Word: defeating
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
While the first tennis team was upholding the Crimson's honor at Princeton, the second string netmen were administering a crushing defeat to the first team from Brown on the Divinity Courts. When the last match had dragged to a close, the score stood 7-2 in the University's favor...
While the University and Freshman baseball teams were snatching unhoped-for victories from the Princeton baseball teams on Soldiers Field on Saturday afternoon, the University and Freshman track teams were going down to unexpected defeat before the Princeton track teams in the Palmer Stadium, the University by a score of 89 2-3 to 45 1-3 points, and the Freshmen...
...overwhelming defeat of the University may be called a decided track upset. On the eve of the contest, the two teams had seemed of very nearly equal strength. It was conceded that Princeton had a slight scoring advantage, but Harvard was allowed better than an outside chance to gather together the 68 points necessary to win the meet. Consequently, the tigers overwhelming, two-to-one victory was distinctly upsetting to all predictions...
...Princeton track team on Saturday seemed an entirely different organization from the group of athletes who went down to an 81-54 defeat against Yale on a muddy New Haven track on May 10. Aided by a dry track, and stung, perhaps, by the memories of their recent defeat, practically every Princeton athlete outdid his performance in the earlier Yale meet. Five new records were established, and four of them were by Princeton men, not to mention Hills remarkable shot put of 49 feet, which, but for a technicality on the part of the officials, would have established...
Post mortems of defeats such as this one are always gloomy business. But if the Princeton defeat on Saturday stimulates the Harvard team to an improvement against Yale this week similar to the improvement shown by Princeton after its defeat two Saturdays ago, Harvard's defeat may be a blessing in disguise. Otherwise, it will have been just