In Coach Schafer’s dreams, this past weekend’s series against Harvard looked pretty much the same as it did when he was awake. The Big Red finished off the lesser shade of red in 2 games, capping the weekend with a shutout for Ben Scrivens and Blake Gallagher’s 100th career point.
Cornell won the series, but what was most impressive was the manner in which they did it. It has been a long time since Cornell has played such a complete, dominant weekend. All season, the team has struggled with assembling 120 consecutive minutes of hockey. Their Saturday night struggles have been well documented. Specifically, the team has often looked strong until the 3rd period of the second game of the weekend, where they begin to fall apart.
When leading in the 3rd period, the team often shifts into shut-down defense mode. The forwards become more selective in their pressure, often just dumping the puck an changing instead of trying to start a play, the team shifts to a trap-like positioning in the neutral zone, and the defense tightens up to limit the opposition to low-percentage shots from the outside. At least that’s how its supposed to go. A number of times over the past few years, the opponent’s desperation overpowered Cornell’s defense, and the shift from an aggressive style early in the game to a passive one late invariably lead to a mistake or two that wound up in the back of the net.
But not this game. Not tonight.
There were no mistakes of consequence in the final period of the Harvard series. Despite maintaining possession of the puck for much of the 3rd, the Crimson were limited to just 7 shots. None of them were particularly challenging; Scrivens stood strong, but was not forced to make any game-changing saves. The decision-making of the Big Red’s forwards was phenomenal. For every break-out, the forwards accurately determined whether there was a weakness in Harvard’s defense. When the answer was “no”, they safely dumped the puck deep and changed lines quickly. There were no poor changes leading to odd-man-rushes, no too many men penalties. When they did see a weakness, they struck, and they scored. Playing this style of hockey requires a lot of patience, a lot of poise, and strong decision-making both on and off the puck. While for most of the season the team could never get all three of these at once, all of the pieces clicked together to finish off Harvard. It was a near-perfect execution of a game plan that had not quite clicked yet this season.
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A major requirement for success in any sport is for the team to come together at the right time. The team certainly came together to beat Harvard. The weekend proved that Cornell can win using either of its styles of play. On Friday, they showed that they can put the puck in the net and outscore an opponent if that’s what the situation requires. On Saturday, they held Harvard to only 3 shots in the 1st and maybe only one quality scoring chance all game (a 3-on-1 in the 2nd period) to prove that they can still successfully shut down an opponent’s offense. The key is now to pull it all together for the big games coming up. If Schafer can get the offense going like Friday and the defense like Saturday at the same time, there is not a single team in the country who our team cannot compete with.
The icing on the cake: Yale will not be in Albany. Cornell will arrive with a 4-0-2 record against the rest of the competition. It will be an exciting weekend. Lets Go Red!