Word: seasonã
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...rebuilding, and his absence will unquestionably be missed, but the program is positioned to progress. “I think this has been the best team depth that we’ve had since I’ve been coaching here,” Graves said at the season??s close. “And I think that’s a really good sign for the future.” “All in all, it’s been a season of great growth,” he added. “The future...
...Junior Emily Tay (an All-Ivy First Team pick) led the team with 22 points, and Hallion added 18 in her final collegiate game. Cornell went on to represent the league in the Big Dance, and with the loss, the Crimson was left wondering what to make of its season??it had accomplished its goal of a repeat title, but couldn’t quite call the season a success. “Too many games, we beat ourselves,” Rollins said. “We shouldn’t discredit the championship, but we have...
...Harvard athlete, exploded onto the collegiate water polo scene with 41 goals, 21 assists, and 27 steals—gaudy numbers for a water polo player at any stage of his career.His stellar season reached its apex during the Crimson’s most memorable game of the season??the opening round of Eastern Championships against No. 20 Johns Hopkins. Having played the Blue Jays twice before and falling short each time, Harvard’s chances looked bleak. Both teams traded scores throughout the game, and Voith rose to the occasion, leading all scorers with four goals...
...can’t get down by too many against Princeton—six or eight points against Princeton is 12 against everyone else.” The onus was on Harvard to step up its defensive ability and do something it had done very little of during the season??get stops inside the paint. A Princeton timeout late in the game did nothing to quell the Crimson’s rising ambitions. Unger, junior forward Evan Harris, and freshman forward Kyle Fitzgerald transformed into goliaths, crashing the boards with vigor and cleaning up missed opportunities on offense...
...finished the season with a 6-1 dual meet record, a second-place finish at Ivies, a No. 2 ranking among mid-major teams, and nine new school records. Harvard handily beat every team in the Ivy League except Princeton, who handed the team its first loss in the season??s final dual meet and then claimed victory again at the Ivy League Championships. The Crimson won all of its dual meets by an average of almost 70 points, including a 199-96 victory over Penn in which Harvard did not lose a single race. Leading the charge...