Word: arcs
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...conference slate before torching the Ivy League with a 13-1 conference mark.When I left Cambridge, the Crimson was just beginning conference play in late January. A shocking road loss at Yale – a game marred by Harvard’s 20 percent clip from behind the arc and a 35.1 percent mark from the field – on the opening weekend of Ivy play seemed an early harbinger of inconsistency and underperforming.Then I flew south for the spring, and the Crimson took off running. 12 straight wins in Ivy League play...
...career-culminating honor ends an up-and-down senior season for Goffredo. He shot just 32.7 percent from the field for the year, managing just a 35.7 percent clip from behind the arc. Goffredo was second on the team in scoring at 15.4 points per game, two behind center Brian Cusworth, who graduated in January...
ITHACA, N.Y.—After struggling all season to find consistency with his jumpshot, Harvard captain Jim Goffredo put on an offensive display Friday night against Cornell, erupting for 32 points on 9-of-15 shooting, including 7-of-10 from behind the arc, in the team’s 85-79 win. Goffredo’s seven three pointers were a season high and just one shy of his career high of eight set last year against Dartmouth. “I think we gained some confidence from the fact that Jimmy was making shots...
...entire arena expected the ball to go to either Goffredo, who had been unconscious all night, or Housman, who already had 15 second-half points under his belt. But instead, the offense found an unlikely crunch-time outlet. Junior forward Brad Unger received the ball wide open behind the arc and decided to spot up and shoot instead of swinging the ball to a heavily-guarded Goffredo. Unger, who is something of a secret weapon for the Crimson—he ranks third on the team in three-point makes and first in percentage—knocked down the three...
...defense,” Nelson said. The overworked Harvard defense was whistled for fouls frequently throughout the first half. The Minutewomen were awarded 11 first-half free-position shots on Crimson freshman goalie Katherine Martino, converting on five. Conversely, Harvard earned only one trip to the eight-meter penalty arc in the opening 30 minutes. “Our defenders needed to have more body control,” Nelson said. “Our defenders needed to have more poise, certainly. But it was tough that we were just never able to get possession. The fouling was frustrating from...