Word: captaining
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...finish the third tied with BC for 12 shots in the period.“I can’t really put my finger on it. It was just kind of a feeling that we were going to stay with it the entire game today,” co-captain Mike Taylor said. “You know it’s the Beanpot. You’ve got to pull out some extraordinary performances, and I thought today everyone stuck with it.” The Crimson managed to stay even for most of the game partly by playing...
...only one relay and two individual contests, both to Quaker sophomore Pat Gallagher. But Harvard didn’t let the losses get to it, as its depth easily overpowered the Penn team. “I think we basically just got the job done,” co-captain Sam Wollner said. “We were tired for this weekend and it was really about locking up the undefeated season and getting a bit of racing done.” Many key performances combined to help Harvard secure its final regular-season victory. Wollner placed first...
...women also finished third, losing, 17-10 to Columbia and a nail-biter, 14-13, to the Bears, despite defeating Cornell, 17-10. The men were simply overmatched in the meet against the Lions, with the lone close call coming in a 5-4 foil defeat. Junior co-captain Kai Itameri-Kinter notched one of the most impressive wins of the day, defeating Columbia sophomore and foilist Kurt Getz, one of the best in the country. Itameri-Kinter was honored for his performance with first team All-Ivy accolades. The men’s squad had an additional...
...meet on Friday, while the men’s squad offered up 11 top-30 showings on Saturday. “We didn’t really go in with any team goals because there were no team rankings,” said senior women’s co-captain Sally Stanton. “But it was really great to see people do well on the individual level.” Because the Invitational was an open one, over 1000 student-athletes packed the confines of BU’s Track and Tennis Center...
...redemption after a 9-0 loss to No. 1 Trinity last Wednesday but saw tough competition in the way of important victories. On Saturday, Penn proved to be a challenge for Harvard, but the Crimson won key victories. In one of the most exciting matches of the day, junior captain Verdi DiSesa was beating Quaker sophomore Mark Froot, 2-0, when Froot came back to even the match at 2-2. In a hard-fought fifth and final game, Froot had a 6-0 lead on DiSesa, but the focused and unwavering captain came back with nine unanswered points...