Word: players
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
PROVIDENCE, R.I.—With a few more performances like this, he could bring home Harvard’s first Ivy League Player of the Year award since 1984 and only its second ever. Heading into the season, that was the likely introduction to a piece about the achievements of captain Matt Stehle or junior center Brian Cusworth, who along with Penn’s Ibrahim Jaaber claimed almost all of the preseason media accolades doled out by various media outlets. But while Stehle’s average of 14 points, nine boards and five assists per league game...
...Frank Sullivan said. “It was great to see us get into rhythm. I think that was the thing that was disturbing last night to us, was that we never got any real rhythm.” Junior shooting guard Jim Goffredo, whose effort earned Ivy League Player of the Week honors on Monday, was feeling that rhythm more than any other player on the court. Goffredo scored 30 points on 9-of-12 shooting, including eight three pointers—the second most in school history—and dismantled Brown’s defense...
...board when Mandes took a pass from freshman Nick Coskren in front of the Union net and shot it in for his fifth goal of the season at 9:47. He was also assisted by sophomore forward Tyler Magura, who forechecked the puck away from a Union player behind the net.“As soon as we got the first goal, we started going,” Mandes said. “I just wished it happened earlier in the period so we would have the whole twenty minutes to use the momentum off of that goal...
...came in and played like a senior, leading the team and playing superbly in the clutch when we needed him.”McKiernan added his own flare with six kills in the third game and 21 overall.“[McKiernan] is our best player,” Crimson coach Chris Ridolfi said. “We need to find a way to get him the ball on a more consistent basis.”As a team, Harvard hit .600 in the third frame with sixteen kills and just one error, never trailing...
...further out.” The jumper gave the Bears (9-8, 3-1 Ivy) a 64-62 victory and rendered obsolete the fierce comeback that Harvard (5-11, 1-2 Ivy) had made in the final five minutes. On the scripted inbounds play, Hayes was the only Brown player who ever crossed halfcourt. “That’s a mistake there,” Delaney-Smith said. “That turned into a foot race we shouldn’t have been in.” Hayes’ dagger silenced a Harvard bench that...