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...hallmarks of Fucito’s impressive season. A critical matchup against eventual NCAA qualifier Brown turned into a 6-2 laugher due to Fucito’s two goals and three assists. Fucito showed his brilliance yet again in the Crimson’s first-round NCAA Tournament game against Binghamton, enticing the crowd to yell, “Give it to Fucito!” Despite constant praise for Andre’ Akpan and Charles Altchek, Fucito outshone everyone on the pitch and delivered a performance for the ages. It seems that it?...
...contest, the Crimson beat Dartmouth, 2-0, riding the bat of Murphy once again. Her fourth-inning longball came in one of the few at-bats in which she was pitched to, but it was enough to give Harvard its only runs of the day. It was her 17th round-tripper of the year, good for a new Ivy League single-season record. The list of year-end accolades was, naturally, very long. Murphy was named Ivy League Rookie of the Year in addition to making All-Ivy League First Team. She led the league with 46 RBI while hitting...
Stone also noted that as proud as Chu was of winning the Patty Kazmaier Award, she would happily trade it for the national championship that has eluded her in her time with the Crimson. Harvard took an early bow out of the NCAA Tournament with a first-round loss to Wisconsin...
...wasn’t supposed to be like this. They were the surprise upstarts of the Ivy League, dazzling all comers with their offensive prowess and dominating opponents with their defensive supremacy. This was their time to shine—the first round of the NCAA Tournament. But there it was, the once-friendly scoreboard now content to mock the Crimson faithful at the half: Binghamton 1, Harvard 0. The crazies of Cambridge had been silenced. In their place stood the green-and-black Binghamton supporters, filling the air at Ohiri Field with their lusty chants. But there was still...
...were all really hoping he would win.” His individual NCAA Tournament battle is not to be overlooked. In what Brand called the toughest pool of fencers he’s seen in the last five or six years, Hagamen first had to make it through the round-robin play—which he did handily, winning 19 of 22 bouts—and then through two of the top fencers in the country in final-four play. In his final bout, the senior was matched up against Notre Dame fencer Patrick Ghattas, who had finished second...