Third-Period Shorthanded Goals Lift Cornell Over Quinnipiac
HAMDEN, Conn. – For the first since 2005, the men’s
hockey scored two shorthanded goals in a game, using the
third-period strikes by senior Sean Collins and freshman Joel Lowry
to erase a one-goal deficit and notch a hard-fought 3-2 victory on
Friday night at Quinnipiac.
Collins’ goal came unassisted just 2 minutes, 17 seconds into
the third period to tie the game at 2. He poked the puck away from
a Quinnipiac (12-8-5, 4-5-4 ECAC Hockey) player at the left point
in the defensive zone, then won the race down the wing to set up a
breakaway. He beat Bobcats goalie Eric Hartzell with a low shot. It
was his sixth goal of the season.
Collins then set up the winner a little more than 10 minutes later
on a rush that started with the teams skating four-on-four. Junior
defenseman Braden Birch started the play with a pass up the left
wing to send Collins away on a two-on-two. He waited until Lowry
beat his defender to the top of the crease, then laid across a
perfect that Lowry chipped over Hartzell to put #9/9 Cornell
(10-4-2, 7-1-1) on top for good. The goal came just as a Cornell
player emerged from the penalty box, giving the Big Red two
shorthanded goals in the same game for the first time since March
11, 2005 (Mike Knoepfli and Mike Iggulden).
The first period was clean and brisk with no penalties, good pace
and plenty of action along the walls. The Big Red’s bid to
take control early was countered with a pair of odd-man rushes the
other way. But Cornell’s defense and goaltending were equal
to the task. Sophomore defenseman Kirill Gotovets foiled a
two-on-one break by picking off a pass at the 4:28 mark. A minute
and a half later, it was junior defenseman Nick D’Agostino
sliding across to his right to thwart a late-breaking three-on-two
rush.
Just like in last weekend’s series at Colorado College,
senior forward Locke Jillson kicked off the Big Red scoring. A huge
hit by freshman forward Cole Bardreau left a Quinnipiac defenseman
struggling to regain position in the zone. Sophomore forward Dustin
Mowrey then forced a turnover on the opposite wing, Bardreau
collected and dropped it to Jillson at the top of the left circle.
He stepped into a slap shot that launched over Hartzell’s
blocker at the 15:22 mark in the first period, giving Jillson his
third goal of the season and Cornell a 1-0 lead.
The Big Red continued to threaten late into the frame until the
penultimate shift turned sour. Freshman defenseman Joakim Ryan
decked Quinnipiac forward Spencer Heichman to the ice, but Heichman
was still able to direct the puck to Jeremy Langlois standing
directly to Cornell sophomore goalie Andy Iles’ right.
Langlois jammed a shot toward goal that caromed off a Big Red
defender’s skate and inside the far post, knotting the score
at 1.
The second period had a much more urgent feel, spurred by the
game’s first penalty 30 seconds into the stanza.
D’Agostino had a golden opportunity from the slot that had
Hartzell beat, but deflected off the shaft of the goalie’s
stick and harmlessly over the glass. The Bobcats killed the rest of
the Cornell man advantage, then got its own opportunity before the
midway point.
It took Quinnipiac just 17 seconds to do damage with Zack Currie
netting a rebound goal at the 7:48 mark. Connor Jones worked the
puck from right to left along the blue line and fired a shot that
Iles kicked away to his right. But Currie was crashing toward goal
from the circle and buried the rebound to give the Bobcats a 2-1
lead. The goal ended a streak of 33 consecutive Cornell penalty
kills against Quinnipiac that dated back to Nov. 21, 2009.
The victory gives the Big Red a 4-0-1 mark all-time at TD Bank
Sports Center, and a 6-0-1 mark in its last seven league games.
With Colgate’s 6-2 loss at Princeton on Friday, the Big Red
now leads ECAC Hockey by two points over Union even with the
Dutchmen playing one more game to date. Cornell also improved to
7-0 on Friday nights.
The Big Red concludes its six-game stretch away from home with a 7
p.m. game Saturday at Princeton (5-10-4, 4-8-1). The game will be
televised on tape delay by Verizon FiOS 1 in Long Island and New
Jersey regions, while Jason Weinstein will provide live
play-by-play on both WHCU-AM 870 in Ithaca and Cornell’s
Redcast service worldwide.












