Word: arcing
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...second proved to be a harbinger of things to come for Harvard. After making a layup to tie the game at the onset of the second, sophomore Jeremy Lin missed a layup, which was followed by two wide open threes that missed the mark. The three-point arc haunted both teams throughout the second half. Harvard shot a combined 1-for-12 in the second, but Columbia proved to be a worthy adversary for long-range mediocrity, going 0-for-12 on the night. The lack of good shooting meant that the game would be decided on the inside, which...
...Harvard's Doug Miller gets blocked on one end, then comes down and blocks Cornell on the other. He outlets to Lin, who finds a streaking Pusar for the easy layin. McGeary then draws a foul from behind the arc by leaning into the defender. He sinks all three free throws. Cornell 66, Harvard...
Cornell also shot 6-for-12 from beyond the arc, compared to Harvard...
...points, six rebounds, four assists, three steals, and a block. It was the first time in the sophomore standout’s young career that he had tallied at least 20 points on back–to–back nights. He was 2-of-2 from behind the arc and 8-of-13 overall from the field. More importantly, he answered all of Penn’s attempts to get back into the game with mid-range jumper after mid-range jumper, but you would never hear this from Lin himself. “We just have so many...
...Those kids, particularly the front-court duo of Brad Unger and Evan Harris and the mid-range assassin Jeremy Lin, combined for 62 of the Crimson’s points. The team as a whole shot 53 percent from the floor and 54 percent from beyond the three-point arc. The key to victory was the way Harvard started and ended both halves. Within the first five minutes of the game, the Crimson jumped out to a seven-point lead and closed the first on an 11-0 run to capture a 17-point lead at the break. Similarly...