Cornell Salvages Hard-Earned Tie at Rensselaer
TROY, N.Y. – With one of its best defenseman out of the
game with an injury in the first period, the 14th-ranked
men’s hockey team couldn’t hold on to a two-goal lead
and eventually settled for a 2-2 tie on Friday night at
Rensselaer.
Down to five blueliners for the final 45-plus minutes, Cornell
(11-6-5, 8-3-4 ECAC Hockey) surrendered a pair of goals 1 minute,
28 seconds apart early in the third period. While Rensselaer
(7-18-2, 4-9-2) is in last place in ECAC Hockey, the Engineers have
lost just twice in their last eight games.
The Big Red kicked off the game with a big defensive play by
junior defenseman Braden Birch. Just 67 seconds into the contest,
Rensselaer threatened with a two-on-one only to have the quick
stick of Birch deflect the puck harmlessly over the glass.
At the 6:34 mark, the Big Red took a 1-0 lead on its power-play
chance of the evening. With just seven seconds left on the man
advantage, senior defenseman Sean Whitney found freshman forward
Joel Lowry speeding up the left wing on the break. Lowry gained the
zone and fed Whitney back at the center point. His high shot was
shrugged down by RPI goalie Bryce Merriam, but the rebound came
down at the top of the crease. Senior forward Sean Collins took a
whack at it, only to have Merriam make another stop, but
Collins’ second attempt fluttered over Merriam’s left
pad and into the net.
Rensselaer then had a pair of power-play chances before the end of
the frame, but came up empty on both occasions despite some
promising build-up. As it turned out, none of the Engineers’
four shots in the opening 20 minutes came on the man advantage, and
Cornell nearly struck on a shorthanded two-on-one at the 10:17
mark.
There were marked similarities in the second period –
Cornell had two penalty kills and another power-play goal. A
terrific shift and sustained pressure by the Miller line created
the power play in the first place after sophomore defenseman Kirill
Gotovets hit the post with a shot and an Engineers defenseman drew
an elbowing penalty a short time later during a scramble in
front.
Miller then scored the goal, his eighth of the year to tie junior
defenseman Nick D’Agostino and Collins for the team lead.
Though his name doesn’t appear on the scoresheet, the play
couldn’t have happened without a stellar effort from Joakim
Ryan. The freshman defenseman gloved down a hard clear above his
head at the center point, then dished off to D’Agostino on
the left side. D’Agostino slid a pass into the high slot for
an a wide-open sophomore forward Dustin Mowrey. He made his way
toward goal and got off a backhanded shot that Merriam stopped, but
Miller was free on the right post to bang in the rebound. The
assist gives Mowrey eight points in his last seven games.
But the Engineers rallied in the third period. After mustering
just 10 shots on goal through two periods, the hosts got on the
board with C.J. Lee’s goal 2:54 into the third, then Ryan
Haggerty’s tally at 4:22. Both teams had several chances
before the final buzzer, but none of them materialized. Sophomore
goalie Andy Iles made 22 saves for Cornell, including 12 in the
final 25 minutes.
Cornell was 2-for-4 on the power play and a perfect 4-for-4 on the
penalty kill. The Big Red, which has lost just twice in its last 10
games, gets right back to work 7 p.m. Saturday with a game against
first-place and 11th-ranked Union (16-6-6, 10-3-3). The Dutchmen
defeated 20th-ranked Colgate on Friday night, 3-1, to take a
three-point lead over Cornell for the league lead – though
the Big Red has a game in hand.












