{"id":6111,"date":"2005-02-05T18:10:06","date_gmt":"2005-02-06T00:10:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/02\/05\/no-6-harvard-reasserts-itself-in-dartmouth-rivalry\/"},"modified":"2010-08-23T11:55:06","modified_gmt":"2010-08-23T16:55:06","slug":"no-6-harvard-reasserts-itself-in-dartmouth-rivalry","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/recaps\/2005\/02\/05\/no-6-harvard-reasserts-itself-in-dartmouth-rivalry\/","title":{"rendered":"No. 6 Harvard Reasserts Itself in Dartmouth Rivalry"},"content":{"rendered":"
A familiar sound at Thompson Arena this season has been the roaring of the crowd as Dartmouth comes from behind, builds momentum and never looks back. It happened to New Hampshire and No. 1 Minnesota in December. It happened to Brown last night. But both times that Dartmouth came back against Harvard this afternoon, Harvard promptly answered, and the loudest sounds amidst a 1,391 crowd at Thompson Arena were coming from the Crimson bench.<\/p>\n
In the end, Dartmouth could not find answer to the nation’s leading goal-scorer Nicole Corriero. The Crimson co-captain delivered one of the greatest finishing performances the sport has ever seen with five goals against the nation’s No. 2 team.<\/p>\n
Corriero netted the last three goals of a 6-3 victory that guaranteed the ECACHL race between the No. 6 Crimson (13-6-2, 12-1-1 ECACHL) and Big Green (20-2-0, 13-1-0) will come down to the wire. The game was extra-special for Corriero given the Harvard-Dartmouth rivalry. The Big Green had won three straight against Harvard and 11 of its last 15.<\/p>\n
“I definitely never could have imagined this against a team like Dartmouth, because they’re so skilled,” Corriero said. “I know a lot of girls on the team so it’s easy to get pumped up for a game like this. It was my last game probably in Thompson Arena, so I wanted to go out with a bang.”<\/p>\n
“It was a great game because everyone was hustling. The bench was awesome. Everybody was just supporting one another. Right now I can’t think of a win more satisfying than this one. It was between Harvard and Dartmouth for me when I was being recruited, Harvard-Dartmouth definitely has a special place whenever the game comes around.”<\/p>\n
Harvard went ahead for the good on Corriero’s third goal at 19:03 of the second period. Just 13 seconds before, Dartmouth’s Gillian Apps had stripped the puck behind the net, and Tiffany Hagge finished off Apps’ wrap-around to tie the game at three.<\/p>\n
The Big Green appeared headed for the second intermission with all of the momentum, but Corriero wasted no time in taking it back. In what has become a routine play for Corriero, she carried the puck down the left side with two defenders bearing down on her, and she still managed to get off a close-range shot. This one first found goalie Kate Lane, but she lost her balance and lost the puck as it deflected back off Corriero into the top corner of the net.<\/p>\n
“When they were able to mount some offense, we were able to answer back right away,” Corriero said. “That just shows the resilience of the team and the fact that we weren’t going to get too fazed or intimidated by them and the fact that they’re No. 2 in the country.”<\/p>\n