Dartmouth 4 vs. Cornell 2 1/28/17

Started by Iceberg, January 28, 2017, 04:39:11 PM

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Iceberg

This is pretty much a must-win game for conference and pairwise purposes. Dartmouth has been pretty rancid to start out the year, but they always seem to give Cornell problems.

andyw2100

Quote from: IcebergThis is pretty much a must-win game for conference and pairwise purposes. Dartmouth has been pretty rancid to start out the year, but they always seem to give Cornell problems.

Dartmouth beat Harvard 8-4 11 days ago, so this is no gimme!

Dafatone

Did I hear that Vanderlaan isn't dressed?  Cause that'd be bad.

Dafatone

Nope, just on a different line, I think.

Iceberg

Quote from: andyw2100
Quote from: IcebergThis is pretty much a must-win game for conference and pairwise purposes. Dartmouth has been pretty rancid to start out the year, but they always seem to give Cornell problems.

Dartmouth beat Harvard 8-4 11 days ago, so this is no gimme!


Well, I never said that it was a lock. This weekend will probably be a killer


Dafatone

Man, the ECAC sucks this year.  We're 18th in the pairwise and have the 9th best win percentage.

upprdeck

strange game.  good first.. ok 2nd,  actually took it to Dartmouth most of the 3rd until the parade to the penalty box,  the first penalty was just awful, the knee one was marginal, the boarding was too far away and the slash on Angello didnt see but the check from behind that followed it was pretty bad..  

 what i didnt get was there was no penalty called on angello until after the play was it called by the other ref?

still the let so much go all game and then just went all out on cornell down the stretch yet ignored a couple trips that would really have helped us.

add to that the non review of last nights goal and not a good weekend for the refs.

GBR1234

I usually don't complain about officiating, but tonight in the 3rd it cost us the game.
Dartmouth's Crema is a downright dirty player, maybe not as bad as Eric Neiley, but he got away with a lot tonight.

Dafatone

Quote from: GBR1234I usually don't complain about officiating, but tonight in the 3rd it cost us the game.
Dartmouth's Crema is a downright dirty player, maybe not as bad as Eric Neiley, but he got away with a lot tonight.

WHCU announcers were as disapproving of the refs as I've ever heard them, which is to say they calmly suggested Cornell send tape of the game to the league.  Jason said they'd do it at the end of the weekend, and the other guy (Dave?) asked why not tonight.

Johnny 5

From the Associated Press, 1/29/17:
I line with current moves by the NBA and NASCAR to make their sport more appealing to short attention-span millenials, the NCAA has decided that all college hockey games for the 2017-18 season will be reduced to 2 periods of 10 minutes each.

::bang::
Cure for cancer? Soon. Cure for stupid? Never. ~ Prof. B. Honeydew

Johnny 5

Cure for cancer? Soon. Cure for stupid? Never. ~ Prof. B. Honeydew

andyw2100

http://www.gazette.net/stories/01202011/frednew165953_32541.php


--
Thurmont man's pet zebra makes commuters smile
3-year-old equine was purchased for fun, owner says

by Courtney Pomeroy | Staff Writer
E-mail this article \\ Print this article

Tom Fedor/The Gazette
A female zebra called Zoey lives on the Barber family's farm near Thurmont. Zoey can be seen grazing along U.S. Route 15 with a pair of donkeys and a heard of angus, and her purpose is to amuse passersby, her owners say.
Mountain zebras are native to Africa, not Maryland.

But Zoey, a domesticated female zebra who lives in Thurmont, has a great view of the Blue Ridge range, not Mount Kilimanjaro.

Many have seen Zoey while driving north on U.S. Route 15, but few know the story behind the exotic equine.

Zoey belongs to Jeff Barber, an Emmitsburg resident and the owner of Playground Specialists Inc., in Thurmont. The company operates on a 120-acre farm that Jeff and his father, Reggie Barber, have co-owned since 2006. The land is also home to about 40 head of cattle, two donkeys and, of course, a zebra.

"I'm more of a playful kind of person, hence I own a playground company," the younger Barber said. And his inspiration for getting a zebra? It would "give [people] something to look for and hopefully make them smile" during their commutes.

The farm was once home to a large, green dinosaur figure that was moved all around the property for fun, but it was stolen.

"People loved to drive by and see it," Jeff said. It was while brainstorming a way to keep the farm interesting for passers-by that he had the idea to purchase a zebra.

"If you just have cows, nobody's looking for your cows," he said. But a zebra "appeals to my kids and everybody driving up and down the highway."

It wasn't long after the thought popped into his head that a 6-week-old Zoey was on her way to Thurmont from a breeder in Virginia.

He thinks "a little farther out of the box than normal," Reggie Barber said of his son.

Jeff's 19-year-old daughter, Amanda, agreed.

"I think it's awesome, it's just random," she said, noting that the purchase was a surprise to her and her siblings.

Amanda, who works at the playground company, is one of four children. She has a twin sister who attends the University of Maryland, College Park, a 10-year-old sister and a 9-year-old brother. The younger siblings attend Emmitsburg Elementary School.

While the kids get a kick out of the fact that their dad owns a zebra, Zoey can't be ridden or played with like other equines can, Reggie said. She is also different from a horse in that she's smaller — about the size of a pony — is only fed grass and hay and will live to be about 35 years old, he added.

And while Zoey comes from a domesticated line, she still has the heart of a wild animal.

"You can't keep a zebra shut up in a stall," the elder Barber said. "They will absolutely come apart." Instead, Zoey takes shelter in a "loafing shed," an open structure that can protect her from the weather but does not have four walls.

Since zebras are generally "flighty animals," she is kept with a pair of docile donkeys to help her stay grounded. Lisa and Jack, who also keep Zoey from getting lonely, were purchased solely for that reason, Jeff Barber said.

The zebra actually seems to think that Lisa the donkey is her mother, he added.

On an average day, Zoey can be seen standing in one of the farm's fields, her stunning pattern standing out from the crowd that consists of Lisa, who is white, and Jack, who is gray.

While Zoey isn't exactly a "hands-on" animal, "she's cute as a button," Barber noted. It's fun to watch her chase the cows and dogs or gallop away when someone approaches her pen, only to come right back and sniff around curiously, he said.

Among friends, Barber owning a zebra "is one of those things that's kind of become comical," he said. But he hopes that Zoey has brought a smile to more faces than just theirs.

"If we've made people smile, we've done something good."

cpomeroy@gazette.net

billhoward

Dave is best known as the name of the multi-costumes Zamboni driver. Tony Eisenhut is the color guy who suggested a tape of the game go tonight [Saturday] not Monday to the ECAC. Jason Weinstein is play by play.

Dafatone

Quote from: billhowardDave is best known as the name of the multi-costumes Zamboni driver. Tony Eisenhut is the color guy who suggested a tape of the game go tonight [Saturday] not Monday to the ECAC. Jason Weinstein is play by play.

Ah, thanks.  Thought they were both daves for some reason.