Word: farrars
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...pool pass. A final shot by MacLaughlin hit the pipe as the buzzer sounded and the first game of the teams’ two-game season series ended in defeat. “Well, it was three good quarters and one lousy one,” Harvard coach Erik Farrar said. “You can’t get outscored 5-0 in a one-score game and expect good things to happen.” Delgado totaled 17 saves in an otherwise solid game and led the defense in holding the Bears to three goals in the first...
...putting goals away.” Thanks to a set offense that started to click and shots that started to fall, Harvard ran away with the win. “We misfired a little bit on the offensive end in the first half,” Crimson coach Erik Farrar said, “but then it was just a question of stepping on the gas.” WAGNER 6, HARVARD 4 In its second game of the day, Harvard started off very slowly. Wagner took advantage of the unprepared Crimson squad by tallying three goals in just...
...recover quickly enough after turnovers, Hartwick utilized an effective transition game to notch easy goals. “We knew that they were going to be bigger and faster than ourselves so we tried to limit their counter with varying degrees of success,” head coach Erik Farrar said. “They are not ranked 13th for nothing.” A short Harvard bench, mainly the result of injury, is one of the reasons the Hawks were able to take control of the game as time wore on. “It got the point where...
...Harvard women’s water polo coach Erik Farrar was nervous about his team’s trip to the Ivy Championship tournament this weekend at Brown, he had every right to be. In addition to the usual opening-weekend jitters, the Crimson had to deal with an injury-filled bench and a starting lineup that contained four freshmen and just two upperclassmen. Even with these setbacks the Crimson took second place overall, going 3-2 on the weekend to take second place in the tournament. Harvard faced the Bears in the championship game after defeating Penn...
Beah's book, A Long Way Gone (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; 229 pages), which comes out this month, is a breathtaking and unself-pitying account of how a gentle spirit survives a childhood from which all the innocence has suddenly been sucked out. It's a truly riveting memoir. But just as crucial to its success is its arrival at what might be called a cultural sweet spot for the African child soldier. The kid-at-arms has become a pop-cultural trope of late. He's in novels, movies, magazines and on TV, flaunting his Uzi like a giant foam...