Word: kicks
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...Since joining the team’s roster, the former Seahawks special teams captain has made five tackles, mostly on kick coverage, as he and his family adjust to a new city and a new team...
...unable to attract the biggest, most skilled frontcourt players or the quickest, most athletic guards, who invariably sign with major D-I teams. The result is a preponderence of “catch-and-shoot” players—those who hang on the perimeter waiting for a kick-out from inside for the spot-up three. The style of play in the league has adjusted to accommodate this evolution, producing offenses like the motion-oriented, three-pointer-generating machine of Princeton, or the fast, guard-driven, up-and-down attack of Penn. Ivy teams generally employ small, mobile...
...uncertainty.Last season, Michael Beal ’06 filled that role admirably. With a 6’5, 215-pound frame, Beal was your quintessential small forward—a position that in the Ivy League often becomes a swingman or third guard. He could drive the lane and kick it out to the perimeter or take it to the hole when he had to. He could bang bodies underneath the rim, as evidenced by his 6.3 rebounds per game last year, good for third most on the team. He could play shut-down defense, and was routinely assigned...
...yard Sandberg run. Sandberg finished the first quarter with 56 yards and two touchdowns on just eight carries against the Ivies’ best rush defense. The kickoff after the touchdown made things no better for the Crimson, when freshman running back Cheng Ho fumbled the kick and Penn recovered at the Harvard 22. The Crimson defense stiffened, holding the Quakers to just two yards and a field goal, but trailed 17-7 just 1:30 into the second quarter. The disasters had not yet ended for Harvard. On the next drive, the Crimson had marched to the Penn...
...yard Sandberg run. Sandberg finished the first quarter with 56 yards and two touchdowns on just eight carries against the Ivies’ best rush defense. The kickoff after the touchdown made things no better for the Crimson, when freshman running back Cheng Ho fumbled the kick and Penn recovered at the Harvard 22. The Crimson defense stiffened, holding the Quakers to just two yards and a field goal, but trailed 17-7 just 1:30 into the second quarter. The disasters were not yet finished for Harvard. On the next drive, the Crimson had marched to the Penn...