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Back at Home in the Crimson Goal

After a year-long leave of absence, junior Kyle Richter has earned the starting position in net over a strong crop of goaltenders, including the hero of last season’s late comeback, junior Ryan Carroll

RICHTER SCALE
Richard F. Taylor

Junior Kyle Richter boasted a .935 save percentage and 2.19 goals-against average in 34 games during his sophomore season for Harvard. Back this season after a year away from Crimson ice and his teammates, Richter will have to fend off junior Ryan Carroll and senior John Riley to keep the starting job in the net.

What a difference a year makes.

This time last October, Harvard was scrambling to fill the goalie position, looking to three untested netminders to act as anchors of the team’s defense.

But with the return of star goaltender Kyle Richter—as well as the recent rise of up-and-coming junior Ryan Carroll—the Crimson appears to be in better shape at the start of this season than it was last year.

“We’re having a real positive feeling, and have a lot of reason to have optimism,” Harvard coach Ted Donato ’91 says. “Last season we came to a spot where we didn’t have a goalie to start the season that had played in a college game. This year we’ll have three. And although he’s been off for a little bit, when Kyle Richter left us, he was the goalie of the year in our league. Ryan Carroll played very well last year, and I think John Riley has developed a lot since he arrived. We feel a lot stronger in that position than we have been in a long time.”

Although there are now two other contenders for the job, Richter, a junior, seems poised for the top spot.

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Before his start in last week’s exhibition game against McGill, Richter’s last time out on Harvard ice was the 2007-08 season, in which his strong performance in the crease earned him the Ken Dryden Award as the ECAC’s best goaltender.

That season, the Calgary, Alberta native notched a .935 save percentage in league play as well as a 2.19 goals-against average overall.

In his 34 games, Richter made a total of 884 saves, and he secured 37 or more saves in four contests, including a 39-save overtime victory against Boston University. He posted three shutouts, including back-to-back shutout victories, making him the first Crimson goalie to accomplish such a feat in over 25 years.

And to top it all off, he became the first Harvard netminder to ever score a goal when he found the net in a 6-1 blowout against Yale in February 2008.

Despite his historical strength between the pipes, there still remains some uncertainty over how Richter will size up after his year-long absence from Bright Hockey Center.

“There absolutely is some concern,” Donato says. “He hasn’t played in a year. Although he worked out with a goalie instructor, he wasn’t playing in games...There is a bit of unknown, just the fact that he’s been off for a while.”

But Richter’s high level of experience, as well as his existing relationships with his teammates, should ease his transition back into Harvard hockey.

“I know most of the guys on the team, so it’s not like I’m starting fresh again,” Richter says. “Getting back into it, they’ve made me feel really comfortable right from the start. But at the same time, there’s a lot of competition and energy in practice. Obviously, I’ve got to bring my game again this year, so there’s that competitive side to it as well.”

The starting job is Richter’s to lose.

With Carroll eager to take the reins, Richter will undoubtedly face some serious competition this year.

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