Word: moretzsohn
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...just as other teams are losing their cores, experienced nuclei that put them in contention for the title this season. The Crimson will return three of its top four scorers next year, with Hallion and freshmen Rollins and Tay all primed for breakout seasons. Reserves Niki Finelli and Emma Moretzsohn, as well as Liz Tindal, who sat all year with a torn meniscus, round out a potent sophomore contingent for next year.Moreover, Harvard brings back the most in a perpetually cyclical league, one that gives rise to great teams for a few years and then sees another team take over...
...someone—anyone. Since Ivy play began in January, much of that offensive help has come from a freshman squad that provided the spark needed to revitalize a reeling Harvard team. After some maturing and greater experience, the group of freshmen—guard Niki Finelli, forward Emma Moretzsohn, guard Emily Tay, and forward Katie Rollins—brought talent and capability beyond their years to a team less than six months removed from a thrilling Ivy Title run.“That’s our schtick,” said Harvard coach Kathy Delaney-Smith earlier this...
...thing.” Lackner will team with Rollins in the post, complimenting the picture with her productive rebounding (an average of 7.7 rebounds in four post-exam games) and strong defensive play. Matched with Lackner, Rollins, and bruisers like 6’7 freshman Emma Moretzsohn and 6’1 sophomore Adrian Budischak will be Princeton’s frontcourt duo of Becky Brown (15.3 ppg) and Meagan Cowher (14.4 ppg), the league’s leading and fifth-leading scorers. “They have a lot of nice frontcourt players,” Delaney-Smith said...
...actually liked the low post game. I haven’t had a true low post player in 20 years here. But you can’t pound these kids.”With a solid rotation of Rollins, Budischak, Lackner, freshman Emma Moretzsohn, and sophomore Lauren Fried, Harvard rarely runs into foul trouble and can set up in three-forward sets that exploit smaller defensive units. Last year, the perimeter-oriented McCaffery was often forced to play the power forward slot. This year, the 6’1 forward has moved to the three-spot on the perimeter, creating...
...can’t score.” If so, they thought wrong. Although the Big Red narrowed the gap to one point with five minutes left in the first frame, Harvard calmly responded with a Robinson three-pointer, followed by a layup and block by freshman center Emma Moretzsohn. Cornell would not come closer than three for the rest of the way. The inside freshman duo opened up the perimeter for shooters like co-captain Maureen McCaffery, who finished with seven points, and sophomore Lindsay Hallion, who totaled nine. With Moretzsohn and Rollins just beginning to hit their stride...