Word: cleverisms
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...first few minutes of play the lighter Cornell team proved too fast for Yale and scored three goals by clever team-work. But Yale braced and before the half was over Loutrel and Harmon each scored by brilliant individual play. The only score of the second half was made near the end of the game when Magner carried the puck through Yale's defence for Cornell's fourth goal. Vail at goal, did the best work for Cornell. Captain Loutrel excelled for Yale...
...Leslie had carried the puck the length of the ice and passed to him from behind the goal. During the next 15 minutes the Canadian seven scored four more points, two by Blair, and one each by Scott and Cassels. The first score by Blair was the result of clever team-work in which Sargent and Scott were the other participants. There was no more scoring until eight minutes had passed. Then Blair shot the puck by Chadwick from a scrimmage in front of the cage. Scott's goal followed a pass from Blair, and 45 seconds later came McGill...
...yard line. A 15-yard penalty against Cornell placed the ball on the 6-yard to Campbell who ran in 7 yards to Cornell's 34-yard line. Graustein replaced Campbell. After another failure in the line, Felton took a forward pass from Gardner and by clever work reached the 8-yard line. Wendell was thrown for a small loss, but on the next play Gardner repeated the forward pass to Felton, who scored easily. The goal was missed by O'Flaherty. Score--Harvard, 22; Cornell...
...second set, the score reached three all when Fraser-Campbell won McLane's service, the seventh game. But the next game went to Pearson and McLane, through clever placing by the former and terrific smashing by the latter. With the score four all, Sweetser and Fraser-Campbell braced and won their second set on the next two games...
...Sweetser's back-hand. He lost the next point, however, driving the ball out. The next two went to Sweetser on double faults, leaving the latter within one point of the match. Fraser-Campbell rose to the occasion by winning the next point on a hard smash after a clever placement. With the score at deuce, Sweetser drove the ball into the net. He brought the score back to deuce again, only to lose the next two points and the game. This was Fraser-Campbell's last stand, for he won only a single point in the last game, losing...