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Subject:
From:
"Zolt, Jeff" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Maine Hockey Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 9 Dec 1998 07:58:33 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (143 lines)
lets cheer again for the womens team...
U.S. COLLEGE HOCKEYS.....DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Defensive Player Of the Week
                                  Kathleen Hedges, Maine
                                  This weekend, the University of Maine
                                  crossed a milestone, earning its first ever
                                  Division I and ECAC win with a 3-2 decision
                                  over visiting St. Lawrence. Shining in the win
                                  was goaltender Kathleen Hedges, who
                                  stopped 41 shots and allowed just two goals
                                  for a 2.00 goals against average and a 0.954
                                  save percentage.
 
> ----------
> From:         Zolt, Jeff
> Sent:         Monday, December 07, 1998 11:14 AM
> To:   'The Maine Hockey Discussion List'
> Subject:      RE: Bears Win First League Game
>
> CONGRATS...TO THE MAINE WOMENS HOCKEY TEAM....GREAT JOB!!!
>
>       ----------
>
>
>       Black Bears win first league game
>
>       by Dave Bailey
>       Maine Campus Staff
>
>       To some, it might be just another puck. But to Maine women's hockey
>       coach Rick Filighera, it
>       was the perfect birthday gift.
>         Filighera celebrated his 31st birthday in style Saturday as Maine
>       downed St. Lawrence 3-2 at
>       Alfond Arena for its first conference win of the season.
>         "I can be real happy about this one," said Filighera, holding the
>       puck the way a child grasps a
>       piece of candy. "We are loving life right now."
>         Raffi Wolf tallied two goals for Maine, while Kira Misikowetz had
>       one, which proved to be the
>       difference-maker.
>         Penalty killing was the key to victory for the Black Bears, as Maine
>       shot down five St.
>       Lawrence power plays, including two when the Saints had two-skater
>       advantages.
>         Maine (5-5-0. 1-5-0 ECAC) also had to cope with some line shuffles.
>       With Alison Lorenz out
>       with a twisted ankle and Colleen Baude under the weather, Amy Van Vuren
>       was inserted into
>       the left wing position alongside scoring powerhouses Wolf and
>       Misikowetz.
>         And it didn't take long for the move to pay big dividends.
>         Just 37 seconds into the game, Van Vuren, who was to the right of
>       Saints goaltender Emily
>       Stein (19 saves), flipped the puck to a waiting Wolf in front of the
>       net. Wolf then banged it high
>       to Stein's left to put the Bears on the board.
>         "It was the most important goal, [being] right at the beginning,"
>       said Wolf, who now has 13
>       goals on the season to lead Maine. "We have to play with everyone. The
>       whole team has to get
>       along."
>         Five minutes later, Maine was put to the test when two quick
>       penalties put the Bears at a
>       two-skater disadvantage.
>         But with the crowd of 187 shouting "Dee-fense!" and Wolf clearing the
>       puck out of the Maine
>       zone, the Bears were able to kill the penalty.
>         "When [Wolf] gets a hang of the puck, it's gone," Filighera said.
>       "That's why she's out there."
>         With her defensive credentials well-established, Wolf exhibited her
>       offensive skills again in the
>       second, rebounding her own shot and stinging the puck to Stein's right
>       for a power-play goal.
>         But St. Lawrence wasn't about to lie down just yet. Midway through
>       the second, Nicole Kirnan
>       and Caroline Trudeau scored two goals for the Saints in the span of
>       2:35 to knot the score.
>         After surving another two-woman disadvantage, Maine took the lead for
>       good, when
>       Misikowetz took a loose puck and stuck it in the net for an unassisted
>       goal at 3:38.
>         "It wasn't a spectacular goal," Misikowetz said. "It was just a
>       "cross the net, jam it in' goal.
>       Amy Van Vuren was behind the net and she worked hard to get it out
>       there, and I just smashed
>       it in."
>         Kathleen Hedges made 41 saves in the net for Maine, upping her record
>       to 3-3-0. Among the
>       sweet stops was a sweeping glove save off Meghan Maguire's dead-on shot
>       with 10:26 left in
>       the second, not to mention a plethora of saves in the third when Maine
>       was unable to get the
>       puck out of its zone (The Bears had only one shot in the second half of
>       the third).
>         St. Lawrence outshot Maine 43-22 overall.
>         "We just kept on saying we thought we were better than them,"
>       Misikowetz said. "We thought
>       if we kept giving it to them that we would come out on top. No matter
>       what they did, we just
>       kept on saying, "C'mon guys, let's go.'"
>         Friday - Polar Opposite
>         Saturday's triumph helped wash out the bad taste of Friday's debacle,
>       as a sluggish Maine team
>       was corralled 3-0 by an equally sluggish St. Lawrence squad at the
>       Alfond the third time this
>       season the Black Bears have been shut out.
>         Filighera was in a less-than-jovial mood following a game in which
>       the Bears failed to take
>       advantage of the subpar Saints.
>         "We played with no enthusiasm," Filighera said. "We weren't going to
>       the net. "
>         Filighera also said that such inconsistencies can be expected from a
>       young team like Maine.
>         Maine defenseman Jessica Stachiw noted Maine's sluggishness on the
>       ice.
>         "Our energy was kind of low," Stachiw said. "We were trying to pick
>       it up, but I think we know
>       what we have to do."
>         St. Lawrence coach Ron Waske suggested that Maine's lack of depth was
>       a factor in the
>       Saints' victory.
>         "Unfortunately, the depth isn't going to be there," he said.
>       "[Maine's] first line is as competitive
>       as many of the first lines in the [ECAC], but the depth after that is a
>       little weak."
>         St. Lawrence got on the board 3:14 into the game when Suzanne Fiacco
>       one-timed a Nicole
>       Kirnan pass past Hedges.
>         The score was 1-0 until the third, when St. Lawrence scored two more
>       to blow the game open.
>         "The third period, we just sleptwalked through it," Filighera said.
>         Stacy Boudrais gave the Saints the two-goal lead, sticking the puck
>       to Hedges' left.
>         Christa Talbot capped the scoring for St. Lawrence with a powerful
>       slap-shot goal from just in
>       front of the blue line.
>         Hedges made 21 saves for Maine, while Caryn Ungewitter made 18 for
>       St. Lawrence to run
>       her record to 3-5-0.
>
>

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