Word: scorers
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...rush led to another UNH goal. In the midst of a sloppy Harvard power play, Wildcat junior Kelly Paton intercepted the puck in the neutral zone and broke up the ice. She beat her Crimson defender and fed the puck to Wakefield, UNH’s top scorer, who was waiting on the right post to put in the shorthanded tally. All the momentum seemed to be in the Wildcats’ favor, with netminder Lindsey Minton stopping a number of Harvard shots. But at 9:21, tri-captain Sarah Vaillancourt took matters into her own hands.Vaillancourt took a pass...
...clock, junior guard Jeremy Lin received the ball behind the line, as his teammates manned their positions down court. When the whistle blew, Pusar broke free from his defender and took the inbound pass. The captain looked to pass it back to Lin, the team’s leading scorer, only to find him swarmed by two Lion defenders with time ticking down. Abandoning the original plan, Pusar took a few hurried steps up to half court where he launched the ball at the rim. Seeing the shot fall short, the Columbia bench leapt to its feet in a victorious...
...free throws. Co-captain Emily Tay was Harvard’s sparkplug, electrifying the crowd and her teammates alike at key points in the game when momentum was up for grabs. Tay finished with 14 points, five rebounds, eight assists, and four steals. The team’s leading scorer, sophomore Emma Markley, posted her fifth double-double of the season. She finished impressively with 18 points, 10 rebounds, and two blocks. Markley helped her team get off to a great start, delivering a crushing block 90 seconds after the opening tip-off and scoring the Crimson?...
...That inside game includes the team’s leading scorer, sophomore Emma Markley. Markley is averaging nearly 13 points and seven boards per game. And sophomore Claire Wheeler will look to help out her teammate on the glass down...
...five at home, all five to league opponents. The night before the Crimson came to town, the Bears had dropped an embarrassing 58-27 decision to Dartmouth on just 18-percent shooting from the field. Harvard was able to coast even without production from two of its most dependable scorers. Senior forward Katie Rollins, who was injured in Friday night’s win at Yale, did not play against the Bears. Co-captain Emily Tay, the team’s second-leading scorer at 11.4 points per game, had just three points on 1-for-5 shooting from...