Word: scorers
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After a missed layup by Mercer guard James Florence—the Bears’ leading scorer coming into the game who finished with nine points on 3-for-18 shooting—Crimson guard Andrew Pusar chased down the rebound in the corner. Pusar made an outlet pass to Magnarelli, who found Housman running alongside junior Evan Harris at midcourt...
...over four years ago. She sat out her entire freshman season with a torn ACL, but started 21 games as a sophomore on her way to a breakout junior year. She received All-Ivy League Second Team honors last season and was the team’s second-leading scorer with 12 points per contest, but it’s her passion for the game that earned her the Crimson captaincy.“Lindsay is such a hard worker and such a great leader,” freshman guard Christina Matera. “We just try to follow...
...rising stars to provide the offensive output needed to compete in the Ivy League. This season, juniors Drew Housman and Evan Harris will be counted on for an inside-outside presence. Their emergence is even more crucial with the graduation in last year’s leading scorer, Jim Goffredo ’07, and center Brian Cusworth ’06-’07, whose eligibility expired midway through last season. Housman has already proven his scoring and overall playmaking ability, ranking in the top 10 in the Ancient Eight in points, field-goal percentage, and assists last...
...Lindsay Hallion, a second-team All-Ivy performer last season after ranking second on the team in scoring and second in the league in both field-goal and free-throw percentage, returns to run the point. At shooting guard is junior Emily Tay, the team’s leading scorer last season with 12.9 points a game. She also led the team in assists and steals on her way to first-team All-Ivy honors. Junior Niki Finelli, a talented all-around player and dangerous three-point shooter, rounds out the backcourt. The Harvard frontcourt faces more of a challenge...
...with 67.7 points per game a year ago.Hallion’s backcourt mate, junior Emily Tay, has the offensive firepower to turn heads this season and may be the Crimson’s best statistical option for Player of the Year. She was Harvard’s leading scorer last year with 12.9 points per game, has a killer crossover, and can finish in the paint.There’s also junior forward Katie Rollins, whom roommate Tay calls “the best post player in the Ivy League.” And, as opposing teams learned last...