Women's lax loses in OT to Princeton Tigers
When the 2004 season began, Dartmouth's women's lacrosse team knew it wanted to end the season at Princeton, the host school for the NCAA championships. Sure enough, the season ended in the Garden State.
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When the 2004 season began, Dartmouth's women's lacrosse team knew it wanted to end the season at Princeton, the host school for the NCAA championships. Sure enough, the season ended in the Garden State.
There were no rumors about the demise of the Dartmouth women's lacrosse team following Saturday's 17-8 loss at Princeton, but if there had been, they would have been greatly exaggerated.
Six down, one to go.
In the summer of 2002, Elizabeth Right '04 made a bold prediction for herself and her Dartmouth lacrosse teammates -- that they would win a national championship.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. -- The Big Green women's hockey team learned a great deal this season about playing through adversity. Faced with heavy graduation losses, injuries to key players and national team commitments that resulted in a constantly shuffling lineup, Dartmouth earned 24 wins, its third Ivy League title in four years and a second straight berth in the NCAA Frozen Four.
UPDATED March 21, 10:34 p.m.
UPDATED March 19, 11:30 p.m.
UPDATED March 20, 9:55 p.m.
UPDATED March 18 -- For the fourth straight year, the Big Green men's and women's hockey teams have both advanced to the Eastern College Athletic Conference championships, to be played this weekend in New York.
Well, the fateful day has arrived. Dave Faucher has resigned as the head coach of the Big Green men's basketball team, effective at the end of the current season.
One of the great things about playing in the ECAC is that redemption is always only a week away.
At last year's "Battle for the Riverstone," Dartmouth goalkeeper Dan Yacey '05 was named Player of the Game by the media after stopping 34 shots in a 1-1 tie between the Big Green and UNH.
As a team that went 5-8 on the road a year ago, the Dartmouth men's hockey team couldn't have been happy about hitting the road for nine straight games from Nov. 14 to Dec. 28.
On September 20, the Dartmouth football team began the 2003 season with the slogan "A Legacy Reborn." Today, almost ten weeks later, the Big Green (4-5, 3-3 Ivy) is gearing up to play Princeton (2-7, 2-4 Ivy) in the final game of Dartmouth's most successful season since 1997.
The 2003-04 Dartmouth men's basketball season tips off tomorrow night in Stony Brook, N.Y., and there's only one certainty: It's a whole new ball game.
Anyone in need of proof of the old adage that defense wins football games need look no further than Dartmouth's 26-17 win over Cornell last Saturday at Memorial Field.
It's almost a week since the Big Green football team turned the Ivy League on its ear with a 30-16 upset win over Harvard at the Harvard Stadium Centennial Celebration, and it's a good bet that in Cambridge, Crimson fingers are still scratching Crimson heads trying to figure out exactly what happened to their previously undefeated Crimson team.
Even at such a prestigious institution as Harvard University, it never hurts to have an extra history lesson here or there. And on Saturday, in Cambridge, the Big Green football team was more than happy to teach the Crimson a thing or two at the Harvard Stadium Centennial Celebration.
Pay very close attention when the Big Green football team takes on Columbia tomorrow at Memorial Field. You'll be watching Dartmouth history in the making.
Lea Kiefer '04 scored two goals and kept two streaks alive yesterday afternoon at Chase Field. With her first goal, the senior forward extended her point-scoring streak to six games. With her second, Kiefer extended the Big Green's unbeaten streak to six, as Dartmouth (6-5-1, 3-0 Ivy) came away with a 3-2 double-overtime victory against Syracuse (8-5-1) in a non-conference matchup.