Cornell Falls in National Title Game in Three Overtimes
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. -- Jessica Wong's game-winning goal with 33.6
seconds left in the third overtime capped an epic 2010 NCAA
Division I Women's Hockey Championship game, as Cornell dropped a
heartbreaking 3-2 decision to the University of Minnesota-Duluth on
Sunday afternoon.
Sophomore goaltender Amanda Mazzotta stopped an NCAA women's
hockey championship game record 61 shots in taking the loss for the
Big Red, whose dream season ends just one win shy of a national
title. Senior forward Melanie Jue scored a pair of goals in her
final contest in a Cornell uniform. Freshman Laura Fortino had a
pair of assists, while classmate Lauriane Rougeau and junior Karlee
Overguard each added one assist on the day.
For Minnesota-Duluth, which claimed its record fifth NCAA
championship, Emmanuelle Blais and Jaime Rasmussen scored the goals
in regulation, with Saara Tuominen chipping in a pair of assists.
Rasmussen also had an assist, as did Audrey Courmoyer, Tara Gray
and Mariia Posa. Netminder Jennifer Harss stopped 49 Cornell shots
in claiming the victory in goal for the Bulldogs.
Cornell would go 1-for-6 on the power play for the game, with
Minnesota-Duluth converting on two of its eight chances on the
power play.
After a scoreless first period that saw both teams work out the
championship game jitters early before settling in, Cornell got on
the board first with Melanie Jue's eighth goal of the season.
Cornell had a brief 5-on-3 power play after back-to-back
cross-checking penalties on Wong and Jocelyne Larocque. After the
penalty to Wong expired, Cornell's Rougeau fired a shot from the
point that worked its way through traffic in front before being
tipped past the shoulder of Harss, staking Cornell to the 1-0 lead,
an advantage the Big Red would carry into the second
intermission.
Straddling the second intermission was a checking penalty on
Cornell's Kendice Ogilvie, and the Bulldogs needed just 18 seconds
of the third period to get the tying goal. Tuominen had a shot on
the rush that was blocked by a Cornell defenseman, but the puck
landed directly on the stick of Blais, open in front of the Cornell
goal. Blais' one-timer beat Mazzotta high and to the glove side as
the Bulldogs drew even.
The game would remain tied through most of the third period until
a power-play on a contact-to-the-head roughing penalty was called
on senior Laura Danforth. The Bulldogs needed just 43 seconds of
the power play to convert, as Tuominen found a wide-open Rasmussen
in the slot, and her one-timer from the weak side beat the diving
effort of Mazzotta, and left many in Ridder Arena thinking that
would be the game-winner.
Except, of course, for those wearing red and white in the
building. Cornell never gave up, and instead put even more pressure
on Harss and the Bulldog defense. That pressure finally paid off
with 3:30 to play as Jue, camped out in the slot, found a loose
puck and chipped a shot past Harss, sparking a wild celebration
from the Big Red players and fans. Jue's goal would send the game
into overtime with the two teams deadlocked at two.
In the first overtime, Cornell skated with the Bulldogs, getting
narrowly out-shot by a 12-11 margin. Up until that point, the Big
Red held a slim lead in shots, out-shooting the Bulldogs in both of
the first two periods. As the game wore on, the Big Red got fewer
and fewer looks at the goal, but still withstood the pressure from
the Bulldog offense.
And it wasn't just Mazzotta, who made spectacular save after
spectacular save for most of the three overtime periods. Her
defense in front of her blocked 32 shots on the game, including 18
in the three overtime periods alone. On one occasion early in the
second overtime period, Mazzotta made the stop but the puck slipped
behind her, trickling ever so close to the goal line before it was
swept away from danger by the quick stickwork of senior co-captain
Kelly McGinty.
In the third overtime period, fatigue appeared to set in among the
Big Red players, with just 15 skaters dressed for the game. Wong
broke into the Cornell end and, faced with a one-on-one against
Mazzotta, lifted her shot high over the glove, only to be turned
away by the crossbar.
With 2:40 to play in the third overtime, Rougeau was called for a
trip, bringing down Cournoyer on a breakaway, earning the Bulldogs
their eighth power-play of the night. Cornell's penalty killers,
fatigued though they were, stood strong, successfully ending off
the power play. As Rougeau came out of the box, streaking across
the ice, she back-checked into the Cornell zone to try to
stick-check Gray's slap shot from the point. Rougeau didn't get
enough of the stick, as the shot fluttered into the slot where Wong
was stationed, redirecting the puck into the net for the
game-winning goal.
Despite the loss, Cornell proved it belonged on the national
stage, taking the five-time champion Bulldogs to the longest
championship game in tournament history. At 119:26, the game also
marked the longest game in Cornell hockey history, surpassing the
men's program's 1-0 loss to Wisconsin in the 2006 NCAA Midwest
Regional final in Green Bay, Wis., which lasted 113:26.
Cornell also recorded plenty of program firsts on the year,
including the first ECAC Hockey regular-season championship, first
playoff series win, first league tournament title, first NCAA
tournament appearance and victory, first berth in the Frozen Four,
and first berth in the national title game. In its run up to the
national title game, the Big Red knocked off a pair of seeded teams
in fourth-seeded Harvard and top-seeded Mercyhurst.
A trio of Cornell players earned a spot on the all-tournament
team, with Mazzotta, Fortino and Rougeau making up the entire
defensive unit of the team. They were joined by UMD's Blais, Wong
and Laura Fridfinnson.
- NCAA Championship Records Set
* Most saves, Game - Amanda Mazzotta, 61 (previous: 41, Patricia
Sautter, Minnesota-Duluth, 2003)
* Most saves, Tournament - Amanda Mazzotta, 123 (previous: 97,
Jesse Vetter, Wisconsin, 2009)












