Word: coachly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Coach, you refuse to rush more than five defenders, and yet you consistently generate pressure on the quarterback, like the five sacks last year against the Crimson as the much-heralded Chris Pizzotti sputtered to a 6-for-17 passing performance...
...Frankly, Coach Siedlecki, I tired of your cliché team after the opener at Georgetown. You’ve won this season by running the ball (first in the Ivy League), playing great defense (first in the nation in points allowed), and winning the turnover battle (first in the Ivy League)—a vindication of every dogmatic coach in the country. Shame on you, Sid! Your boys are boring...
...coach, what I resent you most for is your defense. Before the season began, the New Haven Register ran an above-the-fold spread of Yale’s 11 defensive starters, below the headline, “Defense Begins with Defense.” Sure enough, the impossibly stingy unit has been the key to Yale’s defense of its Ivy League title, carrying the Elis to narrow wins over Penn and Brown even when McLeod’s Achilles toe limited his production (he only mustered 332 yards in those games...
...crowd to make as much noise as possible. A slow clap and “Harvard” chant helped Moira E. Forberg ’11, chair of the First-Year Social Committee, emerge victorious. An appearance by the football team temporarily interrupted the competition. Head football coach Tim Murphy called his team “classy, tough, and resilient,” and conveyed his appreciation for the supporters. “I want to thank everybody for the great support you’ve given us all year,” said Murphy. Football players Brad...
...that deep.And since we’re in a math mood, let’s have a few more numbers. With last week’s win over Penn, the Crimson is the first team in Ivy League history to win seven games in seven straight years. Harvard head coach Tim Murphy has three Ivy titles to the two won by his Bulldogs counterpart, Jack Siedlecki. Five of the last six Games have been Crimson victories. I could go on. But the real number that matters is 1968. After all, that’s the last year in which both...