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(02/18/05 11:00am)
As the college basketball season enters the madness that is March, the Big Green most likely will end up on the outside of the bracket. Despite this, Dartmouth seems to improve game after game, especially in the defensive category. This weekend, Cornell (10-11, 5-3) and Columbia (12-9, 3-5) will travel to Hanover and face the Big Green on back to back evenings.
(02/17/05 11:00am)
When questioned as to the impact of the next several days on Dartmouth men's hockey, team co-captain Lee Stempniak '05 said it all: "This weekend is the most important of the season to this point."
(02/09/05 11:00am)
This weekend's much anticipated match-ups against Harvard and Brown turned out only half as well as Dartmouth would have liked. The Big Green found a way to quickly recover from Friday night's heartbreaking 2-1 defeat at the hands of the Crimson with a strong performance in Providence, beating the Bears 3-1.
(02/04/05 11:00am)
This weekend marks Dartmouth's first meeting of the season with No. 10-ranked Harvard (13-5-2, 10-4-1 ECACHL) and the up-and-coming Brown Bears (11-6-3, 6-5-2 ECACHL). The Bright Center in Cambridge, Mass., will be the scene of Dartmouth's most consequential league battle of the year. If the Big Green (11-8-2, 8-6-0 ECACHL) cannot find a way to topple the Crimson tonight, they will fall six points behind third-place Harvard, and even further out of contention for an all-important first-round bye in the postseason.
(01/26/05 11:00am)
September 15, 2004 marked a new era for the National Hockey League. To be more precise, it began an era without the NHL. For four months, die-hard hockey fans have been forced to resort to the Central Hockey League, a developmental league for the NHL, in order to quench their thirst for professional hockey in the Western Hemisphere. NHL enthusiasts have dejectedly watched the league's marquee players vacate the United States to play in places like the Czech Republic, Scandinavia and even Siberia. However, the forgotten faction has been the crop of college and amateur stars forced to wait in the wings as their dreams of playing professional hockey are put on hold.
(01/25/05 11:00am)
The Big Green traveled to Ithaca, N.Y., Friday night in the middle of an explosive 5-1 run. That was until fellow Ivy and nationally-ranked no. 9 Cornell managed to outmatch Dartmouth 3-1 with penalties dousing the red-hot Big Green. The spark would return to Dartmouth the following night in Hamilton, N.Y., as the Big Green ousted the first-place team in the ECAC for the second time in one week, beating no. 8 Colgate in convincing fashion, 6-3.
(01/17/05 11:00am)
Four days after defeating No. 6 New Hampshire in college hockey's highest scoring affair in almost five years, the Big Green dominated Vermont Saturday night in the rubber match of this season's three game series.
(01/14/05 11:00am)
With a complete offensive eruption, led by Jarrett Sampson's '06 hat trick, Dartmouth came back from four goals down to defeat the No. 6 Wildcats of New Hampshire Wednesday night.
(01/04/05 11:00am)
After a winless four-game span marked by two losses and two ties, the men's hockey team finally returned to form against regional foe and nationally ranked Vermont last Thursday at the Ledyard National Bank Tournament. A climactic shootout victory over Bowling Green sent Dartmouth to the finals of the tournament, where they would face Vermont, after losing 5-1 to the rival Catamounts just 11 days earlier. The Big Green capitalized on this opportunity, convincingly avenging their defeat by winning 6-3.
(11/22/04 11:00am)
After losing Hugh Jessiman '06 for the season, splitting last weekend's games against mediocre St. Lawrence and Clarkson and starting the year 3-3-0 overall and 2-2-0 in league play, confidence was by no means rampant among the Big Green men's hockey players coming into their most difficult weekend thus far. The prospect of facing off against 16th-ranked Colgate and ninth-ranked Cornell on consecutive nights was undoubtedly foreboding, yet Tanner Glass '07 chose to view it from another angle. "We look at this weekend as an opportunity to prove that we are of the same caliber as these types of teams," said Glass. Even after a demoralizing loss on Friday to Colgate, 2-1, the 2004-2005 men's squad may have done just that.
(11/09/04 11:00am)
The men's hockey team never thought the only opportunity for Dartmouth fans to throw tennis balls onto the ice would come after the final buzzer sounded Saturday. But Dartmouth was shockingly shut out 3-0 by previously-winless Princeton Saturday, offering no chance for Big Green traditionalists to carry on the custom of littering the ice with tennis balls after the first home team goal. A night earlier, Dartmouth had trounced the Yale Bulldogs 5-2, making the Princeton collapse even more surprising.
(11/02/04 11:00am)
Leading up to Saturday's season-opening game against Quinnipiac University was the hype triggered by a national ranking of 11, the distinct prospect of an NCAA tournament berth and the optimism and hopes of an entire region. Unfortunately for Dartmouth men's hockey, missed opportunities and a strong defensive effort from Quinnipiac spelled defeat with a 2-1 score on opening night. But Dartmouth rebounded in a big way Sunday versus UConn in a 4-1 victory, hopefully laying to rest any doubt that the 2004-2005 squad is not for real.
(10/26/04 9:00am)
Optimism runs rampant for any athletic team as a new season commences. It is a time of fresh starts, new goals and endless possibilities of success. For the Dartmouth men's hockey team, this new beginning came in the form of an exhibition game against Western Ontario University Friday night at Thompson Arena.