Word: yaleness
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...inadequacies, particularly defensive stability (junior Lindsey Weaver was the lone blueliner returning with two letters under her belt), exposed by more seasoned squads in late 2005, losing to Clarkson and tying St. Lawrence (on a Solley score with six seconds left) at the Bright Center and falling to Yale and Minnesota-Duluth twice on the road. The autumn rut culminated in a 3-0 dissection at the hands of New Hampshire, the first shutout suffered by the program in over four years. Although the team showed signs of improvement heading into 2006, regression or exams broke the momentum...
...competition. The women were seventh among their 23 collegiate opponents, while the men finished eighth of 26. Scherf dominated the 6K course in 21:19.3, winning the meet’s coveted title. Individual accomplishment was again a strong force for Harvard in its annual battle versus Yale but was not enough for the Crimson to overcome its New Haven host and other Ivy rival Princeton, despite record-shattering performances by Scherf and Barrett. Scherf’s 17:03 finish proved only enough to merit second place, while Barrett’s first-place achievement and four other...
After Harvard’s second loss of the season to Trinity, a 6-3 setback in the semifinals of the CSA team championships, the Crimson bounced back with a 6-3 win over Yale in the third-place game. The victory put Harvard in a three-way tie for the Ivy League title with the Bulldogs and the Tigers, marking the third straight Ivy championship for the Crimson and 36th overall...
...drive from New Haven to Cambridge takes two to three hours. If you’ve just upset the No. 1 team in the country, the trip seems to go a lot faster. When the third-ranked Harvard women’s squash team stunned top-ranked Yale, 5-4, on the Bulldogs’ home courts on Feb. 22, the Crimson earned both a joyous ride home and its first Ivy League championship since 2003. Harvard finished with a perfect 6-0 league record. The Crimson went on to take third at the Howe Cup national tournament...
...needed to snap out of its funk, and the team did so the following weekend by securing an impressive 5-2 victory over the Quakers (18-6, 6-1), who rode into the contest on a 12-match winning streak. The Crimson then went on to defeat Princeton and Yale in two 4-3 matches before losing to Brown. Harvard closed out its season with a win against Dartmouth. In early May, Kumar and freshman Sasha Ermakov earned a bid to the NCAA Doubles Championship, but were ousted in the first round. The duo finished the season...