Word: players
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...woman’s life. “You learn how networking and camaraderie help you beyond your sport,” she said. “I learned as much, if not more, through basketball as through academic programs,” said panelist and former basketball player Jessica C. Gelman ’97, who now works for the New England Patriots. “Supporting a team in college is much like supporting a department now.” Participants said events like last night’s panel, hosted by Harvard Athletics and Harvard College Women?...
...after his decisive third-set tiebreaker gained the winning point against Penn (3-4). After dropping the first set, 6-3, to the Quakers’ Hicham Laalej, Chijoff-Evans evened the match with a 7-6 (10-8) victory in the second set. In the final set, each player held serve until the tiebreaker—with Chijoff-Evans holding his nerve to win, 9-7, and clinch victory for the Crimson. “It was a tough match—he was a really good opponent and played a strong game,” Chijoff-Evans said...
...strong impact on both ends of the floor, pulling in a game-high seven rebounds.“I haven’t seen any better big man in our conference yet,” Amaker said. “[Foote’s] a very good offensive player, and an incredible defensive presence for their team.”Forward Adam Wire and guard Chris Wroblewski played key roles for the home team, combining for 31 points off the bench, as Wroblewski went an impressive five-of-six from beyond the arc.Despite junior Jeremy Lin scoring a mere...
...with the worst record in the Ivy League after the first period—metamorphosed during halftime. Following an unimpressive first half, Harvard returned to the court and began making shots, forcing turnovers and building up momentum against a team that was forced to fall back on its star player down the line. The Crimson ultimately came away victorious thanks to these improved efforts, an epic stuff by senior Evan Harris, and a final-second free-throw from junior Jeremy Lin.The sluggish start, the energized return, the discombobulated opponent—the comeback trend seemed to be repeating itself several...
...night’s win and 20 in Saturday night’s loss. But it was the 16 first-half turnovers in Saturday’s game that spelled disaster for Harvard. The Lions’ stifling full-court pressure forced sloppy play from Crimson guards and post players alike. Harvard’s porous fast-break defense didn’t help its cause, as Columbia was able to convert easy buckets and set up its press. During one three-minute stretch early on, the Crimson turned the ball over five times.When the first-half buzzer sounded...