Word: stat
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...experience, unity and ownership that the now-departed group of five shared and the passion on the court—embodied by Merchant’s farewell performance—that it inspired can’t be found in any stat book...
...that the Crimson could spot Penn 22 points and still make it a contest in the second half. And four auspicious drives that ended in complete failure. If you’re looking for a quick answer to the question of why Harvard lost, that’s the stat you should be pointing...
...This World mixes MTV-style camerabatics with the more staid tools of documentary style: time-and-place IDs, animated maps and a tendentious narrator who intones, "It is estimated that the U.S. spent $7.9 billion to bomb Afghanistan in 2001." Thanks for the stat, but we'd swear that Soviet soldiers, Taliban clerics, al-Qaeda mischiefmakers and one or two fratricidal chieftains all had a hand in causing the misery in Afghanistan...
Edwards entered the season unknown to almost everyone but his teammates. As a sophomore, he played well but infrequently, buried on the depth chart behind headliners like Carl Morris ’03 and then-junior Kyle Cremarosa. His career stat line before Saturday sounded more like a really good game—seven catches for 118 yards...
...such numbers make other analysts salivate, because they hint that the embattled tech sector may finally be coming out of the doldrums. "Semiconductors are the feed for the rest of the technology industry, at least for hardware," says Steve Cullen, director of semiconductor research at In-Stat/MDR, a Scottsdale, Arizona-based technology research group. Indeed, some tech heavyweights are coming out of the closet to say that the worst is over. Executives of Intel, the world's biggest chipmaker, demonstrated guarded optimism about a tech rebound. "The thing we are really waiting for is an enterprise commitment to upgrade...