Word: soriaga
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...squad—the Crimson has just two seniors on the roster, and five of the team’s 12 players are sophomores—inherits an Ivy League that graduated all three of the first team All-Ivy guard selections from 2005-2006. Dartmouth lost stars Angie Soriaga and Jeannie Cullen, while Brown graduated 2005-2006 Ivy League Player of the Year Sarah Hayes.The Crimson also lost its two backcourt leaders but has two athletic slashers in Hallion and Tay and a veritable sharpshooter in Finelli. Tay led the team in scoring five times last year, busting loose...
...will torch biased defenses.DARTMOUTHCenter Elise Morrison, so dominant in Dartmouth’s title run two seasons ago, returns after a foot injury kept her out of all but three games last year. The Big Green lost the team’s glue in backcourt mates Angie Soriaga and Jeannie Cullen—both first team All-Ivy last year—but two consecutive trips to the NCAA Tournament has Dartmouth looking for a three-peat.Player to Watch: Ashley TaylorA feisty defender who was 10th in scoring last year, Taylor must carry a young backcourt if Dartmouth is to repeat...
...said. “They definitely came out hard, ready to defend their title.” Dartmouth flourished in the second half, steadily pulling away. The Big Green immediately took control offensively going on a 12-0 run to push its lead to 42-26. Dartmouth guard Angie Soriaga, the game’s leading scorer with 24 points, commanded the surge with her collegiate career on the line, draining five three-pointers in the period. Fatima Kamara posted a double-double for the Big Green, scoring 16 points and grabbing 12 rebounds. Meanwhile, Harvard floundered, shooting...
...just 8-18 the previous year. This year’s 12-15 record is no 3-23, but next year’s team will inherit an Ivy League whose premier players are on the way out. Brown’s Sarah Hayes, Dartmouth’s Angie Soriaga and Jeannie Cullen, and Princeton’s Becky Brown and Katy O’Brien all graduate this spring. Penn loses senior forward Jennifer Fleischer.Harvard is young and learning just as other teams are losing their cores, experienced nuclei that put them in contention for the title this season...
...That’s why they are who they are [now].” Long before Dartmouth became the league’s most successful veteran squad, it featured one of the league’s most tantalizing collections of unproven talent. Unproven, that is, until sophomore Angie Soriaga put the Big Green in overtime with a buzzer-beating three, where Dartmouth shocked the Crimson, 93-88, in front of a hostile Cambridge crowd. All but two players remain from the 2003-04 Big Green, including the team’s three top scorers from that game. With the exception...