Word: postseasons
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...finale of their experience at Harvard and I think it is real important for the three of them to go out with a winning season and feel the program is back to a winning level.” Just because Harvard will not be heading to any postseason tournament does not mean these final two games will be used as preperation for next season. “It is important for us to win this weekend,” Sullivan said. —Staff writer Ted J. Kirby can be reached at tjkirby@fas.harvard.edu...
...tomorrow night, the Harvard men’s hockey team will know its ECAC postseason fate. With just two games left to play for every squad, the league postseason picture is still foggy at best, and the Crimson could end up anywhere from the top of the pack to eighth in the 12-team standings. But one thing is certain: if Harvard sweeps this weekend’s home contests against St. Lawrence and Clarkson, it will finish fourth at worst. That would clinch one of the four first-round byes for the league playoffs, which begin March...
...squad are not without merit. Given three more years of playing time together—and a timely three years it is, as Dartmouth, Brown, and Princeton say goodbye to much of their offense at the end of this season—this freshman class has the makings for postseason success.“It’s so exciting to have such a great class,” Moretzsohn said. “We’re going to have a really great four years.”“We’re young and learning more...
...Penn juggernaut is nearing in on a second straight Ivy League title and the automatic berth in the NCAA tournament that accompanies it. For the first time ever, though, that scenario may not spell the death of the Crimson’s postseason chances.If Harvard (12-9, 4-4 Ivy) can regroup to take at least five of the remaining six games in its 2005-06 season, the team has a chance to advance to the National Invitational Tournament for the first time in school history.First played in 1938, the NIT is the oldest postseason tournament in college basketball, although...
...competition, “difficult” may also be appropriate. The planets have aligned, and the four top-ranked teams of the ECAC—travel partners No. 6 Cornell and Colgate and partners Harvard and Dartmouth—will gather in a shootout that will have postseason implications. The Crimson will face the Raiders in Hamilton, N.Y. tonight, while the Big Green takes on the Big Red in Ithaca. Tomorrow, Harvard and Dartmouth will swap locations. “You’ve got the top four teams playing head-to-head,” Donato said, adding...