University of New Hampshire Athletics

LAVOIE'S LATE HEROICS LIFTS #4 WOMEN'S HOCKEY PAST #9 NORTHEASTERN, 5-3. AT FENWAY PARK
1/8/2010 12:00:00 AM | Women's Ice Hockey
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BOSTON –
Kristina Lavoie (Fonthill, Ontario) broke a 3-3
tie with 5:30 remaining and netted an empty-net goal in the final
minute of the game to lift the fourth-ranked University of New
Hampshire women's ice hockey team to Friday's 5-3
victory against ninth-ranked Northeastern University in the opening
game of the Sun Life Frozen Fenway doubleheader at Fenway Park. It
marked the first outdoor game in women's college hockey.
UNH, which had been idle since its 4-1 win Dec. 12 at Dartmouth
College, won its third consecutive game – and 26th straight
in the series vs. the Huskies – to improve to 13-2-4 overall
and 7-1-1-0 in Hockey East. NU, which had already won two January
road games, falls to 12-5-2, 6-4-2-1.
Lavoie, who tied her career high of two goals, was one of three
Wildcats with multiple points against the top-ranked defensive team
in the nation. Courtney Birchard (Mississauga,
Ontario) set up the last three goals of the game to finish with a
career-high three assists, and Micaela Long (South
Boston, Mass.) tallied a goal and an assist to extend her
point-scoring streak to 12 games.
UNH goaltender Kayley Herman (Weyburn,
Saskatchewan) entered the game at the start of the second period
and earned the victory by stopping 12 of 13 shots in the last 40
minutes. It marked the 50th career win for Herman, who is the
seventh UNH Wildcat goalie to reach that milestone. Lindsey
Minton (Richardson, Texas) started the game between the
pipes and was credited with three saves; she exited the game with
the 'Cats trailing 2-1.
Northeastern netminder Florence Schelling stopped 28 shots and the
Huskies' offense was led by Brittany Esposito (two goals) and
Annie Hogan (two assists).
NU took a 1-0 lead on its first shot of the game when Esposito
wristed a shot under the crossbar from the slot at 1:29. Hogan,
with the centering pass, was credited with an assist.
The Huskies struck again at 3:41 to extend its advantage to 2-0.
On the forecheck, Casey Pickett curled behind the net and lifted a
UNH defenseman's stick to steal the puck at the left post.
She quickly fired a shot cross the goalmouth that caromed off the
far post into the net.
UNH pulled within 2-1 just 18 seconds later, however, with
pressure deep in the offensive zone. Sarah
Cuthbert (East Falmouth, Mass.) kicked the puck out of the
right corner to the circle, where Shannon Sisk
(Pipersville, Pa.) skated into open space and one-timed a shot
inside the right post.
In the 15th minute, Cuthbert fired a one-timer that Schelling
turned aside, and moments later the NU goalie denied Kelly
Paton (Woodstock, Ontario) on a wraparound bid at the left
post.
Northeastern took a 2-1 lead into the first intermission despite
UNH's 9-5 shot advantage.
The Huskies went on a power play at 1:52 of the second stanza but
the Wildcats killed off that opportunity and sprung Julie
Allen (Brampton, Ontario) on a breakaway as she exited the
penalty box. Allen skated down the slot, pulled the puck to her
forehand and was denied by Schelling. Allen followed the rebound to
the right post, but she once again was turned away by
Schelling.
Two minutes later, Paton corralled an outlet pass in the neutral
zone to lead a break down the right wing, where she wristed a shot
that ricocheted off Schelling's helmet.
NU went on another power play in the seventh minute and
capitalized on the skater advantage to build a 3-1 lead at 7:28.
From behind the net, Hogan shoveled the puck to the front of the
net and Esposito redirected a shot into the goal. Kristi Kehoe was
also credited with an assist.
New Hampshire entered the third period with a 3-1 deficit with a
19-13 edge in shots.
The Wildcats struck early in the third period to pull within one
goal. Kristine Horn (Utica, Mich.) moved the puck
from the high slot to Allen on the right wing. Allen's
initial low shot was stopped by Schelling's left leg pad, but
Allen swept the rebound inside the right post to make it a 3-2 game
at 1:30.
UNH continued to pressure and cycle the puck in the offensive
zone, which limited NU's scoring chances. A Wildcat went to
the penalty box at 8:18, but an NU skater followed 44 seconds
later.
And with pressure from that power-play opportunity, UNH netted the
game-tying goal. Allen initiated the flurry of shots with a
dangerous opportunity deep in the left circle. Schelling
couldn't control the rebound, and a pair of Wildcats whacked
at the loose puck in the crease. The NU goalie preserved the
one-goal lead, but the 'Cats retained possession and Paton
swung the puck from the right circle to Birchard at the high slot.
Birchard's pass to the right wing found Long, whose shot from
the faceoff dot trickled between Schelling's leg pads as the
power play expired at 11:02.
Then it was time for Lavoie's heroics. UNH's offensive
pressure generated a shot by Long in the slot that Schelling
blocked towards the right circle. Lavoie corralled the puck and
quickly fired a shot into the open right side of the net to give
the Wildcats their first lead of the game, 4-3, at 14:30.
NU pulled Schelling in favor of an extra skater with 39 seconds
remaining. The Huskies could not sustain possession, however, and
Birchard advanced the puck to the neutral zone for Lavoie. She
skated down the right wing and, while fending off a defender,
pushed the puck from the circle into the open net with 15 seconds
remaining in the game to secure the victory.
New Hampshire returns to action next weekend for a home-and-home
series against longtime nemesis Providence College. The Wildcats
play host to the Friars in the opening game of the series Jan. 16
(2 p.m.) at the Whittemore Center. The game is part of Hockey
East's Skating Strides Against Breast Cancer fund raising
initiative.
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