Word: sevening
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...relax and get more hits,” Harvard coach Jenny Allard said. “Once we got on a roll, we stayed on a roll for a while.”Harvard’s pitching faced some difficulty handling the conditions, walking a total of seven batters but dug in to strike out seven. Entering in the fifth inning in relief of senior Amanda Watkins with two on and no out, Madick struck out the side, leaving the bases loaded.Sophomore Margaux Black held the Lions scoreless in her two-frame appearance. The Crimson defense backed...
...race its way past the defending national champions in the finals of the Copley Cup, as Harvard mustered a third-place finish behind the Huskies and Princeton. “It was a really strong field,” senior stroke George Kitovitz said. “We had seven boats in the race that have a good shot at winning nationals. It was a good start to the season but we’re never happy when we lose.” After a rocky start, the Crimson found itself a length down to the leaders...
...Curtis said. Harvard rallied with three goals in the final three minutes, but time ran out, as the Quakers closed out the game with a 14-10 victory. Harvard’s 10 goals equaled the highest tally scored against Penn this season. Sophomore Katherine Martino made seven saves and played 48 minutes in an impressive showing against the Quakers’ tough offense. Senior Kathryn Tylander started the second half in goal, but was relieved by Martino with 18 minutes remaining. Yesterday’s win marked Penn’s eighth consecutive victory over the Crimson, although Harvard...
...someone break away, have that much time and not score,” Harvard coach John Tillman said. “That’s something that you probably won’t see again.”But the momentum didn’t carry over, as just seven minutes into the second frame the Crimson faced a 7-1 deficit.Much of the scoring came at the hands of sophomore Ryan Hurley, who entered the game with a dominant 3.13 goals per game average. The sophomore used a four-minute Harvard lapse to add to his total, finishing with...
...when he doubled off Penn reliever Reid Terry in the eighth. Terry finished the shutout for rookie Sam Gilbert, who turned in 5 2/3 innings of scoreless ball. PENN 10, HARVARD 0 Quakers stopper Todd Roth bested Harvard’s ace, senior Shawn Haviland, in the seven-inning opener, twirling a two-hit, six-strikeout shutout while Haviland fell to 0-5 on the year with a tough-luck loss. Roth took a perfect game into the sixth inning but O’Hara lashed a leadoff single into left field to spoil it. After he was erased...