Word: tournamente
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Notably, Harvard had made the tournament in 2002 in that very fashion, and the 2003 season certainly had the makings of a playoff run as well...
Cornell finished the season at 5-1 in the Ivy League and earned an NCAA tournament bid, joining Princeton (5-1 Ivy) and Penn (3-3 Ivy) as the Ivy League representatives. Harvard finished in a tie for fifth with Brown, ahead of only Yale...
...with the appearence of the Quakers’ in the NCAA tournament, despite a fairly pedestrian 7-6 overall record and three Ivy wins, Harvard must surely be frustrated by thoughts of what could have been accomplished this season. But the Crimson must also be encouraged by the breakout play of the ’07 class. Led by attackman Greg Cohen—who was first on the team in assists (15) and points (26)—and midfielders Brian Mahler and Evan Calvert, the freshmen accounted for about 29 percent of Harvard’s goals...
...game remained deadlocked well into the third, before the teams lined up for a faceoff to the right of Traylen with under a minute left. Harvard had a set play. Brendan Bernakevitch, later named tournament most outstanding player, would win the draw back to Welch—who only minutes earlier had remarked to Smith, “Why don’t one of us go out and win this game...
...even Penn—Harvard’s traditional counterweight at the top of the conference standings—bowed out of the race following a 6-1 defeat at the Crimson’s hands. In dispatching with its league opponents and locking up a second-straight NCAA tournament berth, Harvard surrendered no more than two points—to Cornell and Yale—and in both those instances, at least one regular top-four player was out of commission due to injury...