Cornell Opens Season with Victory
PRINCETON, N.J. -- An opening-night matchup between two of the
top teams in ECAC Hockey and two of the best netminders in the
league lived up to its billing, as the Cornell men's hockey team
opened its season with a 1-0 victory over reigning league champion
Princeton on Friday afternoon at Hobey Baker Rink in Princeton,
N.J. Cornell senior Tyler Mugford scored the game's only goal early
in the third period.
Ben Scrivens made 43 saves, two off his career high, for the
shutout victory for the Big Red, including 20 stops in the third
period alone. Princeton's Zane Kalemba made 18 saves, but the one
that got past him in the third period would cost the Tigers the
victory.
Mugford's tally, the fourth of his career, came moments after the
Big Red killed off a 5-on-3 Princeton power play to open the third
period. The momentum shift of the successful penalty kill, plus
Mugford's strike, gave Cornell the needed lift to close out the
Tigers.
Princeton got the game's first power play chance when Cornell's Dan
Nicholls was whistled for holding at the 5:57 mark of the contest,
but the Big Red penalty killers held the Tigers to just one shot on
the two-minute minor, a shot that was corralled by Scrivens as
Cornell escaped unharmed.
With 9:16 gone in the first period, a tripping call on Princeton's
Tyler Beachell resulted in the Cornell power play unit taking to
the ice for the first time. Cornell wound up with the best chance
of the early part of the game when Riley Nash received the puck
open on the back post with Kalemba on the top of the crease, but
the sophomore could not get the puck off his stick before the
Princeton defense knocked the puck away into the corner.
Scrivens looked sharp in the early going, making several stops on
close-range shots, including back-to-back saves on shots by Dan
Bartlett and Jody Peterson. Cornell got its second power-play
chance shortly afterward on an interference call on Princeton's
Mike Kramer, but could not muster a shot on the man advantage.
With 28 seconds remaining in the first period, the Tigers went back
on the power play as Jared Seminoff was whistled for a holding
call. Cornell was able to close out the remainder of the period as
the two teams went to the locker rooms scoreless.
With the Tigers on the man advantage to open the second period,
Princeton had an excellent chance to break the scoreless deadlock.
Catching the Cornell penalty killers in a line change, Princeton's
Kramer passed the puck up to Beachell, whose one-on-one was stopped
by Scrivens, but squirted through and toward the goal, only to be
alertly flipped away from danger by Michael Kennedy. Minutes later,
another Princeton chance resulted on a dump-in that caught Scrivens
off-guard, forcing the junior to make a diving stop with the shaft
of his stick before covering up the puck.
Things began to open up offensively in the second period, with
Cornell recording a pair of shots that Kalemba smothered, and a
tipped shot by Tyler Roeszler that went just wide of the goal post.
Cornell had another as Blake Gallagher slipped behind the Princeton
defense on a line change and was the recipient of a tape-to-tape
pass from Evan Barlow, but his chance at goal was stopped yet again
by Kalemba at the 6:57 mark of the second period.
With 5:07 to play in the second, the Big Red went back on the power
play as Locke Jillson picked up a loose puck at the Princeton blue
line and skated in, but an interference call on the Tigers' Brad
Schroeder resulted in Jillson not getting a shot off and Schroeder
serving two. After controlling the puck in the Princeton zone for a
large chunk of the power play, Sean Collins tried stuffing the puck
into the near post, but again Kalemba was there as the Tigers
cleared the zone.
Princeton again went on the power play in the closing moments of
the period as Tyler Mugford was called for roughing with 1:19 to
play in the second. Cornell was three seconds away from finishing
the period unscathed when Brendon Nash was whistled for cross
checking, giving the Tigers a 5-on-3 power play for 41 seconds as
the third period opened up.
After Princeton won the opening draw to begin the third period, the
Big Red got a huge save from Scrivens with 14 seconds left on the
penalty to Mugford. Cornell then won the ensuing faceoff and
flipped the puck down the ice, putting the Princeton man advantage
down to a 5-on-4 as Mugford was released. Cornell again was able to
clear the defensive zone without allowing a shot, putting the time
left on the penalty to Nash down to 27 seconds with a faceoff to
the right of Scrivens. Mugford won the draw and the Big Red was
again able to clear the zone, with the Tigers unable to get a shot
off as Cornell was able to escape unscathed.
Cornell then grabbed momentum just 3:20 into the period. Following
a faceoff in the Cornell zone, the Big Red gained the puck and
broke out of the zone with Jared Seminoff leading the way. Seminoff
then dished the puck to Mugford at the Princeton blue line, and the
senior's wrist shot from the top of the circle beat Kalemba high to
the glove side as Cornell took a 1-0 lead.
Princeton had its chances in the ensuing minutes, but each time,
Scrivens was up to the task. His highlight-reel caliber save came
with nine minutes gone in the third, as he went nearly horizontal
to make a save on Taylor Fedun's shot from the bottom of the
faceoff circle to Scrivens' right.
With 6:48 to play, Evan Barlow was sent to the penalty box for a
goaltender interference call, once again putting the Tigers on the
power play. Cornell was able to clear the zone three times in the
first minute of the penalty on Barlow, then kept the Tigers out of
the zone for the next 20 seconds. Cornell again was able to clear,
this time killing the penalty down to 20 seconds remaining. As the
penalty expired, Princeton's Derrick Pallis ripped a shot from the
blue line that Scrivens made a diving jump of a stop to keep from
getting into the goal.
Kalemba went to the bench with 1:05 to play for the extra skater,
and the Big Red nearly made the Tigers pay, but an offsides whistle
negated an empty net goal with 54 seconds left.
Cornell returns to action on Saturday night, seeking a four-point
weekend to open the year, by making the trip to Hamden, Conn., for
a 7 p.m. matchup against Quinnipiac at the TD Banknorth Sports
Center.












