Word: tournamente
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...victory in the ECAC playoff opener against Yale.But in the end, the 2007 edition of the Harvard men’s hockey team failed to live up to the lofty standards set by its predecessors, bowing out in the second round of the ECAC playoffs and missing the NCAA Tournament for the first time since the 2000-01 season.“It was incredibly disappointing,” senior Kevin Du said of the season’s outcome. “We felt that with the core players that we had...we would...
...defeating Princeton on Feb. 24 and went on to claim the title outright after outlasting Cornell one week later. After beginning the season so shakily, Harvard was now putting on its dancing shoes. The Crimson’s impressive conference play earned a surprising No.15 seed in the NCAA Tournament, matching them up against the defending national champions, the Maryland Terrapins.The reigning champions gave Harvard all it could handle. Despite playing even for the first 10 minutes or so, the Crimson could not keep pace with the Terrapins, as it fell, 89-65. “The stars...
...think it was definitely a bit sad, as we didn’t come out winning,” Suchde said. “It was bit disappointing.” But at the Individual Championships, Oren and Suchde made deep runs in the tournament. Suchde defeated the top seed in the competition to advance to the finals, while Oren—who had not lost a single match the entire season—succumbed in the semifinals to the Tigers’ Sanchez, preventing an all-Crimson final. “I’m very disappointed that...
...play with a 16-6 record. Harvard moved on to the NCAA Regional at Hempstead, N.Y. In Hempstead, Harvard lost a 3-2 eight-inning nail-biter against Hofstra before falling in a gut-wrenching 1-0 loss to Albany the next day to conclude its season. The two tournament losses could not overshadow one of the team’s best seasons ever. “We are really satisfied with the season we had,” said captain second baseman Julia Kidder. “We won the Ivy League, which was our goal since September...
...captain foilist Sam Cross. Down two foilists and a saber fencer, Harvard set out to defend its title while taking on tougher competition. In the Ivy League, Penn was better, and so was Columbia. Nationally, the competition was as stiff as ever. At the NCAA Tournament, the Crimson faced the challenge of taking on 12-person teams with just 11 fencers—it was almost impossible for Harvard to take home the gold. “The field in general was probably the strongest I’ve seen in the last five or six years, especially with Penn...