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...Cavaliers snatched third from the Crimson in the key race of the day, the 200-yard breaststroke, in which four Virginia swimmers placed in the top eight spots. While sophomore Geoff Rathgeber placed fourth, the Crimson did not have the numbers to compete with the Cavaliers. Virginia ended up beating Harvard by only 11 points.“Virginia is a great team, so the fact that we were competitive with them for the whole meet is definitely a confidence booster,” sophomore Sam Wollner said. “The 200 breaststroke was key for them?...
...seasons.“They’ve definitely embarrassed us the last two years,” Stehle said. “Even for the guys who aren’t with the program anymore, I’m sure they’d like to see us beat them at their place.”Freshman guard Corey Hassan currently ranks second on the Terriers in scoring and can light it up from behind the arc. Senior forward Kevin Gardner leads BU in scoring and rebounding, providing a tough matchup for the Crimson inside.The Terriers’ winless...
...empty net goal in the final minute.Jeff Prough had a goal and an assist for the Bears (2-6-1, 2-5-0).ST. LAWRENCE 4, MASS-LOWELL 2CANTON, N.Y.—T.J. Trevelyan scored two goals and Justin Pesony made 29 saves as St. Lawrence rallied to beat the University of Massachusetts-Lowell 4-2 in men’s college hockey Friday night.Danny O’Brien jammed home a rebound at 7:38 of the first period, and the River Hawks (4-8-0) went up 2-0 on a power play at 18:21 when...
...floating atop the conference standings and Yale, still winless in the ECAC, mired at its cellar. “But I think you can pretty much throw the records out when these two play,” said Crimson coach Ted Donato ’91 after the Bulldogs beat No. 14 Harvard 4-3 yesterday at Ingalls Rink. “Great rivalry, great tradition.” Of course, we know all this already. The centuries of enmity and the inexhaustible competition for bragging rights—they make close games of certain blowouts, and they pack...
...Harvard women’s squash team didn’t need the home-court advantage to beat Cornell Saturday, but it didn’t hurt. With a rowdy crowd on hand for its first home match of the season, the No. 2 Crimson (3-0, 3-0 Ivy) blanked the No. 10 Big Red (0-3, 0-3) by a 9-0 score at the Barnaby Squash Courts. The 2005 part of Harvard’s schedule is less demanding than the latter half, but these matches are still valuable preparation. “It?...