Word: pizzatola
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Last Friday night, it was another tale of two halves—a sloppy start followed by a solid second half—for Harvard (17-7, 7-2 Ivy), as it left Pizzatola Sports Center with a 65-54 win against host Brown (7-18, 4-7). The victory gave the Crimson its sixth-straight victory, and its seven wins in the Ivy League is second only behind Princeton...
...This is the one game that is sure to be irrelevant for the Ivy League race. The Bears have a tough road back to the top of the league, but do you know what would be a great step in that direction? If at quiet Pizzatola Sports Center, there was a live bear as a mascot! Think about it, a big hairy scary bear would constantly roar at the opposing team to frighten the jeepers out of it and also dance around the court at halftime to provide better entertainment than any other halftime stuff I’ve seen...
...steady train known as Harvard women’s basketball is back up and running—and just in time. Saturday night’s dominant 71-46 victory over Brown (3-14, 1-5 Ivy) at the Pizzatola Center in Providence made it two straight weekend sweeps on the road for the Crimson. Harvard (12-7, 4-1) will put its four-game winning streak to the test this weekend in two huge conference games against Cornell and Columbia, both of which are nipping at the Crimson’s heels in the Ivy League standings. Saturday night?...
...build on this momentum heading into the tail end of its schedule. Unfortunately, the Bears (7-7, 2-1) had different plans. Already having to spot Brown 12 points due to forfeit, the Crimson simply couldn’t overcome the deficit and fell, 33-7, at the Pizzatola Center, winning only two of seven matches. “It’s frustrating,” Weiss said. “It’s great that so many young guys are getting opportunities [to wrestle], but it’s difficult to be competitive without eight guys...
PROVIDENCE—In Saturday night’s disheartening 71-51 loss to Brown at the Pizzatola Sports Center, Harvard’s two leading scorers were...sophomore guard Alek Blankenau and freshman forward Kyle Fitzgerald. Not exactly the expected 1-2 scoring punch for a key Ivy League road game. Blankenau, known for his long-range shooting, entered the game in the second half, when the Bears had already taken a commanding lead, and poured in a career-high 14 points in just 14 minutes of action. The Nebraska native connected on four of eight attempts from three...