Word: quinnipiace
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Harvard is currently tied for last in the ECAC with two points. The Crimson faces league-leading Quinnipiac (nine points) and fellow cellar-dweller Princeton (two points) at the Bright Center this coming weekend, and then former conference foe Vermont visits the following Tuesday...
...each adding a goal and two assists to the team’s scoring effort. The two wins left the Crimson tied for second in the ECAC with Dartmouth (7-1-0, 7-1-0). Harvard completes its road trip next weekend. On Friday, the Crimson will take on Quinnipiac (3-6-0, 3-6-0) and then get a shot at undefeated Princeton (8-0-2. 8-0-1) in a possible battle for first place on Saturday...
...really exciting to be a part of the team this year,” Finelli said. “It’s exciting to play with my teammates.”Harvard will be back in action on Wednesday. The Crimson will host its home opener against Quinnipiac at 3 p.m.—Staff writer Vincent R. Oletu can be reached at voletu@fas.harvard.edu...
...schedule reveals that most of the usual suspects are back on Harvard’s slate. But there are still a number of easy league games that may serve more as a chance to pad statistics and test young players than real competition. The Crimson will play Union, Quinnipiac, and Division-I newbie RPI twice—a sextet of games that Harvard could realistically win by a combined 50 goals. And it is this lack of a challenge that bothers the Crimson. “I think our league is too big,” Stone says...
...wins keep on coming for the Harvard women’s volleyball team. The Crimson picked up another non-conference victory last night at the Malkin Athletic Center, sweeping away Quinnipiac (0-18) in three straight games (30-13, 30-21, 30-13) to improve to 5-5 on the season. Harvard’s victory was never in doubt, as the Crimson led most of the match en route to its third straight win. “It’s really good to have games like this where you can work on basic fundamentals,” sophomore...