Word: games
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...first regular game is scheduled with Maryland State Agricultural College at College Park, Md., on April 16, but a practice match with the Boston Lacrosse Club will probably be played on April...
...final game of the intercollegiate hockey season will be played tonight in the New Haven Arena when the University seven will meet - Yale in the deciding game of the series. Upon the outcome of the contest depends the college championship; should Yale win the result will be a quadruple tie between the University, Dartmouth, Yale and Princeton. In that event, Dartmouth will lead in actual percentage of games won and lost, since the Green has played only one game with each of the other teams, winning from Princeton and Yale, but losing to the University; but in series rating Harvard...
...work of the forwards has rapidly improved since the game with Yale last Saturday. Their principle difficulty then seemed to be an unwillingness, as well as an inability, to pass the puck; the work of the week, however, has corrected this fault to a large extent. The scoring ability of all four men is high, with Percy leading in total scored. They proved themselves faster on the ice than the Yale quartet last. Saturday, but whether this was due to their familiarity with the larger Boston Arena or merely to individual speed it is difficult...
Coach Winsor put the hockey squad through their last practice of the season in the Arena yesterday afternoon, and brought the long preparation for the final Yale game to a close with an unexpected 45-minute scrimmage. In spite of the absence of Captain Morgan the seven played a strong game, and showed that the loss of even the most important member of the combination would not greatly hamper their work at New Haven tomorrow night. Appleton, playing point in Captain Morgan's place, carried the puck well and was aggressive on the defence, although not as consistent as possible...
...essentially true that Harvard teams have never been one-man teams, and the loss of one player may not break the morale of the whole. Yet the loss to any team however strong of a player so remarkable is a serious impairment of its strength. On the game Saturday depends the victorious conclusion of the whole season of play. The team cannot well afford to present against Yale's fast and aggressive team anything less than its full power...