Word: carazo
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Penn's starting pitcher could be Pat Procacci, a lefthanded slowballer with a 1-0 league record, or Chuck Miller, who has lost two and tied one. Jeff Neuman, the best basketball guard in the Ivy League, pitches relief. Neuman's basketball cohort, Ray Carazo, is rightfielder, captain, and leading hitter for the Quakers...
...started innocuously enough. With 4:55 remaining and Penn leading 49 to 46, Harvard's Barry Williams stole the ball from little Ray Carazo and was fouled. He made the first shot--it was to be Harvard's last point for 4 1/2 agonizing minutes. Williams missed his second shot and Carazo whizzed down the middle for a lay up to give Penn a four-point lead. As the Crimson's fast break moved into operation, Williams was fouled again. This time he missed both free throws...
Harvard went back ahead 42-40 on a jumper by McClung, but the lead changed hands for the 23rd and last time when Hellings tipped in Pawlek's set shot which put Penn ahead 43-42. The tans traded points, until Carazo's free throw put the Quakers on top 49-46. That's when disaster...
...Quakers are probably the best quintet in the Ivy League, and there are two reasons for their supremacy: Jeff Neuman and Ramon Carazo. This hustling backcourt combination put on a show last Saturday that almost made the 1000 fans in the IAB forget about Bill Bradley. Carazo punched holes in the Crimson's usually effective zone defense with high, arching 25-foot jumpers, while Neuman left the fans exophthalmic with his ball-handling wizardry...
Penn guards Jeff Neuman and Ray Carazo put on a dazzling display of basketball skill for the 1000 fans in the IAB--Carazo with his deadly 25 foot jump shots, Neuman with his phenomenal ball handling and lightning behind the back passes...