Word: unbeatens
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...went 7-0 in league singles play, were named Ivy Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year, respectively, earning spots on the All-Ivy singles first team. In addition, the No. 1 doubles tandem of co-captains Melissa Anderson and junior Elsa O’Riain went unbeaten in league play, earning a unanimous selection to the all-Ivy first doubles team. “Almost all of [the Ivy teams] play us now expecting to lose,” Anderson said. “Although they really, really want to beat us, they expect to lose...
...first time Princeton had defeated the Crimson since 1995. With two league losses, Harvard appeared to be languishing in the Ivy race with four games to play.The Crimson got well the next week, crushing Dartmouth 42-14, and received an unexpected boost when Brown knocked off unbeaten Penn, putting Harvard in position to gain a share of the Ivy title by winning out and benefitting from a Brown loss.“The frustrating part,” Murphy said after the Dartmouth game, “is that we’re literally one play away from being tied...
...consecutive season that the Crimson has lost to the Tigers and the fourth straight loss for Harvard. With the victory, the Tigers continue a five-game win streak and keep their hopes of an Ivy title shot alive. Princeton remains the only team in the 2006 season that is unbeaten in Ivy League play. The Crimson have only Ivy League matches from this point on. Harvard hopes to reach the .500 mark in league play with a victory over No. 15 Dartmouth on Wednesday...
...conference. Due to tiebreakers, Brown earns the third seed, with the Crimson hosting Clarkson at Bright Hockey Center next weekend in the opening round of the playoff tourney.A day earlier, St. Lawrence’s 3-0 victory over Harvard was a first, snapping a 13-game unbeaten streak that the Crimson had held against the Saints. In both contests, slow starts left Harvard struggling to climb back into the games.“The first period is something we have struggled with all season,” captain Carrie Schroyer said. “It’s just...
...again, the Ivy title will come down to Harvard-Yale. With a pair of wins this weekend over league rivals No. 4 Princeton and No. 5 Penn, the No. 2 Crimson women’s squash team remains unbeaten in the Ivies heading into its final dual match of the season. Harvard (6-1, 5-0 Ivy) will face off against fellow league undefeated Yale, the No. 1 team in the nation and the defending Ivy and national champion, in New Haven on Feb. 22. It will be a rematch of the 2005 finale, when the Bulldogs eked...