Word: bulldogged
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...bracket. In the semifinal round of play, Hill came from behind to beat Yale junior Francis Johnson. Johnson took the first game, 10-8, but Hill rallied back to take the lead, 2-1. Johnson took the fourth match, 9-7, but Hill demolished the Bulldog player, 9-0, in the fifth game to take the match and advance to the final. Similar to his semifinal match, Hill’s final match was a difficult and strenuous one, facing off against Trinity junior Rushabh Vora. Hill started off strong and took the first game, 9-8, but then Vora...
...opening minutes of the second period that the Crimson’s scoring took an unexpected and historic form. With a delayed penalty on Harvard, the Bulldogs pulled goalie Alex Richards for a 6-5 advantage. But in an effort to recover the puck from the right corner after a save from Richter, a sweeping stick from a Yale attacker sent the puck squirting across the empty ice to sneak inside the left post of the empty Bulldog...
...sophomore goaltender Kyle Richter right now? Put it this way: technically, had Richter been the only Harvard player to suit up on Friday night against Yale, the Crimson still might have had a shot at a win. In his most well-rounded performance of the season, Richter stopped 37 Bulldog shots and surrendered just one goal—a loss he was able to recoup all on his own in the second period. As the last Harvard player to touch the puck on a Yale own goal, Richter was credited with the score, the first netminder in Crimson history...
...matched opponent. “In all I think it went really well, but if I wanted one match to come out differently, it would have been Yale,” junior captain Verdi DiSesa said. The three wins came from West, Buchanan, and Hrdy, who all defeated their Bulldog opponents 3-0. In the closest contest of the day, Endresen had match ball in the fifth game against Yale senior Moshe Sarfaty, but Sarfaty rallied back three points and won the match. Throughout all three competitions, the Crimson kept its composure, focus and drive. “I think...
...today,” junior captain Verdi DiSesa said. “We wanted a victory going into the Nationals this weekend.” One of the Crimson’s two wins of the night came from No. 1 sophomore Colin West, who quickly defeated Bulldog senior Max Samuel 3-0. West only gave up four points in the entire match. The other victory came from No. 5 freshman Eliot Buchanan, who beat Yale senior Ho Ming Chiu. Harvard’s No. 3, 6,7,8, and 9 spots all lost their matches...