Word: brownã
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...mathematical certainty, the Crimson sought consolation wins on the remaining courts. At No. 3, Schittner won her sixth singles match of the season 6-2, 7-6 (7-2), while at No. 2, Rosekrans continued her impressive form with a 6-2, 3-6, 6-2 win over Brown??s Sara Mansur. In a final flourish, Stewart emerged victorious, 6-1, 7-6 (11-9), to make the overall score respectable from a Crimson perspective...
...launched several wayward attacks on goal to no avail. “We weren’t shooting on cage and none of our shots were going in,” Snyder said. “We were getting opportunities but just not capitalizing on them.”Brown??s staunch defense pitched a shutout, the first time this season that Harvard failed to get on the scoreboard. Bears’ goalie Stephanie Laing, with eight saves recorded her second career shutout. HARTWICK 17, HARVARD 7The third time proved not to be a charm for the Crimson...
...eleven straight matches.Nguyen and freshman Aba Omodele-Lucien clinched the doubles point with an 8-5 victory at No. 2. At No. 3, sophomore Michael Hayes and freshman Alexei Chijoff-Evans had a 5-2 lead, but they failed to hold, eventually losing 5-8.In singles, Brown??s players lacked the firepower to put any Harvard player on his heels.Both freshmen, who have surged ever since their struggles against Cornell in their first Ivy League match, combined to lose a total of four games.“For me, it’s just a matter of confidence...
...swing it, but the key is to mix speeds,” Haviland said. “They’re a good fastball hitting team.”The Bears’ power starts with junior Matt Nuzzo, a first team All-Ivy performer in 2007. Before Brown??s game on Wednesday, the shortstop led the squad with four home runs and 29 RBI. Senior J.J. Eno, who has a .315 average and is second on the team with three dingers and 24 RBI, is also a major factor. Freshman catcher Matt Colantonio leads the club with...
...Brown??s football team just recently demonstrated that NFL teams don’t take players based solely on their Ivy League performance. In the 2006 draft, the Bears running back, Nick Hartigan, who always kept Harvard-Brown contests close and finished his collegiate career with 2,761 yards, 33 TDs and fifth in the nation in scoring (10.2 points per game), went undrafted...