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...history of the Harvard wrestling program has his eyes set on one goal—becoming a national champion. J. P. O’Connor accumulated 37 victories in his first collegiate season, placed fifth at the NCAA Championships, and became the first freshman in program history to earn All-American honors. Named Freshman of the Year in the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association (EIWA), O’Connor also earned Second-Team All-Ivy honors and was the co-Ivy League Rookie of the Year. “I attribute a lot of my success to the guys that...
Although the freshman did not record her fastest time in her specialty, the 1650-yard freestyle, a mark of 16:21.43 was fast enough for 17th out of 43 swimmers in the event. The top 16 earn All-American honors...
...first 10 contests. Among those losses were a 1-0 loss to No. 10 Connecticut and a 2-1 defeat at the hands of No. 15 Providence, two of the four ranked opponents the Crimson faced this season. Even though Harvard was the last Ivy League team to earn a win, recording its first nearly halfway through the season, the Crimson earned a fourth of the league’s second-place laurels, tied with Cornell, Penn, and Yale. Second place behind undefeated habitual frontrunner Princeton was widely shared in 2006, with half of the Ivy League claiming silver with...
...competition and became an All-American for the first time. The women lost just twice all season in head-to-head team meets but were not able to pull out an Ivy League Championship, falling short of the Lions’ level. The men, however, lost just once and earned a share of the title behind co-captain Tim Hagamen’s record year. The senior won 23 bouts in the NCAA Tournament on his way to his first individual championship, the first saber win and fourth individual title in Harvard history. The other weapons’ squads...
...Farrar said.The season started on an ambiguous note as the Crimson opened play in the Cambridge Invitational on Sept. 8. Harvard tied, 8-8, with Florida International in its first competitive match of the season. The next day, the Crimson shook off the cobwebs of inactivity and earned its first win of the season en route to eight more convincing victories. Following the Invitational, the Crimson journeyed to Providence, R.I. to compete in the ECAC Championships. Matched up with then-No. 14 Princeton in the first round, Harvard played solidly against the Tigers with Garcia producing half of its scoring...