{"id":9157,"date":"2008-11-22T10:22:11","date_gmt":"2008-11-22T16:22:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2008\/11\/22\/four-is-a-magic-number\/"},"modified":"2010-08-23T11:55:34","modified_gmt":"2010-08-23T16:55:34","slug":"four-is-a-magic-number","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/recaps\/2008\/11\/22\/four-is-a-magic-number\/","title":{"rendered":"Four Is A Magic Number"},"content":{"rendered":"
History repeats, but this is ridiculous.<\/p>\n
For the second night in a row, Vermont gave up the game-tying goal to make it 3-3 in the third period before getting a fourth goal to win 4-3, despite being out-shot on the road.<\/p>\n
Frustrating No. 2 Boston University with a neutral-zone trap, the No. 15 Catamounts completed the sweep with a win in front of 5,209 fans at Agganis Arena. Viktor St\u00c3\u00a5lberg and Corey Carlson paced Vermont with a goal and an assist each, with Dan Lawson setting up Carlson for the game-winner, while Colby Cohen and Colin Wilson each contributed a pair of assists to BU’s losing effort. <\/p>\n
“For our program to come away with two wins here was a great testament to our student-athletes,” Vermont coach Kevin Sneddon said. “I thought they played their hearts out for six periods of hockey, and as a coach I’m very proud of them.<\/p>\n
“Obviously, it gets to 3-3 in the third, and I thought again we had an answer. We didn’t get rattled; we weathered the storm. They were coming at us pretty hard, and obviously Lawson and Carlson made a pretty nice play there, shot through traffic. I don’t know if the goaltender saw it.”<\/p>\n
Meanwhile, it was another discouraging night for Terriers’ coach Jack Parker. <\/p>\n
“To state the obvious, Vermont came in here and ate our lunch this weekend,” Parker said. “They came in and got four points and dominated us in a bunch of different ways. They came in and dictated how the game had to be played on both nights, even more so tonight, I thought. <\/p>\n
“We aren’t patient enough to play the way you need to play against a team that doesn’t want to come at you, that wants to play four or five men in center ice to clog up the middle.”<\/p>\n
For the most part, it was not a terribly exciting game to watch, but it had its moments. At the six-minute mark, Catamount Josh Burrows had a great look, but BU freshman Kieran Millan flashed his arm for the great save. <\/p>\n
Despite being outshot 7-3 in the first ten minutes, BU got the first goal at 10:55. Colin Wilson won an offensive-zone faceoff back to Kevin Shattenkirk at the point. Chris Higgins redirected the defenseman’s ensuing shot. Vermont goalie Mike Spillane made the save, but Higgins tucked in his own rebound around Spillane’s left pad.<\/p>\n
Vermont tied it within two minutes on a bit of a fluky goal. Short-handed, St\u00c3\u00a5lberg raced in and got hooked for a delayed penalty call. He basically fanned on the shot, but that ended up fooling Millan. While the goalie drifted back in the net toward his glove side, the puck slid slowly into the net on the stick side.<\/p>\n
BU had two great chances in the next five minutes. Freshman Andrew Glass made a nice move to get off a good shot at 13:55, then Chris Higgins made an excellent pass to set up Matt Gilroy, but the Terriers’ co-captain failed to get off much of a shot.<\/p>\n
Vermont took their first lead at 19:00 on a power play. From behind the goal line, Colin Vock set up Carlson for a shot. Millan made the save, but Dean Strong took a whack at the rebound. The puck caromed backwards, right onto the stick of Dan Lawson, who shot it in.<\/p>\n