Word: ties
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...weekend, in a pair of key mid-season ECAC contests, the Crimson had to rely on Brittany Martin—its freshman recruit from Torrance, Cal.—to be its lone netminder. Luckily for Harvard, Martin stepped up to the challenge and saved 76 shots to earn ties against Brown and Yale.And she played all 130 minutes with no other goaltender dressed to play on the bench, knowing she would be the last line of defense for the Crimson. “She kept her composure in a very pressure-cooker game,” remarked Harvard coach...
...have to be a little more physical in front of the net sometimes.”BOE’S GOT MOSenior goaltender Ali Boe returned to the lineup for this game from a concussion sustained early last week.Boe missed both of last weekend’s ties with Brown and Yale. During her absence, freshman Brittany Martin minded net for the Crimson, amassing 76 saves while surrendering just one goal.Last night, Boe only had 16 saves—paltry compared to Terriers netminder Allyse Wilcox’s 39 stops—but she was solid enough to earn...
...adding, “I certainly didn’t pick a corner or anything.” But almost immediately after Maki put Harvard ahead, captain Peter Hafner took a trip to the sin bin for interference, giving Brown (3-14-5, 2-10-3) a chance to tie. Though the Bears were not able to convert on the ensuing power play opportunity, Hafner’s infraction was the precursor of several untimely penalties that would hinder the Crimson attack—especially the already ineffective man-advantage unit—and prevent Harvard from finding the back...
...first set and finished the match with a 6-3 second-set win to lead Harvard to its first-ever semifinal at the tournament.HARVARD 4, GEORGIA 3The Crimson’s first match was a nail-biter against Georgia on Thursday, as the score was tied 3-3 before Harvard clinched the victory in the last match of singles play. “We didn’t really have a lot of confidence-boosting going into the first match—we just did our normal routine,” Wang said. “It came down...
...magic and the objects that presume to have it, with power and the gaudy ways it announces itself, with the degradation of native art into gift-shop kitsch and the elevation of celebrity sports gear into sacred bling. By conflating tribal fetish and consumer trophy, Jungen has managed to tie any number of cultural assumptions and anxieties into a wickedly clever knot...