{"id":68852,"date":"2016-02-08T20:27:02","date_gmt":"2016-02-09T02:27:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=68852"},"modified":"2016-02-08T20:38:25","modified_gmt":"2016-02-09T02:38:25","slug":"beanpot-consolation-game-has-consequences-for-harvard-northeastern","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2016\/02\/08\/beanpot-consolation-game-has-consequences-for-harvard-northeastern\/","title":{"rendered":"Beanpot consolation game has consequences for Harvard, Northeastern"},"content":{"rendered":"
The consolation game of the Beanpot always has one guarantee that goes along with it: the lack of atmosphere in the TD Garden.<\/p>\n
In the average Beanpot year, players hope a few students make the trek from campus to join the families cheering on their loved ones to maybe make the building that seats close to 18,000 feel more like a hockey rink and less like an empty cathedral.<\/p>\n
[scg_html_beanpot2016]When Mother Nature dropped a few inches of snow on the downtown Boston area on Monday and drilled the South Shore region with blizzard conditions, the best both Northeastern and Harvard could hope for was that Boston College and Boston University fans would arrive at the Garden early just to make sure they were on time for the finals.<\/p>\n
The empty arena, however, didn’t take away from the fact that this was about a lot more than which team wouldn’t finish last in the legendary tournament. Each team had plenty to play for.<\/p>\n
For Northeastern, which began the season with a win against Colgate then proceeded to go 0-11-2 over the next 13 games, Monday offered hope to continue some momentum it had built.<\/p>\n
Since losing to UMass-Lowell on Nov. 27, the last of those 13 games in that ugly stretch, the Huskies were 8-2-3 coming into Monday. In Hockey East, Northeastern was 4-1-2 in that same stretch. So despite last Monday’s loss, the consolation game provided a chance for the Huskies to keep their second-half surge moving forward.<\/p>\n