Word: back-to-back
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...year ago. Although numerous pins undermined the short-handed squad, senior Tommy Picarsic (133) and O’Connor (157) continued their strong leadership efforts, earning all eight Harvard points with a 6-5 decision and a technical fall respectively.While Picarsic (4-2) has now recorded back-to-back victories twice this season, No. 4 O’Connor has enjoyed sustained brilliance, posting a 16-1 drubbing of Ben Mandelbraut for his 19th win of the year and eighth in a row.“J.P is wrestling really well right now,” Weiss explained...
...Some talk has been made about how the Harvard team and its talented freshmen will do in their first experience with the dreaded back-to-back games. However, the Crimson is not the only team playing back-to-back on this night. The Tigers not only have lost every Ivy road back-to-back game over the past two seasons, they haven’t won ANY Ivy road game in that span. Neither of those two streaks end tomorrow. Harvard by eight...
...first individual event, the 1000-yard freestyle, in 10:05.93. Freshman Kristi Korsberg and junior Katie Faulkner followed to give Harvard another sweep. Korsberg’s strong performance was one of several from the Crimson’s rookie class. Freshmen Meghan Leddy and Victoria Pratt recorded back-to-back dominating victories in the first half of the meet. Leddy won the 100-yard backstroke in 58.53, and Pratt followed up by taking first in the 100-yard breaststroke. Her time of 1:06.99 was nearly three seconds ahead of Brown’s top swimmer...
...Friday’s meet was rookie Darcy Wilson’s 1:23.07 finish in the men’s 600-meter run. The time earned Wilson a 12th-place finish overall and seventh among collegians. Senior Aishlinn O’Callaghan and freshman Meg Looney finished back-to-back in the women’s 600 at the eighth and ninth spots, respectively. O’Callaghan clocked in 1:37.75, while Looney followed 29 seconds behind at 1:38.04. “The idea was to get their legs spinning,” Saretsky said...
...room that bounces come from hard work, and you have to create your own luck. Again, penalties cost us in key situations and unfortunately killed the momentum that we were trying to get going.”In the last five minutes of the game, Yale was hit with back-to-back penalties, giving the Crimson a powerplay for nearly three minutes. But what could have been another chance for Harvard to close the scoring gap was wasted, as a misconduct call on both teams interrupted the flow of the game and deflated the Crimson?...