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...guys made great progress,” Tillman said. “We’d lost our top three or four scorers from the year before, we didn’t have anyone that had taken a faceoff. It’s a possession game, and when you??re young on the offensive end and at the X it can be tough...Our guys were learning to play a very new style, a very different style.” With the difficult system, both play at the X and on the defensive end improved but struggled against...
...extremely successful nationally-competitive athlete, respected team leader, and talented student may seem like a combination that is too good to be true. That is, unless you??ve met Geoff Rathgeber.Rathgeber, a co-captain of the Harvard men’s swimming and diving team, helped lead his squad to unprecedented success—including a perfect conference record. Along the way, he also made a name for himself on both the Ivy League and national swimming circuit by setting numerous records and consistently outperforming his opponents in both regular and postseason meets.“Being able...
...fantastic group of players. The team chemistry was the best I’ve ever experienced,” Cahow said. “It’s so easy to go to the rink and give 100 percent when you really care about the people you??re playing with.”—Staff writer Kate Leist can be reached at kleist@fas.harvard.edu...
...Chenoweth’s first outdoor 5K as a collegian. “It’s definitely exciting to go out there for your first time and get the mark that matters for the postseason,” co-captain Brian Holmquest said. “If you??re there that early in the season, [it] just shows how you??ll be up to good stuff.” “I’ve always been a big believer that if you run the race to win the race, the time will take...
...rowed for Eliot’s house crew (which one all four races by open water, by the way—but who’s bragging?) and sat right behind a girl who plays for the one-time No. 1 Harvard women’s hockey team. You??d be hard-pressed to find that environment at many other schools. Athletes at big universities often move off campus early, live in special dorms, and enjoy a strange celebrity status that transcends the chummy camaraderie (and equality) of undergraduate life. At Harvard, athletes run House Committees and captain...