Poll: Rooting for Harvard?

Started by imafrshmn, March 28, 2017, 01:56:42 AM

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Trotsky

Also really wishing for early departures from Harvard, since they are graduating a ton (Moy, Kerfoot, Malone, Esposito, Anderson).  Obviously Donato is staying, but I'd like to see Madsen (PHI) go, and it would of course be glorious to see Fox (CGY) do 1-and-done.

billhoward

Quote from: TrotskyAlso really wishing for early departures from Harvard, since they are graduating a ton (Moy, Kerfoot, Malone, Esposito, Anderson).  Obviously Donato is staying, but I'd like to see Madsen (PHI) go, and it would of course be glorious to see Fox (CGY) do 1-and-done.
Maybe the Red Wings could offer the coaching job to Donato Sr. And bring in Jr. as well.

Trotsky

Quote from: billhoward
Quote from: TrotskyAlso really wishing for early departures from Harvard, since they are graduating a ton (Moy, Kerfoot, Malone, Esposito, Anderson).  Obviously Donato is staying, but I'd like to see Madsen (PHI) go, and it would of course be glorious to see Fox (CGY) do 1-and-done.
Maybe the Red Wings could offer the coaching job to Donato Sr. And bring in Jr. as well.
I see what you did there.

Jeff Hopkins '82

Quote from: TrotskyAlso really wishing for early departures from Harvard, since they are graduating a ton (Moy, Kerfoot, Malone, Esposito, Anderson).  Obviously Donato is staying, but I'd like to see Madsen (PHI) go, and it would of course be glorious to see Fox (CGY) do 1-and-done.

Madsen may go, but he won't be playing with the big club.  

The Flyers have Mason and Neuvirth right now, and even if they dump one of those next year to get cap space, Stolarz is ready to step up (he's played well in Philly recently, too.).  Lyon has been the go-to at Lehigh Valley, so if Madsen came out now, at best he'd be a back-up in Allentown.  

Even though he does go to Sucks, you have to think he'd be smarter than to leave under those circumstances.

BearLover

Was strongly anti-Harvard going in and was overall happy with the result, but did feel a tinge of regret after seeing they lost/how they lost.  They had an unbelievable team this year and certainly played well enough to win that game.

Jim Hyla

Quote from: BearLoverWas strongly anti-Harvard going in and was overall happy with the result, but did feel a tinge of regret after seeing they lost/how they lost.  They had an unbelievable team this year and certainly played well enough to win that game.

I felt the reffing was particularly bad. It seemed like after the first period the officials said "We called that one close. So let's let everything go from now on." To me the worst was the lack of call on what seemed like a trip on UMD when Harvard was on a PP. Had Harvard scored on a 5 on 3, it could have been a major turning point.
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005

marty

Quote from: Jim Hyla
Quote from: BearLoverWas strongly anti-Harvard going in and was overall happy with the result, but did feel a tinge of regret after seeing they lost/how they lost.  They had an unbelievable team this year and certainly played well enough to win that game.

I felt the reffing was particularly bad. It seemed like after the first period the officials said "We called that one close. So let's let everything go from now on." To me the worst was the lack of call on what seemed like a trip on UMD when Harvard was on a PP. Had Harvard scored on a 5 on 3, it could have been a major turning point.

I was sure I saw the trip from the upper deck far side of the rink.  They replayed it on the scoreboard and that view made the refs look silly.   It seemed like much more of a penalty than the roughing(?) called just seconds before.

I give credit to Duluth. When I saw them fighting to keep the puck in the zone I said out loud that they wanted game over.
"When we came off, [Bitz] said, 'Thank God you scored that goal,'" Moulson said. "He would've killed me if I didn't."

Hooking

Denver U. is a small school (11,797), but U.M.D. is even smaller (10,878). For a really small school root for Union (2,242), which has to compete against Penn State (99,133).

ugarte

Quote from: HookingDenver U. is a small school (11,797), but U.M.D. is even smaller (10,878). For a really small school root for Union (2,242), which has to compete against Penn State (99,133).
do you care about anything except numbers

billhoward

Quote from: HookingDenver U. is a small school (11,797), but U.M.D. is even smaller (10,878). For a really small school root for Union (2,242), which has to compete against Penn State (99,133).
10,000 undergraduates is not a small school. Colgate and Union are small schools. You have to work to stuff football, hockey, basketball, etcetera teams into 1000-1500 male undergrads.

Penn State is more like 40,000. "99,133" is what pops up if you google 'penn state enrollment' but that might be all PSU campuses. Denver is more like 6,000 if you count undergraduates only; I'd check further but Google says Denver is "closed today." UMD is about 10,000 undergrads, not a whole lot less than Cornell. Broadly speaking.

BearLover

Not difficult to see how Harvard put together such an impressive season: top-flight talent (eight draft picks, including a number of early-rounders), none of whom left early; a senior-heavy team; and almost no games lost to injury whatsoever among their top players.  As for how Donato got these players to attend Harvard over a school with a real hockey tradition is more difficult to figure out--sure, it's Harvard, but why not go to Yale, which was in the midst of a dominant stretch when these players were choosing schools?  Regardless, with the talent Harvard's getting it looks like it's gonna be a while before they're back in the cellar.