Nicole Corriero | |||
---|---|---|---|
Born |
Thornhill, ON, CAN |
October 27, 1983 ||
Height | 5 ft 5 in (165 cm) | ||
Weight | 155 lb (70 kg; 11 st 1 lb) | ||
Position | Forward | ||
Shoots | Right | ||
ECAC team | Harvard Crimson | ||
National team | Canada | ||
Playing career | 2001–present |
Nicole Corriero (born October 27, 1983) was a 3-time All-American ice hockey forward for the Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey team.
Corriero tied former Crimson player Jennifer Botterill's record for most points in one NCAA game with ten. She accomplished the feat on November 7, 2003 versus the Union Dutchwomen. In addition, she holds the NCAA record for most game-winning goals in a career with 27.
Corriero graduated from Harvard in 2005 with a B.A. in Sociology.
She attended Law School at the University of Detroit Mercy and the University of Windsor in their Joint JD/LLB Program, and graduated with both her JD and LLB degrees in June 2008 in Toronto, Ontario.
After her articles, Nicole was called to the bar on June 19, 2009. She currently practices Personal Injury Law at the law firm Lofranco-Corriero.
Prior to attending Harvard, Corriero captained the North York Junior Aeros and the Scarborough Sharks.
She represented Ontario at the 1999 Canada Winter Games in Cornerbrook, Nfld where the team went on to win a Gold Medal.
She served as Assistant Captain to Team Ontario 'Red' that took Gold at the 2001 National Women's Under-18 Championship.
Nicole Played at Harvard University on their Varsity Women's Ice Hockey Team from 2001-2005.
During the 2004-05 season, she was the captain of the Harvard Crimson women’s ice hockey team. In that season she became the all-time women's collegiate record holder for goals in a single season by scoring her 52nd goal on March 5, 2005 breaking the previous record of 51, shared by Harvard's Tammy Shewchuk and Northeastern's Vicky Sunohara, both of whom are Canadian Olympic Gold Medalists.
On March 27, 2005 Corriero tied the all-time collegiate record of 59 goals in a season, set by Michigan State's Mike Donnelly in 1986, with her first goal against St. Lawrence in the Frozen Four.