Word: lineup
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...close.Such was the contradictory tale for the Harvard varsity lightweights in 2006. A perpetual game of musical chairs—resulting in countless lineup changes throughout the spring—added to an already frustrating dual season wrought with inconsistency and underachievement. It wasn’t until June, until the last strokes of the 2006 season, that the Crimson showed how far it had come on a Saturday afternoon in Camden. Far enough to make the 2006 lightweight IRA final the most thrilling in recent memory. And close enough to make 2007 a campaign for the national title even...
...into the pass game.” Even with the focus on the passing game, the Crimson defense, augmented by its talented block of sophomore linebackers, still asserted itself in the Lafayette backfield. Simply put, the arrival of linebackers like Dorris, McCracken, and Thomas to the starting lineup have rejuvenated an already talented defensive squad and have placed the rest of the Ivy League on alert...
...senior co-captain Laura Odorczyk said. “And a lot of the girls on the team know how hard it is to reach that level and stay there.”Markgraf’s most recent games marked her return to the national team starting lineup after having her baby, Keegan, in July. The U.S. team emerged victorious against Taipei, thumping the squad by a 10-0 count, and the team won its final friendly a week later, 2-1 over Iceland.At Harvard, Markgraf is a key member of the coaching staff, described as outgoing and very...
...Harvard women’s volleyball team entered the weekend’s matches against Yale and Brown at the Malkin Athletic Center (MAC) determined to snap a two-game Ivy League losing streak, but both the Bears and the Bulldogs defeated Harvard’s injury-weakened lineup, as the Crimson slipped to 8-8 overall and 2-4 in the Ivy League.With starting libero Katherine Kocurek still out of action due to a day-to-day injury, many of Harvard’s players found themselves in unfamiliar positions. The effects of the shake-up were visible...
...This year, cowed by the success of the old-fashioned, '50s-style "Who Wants to be a Millionaire," the networks are, with few exceptions, staying safely inside the envelope. Which means this year's fall lineup practically looks like a "Nick at Nite" schedule, filled with time-machine journeys to TV formats past: Bette Midler doing a Jack Benny?style sitcom (debuting Oct. 11) about herself, Aaron Spelling doing an '80s-style prime-time soap, CBS giving us the second remake of "The Fugitive," and the WB giving us "Hype," a "revolutionary" sketch-comedy show that looks, well, pretty much...