Word: seeding
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...sure.;If the No. 1 Harvard women’s hockey team captures the NCAA championship this weekend, it will be in large part because of junior Jenny Brine.Take the Crimson’s playoff opener against Cornell, for example. Harvard found itself down 2-1 to the eighth-seeded team in the third period.Enter Brine.The forward netted two power-play goals to put her team on top, 3-2. And she hasn’t stopped since.Brine is averaging more than a goal per game in this year’s ECAC and NCAA playoffs, making her the Crimson?...
...season in the clutch. The Crimson has not posted a loss—other than Saturday’s setback—since succumbing to Boston College in the Beanpot finals, and it has remained has won seven of its last eight league matchups. Harvard will challenge No. 5 seed Cornell this weekend in Albany for a spot in the ECAC finals. But after recording both an overwhelming victory and a humiliating loss this weekend, the Crimson believes it has landed on the right attitude for the upcoming playoff match. “I feel pretty confident...
...provost’s office provided seed money for the IIC and oversees its administration in keeping with its role as an incubator for interfaculty efforts, according to Kathleen M. Buckley ’74, the associate provost for science...
...what happened,” Stone said. “We were going after it and that’s the kind of attitude you need to have to be successful in the playoffs.”Harvard now advances to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 1 seed, facing Dartmouth in the first round at Bright on March 15. The puck will drop at 2 p.m. The Crimson has beaten the Big Green by scores of 2-1 and 4-0 this season.—Staff writer Loren Amor can be reached at lamor@fas.harvard.edu...
...Harvard coach Jay Weiss said. “They showed a lot of courage. Many other people wouldn’t have [competed], but they wanted to go out on their own terms.” Unfortunately for the two seniors, they dropped opening round bouts to the top-seeded wrestlers at 157 and 165 lbs. and would not advance in the consolation draw. It was instead the future of Harvard wrestling that shone brightest. Sophomore J.P. O’Connor, ranked first in the tournament and second in the country, tore through the 149-lb field after a first...