Word: blowouts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...three point run. Unwilling to yield, Harvard rallied ahead at the end of the contest, slamming down the last five points of the game to win, 30-28.As soon as the Crimson put away its first victory, the match was won, as Harvard breezed to a cool 30-20 blowout in game two and a 30-23 victory in the third game.Harvard dominated the second frame, posting a team hitting percentage of .500.After nabbing an early 4-0 lead in the third game, the Crimson had no trouble with the Scarlet Raiders, as twice in the game Harvard reached leads...
...Eight suspects. Whatever the reason, Harvard snapped into shape after the Yale loss and didn’t lose again until the first round of the NCAA tournament. In between its two losses came 12 straight Ivy wins, including sweet revenge against Yale at home and an 18-point blowout of rival Dartmouth in its final regular-season game. While I can’t predict the future, I detect a familiar pattern in this year’s blossoming campaign. The 2008 “wakeup call,” as coach Kathy Delaney-Smith called it, came...
...scorer averaging double figures. The Bears will need to use their stingy defense against the three if they hope to keep up with Harvard—the Crimson is making a third of its shots from long range this season, and rained down on Princeton last weekend in a blowout win. But very recent history warns the Crimson against overlooking the Bears as it looks ahead to the Bulldogs. Last weekend, Harvard faced a struggling Penn team and the perennial powerhouse Tigers on consecutive nights, and needed a game-winning jumper from junior guard Emily Tay to escape with...
...score from Friday night’s game certainly looks promising enough. It reveals that the Crimson offense managed 34 shots to Brown’s 20, and held a 17-3 shots advantage in the third period. In short, it reads like a recipe for a blowout. When those statistics come on the short end of a 4-2 loss to the league’s lowliest opponent, however, they tell a completely different story. Rather than indicating offensive domination, these numbers underscore the Harvard offense’s inability to convert offensive chances, a running theme...
...strategically timed tip than a romantic overture. Have you ever met a male hairdresser who wasn't a flirt? Women go to him to look better. So the better they feel when they walk out of his salon, the happier they'll be to go back for a frequent blowout. Flirting's almost mandatory. And if the hairdresser is gay, so much the better, since the attention is much less likely to be taken as an untoward advance...