Word: hockey
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...Friday night at the Bright Hockey Center, the Harvard men’s hockey team quickly silenced any talk that two weeks off the ice could be detrimental to its playoff run.In the first game of the ECAC tournament quarterfinals, No. 17 Crimson (15-11-4, 12-7-3 ECAC) crushed Quinnipiac with an 11-0 shutout. In Harvard’s dominating performance against the Bobcats (20-14-4, 9-9-4 ECAC), senior Dave Watters provided one of the driving forces behind the historic effort. After scoring only two points throughout the regular season, Watters posted three goals...
Each with a win in hand, the Harvard and Quinnipiac men’s hockey teams were literally playing with everything on the line last night at Bright Hockey Center, both knowing that a loss would end their seasons. Emotions ran high from the very beginning of the game, with members of both teams engaging in physical exchanges. But in the end, it was the No. 17 Crimson (16-12-4, 14-8-3 ECAC) that was left standing, after effectively avenging Saturday night’s loss with a 3-1 win over the Bobcats...
After a near-perfect season in which the Harvard women’s hockey team tore through the best competition that its conference had to offer, the Crimson now takes its game to the national stage.No.1 Harvard faces off against the No. 8 Dartmouth Big Green tomorrow afternoon at the Bright Hockey Center in the first round of the NCAA championship. The Crimson met few obstacles in its path to the NCAA tournament, finishing the season 31-1-0 overall and 20-0-0 in ECAC play. Averaging over 3.56 goals per game and only .91 against, Harvard left...
...member of the Harvard men’s hockey team, I take exception to Lucy Caldwell’s article (“Are Jocks Necessary?” column, March 7) questioning the necessity of jocks at Harvard. While her argument is inherently flawed on the whole, there are a few major points of contention I found simply uninformed and inaccurate...
...strive for excellence in everything it does; it only admits the best, brightest, and most talented students in the world. I don’t see why athletics should be an exception here. Through its history, Harvard has traditionally been an athletic power in certain sports, such as hockey, squash, and rowing, and its academic reputation has certainly not suffered because of this. Take a school like Stanford, which is widely renowned for being a powerhouse in many big time Division 1 sports, including basketball, baseball and football, probably the three most widely competitive sports nationally. All the while...