Word: fehr
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...their character.” Last time the teams met, Harvard walked away with a 13-8 loss. And after watching an early lead melt into a 4-4 tie at halftime, the Crimson’s strong third period was well-timed. In that frame, sophomore attacker Jesse Fehr put the finishing touches on a hat-trick and classmate and midfielder Travis Burr slammed in his first two goals of the season within two minutes of each other to take the score to 7-4 at the end of the third. The first goal of the period came during...
...with three goals to take a 3-1 lead with 6:43 remaining in the first half. Two minutes into the second quarter, tri-captain Brooks Scholl tallied the first Crimson goal on an assist from junior midfielder Nick Sapia. Less than half a minute later, sophomore attacker Jesse Fehr brought the score to 2-1 in a man-up advantage. Harvard went 1-for-4 in such situations and killed both man-up opportunities for the Saints on the afternoon. Junior midfielder Max Motschwiller scored his first of two unassisted goals on the day shortly thereafter taking the score...
...Oversight and Reform, one of the most powerful investigative bodies in Congress, is to hear testimony from former Senator George Mitchell, the author of the report that linked some 90 players to the possible possession or use of performance-enhancing drugs. Baseball commissioner Bud Selig and union chief Donald Fehr will join Mitchell at the hearing, in which Congress will pressure the executives to implement the report's recommendations, which include a truly independent drug testing program and more frequent year-round, unannounced tests (Selig has already acted on a few of them; for example, last week...
...Calling Selig and Fehr back does makes some sense. In 2005, in the face of skepticism about its motives, Congress effectively used its bully pulpit to embarrass baseball into strengthening its steroid penalties and testing procedures. Now Congress has a right to seek closure, to again goad baseball into accepting the recommendations. But the suits are just a prelude to the main event, a potential circus that doesn't seem to serve any real purpose...
...What's fueling Fehr's concerns? For one, during baseball's general managers' meetings in Orlando last week, Theo Epstein of the Boston Red Sox and Larry Beinfast of Florida Marlins introduced a new element to the gathering. The GMs assembled in one room and each stated what their off-season priorities were, and who might be available in trades. To the execs, it was an efficient way to horse-trade information that they typically would share in various time-consuming, one-on-one conversations. Some teams spoke in general terms, others got a little more specific, Major League Baseball...