Word: attacks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...games before the start of conference play.After a tough 20-2 loss to No. 1 Stanford, and then a tight win against unranked Sonoma State earlier in the week, the Crimson (7-9) came into the last four games of the week a little tired but ready to attack. And attack they did.In the four-game series, Harvard scored a total of 38 goals, proving that the team has what it takes to match up against some of the toughest competition in the nation.“I thought it was a very successful trip,” Crimson coach...
...Friday. The Crimson (5-2) faced the Blue Hose (0-9) for the first time ever on a neutral site at George Walton High School in suburban Atlanta, but Harvard did not let any of these peculiarities prevent it from putting together a complete game. Sophomore attack Dean Gibbons scored the first of his career-high five goals nearly a minute into the game off a pass from freshman attack Jeff Cohen. Presbyterian also came out of the gates with energy and tied the game at one about three minutes into the first quarter. Cohen regained the edge...
...Martin, though, put Harvard back on top, taking a pass from junior Sara Flood and scoring her second goal with 10:23 on the clock. Outshooting Yale by a total of 23-17, and holding a 16-13 advantage in ground balls, the Crimson offense continued to attack. Two minutes later, Martin scored another goal...
...keep the Crimson in contention. Weissbourd had his second 31-kill performance in two days, and junior setter Gil Weintraub was once again reliable on the court, dishing out 63 assists. “Gil was able to keep the offense going even when we weren’t attacking very well,” Baise said. “Our liberos, senior Jeff [Nathan] and freshman Dan [Schreff], also made some very big plays.” HARVARD 3, NYU 2With over a week of rest since its previous game, a rejuvenated Harvard team found just enough energy...
...disgrace last year. The 50-year-old oversaw a disastrous expansion that almost felled one of Europe's largest banks, prompted a $30 billion government bailout last fall and triggered the biggest annual loss in U.K. corporate history. "We are angry," a group claiming responsibility for the attack wrote in an e-mail to an Edinburgh newspaper, "that rich people, like him, are paying themselves a huge amount of money and living in luxury, while ordinary people are made unemployed, destitute and homeless. Bank bosses should be jailed. This is just the beginning." (See pictures of the financial crisis...