Carey, Essery Help Saints Force Game 3
The rookies did not want St. Lawrence University's hockey season
to end, and made sure it didn't as freshman wing Greg Carey scored
two goals and rookie center Kyle Essery netted the third period
game winner as the Saints squared their best-of-three ECAC first
round playoff series with Princeton with a 3-2 win at Hobey Baker
Rink Saturday afternoon.
The Saints, now 11-20-5, will play the 6th-seeded Tigers, 17-12-2,
for the right to advance to the quarterfinals at 4 p.m. Sunday
afternoon. The Saints will be out to square their record in games
three of playoff series at 2-2 since 2006 and to advance to the
quarterfinals for the third straight year when they meet the Tigers
on Sunday.
"I thought we played a very solid game," said Saint coach Joe
Marsh. "Special teams was obviously a big difference for us...we
gave them only one power play and we converted on two of our own.
We also did a solid job defensively and didn't give them too many
openings that Matt Weninger couldn't handle."
Weninger picked up his first collegiate post-season victory for
the Saints with a 28-save performance which included a dozen stops
in the third period. He made several point blank saves and got some
help from defensemen Pete Child and George Hughes, both of whom
knocked away rebounds which appeared destined for the net in the
third period.
Princeton opened the scoring 5:50 into the game when Mike Kramer
found Rob Kleebaum all alone between the faceoff circles right in
front of Weninger and Kleebaum banked his second of the playoff
series in off the post. The Saints came back to tie just under four
minutes later when Carey scored his 19th goal of the season on the
Saints' first power play opportunity of the game.
Kyle Flanagan got the puck back to Carey at the center slot and
his bomb from just inside the blue line beat Princeton goalie Sean
Bonar cleanly with Nic Vangog screening in front.
Princeton took a 2-1 lead at 4:13 of the second with Andrew Calof
credited with his ninth of the season as he took the puck behind
the Saint net and threw it out in front, the puck hitting the back
of a Saint defender's leg and caroming past Weninger and into the
net.
Carey tied it again for the Saints on a five-on-three power play
at 12:09 of the second as he took a pass from Jared Keller and
snapped a wrist shot inside the far post with Vangog picking up his
second assist of the game on the play. It was the first time in
three games against Bonar that the Saints have gotten more than one
goal past him. Keller later injured a knee on a hip check and is
lost for the rest of the playoffs.
Essery put the third of the game and the game winner, the first of
his collegiate career, past Bonar at 9:42 of the third as he cut
down the slot, took a pass from Sean Flanagan and snapped a wrist
shot between Bonar's blocker and the post with Jacob Drewiske also
assisting.
"All three goals were well placed and well-timed shots," said
Marsh. "We know that Carey can score and that he has a deadly
wrister, but Essery showed us he can put it away as well."
The Saints were outshot 12-3 in the third period, but were able to
hold off the Tigers, who pulled Bonar for the final 1:33 for an
extra attacker, stretching the season for at least one more
game.












