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...proved very similar to the day’s first game against Toledo.Bolstered by long offensive runs, the Bulls did not provide the women’s squad any chances for late-game comebacks.South Florida started off the first set with one such run, scoring five straight points??three of which were aces. The Crimson could not keep up with the barrage of attacks and soon fell behind 13-3.Assorted Crimson plays slowly augmented Harvard’s score, but frequent errors and the Bulls’ large lead precluded any hopes for a come-from-behind win. Finishing...
...half, mustered an abysmal 5-for-28 clip in the second half after the Crimson switched its zone defense to an aggressive man-to-man. But in the last minute, the Big Green calmly sank eight consecutive free throws to ice the game. Koren Schram led Dartmouth with 15 points??including three big three-pointers—and Betsy Williams and Brittney Smith each had 11. “We didn’t run out of gas,” Hallion said. “But when it’s a minute left and you?...
...charity stripe just 10 times, sinking six of those shots. In a game where the opposing team was shooting so well, Harvard needed a boost to get past its sub-50 field goal percentage, and that force never came through.Twice the Crimson got within two points??once with Harris’ put-back layup, and once with a pair of free throws by junior Andrew Pusar. Neither was able to spark a huge run, however, and Brown responded to every Harvard basket with two or three more. The Bears went on a 21-6 run after the Crimson...
...mere 31.6 percent from the field as compared to Brown’s 54.6 percent.The Bears’ arrival today also means that Harvard must again contend with the leading scorer in the Ivy conference, Mark McAndrew. In the previous matchup, the Crimson held McAndrew to 14 points??almost three shy of his average per game–but he still poses a threat. “They’re a very difficult team—and [McAndrew] in particular—to defend,” Amaker said. “But I think that hopefully...
Trailing 61-53 with 2:29 to play, things weren’t looking up for the Harvard men’s basketball team. But, with 15 unanswered points??eight to close out regulation and force overtime, and the first seven of the extra period—the Crimson (7-18, 2-7 Ivy) came back from a second-half, 12-point deficit to defeat Princeton (5-18, 2-6 Ivy), 74-67, and snap its seven-game losing streak at Lavietes Pavilion on Friday night.“It’s been a while since we?...