Word: penns
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...Yale, especially in the context of what happened Saturday.” In the victory, the Crimson continued its trend of making history. Yesterday marked the first time that Harvard had ever won at Yale. In the tournament, the Crimson comfortably beat Ivy rivals Yale, Columbia, Brown, Dartmouth, and Penn. “It showed not only that our physical games surpassed the rest of the field, but also that our mental game was stronger,” Kabasakalis said. Harvard has dominated the start of the season. Having played three weekends in a row, the Crimson now gets...
...Crimson travels to Easton, Penn. next week to take on Lafayette before taking on the recently Bulldog-triumphant Cornell squad. With the parity in this league, it is anyone’s game. But if Harvard wants to be repeat Ivy champs—the first since Penn in 2003, and the first Crimson squad to accomplish the feat—then it’s going to have to win every game on the rest of its schedule...
...more we can learn and improve on and we’re doing well as it is. It just shows how much better we can be.” In the lower doubles brackets, the team of senior Catriona Stewart and Laciny went 0-2, losing to teams from Penn and Yale. This week, while Ko battles as an Individual, her teammates will stay behind both to train for the U.S. Open Invitational that starts on Oct. 11th and to recover. “[We need] to get everybody healthy,” Green said...
...Harvard field hockey team had won 11 of its last 12 meetings with Penn heading into its game on Saturday. Despite the recent success, however, the Crimson lost, 2-0, at Franklin Field for its first Ivy League defeat of the season. The Quakers (2-7, 1-1 Ivy), who had lost seven straight games, attacked right from the beginning. Penn notched three shots on goal in the opening minutes, all of which were stopped by senior goaltender Kylie Stone. The Quakers finally broke through in the eighth minute when they gained a penalty corner, and on the ensuing play...
...better insticts. It’s like going home.”But where did this diamond in the rough come from?Last season fans could’ve found Jenkins working out with the defense—the secondary, to be exact. But gearing up for a tough Penn run game led by then-senior Joe Sandberg last November, coaches decided to use Jenkins as a scout tailback to prepare the defense for the ground attack. Impressed by his performance, the coaching staff returned the sophomore to running back for a trial run.The 5’11, 190 pound...