Word: blumbergã
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...really exciting—maybe even more exciting—to have a teammate in the final,” Lorentzen said. It capped a smashingly successful individual tournament for the No. 3 Crimson, which saw three of its entries—Lorentzen, Grigg, and sophomore Jen Blumberg??reach the quarterfinals. In addition, sophomore Supriya Balsekar, who lost in the round of 16, knocked off Princeton’s top player in the second-round consolation bracket. “I think it’s a great way to end the season,” Grigg said...
...intercollegiate No. 8 Larissa Stephenson, 9-3, but won the next two by identical 9-4 scores to take a 2-1 lead. But Stephenson rallied to claim the fourth and fifth games, 9-6 and 9-2. Harvard got three-game wins from sophomore No. 3 Jen Blumberg??9-7, 9-5, 9-2 over Ashley Clackson—and junior No. 6 Lydia Williams, 9-3, 9-1, 9-3, over Fernanda Rocha. Duboc rallied from a first-game loss to beat Isa Restrepo 1-9, 9-4, 9-0, 9-4. Despite the Harvard loss...
...Blumberg??s final contest proved a slight down note after a magnificent senior season. The senior was the only Crimson player to beat the Bantams in both of the teams’ matches, disposing Yvain Badan on Feb. 3 and Johnstone...
...decision came down to freshman Jennifer Blumberg??s bout at No. 3 and Grigg’s duel at No. 1 with defending individuals champion and intercollegiate No. 2 Michelle Quibell. There was the potential for the final result to hang on the outcome of the highly-anticipated Quibell-Grigg matchup...
...drama was undermined by Blumberg??s match with Catherine McLeod, one of the top-five players in the country. Blumberg battled out the first game for a 10-8 loss, but could not mount a consistent comeback and lost the next two games 9-0, 9-2, to give the Bulldogs the newly-dedicated Ivy League trophy...