Word: matchesã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...with two wins over Cornell and Columbia, the Crimson suffered five consecutive league defeats to end the season tied for fifth place.“Overall I think the season’s been a good one for the team and we were very close in a lot of matches?? Ko said.Harvard faced a terrifying schedule this year and it dropped nine matches to ranked teams before the Ivy League schedule started. Sickness and injury also plagued the Crimson during the preseason and throughout league play.“With the circumstances and injures I think...
...taking the game to our opponents today, one through six, and as a coach that’s all you can ask for.” To counter the loss of the captains and preserve the players’ energy, the coaches shuffled the doubles partners for both matches??a tactic resulting in five wins out of a possible six. In the perfect response to last weekend’s defeats to No. 47 Kentucky and No. 1 Virginia, a series of stellar performances across the board ensured the Crimson (4-2) regained momentum.HARVARD 6, BOSTON COLLEGE...
...sweep and leaving its singles players to climb out of a hole. “To a certain extent, we were sleep-walking through some of the matches,” junior co-captain Chris Clayton said. Given how dominant the Crimson was in its first two matches??cruising to consecutive 6-1 victories against George Washington and Penn—the team’s early complacency against Penn State—which finished last season ranked No. 43—was perhaps understandable. But even the doubles point wasn’t as lopsided...
...Harvard win came in the form of a 3-2 comeback at No. 8 from sophomore Verdi DiSesa. “We had a few matches here and there that didn’t go our way, so it was disappointing,” West said. Without Suchde, those matches??the kind that oftentimes end up going the way of the Crimson—fell in Princeton’s favor. “Sidd is usually a guaranteed win for us, and we can count on him every time,” West said...
...point, came from the team of Denenberg and senior Gideon Valkin. The following day, Saturday, proved to be more positive for the Crimson as it swept past No. 14 seed St. Joseph’s 7-0. Harvard dropped only one match—one of the three doubles matches??and within its singles play only lost a single set. Rain and other inclement weather created havoc with the scheduling yesterday, and the tenth-place match against Boston College had yet to be played. The only complete results from yesterday morning belonged to the tournament semifinalists...