Cornell vs Harvard, ECAC QF Game 1, 3/13/26

Started by Trotsky, March 08, 2026, 09:00:54 PM

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BearLover

Cornell's offensive playmaking/awareness has been pretty abysmal for much of the season, and especially so tonight. They have no idea what to do on odd-man rushes. They run out what look like four third lines. Cornell got caught playing a transition game which Harvard is much better at, as they have actual offensive firepower. The freshmen have been rough in the second half of the season, save for a few. Lots of mistakes and little production.

imafrshmn

Quote from: BearLover on March 13, 2026, 09:55:52 PMCornell's offensive playmaking/awareness has been pretty abysmal for much of the season, and especially so tonight. They have no idea what to do on odd-man rushes. They run out what look like four third lines. Cornell got caught playing a transition game which Harvard is much better at, as they have actual offensive firepower. The freshmen have been rough in the second half of the season, save for a few. Lots of mistakes and little production.

I was expecting this post. We got exposed for our pedestrian playmaking approach by a Harvard team that played a more defensively disciplined style than we are used to seeing from them. Most disappointingly
for me, we had no real ability to grind in the offensive zone for extended periods, so those grade-A chances never materialized.
B.S. Cornell '09 / M.S. Michigan '17

stereax

Quote from: stereax on March 13, 2026, 09:47:03 PMsearch: places to eat in the commons, "open after 10 pm", - run by a cult, - luna property

there's like. maybe two places open? and one is ale house on a reduced menu 😭

The bodega was open.
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

stereax

Quote from: imafrshmn on March 13, 2026, 10:03:15 PM
Quote from: BearLover on March 13, 2026, 09:55:52 PMCornell's offensive playmaking/awareness has been pretty abysmal for much of the season, and especially so tonight. They have no idea what to do on odd-man rushes. They run out what look like four third lines. Cornell got caught playing a transition game which Harvard is much better at, as they have actual offensive firepower. The freshmen have been rough in the second half of the season, save for a few. Lots of mistakes and little production.

I was expecting this post. We got exposed for our pedestrian playmaking approach by a Harvard team that played a more defensively disciplined style than we are used to seeing from them. Most disappointingly
for me, we had no real ability to grind in the offensive zone for extended periods, so those grade-A chances never materialized.
Were we watching the same team that pinned Harvard in the o-zone for like 90 seconds at the start of the third and got an entire line change in?
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

imafrshmn

Quote from: stereax on March 13, 2026, 10:29:45 PM
Quote from: imafrshmn on March 13, 2026, 10:03:15 PM
Quote from: BearLover on March 13, 2026, 09:55:52 PMCornell's offensive playmaking/awareness has been pretty abysmal for much of the season, and especially so tonight. They have no idea what to do on odd-man rushes. They run out what look like four third lines. Cornell got caught playing a transition game which Harvard is much better at, as they have actual offensive firepower. The freshmen have been rough in the second half of the season, save for a few. Lots of mistakes and little production.

I was expecting this post. We got exposed for our pedestrian playmaking approach by a Harvard team that played a more defensively disciplined style than we are used to seeing from them. Most disappointingly
for me, we had no real ability to grind in the offensive zone for extended periods, so those grade-A chances never materialized.
Were we watching the same team that pinned Harvard in the o-zone for like 90 seconds at the start of the third and got an entire line change in?

I retract everything i said. Sorry BearLover
B.S. Cornell '09 / M.S. Michigan '17

Trotsky

#155
Our playmaking has been solid for most of the year.  Tonight we didn't have much of a method for exposing what would have been Harvard's backmarker vulnerability given their aggressive forecheck.  That was the issue.  It was certainly not systemic for the season, in which we produced strong offensive numbers.

I've been on enough Mets game threads to know when people want to cope by hinting at catastrophic  problems.  This is part of how certain personalities process losses.  The reality is these games are typically on a knife's edge and the best teams are the ones that are consistently on the winning side.  But losses happen, even to good teams. 

If Alexis is a little more alert for that ridiculous short angle first goal then the game probably turns out in our favor.  It wasn't the best process but it wasn't terrible and the season has certainly not been one of deficiency unless your measuring stick is 1970.

On to tomorrow, and hopefully Sunday, and hopefully LP.    Après-ski is not my priority and in any case will take care of itself.

imafrshmn

Quote from: Trotsky on March 13, 2026, 10:55:35 PMOur playmaking has been solid for most of the year.  Tonight we didn't have much of a method for exposing what would have been Harvard's backmarker vulnerability given their aggressive forecheck.  That was the issue.  It was certainly not systemic for the season, in which we produced strong offensive numbers.

...

What I'm trying to say is that we tend to be very deliberate and predictable with our attack sometimes, especially as compared with the top offensive teams in the country (fair or not to compare). How many times do we shoot into a block? To me it's a matter of tempo, guile, and a lack of "flow".
B.S. Cornell '09 / M.S. Michigan '17

BearLover

Quote from: imafrshmn on March 13, 2026, 11:31:53 PM
Quote from: Trotsky on March 13, 2026, 10:55:35 PMOur playmaking has been solid for most of the year.  Tonight we didn't have much of a method for exposing what would have been Harvard's backmarker vulnerability given their aggressive forecheck.  That was the issue.  It was certainly not systemic for the season, in which we produced strong offensive numbers.

...

What I'm trying to say is that we tend to be very deliberate and predictable with our attack sometimes, especially as compared with the top offensive teams in the country (fair or not to compare). How many times do we shoot into a block? To me it's a matter of tempo, guile, and a lack of "flow".
I think our offensive vision is bad. We lack foresight as to how the play is going to develop. Watch our odd-man rushes all season-consistently a disaster. No idea what to do with the puck.

stereax

Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

chimpfood

Well shit. Im honestly more involved in basketball this weekend but if both bball and hockey lose tomorrow that would make for a real bad day. Lynah wasn't as loud as I'd like it today but tomorrow everyone should be hammered from st pats so that should help

chimpfood

xG were 3.9 to 2.1 in our favor. That stat isn't the be all end all but it lines up with the eye test. Play our game and we should be fine, a good team finds a way.

Also just please let DiGiulian take the third line draws, it's not that hard to take a draw and then play as a winger if that's so important to us

stereax

Quote from: chimpfood on Today at 12:26:46 AMAlso just please let DiGiulian take the third line draws, it's not that hard to take a draw and then play as a winger if that's so important to us
feels like i've been saying this for the past month and a half
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

BearLover

Somebody needs to splice together footage of all of our transition opportunities this season. Comically bad execution. With all the stumbling and bumbling, hesitating, misfired passes, shots into the goalie's chest, shots over the net, and above all the WRONG DECISIONS, it's like a Keystone Cops-style parody of actual hockey.

Snowball

Quote from: BearLover link :P =msg=282656 date=1773488097Somebody needs to splice together footage of all of our transition opportunities this season. Comically bad execution. With all the stumbling and bumbling, hesitating, misfired passes, shots into the goalie's chest, shots over the net, and above all the WRONG DECISIONS, it's like a Keystone Cops-style parody of actual hockey.

On it!

Right after I finish putting together my bed of nails.

upprdeck

We could just as easily scored 5 with the chances we had.   The goalie made several good saves as well.

Corn was crazy slow on that first goal, even when he saw where the puck was, he was really slow to slide back across.

We fell down probably 5 times during the game and almost every one created a scary situation for us.

We were the better team about 75% of the game, thats hockey.

Not sure why people would complain about transition passing and such. I saw a dozen really nice entry plays leading to solid chances. none went in.