Word: six-point
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...game.“They were picking up balls that usually would drop,” Turley-Molony said. “They broke down our passing a lot.”The Bulldogs steadily expanded its lead throughout the third game, reaching a six-point advantage at 9-3 and their eventual 10-point advantage by 28-18.HARVARD 3, BROWN 0In Friday’s 3-0 (30-26, 32-30, 30-26) sweep of Brown—Harvard’s first shutout of an opponent in league play in two years—the Crimson played...
...strong before losing focus and fading towards the end.In the opening frame, Harvard and Princeton battled through the first few points before the Crimson jumped out to a 13-9 lead. But with Harvard ahead 17-14, the Tigers went on a 9-0 run to open up a six-point margin. The Crimson did not recover, as Princeton won 30-24 to take the 1-0 match lead.In game two, neither team led by more than three points until the Tigers moved ahead, 16-12. From there, Princeton continued to slowly increase its lead and coasted...
...2005–2006, Harvard started with an 11-5 record and sprinted to four wins in its first five Ivy games. But after squandering a six-point lead in the final minute against Princeton on Feb. 10–a game the Tigers won on a Noah Savage buzzer beater–the Crimson went into a tailspin, losing its next six games and surrendering its title hopes...
Last week’s final minute collapse notwithstanding, Princeton is extraordinarily good in close games, which is what this one will likely be. The Tigers stay in the race, at least for one more evening, with a six-point win over Dartmouth...
...discussion could have started two Saturdays ago, after the Crimson blew a seven-point lead with five minutes to go at Cornell. Or it could have started the following Friday, when Harvard handed Princeton a win despite holding a six-point advantage with less than one minute to play. Failing that, it definitely should have come this past Friday night, after Brown, a team which the Crimson beat by 17 on the road three weeks prior, soundly thumped Harvard on its own floor...