Word: tars
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Another advantage Harvard has is discipline. Cserny and Peljto have kept out of foul trouble after some struggles early in the season. The two have fewer fouls per game than any of the starting Tar Heel forwards...
...Stanford had even better home numbers when Harvard beat the top-seeded Cardinal in 1998. And most of those North Carolina numbers came from Tar Heel teams far superior to the one Harvard is playing tomorrow. That makes Harvard’s 71-67 upset of Stanford in 1998 and Dartmouth’s 70-66 near-miss against defending champion Purdue in 2000 better indicators of how Harvard will perform tomorrow than years of North Carolina history...
Though the Tar Heels may not be top national championship contenders anymore, they’re still better than any team Harvard has faced this season...
...from outside at a rate of just under 40 percent. Brown leads the team in scoring at 16.6 points per game. Teasley is second with 15.8 ppg and leads the team in assists. Her return from a year off is easily the biggest reason why the Tar Heels went from a .500 team last season to 2002 tournament hosts...
...Brown and Teasley are the only Tar Heels who are shooting above 30 percent from three-point land. And freshman Leah Metcalf, North Carolina’s next-best three-point threat at 28 percent, has not been at 100 percent in recent weeks. Her numbers dropped in the ACC final against Duke after a shoulder strain the day before, and the whole team suffered because...