Word: errors
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...Harvard’s three-game winning streak and securing victory over the rival Crimson at home for the first time in four years. Cornell showed Harvard that putting too much pressure on one’s penalty kill and failing to create scoring chances leaves little margin for error. Though back-and-forth hockey was the norm for the majority of game, Cornell (3-0-2, 3-0-2 ECAC) capitalized on four Crimson penalties in the second period to notch a power-play goal and keep Harvard’s offense from coming to life. With the score...
...quarter: On 3rd-and-1 from the 4, Gordon takes the handoff from the shotgun and powers in, TOUCHDOWN HARVARD. Patrick Long adds the extra point, and the Crimson turns the Yale error into a touchdown. Gordon is looking very quick and finding big holes against a stout Yale defense. 3 plays, 19 yards, 1:29 on the drive...
...quarter: On 3rd-and-1 from the 4, Gordon takes the handoff from the shotgun and powers in, TOUCHDOWN HARVARD. Patrick Long adds the extra point, and the Crimson turns the Yale error into a touchdown. Gordon is looking very quick and finding big holes against a stout Yale defense. 3 plays, 19 yards, 1:29 on the drive...
...State Canvassing Board, however, has yet to decide whether to consider the rejected absentee ballots; and the campaign still has to match the information about the disenfranchised voters against the rejected ballots and then to figure if any were rejected in error and whether it is worth trying to determine the voter's intent. If the Canvassing Board chooses not to consider the ballots, Franken may have to urge uncounted voters take the issue to the courts - further delaying a recount that is already expected to take three more weeks to conclude. The process may make everyone nostalgic...
...second period and carried through the intermission into the third. Harvard had committed two penalties and faced a 5-on-3 situation for 1:30. It was imperative for the defense to be perfect, as the Crimson’s one-goal lead left no room for error. “That was a huge [penalty] kill,” said Harvard coach Ted Donato ’91. “Jim Fraser, Alex Biega, Chad Morin, and Matt Hoyle I think really dug down deep. They were blocking shots. That’s always a very nerve-racking...