Word: ncaas
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...help the men’s team take second overall. Barrett continued his impressive season as the Crimson’s best at the Ivy League Heptagonal Championships, but his No. 37 finish could not resurrect Harvard from last place. Harvard concluded its season at the NCAA Northeast Regional Championship, where the women and men earned ninth and eighth overall, respectively. All seven Crimson women placed in the top 100, including Scherf with her No. 5 finish. Barrett again headed the Harvard men’s attack, finishing No. 45 in the field. Harvard will hope it can carry...
...contest on a 12-match winning streak. The Crimson then went on to defeat Princeton and Yale in two 4-3 matches before losing to Brown. Harvard closed out its season with a win against Dartmouth. In early May, Kumar and freshman Sasha Ermakov earned a bid to the NCAA Doubles Championship, but were ousted in the first round. The duo finished the season 10-7, and both received first team All-Ivy League honors. The Crimson also had impressive seasons from sophomore Dan Nguyen, who finished 14-9, and the doubles pair of juniors Scott Denenberg and Gideon Valkin...
...fell swoop, senior Jennifer Raimondi put the Crimson in place for its postseason run—a run that eventually led to a berth in the NCAA tournament. With her goal at the end of regulation in the season finale against Clarkson, Raimondi gave the Harvard women’s hockey team a chance to clinch home ice for the upcoming playoff series between the two squads. Raimondi’s goal with one second left in overtime made that a reality. Riding the momentum from those two goals, the Crimson managed to slide by the Golden Knights in three...
...might not have been the storybook ending that she wanted, but a first-round loss in the doubles draw of the NCAA Championships this season didn’t take the luster off co-captain Melissa Anderson’s career accomplishments. In 2006, Anderson and junior Elsa O’Riain finished 31-7 and took a No. 3 ranking into the championship tournament, the highest ranking ever for a Crimson doubles team. Anderson finished 21-3 in singles matches during Harvard’s dual meets, earning her Second Team All-Ivy honors, and her performance...
...third time that happened, however, proved to be Harvard’s charm. With the season on the line and the ECAC title in play—the Crimson made its way to the semifinals, and was ranked just outside the top eight squads lined up for the NCAA Frozen Eight—Harvard took control in the final two frames of play and defeated the then-No.2 Saints, 3-1, at Appleton Arena on March 11. “Even though we lost last time we faced them [on Feb. 24], we hit three posts and carried...