Word: ben
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...that was deflected, and the ball nestled into the bottom right corner.Harvard was not done yet. Stamatis, probably the man of the match, picked up the ball at midfield on the right side and left the Lions’ defenders in his wake. Stamatis played through freshman Ben Tsuda, who scored his first career goal. Stamatis was at the center of nearly every Crimson attack, putting in a notable performance on Senior Day.“He’s our best true soccer player,” Clark said of Stamatis. “As far as seeing...
...lost because of a bad snap over junior punter Thomas Hull’s head—both losses counted against the rushing total. It probably also didn’t help that the Crimson started a pair of new offensive linemen on Saturday: sophomore Chris LeRoy and junior Ben Sessions got their first starts of the season against the Lions. Harvard gave up five sacks on Saturday, the most it has allowed all season. OFF AND RUNNING Harvard’s defense spent most of the afternoon trying to contain the scrambling of Columbia’s quarterbacks...
...second play of Harvard's drive, a Columbia defender gets a hold of Pizzotti's leg, but he stays standing and gets a pass off to Ben Jenkins, who gets a yard on the play. James Williams is hurt and writhing after the play and is helped off the field...
...back (along with the director-writers Eric Darnell and Tom McGrath) in Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, which is the surest money-getter this year short of an email to Obama supporters. The first film sent four denizens of New York City's Central Park Zoo - Alex the lion (Ben Stiller), Marty the zebra (Chris Rock), Gloria the hippo (Jada Pinkett Smith) and Melman the giraffe (David Schwimmer) - across several seas to an island off Africa. Madagascar was Oz with even more monkeys. It was smart, sitcommy and nicely congested. The sequel is more of the agreeable, strenuous same...
...crude humor. Rudd’s character supplies a number of clever quips, and his highly referential, sarcastic style provides ample laughs. Ronnie is also given a number of good lines—most memorably his insistence that all white people be referred to as “Ben Affleck.” Wain worked on a number of television comedies, including “Mad TV” and “Stella,” and he successfully adapts his banter for the big screen. Ultimately, “Role Models” ends on a high note...