Word: rout
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...senior year so I’m sure she wants to make it happen.” The three scores bumped Cahow’s goals per game average to 1.13, which places her at third in the nation among defensemen. SPECIAL DELIVERY Harvard’s rout of the Eagles was due in large part to its special teams play. Both the Crimson’s power play and penalty kill units dominated, overwhelming BC at both ends of the ice. The Eagles played a physical game from the beginning, and the contest took a rougher turn...
Fresh off a rout of Dartmouth that started the Ivy season, the Harvard men’s basketball team stayed hot as it pulled away from Colgate at Lavietes Pavilion, coming away with a 77-57 win and wrapping up its non-conference schedule. Strong runs at the end of the first half and mid-way through the second were key as the Raiders (8-6) became the second straight team to fall to the Crimson (6-11, 1-0 Ivy) by more than 20 points, following the home team’s 82-56 win over the Big Green...
...four touchdowns on his way to 316 yards in the air. His first touchdown pass came just a minute after the start of The Game. Pizzotti’s 40-yard throw connected seamlessly with sophomore wide receiver Matt Luft to score the first six points of the eventual rout of Yale. “To actually go out and execute on the first drive and have some pretty easy success was very important to our confidence,” Pizzotti said. “It was an obvious confidence booster for us,” Luft added...
This Game was supposed to be one for the ages: a gridiron battle of Ivy unbeatens for the first time since 1968. But starting 68 seconds after the opening kickoff, Harvard turned it into a rout for the ages. Leaving the Yale Bowl, two things were undeniably evident: Yale sucks and Harvard reigns supreme. On the field, Harvard put on a clinic that demonstrated our superiority in every element of the game. On defense, Harvard held Yale’s star running back Mike McLeod—who entered the game averaging 174 yards per outing?...
...June’s injury,” Bajwa said. “The team really responded to adjustments and came together as a unit.” HARVARD 8, STANFORD 1 The Crimson delivered a second dominating performance, dropping only the No. 9 position in an 8-1 rout of the Cardinal. The highlight of the match was freshman June Tiong’s 3-1 defeat of the Cardinal’s Lily Lorentzen, who won the individual national championship in her freshman year at Harvard before transferring to Stanford. After losing the opening set, 9-1, Tiong...