Iles Spurs Huge Win for Big Red Over Colorado College
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Sophomore goalie Andy Iles made
39 saves, spurring the #13/14 Cornell men’s hockey
team’s defense as first-period goals by senior forward Locke
Jillson and freshman forward John McCarron stood up in a huge 3-1
win over #6/8 Colorado College on Friday night at World Arena.
In the Big Red’s first visit to the Mountain Time Zone since
1995, Cornell (9-4-1) looked right at home after some early
sloppiness on the Olympic-sized sheet of ice. The Big Red scored
the pivotal first goal with Jillson’s second strike of the
season. The assist went to sophomore Dustin Mowrey after he won a
one-on-one battle with a CC defenseman in the right corner. The
puck came back to Jillson on the halfwall. After he faked a pass
back to the blue line, he twirled and found space just outside the
right hash mark. With freshman forward Cole Bardreau creating
traffic in front of the net, Jillson wired a shot over CC goalie
Josh Thorimbert’s glove to give Cornell a 1-0 lead. Jillson
continues to show a knack for scoring goals in big games –
his first tally this season came in front of a sold-out crowd at
Madison Square Garden against BU, another ranked opponent.
McCarron doubled the lead with 1:42 remaining in the opening frame
with spectacular individual effort. The puck squirted out of the
Cornell zone along the right wing, sending McCarron and a CC
defender away on a high-speed battle. The 6-foot-2, 225-pound
McCarron won, getting free on the outside to set up a blast that
sailed over Thorimbert’s blocker. It was McCarron’s
first collegiate goal to complement his six assists.
Colorado College (12-7) held a 9-8 lead in shots on goal after the
first period, but six of those shots came from the distant
perimeter. The second period would be a different story, even if no
goals were produced.
After the Big Red came up empty on an early power-play chance in
the middle stanza, CC went on a two-man advantage for 1 minute, 45
seconds – with two of its best penalty-killing defensemen in
the box, to boot. The trio of Sean Collins, Sean Whitney and Braden
Birch played then next 1:20 to spearhead a game-changing penalty
kill which featured a pivotal save from Iles. A cross-slot pass set
up Tigers leading scorer Rylan Schwartz for a one-timer at the
bottom of the right circle, but Iles stretched his left pad to the
post to foil the offering and keep CC at bay. Cornell survived
another penalty kill later in the frame to successfully survive
until an intermission that helped the team collectively catch its
breath – no small feat at the venue’s elevation of
6,000 feet.
The third period featured much of the same – both in the
Tigers’ relentless pressure and Iles’ outstanding
goaltending. A mix-up at the Cornell blue line led to a solo dash
down the slot from CC’s Archie Skalbeck, but Iles stood tall
and squeezed off the offering in his mid-section. The Big Red then
looked to be in control when the Tigers were whistled for
cross-checking with 1:43 remaining in the game. But CC stormed
right back on a shorthanded two-on-one almost immediately. Iles
made a scrambling save on David Civitarese to keep the Big Red in
front, but the ensuing scrum led to a Cornell penalty that evened
up the teams’ man power.
The Tigers then pulled Thorimbert with 1:20 remaining in favor of
an extra attacker, essentially giving CC’s high-powered power
play its fifth opportunity of the game. It didn’t take long
for the nation’s sixth-best power play to create another
Grade-A chance, but Iles gloved a shot from Scott Winkler off a
goal-mouth feed from Alexander Krushelnyski with 1:02 left to keep
the lead intact.
Cornell then iced the game with junior forward Greg Miller’s
second empty-net goal in as many games with 7.6 seconds remaining,
set up by a blocked shot from classmate Erik Axell. Freshman
defenseman Joakim Ryan also picked up an assist.
Cornell concludes the non-league portion of its schedule on
Saturday against with a rematch against the Tigers at World Arena
before returning east for ECAC Hockey contests at Quinnipiac
(Friday, Jan. 13) and Princeton (Saturday, Jan. 14).












