Word: captained
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...Crimson, running away to a 11-4 victory. Harvard managed to keep the game close in the first half, but fatigue wore them out as the game went on. “We got tired towards the end because we were low on numbers,” junior co-captain Vivian Liao said. “They beat us with speed, especially in the second half.” “Five games in two days is kind of a lot,” junior co-captain Lauren Snyder added. The scarcity of players on the Crimson bench...
...contain the sharp-shooting Princeton squad, who shot 6-of-14 from three-point range in the first half. Coupled with stellar offensive play from Harvard, the Crimson built upon its halftime lead of 32-29. The only problem for Harvard: with the exception of two free throws from captain Jim Goffredo, nobody but Housman scored for the rest of the half. For more than 20 crucial minutes, from early in the second half until well into the second overtime, Housman was the Crimson offense. And as the second overtime came, an exhausted Housman had nothing left in the tank...
...part of Tim Brewster’s new staff. After arriving from Southwest Texas State, Butler spent the last four seasons at Harvard, handling recruiting for Texas, Arizona, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. He coached four first-team All-Ivy selections at linebacker during his tenure in Cambridge, including senior captain Ryan Tully this season. Harvard has not yet announced replacements for the departing assistants...
...said junior outside hitter Jordan Weitzen. “We always know they’ll come through. Our game plan is focused around the middle, and that’s why.” Still slightly hampered by an ankle injury he suffered last Friday, co-captain and setter Dave Fitz sat out the opening frame. But after Harvard (1-2) barely escaped with a game one victory, the senior came in to get his team back on track. “He was ready to go at the beginning of the match, but we held...
...turned out, the confetti raining down and the golden trophy glowing above the head of captain Fabio Cannavaro was just a flickering interlude in what is turning out to be among the darkest periods ever for Italian soccer. The shadow had already been cast before the June-to-July victorious run in Germany, as a referee scandal consumed many of Italy's top league teams. Wire-tapped phone calls revealed that team officials orchestrated referee selection, and everyone from league bosses to politicians to television commentators had a foot in the alleged "system" of influence. The controversy eventually forced Juventus...