Word: ties
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...right now it’s payback. It’s a huge game for us.”HARVARD 5, RPI 1After a sluggish start, the Crimson rallied behind Vaillancourt to pull away down the stretch. Harvard fell behind 1-0 midway through the second period but tied the score later in the frame and used a natural hat trick from Vaillancourt to bury the Engineers in the third period.It was Vaillancourt’s third hat trick of the season and her second against RPI, bumping her season goals total to 20.With the score knotted...
...second on the team’s scoring list with nine goals.Meanwhile, Harvard (9-12-1, 7-9-1 ECAC) was 6-for-12 on the power play after converting only two of 21 attempts in the previous four games.The weekend wins moved the Crimson into a tie for sixth in the league standings with five ECAC contests left to play.HARVARD 3, RPI 1The Crimson took only five man-advantage shots Saturday night, but three of them beat Engineers netminder Mathias Lange.Meintel started the scoring with the redirection of a Dylan Reese slapshot 98 seconds into the second period, putting...
...Crimson took the first three points of the game, the Highlanders strung together a series of kills to open up a 16-11 gap. After a timeout, Harvard turned the tables on NJIT, going on a 12-4 run to establish a 23-20 lead. The Crimson escaped tie scores at 24 and 28 and captured a 30-28 victory on a kill by sophomore middle hitter Brady Weissbourd (16 kills, six blocks). “Part of it was going back to what we had in the first game—bringing it back to the middle...
...hopefully things will go our way.” Surprising Colgate has used upset wins over the first-place Big Green and the fourth-place Saints, coupled with a 10-2-1 mark against the league’s bottom two-thirds, to move into a second-place tie with Harvard in the conference standings. Neither front-runner nor upstart, the Crimson’s upcoming opponents are studies in the final two levels of quality in the league—the opportunist and the doormat. Union is definitively the latter; the Dutchwomen are working on an astounding streak...
...pole vaulters are competing,” Christensen said. “We had good individual performances.” Christensen cleared 1.80 meters in the high jump, taking second place, while sophomore Brittan Smith and senior Julia Pederson’s 1.60-meter heights landed them in a tie for fourth in the same event. Both teams look to bolster their times at the Harvard Select Meet on Saturday. —Staff writer Courtney D. Skinner can be reached at cskinner@fas.harvard.edu...