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...that are moving the team forward.“In general, the team feels like we are moving in the right direction,” captain Jennifer Chung said. “We’re trying a lot of new things this year, especially in the first varsity eight??different people trying new seats that they are not used to.”This flexibility of people, positions, and stroke combination on the boat is difficult to get used to.But the team sees this as a process; these are the steps necessary to finding the most speed...
...Penn. Playing one of the league’s worst teams from a year ago, the Crimson was plagued by its slumbering bats, which registered just eight hits in 16 innings, and now finds itself already having to play catch-up in the remorseless race for the Ancient Eight??s Rolfe Division title. “We didn’t come down here for a split,” head coach Joe Walsh said. “I feel like we dropped two.” PENN 6, HARVARD 4 After six innings of Saturday?...
...Penn. Playing against one of the league’s worst teams from a year ago, the Crimson was plagued by its slumbering bats, which registered just eight hits in 16 innings, and now finds itself already having to play catch-up in the remorseless race for the Ancient Eight??s Rolfe Division title. “We didn’t come down here for a split,” head coach Joe Walsh said. “I feel like we dropped two.” Harvard hopes to rebound when it meets Columbia...
Sunday marked an afternoon of tough competition, hard-fought battles, and varied finishes. The Harvard fencing teams took on Penn, Princeton, and Cornell yesterday in the Ivy League South Championships, the opening leg of the Ancient Eight??s championship series, at Hutchison Gym in Philadelphia, Penn. The No. 1 men’s squad dropped its first meet of the season, 16-11, to Princeton to open the day, rebounding in the afternoon with a convincing 19-8 victory over Penn. The third-ranked women handily took their opening two matches, winning 21-6 against Cornell...
...point of the Ivy season, and these three teams should all be in the running until league’s final games in early March. Tigers junior Meagan Cowher, the Ivy League’s scoring leader and daughter of former Pittsburgh Steelers coach Bill Cowher, leads the Ancient Eight??s highest-scoring team into Lavietes. The Tigers (10-9, 4-1) arrive with not only talent, but also experience, having finished second in the league last season...