Word: beate
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...center Andrew Naeve got open down low for what looked like an easy two points. But as the big man went up for the dunk, two Harvard defenders converged to contest the shot, and Harris got a hand on the ball to knock it away. Harris then beat Naeve on the offensive end, scoring over the taller player with a lefty hook shot. On the next possession, Housman stole the ball from guard Louis Dale and fed a streaking Harris for another big two-handed dunk, which gave Harvard a 63-58 lead and brought the crowd to a frenzy...
Without missing a beat Saturday night, junior forward Alex Meintel explained that the pucks were “just kind of finding the net.” He credited his teammates’ passes, then praised the bounces his stick produced.Such modesty can explain away one goal, or perhaps a lucky two. But Meintel knocked home four pucks—including a hat trick Friday night—as the Harvard men’s hockey team beat Union and Rensselaer at the Bright Hockey Center this weekend. Meintel’s outburst lifted him to second on the team?...
...challenging bind of having to win four of six singles matches.At first, the Crimson looked determined to pull off the upset, winning their first sets at No. 1, 2, 4, and 5.Harvard’s 93rd-ranked sophomore Chris Clayton, playing at No. 1, continued his strong play, beating his opponent 7-5 in the first set and, after failing to convert three match points at 5-4 in the second set, finished off No. 59 Brian Hung, 7-5.“He had an aggressive game style,” Clayton said. “He played...
...That’s a fine finish for them…with a really fantastic first leg by Jennifer Harlow,” Graves said. “They’re improving every week. The men were 13th out of 20 teams, and they actually beat a team of Bates and Willams, among many others, which is really another really great achievement in our progress forward. I haven’t seen that happen in my years here. I’m really encouraged.” In the women’s giant slalom, senior Katie Connors...
...night—but also found itself watching the Crimson pass it by on the scoreboard and in the standings. After taking care of business in a 65-36 rout at reeling Columbia—and noting the Big Red’s loss to Dartmouth, a team Harvard beat last month—the Crimson headed into Ithaca, N.Y., and leaped into a tie for first place with a 71-57 victory over Cornell. After an 0-6 start to its season, Harvard (6-12, 4-1 Ivy) is finally asserting itself as one of the teams to beat...