Word: beate
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...teams in the league, we probably match up best with East Stroudsburg,” Ridolfi said. “Both our strengths are through the middle, and our middle hitters are better than theirs. So they played to our strength, and we were able to beat them twice.” But ESU kept winning, and the Crimson was left fighting for second place and a spot in the end-of-year EIVA conference tournament. With Springfield—who routed Harvard both times the two teams faced off—hovering right behind the Warriors, the Crimson could...
...Riain went unbeaten in league play, earning a unanimous selection to the all-Ivy first doubles team. “Almost all of [the Ivy teams] play us now expecting to lose,” Anderson said. “Although they really, really want to beat us, they expect to lose and they know it’s going to be tough.” Against non-league opponents, Harvard was far from invulnerable. The Crimson began the spring season with three consecutive wins, including a victory over No. 6 Georgia. After a loss to No. 1 Stanford...
...record in four years. The Crimson finished the season at 13-14 overall and sixth in the Ivy League with a 5-9 mark, seven games behind champion Penn.“What [the team] experienced for the first time was the feeling that people were really trying to beat us this year,” said coach Frank Sullivan prior to the season’s last weekend. “We generally saw some teams genuinely get excited about beating us. Within the context of our league, we all of a sudden became a quality...
...from the fall,” junior Tom Hegge said. Improvement after Georgia was readily apparent throughout the short spring season. After a rain-shortened tournament at Yale, Harvard played its best golf of the spring at the New England Division I Championships. The team hung with or beat several Ivy rivals, conveniently peaking the week before the Ivy League tournament. “We’re all kind of hitting our stride,” Hegge said after the tournament, adding, “We have just as much talent as the other teams, but we just have...
After a perfect season last year, the Harvard women’s swimming and diving team is leaving Boston this year a little less jovial. After beating out long-time rival Princeton last year to win the Ivy championship, the Crimson was ready to bring home another trophy, but was thwarted once again by the strength of the Tiger squad. Harvard lost to Princeton, 1,580 points to 1,445. “I’m really proud of us for fighting,” sophomore Lindsay Hart said. “It was incredibly difficult to be down...