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...Harvard coach Frank Sullivan about his All-Ivy twin towers Matt Stehle and Brian Cusworth, and the praise seems endless. Right up until Sullivan recites the Ivy mantra. It’s a three-point shooting league, and staying even or better from behind the arc is imperative to winning games. Last Friday night against Yale, the Crimson’s perimeter defense fell apart, and the Bulldogs hit nine threes on just 13 attempts. Harvard matched the number of treys, but it took nine more attempts, as the Crimson fell 82-74. Junior guard Jim Goffredo led Harvard with...
...Goffredo made up for that, though, nailing trifectas on each of the next three possessions to cap off a personal 16-3 run that put Harvard up 35-15 with 4:06 left before halftime. “Jimmy made some phenomenal plays,” Harvard coach Frank Sullivan said. “He was definitely in rhythm, and everyone derived great energy from that.” “The big guys did a great job setting screens on the outside players,” Goffredo added. “Matt, especially, set some great screens...
...from the field and 4-of-7 from the line, to go along with four assists and three rebounds in a game-high 35 minutes. “This is the first time we were really confronted with hard energy,” Harvard coach Frank Sullivan said. “I talked to Drew during the week—I said, ‘this is the first joint where everybody knows your name; they might be chanting it’—I was right on that call.” Besides the taunting of Crimson players?...
...around their own gym. The Crimson outscored Brown 45-23 in the first 20 minutes of play, effectively ending the game by halftime. “Clearly, [it was] just great to bounce back after a tough loss last night,” Harvard coach Frank Sullivan said. “It was great to see us get into rhythm. I think that was the thing that was disturbing last night to us, was that we never got any real rhythm.” Junior shooting guard Jim Goffredo, whose effort earned Ivy League Player of the Week honors...
...just 5-of-9 attempts from the free throw line during that span. The Crimson struggled from the line all night, converting just 19 of its 33 opportunities, well below its season average. “We didn’t help ourselves,” Harvard coach Frank Sullivan said. “To get to the line 33 times and only shoot 58 percent, that’s not a good number for us.” Crimson guards Ko Yada and Drew Housman, as well as forward Zach Martin, each hit three-pointers in the final minute...