Word: drew
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...Crimson, the Bulldogs used a late first-half run and forced several Harvard turnovers to end its season on a three-game winning streak and defeat the Crimson, 81-65.The game’s first eight minutes consisted of crisp all-around play from Harvard. Juniors Andrew Pusar and Drew Housman, and sophomores Dan McGeary and Jeremy Lin each hit threes in the stretch to help Harvard jump out to a 20-7 advantage.“Certainly I thought we came out with a great deal of energy and excitement,” Harvard coach Tommy Amaker said...
...before the first buzzer rang, but halftime seemed to recharge the Bears, who jumped ahead by double digits again almost immediately after the break.Harvard played with a much deeper lineup than usual, as nine players saw 10 or more minutes.Captain Brad Unger ran into foul trouble early and junior Drew Housman saw fewer minutes because of some nagging knee pains, opening the door for players like Blankenau and junior Cem Dinc to see the ball more than usual. They both became key contributors in the surge that nearly earned a Crimson lead deep into the second half. Dinc knocked...
...timeout, Harvard almost loses the ball but Brad Unger recovers it and kicks it out to Drew Housman. Housman knocks down the long three. Back on the other end, Yale answers with a three of its own [Yale 69, Harvard...
HALFTIME RECAP: - Yale's Travis Pinick leads all scorers with 9 points. Drew Housman and Jeremy Lin are leading the Crimson charge with 7 apiece. - Andrew Pusar had a great start to the half (5 points) but foul trouble has limited him to only 8 minutes of action. (3 personal fouls) - Yale is dominating in the paint, holding an 18-10 scoring advantage. - Both teams are shooting the lights out from downtown. Yale = 55% (5 of 9), Harvard = 50% (4 of 8). - Turnovers are KILLING the Crimson. They've already accumulated 15 turnovers, compared to only six assists. Yale...
...late 2003, Mosul was largely peaceful by comparison with the rest of Iraq at the time. The burgeoning insurgency, then beginning to spread across other areas of Iraq, was slower to take hold in Mosul for a number of factors. Mosul drew a measure of stability from its history as place of relative wealth and sophistication, whereas early insurgent havens like Fallujah and Ramadi were poor, troubled places even under Saddam Hussein. And some leaders among Mosul's Sunni community for a time held out hope of finding a role in the emerging post-invasion power structures even when Sunnis...