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Colgate 2025-26

I was recently told by someone with credibility that the Gate players love playing at Lynah, and I always thought they hated it because of the intimidation etc. This really surprised me !

Yes, Lynah is a very popular place for a lot of opposing players because of the energy there that just doesn't exist at other rinks in the conference so it's always named as a genuinely enjoyable place to play. Maybe Clarkson comes close but I haven't been there myself.

Speaking of other rinks, Union, who Colgate plays tonight, had a fairly lively atmosphere in their championship years. Not as much recently
 
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Posting the language of the rule is not the definitive answer you seem to think it is. Under Cornell's interpretation of what occurred, the goal should have counted. "And, by his own actions" is the key phrase. In this case, a Colgate player prevented the Cornell player from moving out of the way. How, then, did the Cornell player impair the goalie's ability to defend "by his own actions"? You say there was no attempt to avoid contact, but that is because the Colgate player prevented the Cornell player from moving. You may disagree with Cornell's interpretation, but what you're disagreeing with is Cornell's interpretation of the facts, not Cornell's interpretation of the rule.

As I understand it, in your totally unbiased opinion, the reason no one talks to Cornell fans at LP is because some dude on an internet forum makes excuses for Cornell losing. Here's an alternative theory: Cornell brings more fans than the other three teams combined, and the others teams' fans need to find people to talk to. Here's one more theory, and the obviously correct one: you completely made this up.
My goodness where to start: Yes the rule is the definitive answer as it is THE RULE. You assume or your interpretation is that a defending player must, allow the player who voluntarily skated into the crease and put himself in a bad position, stop playing and let him avoid contact. As you can read it is the attacking players responsibility to avoid contact, meaning he had an out, stop skating not hit the goalie and back out of the blue paint. Now that would require the player to take himself out of the play, but once again it is his responsibility not to contact the goalie, it is not the responsibility of the defender to make it easy or good for him to do so. The Cornell players avenue to avoid contact was to stop and reverse, you might not like it but it is possible. And "Cornell's interpretation" of course says it should count but that is just not what the rule says.

Now to address the "in game trivia" where the contestant, misses the question and you pose it to them again and again until they win. If that is how classes work in the Ivy League I am glad I went to a patriot league school.
 
Under Cornell's interpretation of what occurred, the goal should have counted.

I am shocked. Shocked. Should we send the recording out to the other ten ECAC Hockey schools and find out their 'interpretation of what occurred?' Majority rules? Disregard the rulings by the on-ice officials? It's like Mike Schafer has never left the building.

As for tonight...
Union scored in the first 11 seconds. One shot, one goal.

Then Colgate scored three goals in 90-some seconds...
Max Nagel from Isiah Norlin. PPG.
Easton Wainwright from Jacob Napier and Ryan Spinale.
Jake Schneider from Daniel Panetta and Simone Dadie.

Then Daniel Panetta scored an unassisted Shortie.

Union 17, Colgate 8, SOG after one.
Colgate 2, Union 1, penalties after one.
Union 11, Colgate 10, faceoffs after one.
Colgate 4, Union 1, score after one.

Union scored three straight goals.
Colgate 4, Union 4.

Then Simone Dadie scored an unassisted goal, which was the result of a challenge by Mike Harder. His challenge record is unbelievable.
And then Union scored a Penalty Shot goal, followed by another Faceoff goal.

Union 35, Colgate 12, SOG after two (estimate).
Union 6, Colgate 5, score after two.

Ryan Sullivan, from Max Nagel and Simon LaBelle, scored for Colgate, seconds after PP ended. 6-6.
And now Union with a PPG. 7-6 Union.

Colgate pulled Reid Dyck with two minutes left in regulation.
20.2 seconds left in regulation. Still 7-6 Union.

Union 7, Colgate 6, final score.
 
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My goodness where to start: Yes the rule is the definitive answer as it is THE RULE. You assume or your interpretation is that a defending player must, allow the player who voluntarily skated into the crease and put himself in a bad position, stop playing and let him avoid contact. As you can read it is the attacking players responsibility to avoid contact, meaning he had an out, stop skating not hit the goalie and back out of the blue paint. Now that would require the player to take himself out of the play, but once again it is his responsibility not to contact the goalie, it is not the responsibility of the defender to make it easy or good for him to do so. The Cornell players avenue to avoid contact was to stop and reverse, you might not like it but it is possible. And "Cornell's interpretation" of course says it should count but that is just not what the rule says.

Now to address the "in game trivia" where the contestant, misses the question and you pose it to them again and again until they win. If that is how classes work in the Ivy League I am glad I went to a patriot league school.
No. Let me spell this out for you. You posted the language of the rule as some kind of "gotcha." But what you failed to understand is that everybody agrees on the rule. Cornell knows the rule, Colgate knows the rule. The rule itself is not in dispute. What the teams disagree on is what took place on the ice. In Cornell's view, their player was blocked by a Colgate player from getting out of the way. You say "the Cornell player's avenue to avoid contact was to stop and reverse, you might not like it but it is possible." No, it wasn't possible, because the Colgate player had lodged into him such that he could not move and could not avoid contact.
 
No. Let me spell this out for you. You posted the language of the rule as some kind of "gotcha." But what you failed to understand is that everybody agrees on the rule. Cornell knows the rule, Colgate knows the rule. The rule itself is not in dispute. What the teams disagree on is what took place on the ice. In Cornell's view, their player was blocked by a Colgate player from getting out of the way. You say "the Cornell player's avenue to avoid contact was to stop and reverse, you might not like it but it is possible." No, it wasn't possible, because the Colgate player had lodged into him such that he could not move and could not avoid contact.
Where in the rule does it say that the defender has to allow the attacking to do anything. The rule says that it is the responsibility of attacking player to avoid contact. The Cornell player skated across the blue paint and contacted the goalie taking him out of the crease. The Cornell player could have, while in the blue paint, stopped, reversed course and avoided contact.

"If an attacking player has been pushed, shoved, or fouled by a defending player and causes contact with the goalkeeper...." that is the only part of the rule that discusses the play of the defender.....Not even you have claimed (at least yet, because I am sure it is coming) that the Colgate player "pushed, shoved or fouled..." You simply say that the defender did not allow him out....THAT ISNT IN THE RULE......READ IT...........If the defending player did not push, shoved or fouled then contact with the goalie results in no goal, and then it goes on to say that even if the push, shove or foul happen, the attacking player has to make an attempt to avoid contact.

You are reading something into the rule that is not in the rule. The rule does not say, if an attacking player enters the crease, the defending player has to allow that player to freely move and avoid contact with the goalie. It is the responsibility of the attacking player.....that is what the rule says.

Yes I posted the rule because, well first, it is the wording that has to be evaluated and interpreted so if we are debating it, we should look at the actual rule.
 
I'm just guessing that Coach Harder was not too pleased after the game...given the remaining schedule for various teams a win last night could've afforded us a decent chance to finish in the top four...NOW? Just finish in the next four...Union can certainly score, but blowing a 4-1 lead is not good...can't really tell if Dyck had a rough game, although, as usual, defensive coverage in our zone did look pretty bad...
 
The Union announcers were so biased, hard to listen to. There are no excuses to allow seven goals. Wonder why coach didn't pull Dyck after four or five goals, I would have.
Oh well, last weekend was the good Gate team and last night...arghhhh !
 
Shabby, I got home from Florida just in time to see last night’s puck-drop on ESPN. The two announcers were terribly biased (“I hate to be a homer, but…”), but I didn’t feel the need to mute them. I just kind of enjoyed it (thinking it was a Colgate penalty when, in fact, it was a Union penalty). The same cannot be said by me for the Quinnipiac announcer (“SCARE!!”). I will drive to RPI today, where I assume that Andrew Takacs will be in net.
 
My vote for worst hockey night of 2026 so far as both teams lost games they absolutely should have won. The women allowed a tying goal with 45 secs left in the 3rd and then lost in OT to Clarkson and the men squandered that 3 goal lead v Union to lose by 1. Often tough being a Gate fan in any sport yet we persevere…
 
Andrew Takacs led the team out onto the ice for tonight’s pre-game warmup at Houston Field House in Troy, N.Y. Freshman Nate Krawchuk in goal for RPI.

RPI gets on the board first, three minutes in.
Colgate’s Bobby Metz with the tying goal, from Josh Niedemayer.

Colgate penalty (unsportsmanlike conduct).
RPI with the PPG.

Colgate 1, RPI 0, minor penalties after one.
RPI 9, Colgate 8, faceoffs won after one.
Colgate 10, RPI 9, SOG after one.
RPI 2, Colgate 1, score after one.

For whatever reason, the first period was tough on players’ sticks. 3 or 4 broken by both teams.

A defensive miscue results in RPI’s third goal.
Minutes later, Andrew Takacs is slow to reach the puck in front of him, resulting in RPI’s fourth goal.

Reid Dyck replaces Andrew Takacs in goal for ‘Gate.

Colgate is frustrated and the game is getting chippy quick.
 
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Having trouble with message board… but previous play is under review by RPI. Five-minute major (slew-footing?) and game disqualification to Colgate. KILLED.

Note: slew foot in hockey is a dangerous, illegal move where a player knocks an opponent’s skates out from behind using their leg or foot while simultaneously pushing the upper body backward with an arm or elbow, causing a violent fall. It is a severe, often penalized infraction (double minor or match penalty) because it leaves the victim defenseless, frequently resulting in head or back injuries.

Matching penalties (roughing). One minute remaining in the period.

Colgate 4, RPI 1, penalties after two.
RPI 21, Colgate 17, faceoffs won after two.
RPI 22, Colgate 18, SOG after two.
RPI 4, Colgate 1, score after two.

8 seconds remaining in the 4-on-4 and RPI scored. 5-1.
Minutes later, RPI scored again. 6-1.
 
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Frankly, and I've thought this for quite some time, Harder and his assistants have to up their games...the recruiting since DV retired has been mediocre at best, the communication from the coach has been pathetically boiler plate, and the recruits prospects for next year, at least at this point, look unimpressive...the current team lacks real skill and speed, and more importantly, lacks discipline...as I said before today's successful coaches resemble those at Q-Pac, not someone who wants to be liked by everybody...6-1 to RPI?
 
I assume GreenCoat saying the team ‘lacks discipline’ refers to their penalty-taking. We are becoming the kind of team that I really dislike… one that regularly takes more penalties than its opponents. Five-minute major penalties and game misconduct penalties seem to be increasing in frequency, too, which I find troubling.

After tomorrow’s Quinnipiac at Princeton contest, all ECAC Hockey teams will have played 18 of their 22 league games. It appears that if we run the table the next two weekends, we could still earn a first-round bye with a lot of help from Harvard, Princeton and Union. Thus, I will be cheering for Quinnipiac ‘morrow.
 
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