Word: cooper
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...freestyle relay. The Princeton foursome of Tim Sullivan, Howard Nelson, Andy Saltzman and Andy O'Hara obliterated the meet record set by last year's Princeton squad by more than eight full seconds as they sailed to victory in 6:41.68. Harvard's team of Malcolm Cooper, Mack, Coglin and Hackett, the favorites in the event, bettered the meet record by a full five seconds themselves en route to finishing second in 6:44.05. Much to everyone's surprise, Princeton's sky-high O'Hara split a 1:38.00 compared to Hackett's 1:38.98 in the anchor...
...Crimson looked very strong in the 100-yd. backstroke, placing three men in the top six. Steady freshman standout Geoff Seelen qualified for NCAAs as he landed third place with a time of 52.71. Malcolm Cooper (53.23) took fourth and co-captain Duncan Pyle (53.61) finished sixth in the race, which was won by Navy's Mark Heinrich...
...Crimson matmen were eliminated from the tournament following opening losses. When the first round opponents fell in the quarterfinals, Ray Dominguez, Rick Kief, Ray Cooper, Jim Corcoran, Bill Mulvihill and Tony Cimmarusti became ineligible for the wrestlebacks...
...Harvard team of Geoff Seelen, Tuomo Kerola, Malcolm Cooper and Julian Mack placed second in 3:27.44. Crimson Coach Joe Bernal pulled a mild surprise in the medley by not swimming Hackett, who split a blazing 45.0 against Yale last weekend, in the anchor leg. A swimmer may race in all three relays and three individual events in the championships, but apparently Bernal wanted to save his premier swimmer for a later showdown...
...must-win event for Harvard if it plans to hold onto the lead is the 800-yd. freestyle relay. The fearsome foursome of Coglin, Mack, Cooper and Hackett is heavily favored (and in fact could do quite well at the NCAAs later this month); a choke here could be very costly...