Word: fell
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Katarina Zoricic took down Ko. Though Ko pushed the contest to a deciding third-set tiebreaker, Zoricic finished the match on a hot streak, ultimately downing the senior 4-6, 7-5, 10-2. The loss was Ko’s first of the dual-match season, and she fell to 4-1 in singles play this year. In September, Ko easily beat Zoricic 6-2, 6-2 at the William & Mary Fall Invitational. In the No. 2 position, No. 70 Ragini Acharya defeated Harvard freshman Camille Jania in straight sets, 6-1, 6-1. Jania filled...
...better than she did,” Brand said. In the individual foil, junior Arielle Pensler tied for third, taking the bronze, while Anna Podolsky and freshman Shelby MacLeod finished eighth and ninth respectively. In the épeé, Maria Larsson had to settle for second, as she fell to Columbia’s Neely Brandfield-Harvey in a fierce 15-13 bout. All three squads competed well, with the saber squad having a 22-11 day, the foil squad posting a record of 22-10, and the épeé finishing the day 16-17. Overall...
...shot the ball with less than ten seconds to play, but Harvard junior Jeremy Lin made it hard for him to get a good look. The ball bounced off the rim and headed towards the stands when Wittman recovered the rebound, calling for a controversial time out as he fell out of bounds. “We didn’t want to do anything that was going to bail them out,” Harvard coach Tommy Amaker said. “We wanted no silly fouls or anything like that.” The Big Red then...
Junior Colin West fell just short of a berth in the national championship match this weekend at the CSA National Individual Championships in Williamstown, MA. The star of the Harvard men’s squash team, who was the third seed in the Potter Cup, fell in five games to No. 2 seed Mauricio Sanchez of Princeton. After taking the first two games of the semifinal match, West faltered, and Sanchez walked away with the 3-9, 6-9, 9-1, 9-2, 9-4 victory. West advanced to semifinals with a pair of wins on Saturday over Trevor McGuinness...
...first round of the Consolation Bracket. Mashruwala was upset herself in the finals though, falling 9-2, 9-4, 10-8 by Perez and had to settle for 10th place. Harvard Sophomore Bethan Williams, a year after scoring one of the tournament’s biggest upsets, fell in a first round nailbiter to the Tiger’s Emery Maine, 6-9, 9-7, 9-2, 2-9, 9-5. Williams pulled herself together and cruised through the consolation bracket, winning three matches to advance to the finals against the Quakers’ Alisha Turner. After a shaky start...