Word: tournamente
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This past weekend, the Harvard women’s tennis team traveled to Hanover, N.H. to play in the ECAC Team Championship. The three-day tournament was hosted by Ivy League foe Dartmouth and included seven of the eight Ivies. Seeded No. 4 in the draw, the Crimson (1-2) fell, 4-3, in the first round to the Big Green (1-5), but rebounded and dominated Cornell (3-2) 6-1 in the fifth-place match. Up first on Harvard’s schedule was fifth-seeded Dartmouth. Last season, the Crimson ended its 2008 campaign by losing...
...second-place finish is a marked improvement over last year’s performance, in which the team fell to Trinity in the opening round and took fifth place in the tournament.Harvard next gears up for the CSA Individual Tournament in Williams, Mass., to be held Feb. 27-March 1. PRINCETON 5, HARVARD 4The Crimson came up just short in the national-title match, falling 5-4 to the Tigers. The loss gave Princeton its third-consecutive national title.But Harvard certainly had its chances.Masterful performances by No. 5 junior Katherine O’Donnell and No. 6 sophomore Bethan Williams...
...regular season, the Crimson’s playoff prospects remain bright. Harvard will travel to Princeton, N.J. for the CSA National Team Championships as the fifth overall seed, looking to improve on their next trip to New Jersey.In order to gear up for the year’s final tournament, the Crimson will look to take advantage of well-deserved time off.Hill stressed the importance of recovery time, as the squad prepares for rigorous back-to-back matches in two weeks...
...freshman Elizabeth Shuman to turn the final score in the Crimson’s favor.With an 8-1 regular season record, a second place Ivy League finish, and home-court advantage, Harvard will likely be the team to beat in this weekend’s Howe Cup. The tournament opens Friday at the Barnaby Courts and runs through Sunday.The Crimson’s main competition this weekend will be Princeton, who narrowly defeated Harvard 4-5 at home on Sunday. “You could call [the loss to Princeton] just a bit of a hiccup,” Bajwa...
...Harvard’s 2008 dreams of playing in the NCAA Tournament, however, were not to be, as the Crimson suffered a loss to Yale on the final day of the season, and were subsequently beaten by Dartmouth in the three-team playoff. Still, Harvard came out of the Columbia/Cornell weekend with two huge wins that seemed to set it up for an Ivy championship and a spot in the tournament...