Men's hoops down BU
In the midst of a losing streak that was more than a month old, men's basketball coach Dave Faucher would have taken a win against a team that had to be wheeled onto the court.
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In the midst of a losing streak that was more than a month old, men's basketball coach Dave Faucher would have taken a win against a team that had to be wheeled onto the court.
Bobby Clark, the men's soccer coach for the last nine years who established the Big Green as one of the nation's premier soccer programs, is leaving Dartmouth to coach New Zealand's national soccer team.
There are times during a game when Gregg Frame '94 looks like he might charge if someone were to wave a piece of red cloth in front of him.
The race for the Ivy League title in women's hockey is down to two teams - unfortunately, Dartmouth is not among them.
In a season where every single night turns into "just one of those games" for the 1-12 Big Green men's basketball team, Harvard certainly did its best not to break any trends in a 79-69 slapping of Dartmouth on Saturday night in Leede Arena.
For a few brief, tantalizing moments in last night's 87-82 loss to the University of Vermont, the men's basketball team showed the world on the floor of Leede Arena a few glimpses of the future.
As he watched Princeton fourth-line winger Ethan Early burn Dartmouth defenseman Mike Loga '93 for a goal that put the Tigers ahead 4-1, Princeton's Assistant Sports Information Director Mike Jackman grinned and said, "Gotta love those tennis balls."
Other than the final weekend of the season when Ivy League Titles are on the line, and the rare occasions when an Ivy team scares the daylights out of some loftily-ranked, overconfident, basketball powerhouse in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament, the first weekend of the new year is always a great time for the Ancient Eight's hardwood warriors.
Sudden death overtime periods have a nasty habit of ending all too quickly for the losing team, and the women's hockey team's stunning upset of Northeastern, which came into the game as the top-ranked team in the nation, was no exception.
Jay Fiedler '94 leads a star-studded - or as star-studded as the Ivy League gets - contingent of senior first and second team All-Ivy selections at the fourth annual Epson Ivy Bowl this weekend in Tokyo, Japan.
As temperatures plunge with the onset of winter, health officials warn students to take proper precautions to prevent such dangers as hypothermia and frostbite.
When the Dartmouth football team began its season two months ago at Pennsylvania's Franklin Field, the 1993 campaign had been all but mapped out.
In an encore that befit the brilliance he displayed so frequently throughout his college career, Jay Fiedler '94 pushed the Dartmouth football team beyond ridiculous to utter lunacy one final time.
Forget the records. Forget the Ivy League Championship. Forget about Penn.
There were no prayers of thanks, no slack-jawed spectators, no title-hopes-on-the-line miracles -- finally, a nice, blissful blowout.
There seems to be some point of critical frustration for Dartmouth football this year.
NEW YORK, Nov. 6 -- Both Dartmouth and Columbia thoroughly dominated two quarters of today's match-up between one of the Ivy League's Prince Charmings and the foulest of the league's ugly step sisters.
It's fairly rare that you head to a football game hoping it turns into a 41-7 blowout.
A relatively short amount of time has passed since first-year coach Julie Dayton arrived in Hanover to try and salvage something -- anything -- positive out of the 1993 field hockey season.
After weeks of picking up momentum for the showdown of the year in Ivy League football, Penn and Princeton, both 7-0 overall, 4-0 Ivy League, finally set their collision course in stone this weekend.