contributed to the team’s defensive success from their respective positions.

“We’re very different players and I think that we really feed off each other,” Botterill said. “We’re really working to make each other better.”

Potter, the third candidate, has posted outstanding numbers with 31 goals and 54 assists in 34 games this season, while her Duluth team has put together a campaign almost as outstanding as Harvard’s.

Potter has had a successful year despite having to care for a two-year old daughter on top of the burdens of a typical student-athlete.

Forwards have won four Kazmaiers in the award’s five-year history, and no defenseman has ever won the honor.

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