Word: shutout
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...excelling in her career on the field before pursuing one off of it. The four year starter is well on her way to a record-breaking final season for the Crimson. Shields leads a defense that has allowed a mere five goals in 11 games. Her eight shutouts are a season record for the keeper, who entered the season with just seven career shutouts. Shields also boasts a 0.44 goals against average with 54 saves, leading the Ivy league in both the goals against and the save percentage (0.915) categories. Thanks to Shields, Harvard...
...surrendered three or more goals. This streak comes after the Crimson allowed just three goals over the first six games of the season, and in this case was against a BU team that had been shut out six times in its first 11 games. But 60 minutes of shutout soccer shows some signs that the Crimson might be coming out of their defensive funk. “I was real happy going to the half with the shutout,” Craig said. “Hopefully we can build on that.” The importance of a defensive...
...pass to Kenny Parker two minutes later. YALE 13, DARTMOUTH 0NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Alex Faherty and Todd Feiereisen each caught 20-yard touchdown passes from Jeff Mroz as Yale defeated Dartmouth 13-0 during a driving downpour Saturday in the Yale Bowl. It was the first shutout since 2000 for the Bulldogs (2-2, 2-0 Ivy League). Dartmouth (1-3, 0-2) was unable to take advantage of four Yale turnovers, including a fumble recovery on the Bulldogs’ 13 by Mike Rabil with 12:10 left in the second quarter. Yale defensive end Brandon...
...shutout is nothing new for the Harvard women’s soccer team. Scoring more than one goal, however, is something out of the ordinary. After a recent run of two ties and one loss, Harvard (6-3-2, 1-1-1 Ivy) broke out with its eighth shutout of the season, beating Cornell Saturday 3-0 at Berman Field. The defeat was the fourth straight for the Big Red (6-4-0, 1-2-0). It was the first time that the Crimson eclipsed the one-goal barrier on the season. “It was really exciting scoring...
...best. After a slow start to the season, the Crimson (4-7) won its second game in a row and is starting to even out its lopsided record. After a close win over Brown on Thursday night, Harvard ended its contest against the Camels with a near shutout, suggesting that the offensive and defensive kinks in the team may be working themselves out. The Crimson offense kicked into gear in the middle of the second quarter. After a scoreless first with many missed shots and poor execution, freshman David Tune jump-started the offense with a goal during...