Word: ramsã
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...fingers.The Crimson received additional offensive support from juniors Jeff Lee and Alex Thompson and sophomore Luka Babic, as well as a strong showing in goal from junior Alexander Popp. Popp made 11 saves in his second start of the tournament.But Harvard was stung by a commanding performance from the Rams?? Ali Arat, who proved to be a single-handed force with seven scores.“I think we failed to adjust to [Fordham’s] style of offense,” Atkinson said. “They have one very dominant player and we didn?...
...worthy opponents in both [MIT and Fordham],” Tune said. “I thought we were well prepared and played hard, but just came out on the wrong end of a couple of close games.”FORDHAM 10, HARVARD 8Harvard responded well to the Rams?? attack throughout the first quarter of the game yesterday. The teams switched off tallies and ended the period deadlocked at two. However, the Crimson did not respond well out of the break and quickly fell behind, 6-2, and eventually, 8-4, before halftime.Harvard closed...
...very difficult to find spaces.URI’s defensive formation forced Harvard head coach Jamie Clark to make a few tactical adjustments midway through the first half. The introduction of attackers Fucito and fellow classmate Walter Diaz further shifted the onus of keeping a clean sheet from the Rams?? backline and onto the hands of junior keeper Chris Pennock.Harvard mustered four shot attempts in the last 15 minutes of the half but Pennock stood on his head and stopped a valiant effort in the 45th minute by Fucito. The England-native would finish the night with seven...
...Cassidy, just a sophomore, runs as much as he throws, with 41 carries to only 39 passing attempts through the Rams?? first three games...
...towels or any type of cloth that might be used to wipe sweat off,” he said. Pier also did not rule out the notion–advanced by the New England Journal of Medicine in a 2003 study of the NFL’s St. Louis Rams??that artificial turf fields of the sort recently installed in Harvard Stadium could enhance the likelihood of infection. “If the artificial surfaces are more likely to cause abrasions than [a] natural surface…it probably does contribute to transmission,” he said...