Word: loss
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...Crimson final. “I’m very disappointed that I didn’t win,” Oren said afterwards. “[If we had met in the finals,] we both would have wanted to win really badly.” Avenging his earlier loss, Suchde bested Sanchez, 9-2, 9-7, 8-10, 9-2, to claim Harvard’s 27th individual title and the first since Daniel Ezra in 1996. With seven seniors on the team, the core of this year’s successful squad will be gone next season...
...inaugural Ivy League Softball Championship to finish out league play with a 16-6 record. Harvard moved on to the NCAA Regional at Hempstead, N.Y. In Hempstead, Harvard lost a 3-2 eight-inning nail-biter against Hofstra before falling in a gut-wrenching 1-0 loss to Albany the next day to conclude its season. The two tournament losses could not overshadow one of the team’s best seasons ever. “We are really satisfied with the season we had,” said captain second baseman Julia Kidder...
...Crimson saw dominating individual performances not only at nationals, but also at the EIWA Championships, where Caputo took the 184-lb. title, marking the tenth year in a row a Crimson wrestler has earned top honors at EIWA competition. O’Connor took second after a close loss in the finals, and Meltzer and Preston each took third. Meltzer, who had a perfect 5-0 record in Ivy play, and Caputo both earned First-Team All-Ivy honors, while Flanagan and O’Connor were named to the Second Team. Preston received an honorable mention...
...that rainout,” Casey said. “We beat them pretty good in both games, and we thought that could be a turning point.”But then the Crimson dropped a twice-postponed opening-round Beanpot game to Boston College—its second loss to the Eagles in a week—to begin a stretch of .500 ball that lasted for the rest of the season. After splitting four games at Brown in the penultimate Ivy weekend, Harvard had to take all four from perennial contender Dartmouth and hope that Yale could sweep...
...point. Week 6 marked the showdown of two undefeated teams when the Crimson traveled to Princeton, the first time the two squads had played each other with records of 5-0 or better since 1922.It also marked Harvard’s shot at avenging its gut-wrenching 27-24 loss to the Tigers of a year earlier. The end result, however, was a loss far more gut—or chest—wrenching than that of 2005.For it was a seemingly innocent chest bump by senior safety Danny Tanner that swayed the momentum in Princeton’s favor...