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...comeback bid to win, 9-7, 9-3, 0-9, 0-9, 9-7. “It was really exciting—maybe even more exciting—to have a teammate in the final,” Lorentzen said. It capped a smashingly successful individual tournament for the No. 3 Crimson, which saw three of its entries—Lorentzen, Grigg, and sophomore Jen Blumberg—reach the quarterfinals. In addition, sophomore Supriya Balsekar, who lost in the round of 16, knocked off Princeton’s top player in the second-round consolation bracket...

Author: By Lisa Kennelly, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Freshman Takes CSA Crown for Crimson | 3/6/2006 | See Source »

That yesterday’s decisive third game of the ECAC quarterfinal series between No. 8 Harvard and No. 10 Clarkson, the fourth and fifth seeds in the tournament, stretched into double overtime came as no surprise to those following the recent action between the two squads. It was the fifth meeting of the season between the Crimson and the Golden Knights, and all five have been decided by a one-goal margin. A Harvard comeback fell one score short in a 4-3 loss during Clarkson’s regular-season visit to the Bright Hockey Center. The Crimson...

Author: By Jonathan Lehman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard, Clarkson Divided By Slimmest of Margins | 3/6/2006 | See Source »

...first of three plane trips the Harvard softball team will take before once setting foot on its home turf, the Crimson headed down to Florida to compete in the Plant City Tournament this weekend. In its opening games, the Harvard competed against Toledo, Temple, Buffalo and Michigan State. The competition had a total of 37 games under its collective belt, and the lack of relative game experience for Harvard (1-3) was evident over the weekend. MICHIGAN STATE 5, HARVARD 0Harvard ended its road trip on a sour note yesterday when Michigan State dealt it a 5-0 shut...

Author: By Elyse N. Hanson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Season Starts on Sour Note for Crimson | 3/6/2006 | See Source »

...viewed by broadcasters as a truly global sport, like soccer. Even in the U.S., cricket is catching on. There, pay-per-view cable subscribers forked out roughly $50 million to watch the 2005 Test series between India and Pakistan, making the U.S. the third-biggest revenue source for that tournament. (The ICC says those statistics are partly explained by 2 million ethnic South Asians living...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crazy for Cricket | 3/5/2006 | See Source »

...There seems to be just one missing ingredient: a winning India side. The national team has captured only one World Cup?the tournament held every four years in the game's one-day format?and that was in 1983. It's been almost as long since India took a foreign Test series, not counting its victory against lowly Zimbabwe last autumn. "The cricket talent in India is still very much untapped," says Rahul Dravid, captain of the country's team. "The hope is that the new money can help find our future stars...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crazy for Cricket | 3/5/2006 | See Source »

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