{"id":7089,"date":"2006-01-29T11:33:19","date_gmt":"2006-01-29T17:33:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2006\/01\/29\/wildcats-big-second-period-leads-to-big-win\/"},"modified":"2010-08-23T11:55:14","modified_gmt":"2010-08-23T16:55:14","slug":"wildcats-big-second-period-leads-to-big-win","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/recaps\/2006\/01\/29\/wildcats-big-second-period-leads-to-big-win\/","title":{"rendered":"Wildcats’ Big Second Period Leads to Big Win"},"content":{"rendered":"
All season long, New Hampshire’s strongest period has been the second. Sunday against Providence, the No. 2 Wildcats took their play after the first intermission to another level.<\/p>\n
Trailing 1-0 after a first period it had dominated, UNH (21-2-1, 10-1-1 Hockey East) exploded for four goals in the second period and three in the third period for the 7-2 win over the No. 10 Friars (13-8-4, 7-3-2). It was the program’s biggest win over Providence since the 1997-98 national championship season.<\/p>\n
“I think falling behind galvanized us,” said UNH coach Brian McCloskey. “If you want to win the league and be a national tournament team, you’ve got to take care of business at home, and the kids just took it on their shoulders and got after it.”<\/p>\n
The game’s momentum shifted when Providence took four penalties in the first six minutes of the second period, including a 10-minute misconduct to All-League defenseman Kathleen Smith. The shorthanded defensive unit struggled on UNH’s Olympic-sized ice.<\/p>\n
“In a game like this, every mistake is magnified in a very big way, it’s young kids wanting to give you everything they’ve got, but they don’t know how to do it in a constructive way,” Providence coach Bob Deraney said of his team’s penalty troubles. “You’re wasting a tremendous amount of energy just trying to stay even. That was the turning point of the game, and we could never catch up after that.”<\/p>\n
Sophomore Sadie Wright-Ward, fresh off her game-winner against No. 6 Mercyhurst on Friday, finally made Providence pay for its mistakes with a power play goal at 7:02 of the first period. Exhibiting good puck movement, sophomore Leah Craig gathered a rebound from Martine Garland’s shot at the point and fed Wright-Ward wide open on the left side. Wright-Ward’s initial shot was stopped by Providence goalie Jana Bugden, but the rebound went right back, she roofed the puck to tie the game, and extended her point streak to 12 games.<\/p>\n
“We came into today saying that we can’t take penalties, especially on the big sheet with their great power play,” said Providence captain Karen Thatcher. “We tested that today, and learned the hard way\u2026 The penalties gave them momentum, and took a lot away from us. We lost a ton of composure as soon as we started stepping into the box.”<\/p>\n