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...lead for the first time late in the third period.“Navy had a lot of guys so they were just throwing fresh units and speed at us,” sophomore Mitch Denti said. “The game was kind of like a swim meet??but we just had to step up our game and finish our goals.”Denti, fresh off of receiving valuable experience against the Navy’s B squad, led all Crimson scorers and added three goals to his weekend tally.Nevertheless, Navy proved true to its national...
...yard freestyle in a time of 52.23 seconds. Co-captain Noelle Bassi led five Crimson finalists in the 200-yard butterfly, touching the wall in 2:01.41 seconds to beat ECAC record-holder Kerry Goodman of UNH by over two seconds. Harvard was paced in the meet??s opening days by contributions from some of its underclasmen. Freshman Katie Faulkner opened the meet for Harvard with a second-place finish in the 500-yard freestyle, while Mooney added a pair of top-six finishes. Cutter chipped in by claiming third in the 100-yard free while Faulkner took...
...second through fifth places don’t match the first in points. But at Ivies, it’s all about depth—it goes all the way down to the 24th girl.”The records started to stream in for the Crimson in the meet??s second event—the 500-yard freestyle.Freshman Alexandra Clarke topped her own school record with a time of 4:47.29 in the finals, finishing second to Princeton freshman Alicia Aemisegger, who rewrote Ivy League history with a 4:43.50 swim and was later named Swimmer...
...following weekend (Feb 22-24) Harvard will again travel to Princeton for the EISL Championships looking to gain revenge against the Tigers. Because the scoring system for dual and championship meets differs—four swimmers score in each event in dual meets, while 24 score in each championship meet??depth is far more important in championship meets. Because of this, Harvard views the Tigers—who exhibited their depth this weekend—as the team to beat heading into the next phase of their season. “As always, the goal...
Although the Crimson traditionally competes against multiple teams at the annual meet??the location of which alternates between MIT and Brandeis—Harvard had already faced many of its potential opponents in New York earlier this season and thus faced only the Blue Devils...