Word: ties
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PETER JACKSON'S KING KONG That's one handsome monkey. Jackson, director of the new movie, was heavily involved with this taut, visceral tie-in, which has players creeping through the dino-infested jungles of Skull Island like the puny humans they are. And if you get bored with being small, you can, yes, play as the big guy himself...
...lead burned into oblivion, not unlike the Sterno-lit tablecloth at the Branford College tailgate. After letting Yale have their pity points, Harvard regained its composure—it’s hard to beat a team over and over again without feeling sorry for them—to tie Yale at 24, and turning the game into the first-ever triple-overtime contest in the Ivy League. When it finally came time to handle the pressure, Yale did what it knows best. It choked. Pumped up and ready to go, the Bulldogs started the first play of overtime with...
With the Crimson clinging to a slim lead, Cusworth blocked forward Timothy McCrory’s bid to tie the score, dumped in a reverse layup on the offensive end to make it 61-57, and rebounded Schneider’s three-point misfire with 45 seconds remaining, forcing the Catamounts to begin fouling. Cusworth, who finished with a team-high 17 points, was dominant on the defensive end, rejecting four shots—all in the second half—to go along with his 10 rebounds and two steals...
...feeling about Vermont basketball. This is a very good way to start the season.” Harvard nearly let the victory escape down the stretch. Despite trailing by as many as 11 points in the second half, the Catamounts fought back on the strength of their perimeter shooting, tying the game at 50 with 6:21 to play on forward Ryan Schneider’s three-pointer. Harvard gained back some breathing room on a trifecta by senior forward Zach Martin, but with 2:03 left, Schneider—who finished with a game-high 19 points?...
...surface, this weekend’s matchup against the No. 6 Harvard women’s hockey team has to look good to the opposing Yale Bulldogs. The Crimson (3-1-1, 2-1-1 ECAC) has lost and tied in its last two games, and last season struggled mightily at times with Yale (1-3-2, 1-1-1). Harvard’s first ECAC loss was to the Bulldogs last year and then in March, Yale brought the Crimson to the edge before falling in a 2-1 overtime contest in the ECAC semifinals. The main reason...