Word: colins
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...Hoyle made a few crucial saves in the third frame to keep it a one-goal game. With eight minutes on the clock, Cornell’s Colin Greening nabbed the puck after a defensive-zone faceoff and charged toward the Crimson goal in a breakaway rush. Hoyle got his pad on the initial shot, and when Greening fired off a rebound attempt, the Harvard rookie got in front of the puck again. With about a minute left in the game, Greening took off along the left boards in a 2-on-1 breakaway to try for one last goal...
...water torture, and people just want it to stop. This week Sports Illustrated football scribe Peter King, author of the religiously read Monday Morning Quarterback column on si.com, wrote, "Someone please - I IMPLORE YOU - put that 'Saved by Zero' Toyota commercial out of its misery." About a month ago Colin Anderson, a freshman at Binghamton University in New York, was watching football in his dorm room when the once again ad appeared. "It was probably like the 20th time I had seen it that day," Anderson says. "It was driving me crazy." So he started a Facebook group, Stop Playing...
...effort tonight,” senior co-captain Jimmy Fraser said. “Unfortunately, we weren’t able to get the two points we set out for there.” Fraser and co-captain Brian McCafferty each notched a goal and an assist, and freshman Colin Moore knocked in his first collegiate goal, but the Bears rallied back to tie late in the third period and held the Crimson scoreless in the extra session. In what’s becoming a recurring story, Harvard was once again hit by a number of untimely penalties that disrupted...
...that one shift where Joe Smith ended up scoring, and the line of Jimmy Fraser, Steve Rolecheck, and Colin Moore, cycled it for about thirty seconds, getting all five guys involved, and that’s what we worked on all week,” Coskren said...
...major upset. The sounds of cheering Obama fans at the Election Night Party in the adjacent JFK Jr. Forum are only somewhat muted. But the prospects of an upset grow dimmer as the projection screen in front of the room reports one blue state after another. For Colin J. Motley ’10, President of the HRC, the tendency of exit polls to exaggerate offers some hope, but overall things are “not too positive.” The loss of New Hampshire to the Republicans stings the attendees on a more personal level. Jordan A. Monge...