Word: championship
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...Pizzotti is living the high life right now. Having completed one of the greatest Harvard football careers in history, Pizzotti is now vying for a backup quarterback role behind Mark Sanchez with the New York Jets. For a guy who’s been part of three Ivy League Championship teams, this is an appropriate punctuation to an already-stellar career.“Chris Pizzotti is the best football player...to ever play at Harvard,” outgoing captain Matt Curtis said. “He’s the most winning quarterback in Harvard history...
...Aboubakare and Cassandra Herzberg from Brown—en route to being voted unanimously to the Ivy League First Team. Ko, honored as the ITA East Senior Player of the Year, was also the lone representative from the Ivy League at the NCAA Women’s Tennis Singles Championships in late May. She is only the third player in Harvard history to be invited to this tournament three years in a row. At the championships, hosted by Texas A&M, Ko challenged No. 46 Nadia Abdala from Arizona State. After an epic three-and-a-half hour match...
...with her junior campaign, Hagner still has a lot to prove—she “really should have made All-Ivy,” Leone said. And the ultimate objective, of course, will remain the same as always.“Our goal is to win the championship again, which would be a dream come true for us,” Hagner said.Harvard’s best shot at doing so will hinge on her newfound willingness to take the shot.—Staff writer Dennis J. Zheng can be reached at dzheng12@college.harvard.edu...
...team, Vloka participated in every match for the Crimson this year, guiding the team to a 20-1 overall record. Vloka, a stranger to defeat, finished with a perfect record in many key tournaments throughout the year. She went 12-0 in the second part of the Ivy Championships, 6-0 against defending national champion Ohio State and St. John’s, and 9-0 in the annual Beanpot tournament. This, along with various other stellar performances, places Vloka among the best fencers in the country. “After the first day [of NCAAs], when...
...bedlam, and deservedly so. Nichols’ penalty-kick goal with nine seconds left in double overtime not only won the game, 2-1, for the Crimson, but more importantly, it secured an Ivy title. Were it not for that goal, a tie would have resulted, handing Princeton the championship and leaving Harvard on the outside looking in for an NCAA berth. But all that changed in a split second. “It’s just a shock,” Crimson coach Ray Leone said after the game. “To end the game like that...