Word: contestable
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...club teams from Dartmouth and Penn. Against the Big Green, Snyder and Pinto tallied three goals apiece while Delgado racked up eight saves between the pipes. Fueled by its offense, the Crimson coasted to an easy 11-2 victory. Harvard only led by 3-2 at halftime in its contest against the Quakers. But the Crimson pulled away in the fourth quarter to win, 7-4. Freshman Kelly Peeler scored a goal, her second of the night, with a minute remaining in regulation to seal the victory. For their impressive performances this weekend, Delgado, Pinto, Liao, and Snyder were named...
...second contest, the Crimson lost its rhythm, dropping to a .194 hitting percentage. Squandering its chances to win, Harvard allowed Sacred Heart to tie it up at 25 and yielded to the Pioneers...
PRINCETON, N.J.—The Harvard men’s hockey team won its third consecutive conference contest on Friday night, defeating Princeton, 4-2, at Baker Rink.Freshman center Doug Rogers scored two of the Crimson’s three second-period goals, as Harvard rallied from a 2-1 first-intermission deficit.Though the Crimson (10-13-1, 8-9-1 ECAC) was idle on Saturday night while most of its ECAC rivals were in action, the two points against the Tigers (10-12-3, 7-9-2) helped Harvard remain tied for sixth place in the standings?...
...gutsy effort by the Harvard men’s tennis team could not lift the Crimson past Northwestern in its home opener on Friday, as the Wildcats squeaked past Harvard in a contest that came down to the last set on court one. Though the Crimson appeared to have shaken off much of its early-season rust, Harvard fell, 4-3, to a Wildcat squad that was at times overpowering, at times too quick, but very often beatable. With the overall score 3-3, the Crimson’s hopes rested on the shoulders of No. 1 Chris Clayton...
...much left in the tank.Its wary frontline would eventually hit the wall, and, most likely, the Ivy-league’s leading scorer in Penn senior Mark Zoller would take full advantage.No one predicted that the scarcely used Brennan Votel, averaging just 1.8 points per game coming into the contest, would instead fill this void. In dropping a career-high 11 points on the Crimson, Votel seized his opportunity to step into the spotlight and squashed all hopes for a Harvard upset in the process.“Our numbers are down in the frontcourt,” Sullivan said...