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When the Harvard women’s ice hockey team takes the ice this season, the Crimson will feature several new and returning faces.
With a diminished roster in 2013-2014 following injuries and Olympic team berths and its head coach out for the season while at the helm of Team USA, Harvard defied odds and expectations throughout last year’s campaign.
The Crimson ended the campaign with a 23-7-4 record, just one win shy of its previous season’s total, while contending for an ECAC championship and playing in the NCAA tournament.
With the return of veteran players from Sochi, a highly touted freshman class, and Harvard coach Katey Stone back at the Bright-Landry Center, the No. 3/4 Crimson has all the pieces in place to achieve its ultimate goal of clinching the NCAA crown this year.
The absence of some key playmakers from the Crimson’s depleted squad last season left room for growth in the young but talented group.
“Our team had a fantastic season last year and great leadership by [interim coach] Maura [Crowell] and her staff,” Stone said. “A lot of kids stepped up and filled gaps that were needed. They really pulled the train, and other kids fell into place.”
Four of Harvard’s top five scorers last season were underclassmen. Then-sophomore Miye D’Oench led Harvard with 21 goals and 18 assists, a far cry from the 13 points she tallied in her first season with the Crimson. Classmate Mary Parker added 13 goals and 12 assists, while Hillary Crowe notched 30 points for Harvard in her junior season.
The more prominent roles and increased ice time for these players ensured that this season’s squad has a core of experienced veterans. Harvard also welcomes the return of co-captains junior Michelle Picard and senior Lyndsey Fry, who spent last year training and competing under Stone’s leadership for Team USA.
Harvard also welcomes a heralded recruiting class, further bolstering its lineup.
The fresh faces are a welcome addition to a squad that carried only 18 players last campaign.
“[Last year], we had a really tight group which was great, but it was really limiting in other [respects],” D’Oench said. “Even at practice, what drills we can do and what games we can play in a regular practice is night-and-day from this year to last year.”
The biggest question will be if Stone can juggle the bevy of talent the Crimson possesses on the ice.
“We’ve done a lot of different things already with the lines,” D’Oench said. “It just shows all the options we have and the firepower that we can utilize in games.”
It seems as if Harvard is primed for success in this season’s campaign, but Stone is quick to avoid the Crimson looking too far down its schedule.
“The landscape is really challenging,” Stone said. “I think if we work really hard, we outwork people, stay committed to each other, you never know. But women’s college hockey is really competitive.”
Harvard will open its 2014-2015 season with a pair of home contests before heading on a five-game road stint.
The Crimson will likely face its toughest test of its early schedule when it takes on No. 2 Boston College over Thanksgiving weekend. Harvard hosts one other top-10 matchup before the holiday break, a Dec. 6 game against No. 5 Quinnipiac.
A short winter break will serve as a quick respite before the Crimson takes on the bulk of its regular season schedule. Harvard will look to clinch its eighth ECAC championship and third-straight Ivy League title.
But despite the horde of talent and experience across the bench, the Crimson still has a long way to go in its quest for the program’s first-ever NCAA title.
“I would like us to put ourselves in a position to win a national championship,” Stone said. “That’s what we’re going to try and do every day. But along the way, we’re going to hit some potholes, and we’re going to see how resilient we are when we do.”
For now, Harvard will have to see how the pieces fit together in its first regular season outing against Rensselaer on Oct. 31.
“It’s a long offseason,” D’Oench said. “We work really hard on and off the ice throughout the year, so this is the time when we finally get to show it.”
—Staff writer Brenna R. Nelsen can be reached at brenna.nelsen@thecrimson.com.
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