Word: delaney-smith
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...things I was coasting through in high school.”“I always think it’s more difficult for any basketball player—male or female—when you’re exceptionally tall,” coach Kathy Delaney-Smith adds. “[Emma] had to learn how to jump when she came here, she had to learn how to move.”The transition to college basketball was a difficult one for Moretzsohn, who also had to learn to adjust to the increased level of physical play...
...this season. With seven freshmen on the 15-man roster, however, the Crimson may be the Ivy League favorite for years to come.“[The freshman class is] potentially one of the most talented classes that I’ve ever recruited,” coach Kathy Delaney-Smith says.Most of Harvard’s “diaper-dandies,” five guards and two forwards, should provide quality minutes for an experienced squad this season.“In the Ivy portion of the season they’ll all be able to contribute...
...Delaney-Smith was a legend in Massachusetts high school basketball, making a name for herself at Westwood—the same school where Hallion proved her mettle nearly 20 years after Delaney-Smith’s departure. The coach led Westwood to a state title, six undefeated regular seasons, and the record for most consecutive wins (96) before taking the head coaching job at Harvard in 1982. Delaney-Smith was an emblem of progress in girls’ athletics at the high school level, demanding changes like better gym times and uniforms for female athletes at Westwood and beyond...
...last year.” This year the team comes back with a more mature squad, which will display skill, patience, and leadership. “I would hope that we’re a little more veteran, so we play smarter,” head coach Kathy Delaney-Smith said. The backcourt is a solid group of three accomplished upperclassmen. Running the point is experienced senior Hallion who was the team’s second-highest scorer and earned a second-team all-Ivy spot. In addition, she finished ninth in scoring in the conference and second in both...
...Michigan, with NCAA Championship banners hanging from its rafters, the pressures are even greater.At Harvard, these faults don’t matter because our rafters are bare. At least on the men’s side—the women have accumulated enough Ivy Championships under Coach Kathy Delaney-Smith for both teams. Our pavilion can’t seat three thousand, let alone 13, 751—the capacity at Crisler Arena in Ann Arbor. And on top of this, the pressure is off Amaker because, to put it bluntly, nobody at Harvard really cares.At least not yet.Looking past...