Cornell Earns Fourth Straight Home Shutout
ITHACA, N.Y. -- If the storyline is starting to sound the same,
it should. Just like its last home game, the men's hockey team got
a shutout from sophomore goalie Andy Iles, a game-winning
power-play goal from junior defenseman Nick D'Agostino and a 1-0
victory -- this one coming against St. Lawrence in front of a
sold-out crowd at Lynah Rink.
Iles stood tall when called upon for a 13-save blanking after the
Big Red defense held the Saints to just four shots on goal through
the opening 40 minutes. It was Cornell's fourth consecutive home
shutout after defeating Princeton, 4-0 on Nov. 18; Quinnipiac, 4-0
on Nov. 19; and Niagara, 1-0 on Nov. 22. That's a first in the
modern era of the program, with the last occurrence coming with two
games apiece in the 1906-07 and 1907-08 seasons.
"It's just one of those games that as a coach, you're sitting there
between the second and third, thinking 'We've outshot them 19-4.'
You just hope nothing breaks and goes the other way on you,"
Cornell head coach Mike Schafer said. "It's fortunate for us. We
had a lot of guys block shots tonight. When they had good looks at
the net, we had guys in front of them, and held on to get the
win."
The Big Red got the winner from D'Agostino at the 14:18 mark of the
first period after 6:57 of power-play time. After coming up empty
on a five-minute major in the game's early stages (save for a pair
of hit posts by freshmen forwards Brian Ferlin and Joel Lowry),
Cornell's second chance on the man advantage went turned out to be
more fruitful. Junior forward Greg Miller won a faceoff just
outside the SLU blue line back to junior forward John Esposito, who
entered the zone up the middle. He dished off to Ferlin, who then
backhanded the puck into the left corner. Esposito maneuvered
around a defender to cut behind the net, then sent a pass up the
slot to SLU goalie Matt Weninger's left that found D'Agostino
charging from the point for a slam-dunk conversion.
There turned out to be many more posts clanked than nets dented in
this one. St. Lawrence's Peter Child hit a pipe about midway
through the game when a shot deflected off a Big Red defender and
off the frame to Iles' right, bouncing right back into range for
the goalie to pounce on. The favor was then returned when Cornell
sophomore forward Dustin Mowery's offering from the high slot
through traffic sent those familiar ringing tones echoing through
the east end of Lynah.
Special teams turned out to be pivotal in keeping the Big Red out
in front. The Saints had five of the game's final six power plays,
but came up empty each time -- including twice in the final six
minutes.
"The defense has to be consistent, and we did that tonight limiting
them to 13 shots," Schafer said.
Cornell (7-3, 6-1 ECAC Hockey) will attempt to maintain first place
in the league Saturday when Clarkson visits Lynah Rink to close out
the fall semester portion of the schedule.












