Word: regular-season
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...books and earned a share of the Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League (EISL) regular-season title. After dominant season-opening wins against Cornell and Dartmouth, Harvard dropped a 160.5-139.5 decision to the Lions, ending the Crimson’s streak of 12 straight wins in dual meets. Although it had not lost a dual meet since the 2003-2004 season, Harvard quickly rebounded with a strong showing at the Georgia Invitational and a win over Rutgers. The Crimson swept through the league season, posting strong victories over the likes of Brown and Navy. In the annual meet between...
...third because the lead was so large,” Samuelson said. “I think it was about playing with more intensity and having nothing to lose.” The Crimson will look to redeem itself next Saturday at home against Dartmouth in its final regular-season and Ivy League game. “I think the goal all year has been to play each game one at a time,” Anderson said. “This [could be] a big win—this is a team we haven’t beaten...
...wins over the Bears, who entered the afternoon just a game back in the Ivy League’s Red Rolfe Division, coupled with a split between fellow contenders Dartmouth and Yale, gave the Crimson some breathing room in the standings as it entered the final week of the regular-season schedule. The back end of the weekend series, a second doubleheader against Brown, was rescheduled for this afternoon at 1 p.m. due to rain.HARVARD 8, BROWN 4Harvard capitalized on three Brown errors in a four-run eighth inning to take Saturday’s nightcap, a sloppy back...
...said junior Elsa O’Riain, who did not lose during the weekend in singles or doubles, “everything goes so much harder. That will be the grudge match.” Harvard provided plenty of reasons to feel good about the remaining regular-season schedule, which will wrap up in just more than two weeks. The Crimson was particularly dominant in doubles, losing only two matches and taking the points in all three. O’Riain, freshman Laura Peterzan, and junior Preethi Mukundan went undefeated in singles. “It?...
...Eight team Princeton fell to Minnesota on Friday night, 4-0, in a game marred by a rare brawl with 38 seconds left. The win allows the Golden Gophers to advance to its first straight Frozen Four and keeps their bid for a three-peat alive. On Saturday, ECAC regular-season champ St. Lawrence prevailed over Minnesota-Duluth, 1-0, in a goaltending duel. Later that night, Wisconsin held off upstart Mercyhurst by a 2-1 count in double overtime. The results mean that the all of the host teams, representing the consensus top four teams in the nation, survived...