'94 #7 Colgate 4, #10 SLU 3 #8 Cornell 5, #9 Princeton 4 (OT) '93 #10 Princeton 3, #7 Vermont 1 #9 Colgate 4, #8 Dartmouth 3 (2OT) '92 #10 RPI 5, #7 Vermont 1 #9 Princeton 5, #8 Colgate 4 (2OT) '91 #7 Colgate 5, #10 Princeton 2 #9 Yale 2, #8 Brown 1 '90 #10 Yale 5, #7 Princeton 1 #8 Brown 7, #9 Vermont 5 Cumulative records: #7 2-3, #8 2-3, #9 3-2, #10 3-2 Yale 2-0 RPI 1-0 Cornell 1-0 Colgate 3-1 Princeton 2-3 Brown 1-1 SLU 0-1 Dartmouth 0-1 Vermont 0-3 Attendance plays a big part in the underdog's success; the Princeton wins over Vermont and Colgate were played in front of crowds well below capacity, as was the Yale win over Princeton in '90. If anyone has attendance figures for the other games, I suspect they will bear me out. If I had to pick the greatest upset of all of these, it would be Yale over Princeton in '90; Princeton had Andre Faust and Mike McKee (both made the NHL), a pair of 18-goal scorers up front in Mark Khozozian and Greg Polaski, and the defense included Sean Gorman (spent a year in the IHL), Sverre Sears (just called up to the IHL), Jeff Kampersal (had a cup of coffee in the AHL), and Andy Cesarski (represented the U.S. in the World University Games, played in the Olympic Sports Festival, etc.) in addition to McKee. Yale had Ray Latourneau in goal and not a whole lot more - and had lost to Princeton by three goals twice during the regular season, including a 6-3 decision at Ingalls on the Saturday before the playoff game. Letourneau made 19 saves in the third period to clinch the Yale win. Only 1,032 fans were on hand for the Yale '90 win. Geoff Howell The Trenton Times Drop the Puck