Word: shots
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...Harvard was Davis’ 6-0, 6-3 defeat of Maria Morrissey at No. 6. “Towards the end of my doubles match with [partner Rosekrans], we really started to play well,” Davis said. “So I was confident in my shot going into my singles match. I knew that if I could keep the ball deep, [Morrissey] would make mistakes.” Davis swept the first set, but in the second set she quickly fell behind three games to none. “It was nerves,” Davis...
...best chance to score came on a shift late in the frame. Junior Doug Rogers ripped a cross to blueliner Alex Biega, who was posted at the right circle, but Quinnipiac goalie Bud Fisher glided to his left just in time to stop Biega’s wrist-shot, keeping the game scoreless at the first intermission.Harvard and Quinnipiac traded a pair of power plays and posted seven shots each in the opening period.“It was a bit of a frustrating game in the fact that we didn’t get the start that we wanted...
...scoring action as well, led by Ryabkina.Just over 12 minutes into the third period, Ryabkina took the puck from sophomore Amy Uber and created some room at the point. Weaving her way around a couple of Big Red defenders, Ryabkina found an opening and deftly lasered a wrist shot past Mazzotta, giving the Crimson a 3-0 lead.“It’s always nice to score, but it’s a team effort,” Ryabkina said. “When you do your best and your teammates do their best, that?...
...four goals and an assist. He was one of eight Harvard players to score on the afternoon. “Dean didn’t play last week so this was his first game, but he really stepped up,” Sapia said. “He shot the ball well and gave our offense a big lift.” The Crimson began the onslaught early. Gibbons scored his first goal, an unassisted effort, just five minutes into the action. Junior attackman Travis Burr followed suit six minutes later on his own unassisted goal. Moments after that, Gibbons...
With the crowd roaring for defense and the home team up by one, it was up to the Crimson (13-13, 5-7 Ivy) to come up with a stop against the defiant Big Red (19-9, 9-3). Cornell junior Ryan Wittman shot the ball with less than ten seconds to play, but Harvard junior Jeremy Lin made it hard for him to get a good look. The ball bounced off the rim and headed towards the stands when Wittman recovered the rebound, calling for a controversial time out as he fell out of bounds...