Sports

GREEN SIX STAGES REVIVAL

March 1931 ROBERT P. FULLER '37
Sports
GREEN SIX STAGES REVIVAL
March 1931 ROBERT P. FULLER '37

Thus when Dartmouth did an about- face against Queens even in defeat and against Yale in the first International Intercollegiate League win of the winter, it was especially gratifying to witness the hockey team joining the ranks of other fighting and dogmatically determined Dartmouth athletic teams of which they are part of a long tradition.

At Montreal Dartmouth again dropped into the losing column, but from all accounts of the game, the Indians continued to show a real spirit on the ice.

Perhaps the Outstanding star of the last few games has been goalie Wes Goding, who turned in brilliant performances against Queens, Yale and Montreal within a period of four days. Goding faces one more exciting night when Dartmouth meets McGill, and should cover himself with enough glory to enable the Indians to make a fairly close game against the apparent I. I. league winners. Wes has two more years in the Green net, and with a little more consistency promises to become one of the great goalies of Dartmouth hockey.

The Big Green still faces the opportunity of finishing out of the cellar in the I. I. league with two games left on the schedule with last-place Princeton. Two wins over the Tigers would give the Indians a final standing of three wins and seven losses, with a present goal rating of 17 goals scored to the opposition's 39. At the present time, against all opposition Dartmouth has won nine games, lost ten, with 88 goals scored against the opposition's 77. Williams, Boston University, Brown and two Princeton encounters remain on the schedule and the Indians should, with little wishful thinking involved, win four out of the last five games to complete a hockey season that has been discouraging from several different angles.