Word: postseasons
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...extenuating circumstances, Harvard went on to suffer its only regular-season loss of the year. Had the game against New Hampshire not been scheduled on the road during orientation week when Harvard University rules forbid first-years from leaving campus, the 1999 Crimson might well have entered the postseason with an unblemished record...
...Pedro Martinez, 28, the Red Sox have--with due respect to Arizona's Randy Johnson--the best pitcher in baseball. After winning 23 games and losing only four in 1999, then performing postseason heroics against Cleveland and New York, Martinez has won nine games this year and lost two--with an average of 12 strikeouts for every nine innings he pitches. What's most impressive about Martinez is his earned-run average: the number of runs that opposing teams score against him, without help from errors, for every nine innings that he pitches. In this ERA of a lively baseball...
...loss set up two dramatic postseason contests in Lynah Rink. In the second game, junior winger Chris Bala gave the Crimson a 3-2 lead in the third period, but Cornell scored a pair of goals 25 seconds apart to seal Harvard's fate...
...Harvard then went to the postseason Eastern championships at Princeton. With the Crimson holding the lead from start to finish, the meet turned into more of an opportunity for Harvard swimmers to qualify for the NCAA tournament and Olympic trials than a competition. In addition to Martin and Shevchik--whose times in the 400 individual medley and 200 backstroke qualified him--Harvard qualified ten others for the Olympic trials, including Waters, Im, Swinteck and tri-captain Brian Cadman. Harvard won the meet by a comfortable margin...
...Harvard baseball team won the Ivy Crown in two of our four years, reaching NCAA postseason play, but by the looks of the crowd at O'Donnell field, it seems unlikely that anyone actually knew about...