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...with the Crimson pushing the powerhouse Bulls to the brink. “I thought we were brilliant,” Clark said after the match.Akpan led the team with 10 goals on the season, and was named a semifinalist for the Hermann Trophy, awarded to the top collegiate player. Fucito was a finalist for the Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award, and was selected by the Seattle Sounders in the 2009 MLS SuperDraft. Stamatis led the Ivy League in assists and joined the striking duo on the All-Ivy First Team.While Akpan, Fucito, and Stamatis deservedly garnered most...
...didn’t necessarily see the results of our adjustments within the season, but…beginning next August I think there will be improvements.” New captains Atkinson and Voith will lead the charge after enjoying breakout seasons for the Crimson, earning Most Improved Player and the Coaches’ Award respectively at the team banquet. But while Harvard graduates only two seniors, it will lose crucial contributors in co-captains Jay Connolly and David Tune. “David and Connolly are going to be completely irreplaceable,” Atkinson said...
...miss a beat. The rookie point guard started every game, finishing the year second in the Ivy League in assist/turnover ratio and first in three-point percentage. She was the unanimous selection for the conference’s Rookie of the Year.“She could be Player of the Year the next three years and be one of the best players to ever graduate from Harvard,” Rollins said. “The sky is the limit for her.”With the play of Markley and Berry, along with the experienced seniors...
...game against BC was merely the start to a historic season for Lin. The junior, who averaged 17.8 points per game, 4.3 assists per game, and 5.5 rebounds per game, earned first-team All-Ivy honors and the team MVP award. Lin was the only player in the country to rank among the top 10 in his conference in every statistical category. Next season, Lin, along with junior forward Doug Miller, will serve as team captains...
Coming off of one of the most successful seasons in program history can be both a blessing and a curse. For the Harvard women’s hockey team, which returned 21 players from a squad that made it all the way to the Frozen Four in 2008, the pressure of those high expectations proved to be just a little too much.The Crimson’s up-and-down season, which saw the team rebound from a sub-.500 start to take the ECAC regular-season title, came to a heartbreaking end in the ECAC tournament.Top-seeded Harvard?...