Word: ties
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...contest was left to Curry, Ryder, and Ewing, none of them Harvard men. The bar was put at 9ft, 10in. Byder and Ewing both dropped out at this height, and Curry, B A A, won the event at 9ft, 10in. Ryder and Ewing then vaulted for the tie for second place. Neither could better the other and so the toss of a penny decided it in favor of Ewing of Amherst...
...next event was the 10 yards dash. Owing to the large number of entries heats of four had to be run. The first heat was won by Hawes, second by Wendell, third, tie between Downs and Alward, Alward winning the run off; fourth by Crosby, fifth by Baker, sixth by Andrade, seventh by Hall, eighth, tie between Brown and Rhoades, Rhoades winning the run off ninth and last by Batchelder. In the second round the men ran in threes. The first heat was between Hawes, Wendell and Alward. Hawes and Alward made it a tie, Alward winning...
...back before one minute was over. '93 then gained a little only to lose it again. At the end of four minutes '91 had one-quarter of an inch, but a few seconds before time was up, the freshmen heaved and made the event a tie...
June 14, Yale in New York city or vicinity: to be played only in case of a tie...
...time limit of ten minutes to each bout. In the preliminary bouts one fall shall constitute a victory. In the final bouts the competition shall be given to the man first gaining two out of three falls, or gaining the greatest number of falls. In ecse of a tie, another bout of three minutes will be wrestled and unless a fall is gained, the competition shall be given to the man showing the most wrestling. The time between falls shall be not less than five nor more than ten minutes...