Word: hagamen
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...fewer fencers than five other squads heading into the competition, it will be incredibly difficult for Harvard to regain its championship glory of 2005. In last year’s competition the Crimson finished sixth, with four women and three men notching All-America honors, including then-senior Tim Hagamen who took first in sabre for Harvard’s fourth gold medal in school history...
...captain Sam Cross leaving to battle leukemia, to Cross’ sister Emily leaving to train for the Olympics, the cards were stacked against Brand. Still, his team finished sixth in the country, and the men’s side also saw senior captain Tim Hagamen win an individual title in the men’s saber. It’s Brand’s style of coaching that motivates everyone to perform at the highest level. He combines strict practices with understanding—including pushing all of his athletes to fence in competition beyond Harvard...
...most dominant athletes are more than just a lean body with great skills. Instead, they act as role models and provide leadership in addition to their prowess. In what may have been the toughest year to be a captain, saber fencer Tim Hagamen more than rose to the occasion to meet all the requirements. Despite losing his fellow captain in the middle of the season, the senior led the men’s fencing squad to its third straight Ivy League championship and a sixth-place finish at the NCAA Tournament and earned an individual national title in men?...
...championship repeat was just not in the cards. The Harvard fencing team entered the season as the unquestioned defending national champion, but came away with a sixth-place finish at the year-end NCAA Championships in Madison, N.J. this weekend. Senior captain Tim Hagamen led seven All-Americans for the Crimson with an individual title in the saber. The finish is the second best in school history after last year’s national championship season. After regional competition, Harvard qualified just nine fencers for nationals, a number mathematically insufficient to allow the team to repeat. But two at-large...
Don’t be fooled by the big poofy hair, the glasses, or the mile-wide grin.No, this athlete may not look like your typical muscular jock, but he has a license to kill—with a saber, that is.Senior captain and saber fencer Tim Hagamen went into the NCAA national competition March 22-25 with one thing on his mind: winning. He had come close a few times before; he had already been awarded the title of all-America twice. This time it was about not only leading his team, but also becoming the first men?...