{"id":9281,"date":"2009-01-03T12:36:27","date_gmt":"2009-01-03T18:36:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2009\/01\/03\/holy-cross-edges-rpi\/"},"modified":"2010-08-23T11:55:35","modified_gmt":"2010-08-23T16:55:35","slug":"holy-cross-edges-rpi","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/recaps\/2009\/01\/03\/holy-cross-edges-rpi\/","title":{"rendered":"Holy Cross Edges RPI"},"content":{"rendered":"
After playing Denver to a 2-2 tie Friday night, Holy Cross Crusaders’ coach Paul Pearl talked about being able to build on the experience of playing strongly against the No. 5 team in the county, and how it would help them down the stretch.<\/p>\n
That experience probably helped the Crusaders in their win over RPI in the consolation game of the Wells Fargo Denver Cup Saturday afternoon. After being dominated in the first period and trailing 2-0, the Crusaders rallied to edge the Engineers 4-3.<\/p>\n
“Last night, we were getting run over because we were taking penalties,” said Pearl. “Tonight, we were getting run over because they were outworking us. We didn’t have a very good first period. We didn’t work hard. The second and third were really good.”<\/p>\n
RPI got on the board early in the first period on a fluky set of bounces. Off a dump in, the Engineers broke into the zone, and Holy Cross’s Everett Sheen intercepted a pass, but it went off his stick and right back to Alex Angers-Goulet, who fired it on net. Crusaders’ netminder Ian Dams made the save, and Kyle Atkins tried to clear it, but the puck rolled off his stick to Kurt Colling, who one-timed it top shelf past Dams at 3:34.<\/p>\n
Buoyed by the goal, the Engineers dictated play the rest of the period, out-shooting the Crusaders 13-4. The Engineers built on their lead at 10:52 on a goal Dams would probably like back. Colling skated up the right side boards with the puck towards the point and slide a cross-ice pass to Peter Merth at the left point. Merth fired a low wrist shot along the ice that beat Dams as he slide back across his crease.<\/p>\n
“I thought our work ethic was very good,” said Engineers’ coach Seth Appert. “I thought there was just some individuals on our team where their habits, their intensity and commitment to playing the way we need to play wasn’t there, and that hurt us. We’re a team that’s not going to beat people with our individual skill’ it’s our speed and our work ethic and team play. We probably had 16 on board tonight and three or four who weren’t, and we let them back into the game because of it.”<\/p>\n