Word: layup
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...interesting is one thing, winning is another.”After storming back from 17 down to take a 53-49 lead, Harvard seemed to run out of gas. Over the next 10 minutes, the Catamounts dominated the Crimson, breaking down the defense for easy layups, while Harvard struggled to make shots.With the score tied at 55, Vermont went on a 14-6 run to race past the struggling Crimson and open up a 69-61 lead with 2:30 to play.But as Harvard responded at the beginning of the second half, the team bounced back again.It began with...
...Finelli led the squad with 16 points on 4-for-6 shooting from beyond the arc. A three-pointer from Finelli cut Vermont’s lead to nine with 8:24 to play, and the score remained at 62-53 for nearly two minutes before Pilypaitis made a layup with 6:48 left. Harvard never cut the lead back to single digits. Delaney-Smith’s search for consistent production from her front line continues. Freshman Lisa Harchut was a pleasant surprise with seven rebounds in the first eight minutes of her collegiate career, but starting forwards Katie...
...sophomore guard Jeremy Lin. A three-pointer by Lin just over a minute into the second half sparked the Crimson’s run, during which he scored eight of his team-high 18 points and recorded four rebounds, two steals, and an assist. His coast-to-coast layup at the 17:22 mark of the second half brought the Harvard within 10 at 46-36 and brought the crowd back into the game. Up 53-49 with 12 minutes left, a missed layup and a series of unproductive possessions took the wind out of the Crimson?...
...quick Crimson turnovers and poor shot selection, Harvard quickly fell to a 10-point deficit in the early minutes of the second half. Jesyka Burks-Wiley’s layup with 16:41 remaining pushed the Terrier lead to 50-40. In what was a game of runs all night—the Crimson responded to a 13-4 BU run in the first half with a 9-1 stretch of its own—Hallion and Harvard provided the final spark. Defensive intensity and renewed effort on the boards helped sustain the run that Hallion started...
...double-team. He has Manny Harris, a guard who was incredibly adept at improvising and scoring, and, it appeared, forgetting that he wasn’t supposed to improvise.That’s why it must have killed Beilein on Saturday to see Andrew Pusar cut baseline for easy layup after easy layup—that was Gansey’s favorite move. Or to see Drew Housman and Jeremy Lin confidently work the ball around the Wolverines’ zone D waiting for the open look.Thanks to Amaker, Beilein had the size and speed, the outright skill...