Word: caplan
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...uncharted territory for a crew that hadn’t seen a deficit after the 750-meter mark all year.“All I know is that at 1000 meters, we were clearly walking through [Wisconsin] but not Yale,” said second varsity coxswain Amanda Caplan. “I made it very clear that Yale was moving on us.”The Crimson’s third 500, however, changed the game as Harvard made a move to gain ground on Yale with under 700 meters remaining.“I wasn?...
...Harvard its first glimpse at Wisconsin, ranked No. 4 in the EARC for both the varsity and second varsity races. “We’re definitely prepared—we know that Wisconsin will be a big, big challenge,” said second varsity coxswain Amanda Caplan. “Everybody is going to show up with their game faces on.” For the Harvard varsity, the 2006 Sprints race is a chance to add a fourth consecutive Sprints crown to the trophy cabinet, something no crew has done since the Crimson...
...match 7-5 and cruised to a 6-3 victory over Zebroski. Junior Cindy Chu at No. 6 gave the Crimson its sixth point of the match when she defeated Katie Jaxheimer 6-4, 6-4. Mukundan suffered the only loss of the match when she fell to Caplan...
Senior Eva Wang and sophomore Stephanie Schnitter also won by an 8-4 margin in the No. 2 position against Kerry Snow and Lindsay Winingham. In No. 3 doubles, freshman Laura Peterzan and junior Preethi Mukundan beat Dartmouth’s Ann Scott and Jamie Caplan by a score...
...each Harvard entry won by open water—secured the Crimson’s seventh consecutive Adams Cup win on a day of poor racing weather and choppy water in Maryland.“The water was just horrendous,” second varsity coxswain Amanda Caplan said. “The plan was to have the varsity race at 6:30 and the JV race at seven, and we get up at 4:30 or five to get to the course to find that the races were delayed. Even at that early hour the water was horrible...