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...future looks bright,” Caples added. “We’ve got a lot of work to do ahead of us, but there are some good athletes and players…We hope we can not miss a beat and keep going forward.”—Staff writer Kara T. Kelley can be reached at kkelley@fas.harvard.edu...
...things they worked on in practice.” The Crimson had only two singles victories on the first day of the tournament. Senior captain Stephanie Schnitter defeated Anna Blagodarova of Texas A&M, 6-4, 1-6, (10-7) in flight A, and freshman Samantha Rosekrans beat the Aggies’ Michelle Sammons, 5-7, 6-4, (10-7) in flight B. Harvard came up empty in the first day’s doubles matches, with Schnitter and freshman Agnes Sibilski coming closest to a win, but eventually falling to Texas A&M’s Blagodarova and Tiffany...
...home games this coming weekend in Lavieties Pavilion. The team hopes to finish strong against two opponents, Columbia and Cornell, that it believes are beatable.“We’re in good place for next weekend coming in,” Mahon said. “We beat Columbia once, and we beat Cornell in points last time, so it’s just a question of ekeing out the games.”—Staff writer Douglas A. Baerlein can be reached at baerlein@fas.harvard.edu...
...times, we show our inexperience,” Leone said. “And tonight was just one of those nights.” Despite the loss, Harvard has an outside shot at making the NCAA Tournament via an at-large berth if it can beat Penn in its final match of the season. “We’d like to finish with more heart at home against Penn,” Leone said. That contest kicks off at 1:30 p.m. Saturday on Ohiri Field...
...Crimson remains undefeated in the Ivies in its quest for its first title in three years, but a game like this is enough to worry Harvard supporters. The team that showed up in New York on Saturday is not one that will beat Yale on Nov. 17, or even Penn this coming weekend, for that matter. Every game this season I have wondered when I’ll see that decisive victory, the one in which the Crimson finally breaks free of its growing pains and shows its full strength. And every time Harvard makes a few bad decisions...