Word: kristine
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
This time, Keating was on the delivering end, deflecting senior captain Devon Shapiro’s shot to sophomore midfielder Kristin Bannon, who notched her third goal of the season...
...first frame, junior back Francine Polet slapped in a shot off a penalty corner to even the score at one and earn the Crimson’s only goal of the game. Polet’s tally, her second of the season, was assisted by midfielders sophomore Kristin Bannon and co-captain Jana Berglund, each earning her fourth assist this year. The sprinklers at halftime not only cooled off the turf field, but Harvard’s offense as well. “The first half was pretty evenly matched, but we didn’t do anything really...
...gave them a few breakaways, but we possessed the ball well. We did a much better job in the second half creating attack instead of just passing the ball around the backfield.”By eight minutes into the half, junior forward Tami Jafar and sophomore midfielder Kristin Bannon had both struck gold for the Crimson off penalty corners, and it was all defense from there on out.—Staff writer Paul T. Hedrick can be reached at phedrick@fas.harvard.edu...
Call it a sideways moment. New Zealand vintners Sam Neill and Adam Peren are surveying a rugged hillside vineyard and discussing why Pinot Noir is the most sensuous and elusive of wines. "If Pinot were a woman, she'd be Audrey Tautou in Amlie," says Neill. "Kristin Scott Thomas," offers Peren. "No, Kristin's a dry Riesling," Neill insists...
...scoresheet when the first-half whistle sounded at Jordan Field last night, but the short halftime break sparked an offensive surge in both teams. Just minutes into second period, the Crimson tallied its first score of the season, with captain Devon Shapiro assisting on a goal by sophomore midfielder Kristin Bannon. The score came after a Wildcat foul on an attempted clear, which granted Harvard the penalty corner. New Hampshire responded after just 1:45 later to tie the score at 1, ending both teams’ droughts less than five minutes into the half. Harvard’s answer...