- Cornell-Harvard hockey rivalry
| accessdate = 2006-07-26]
Not including playoff meetings, the teams play twice each season, once at Cornell's
Lynah Rink inIthaca, New York and once at Harvard'sBright Hockey Center inAllston, Massachusetts (just across theCharles River from Harvard'sCambridge, MA campus). Since the first time they played, the overall record is (as of March 22, 2008) 65-56-7 in favor of Cornell.The rivalry is so important to Cornell in particular that head coach
Mike Schafer listed defeating the Crimson (who were then unbeaten in their last 20 regular-season games against the Big Red) as one of his three goals for his first season in 1995-1996. Schafer's record against Harvard as a coach is (as of March 22, 2008) 24-11-2.Harvard at Cornell
On
January 6 ,1973 , a Harvard fan threw a dead chicken at Cornell goalie Dave Elenbaas. The chicken was a crack at Cornell's agriculture college. Later that month, Cornell fans threw dead fish on the ice, purportedly as a reference to Boston's seafood industry. Harvard fans retaliated during the same game by tying a live chicken to Cornell's goal post. Despite countermeasures by university officials, Cornell fans still continue to throw fish prior to, or occasionally during, the Harvard game at Lynah.cite web | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/05/sports/hockey/05cheer.html | title = At Cornell, Catch of the Day Is Always Best on Ice | publisher =The New York Times | accessdate = 2006-11-05]In an interview with the "
Cornell Daily Sun ", published onNovember 8 ,2006 , William Ruskin of Cornell's class of ’74 disputed this version of history. He said that after hearing about Harvard's original 1973 chicken prank, he and his friends decided to get some revenge, and started planning. "'Contrary to what was in "The New York Times " this week, there was no intention at the time to have any symbolism of the New England fishing industry,' Ruskin said. 'We merely wanted to put something disgusting in their net … [and] getting a big smelly fish seemed like the best thing we could do.'"cite web | url = http://www.cornelldailysun.com/node/19696 | title = Fish Throw a Red Tradition | publisher =The Cornell Daily Sun | accessdate = 2006-12-06]Cornell at Harvard
Due to relatively large numbers of Cornell fans traveling to away games, the significance of the rivalry on the Cornell side, and generally low attendance at Harvard hockey games, contests at Bright have sometimes been played in front of predominantly pro-Cornell crowds. This led to the idea of Cornell-at-Harvard games as de facto home games for Cornell, and earned Bright (and by extension the Cornell-Harvard game played there) the nickname of "Lynah East." With the increasing success of Harvard's hockey program since 2002, the size and participation of the Harvard contingent has increased and the crowd has become more balanced. As the Harvard hockey program struggled during the 2006-2007 season, it remains to be seen whether this trend will continue.
"Love Story"
A Cornell-Harvard hockey game plays an important role in the first half of the novel and film "Love Story", whose protagonist, Oliver Barrett, is a Harvard undergraduate and member of the Crimson hockey team, and whose author,
Erich Segal , is a Harvardalumnus . In the movie, Harvard's hockey team loses to Cornell's. Although exterior post-game shots were filmed on the Cornell campus, they showed characters exitingBarton Hall , the old armory where Cornell playedbasketball at the time, rather thanLynah Rink .In commemoration of Cornell's victory in that fictional game, the
Cornell Big Red Pep Band plays the theme from Love Story when Harvard takes the ice before the first two periods of each game.ee also
*
Lynah Rink (Cornell)
*Bright Hockey Center (Harvard)
*Harvard-Yale Regatta (rowing)
* The Game (Harvard vs. Yale, football)Notes
References
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*External links
* [http://www.ivyleaguesports.com/sports/ivy-champs.asp?intSID=8 Ivy League Men's Ice Hockey Champions by Year]
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