You gotta believe
New Yorkers seem to believe the world revolves around them. At least in terms of the baseball world, they're right.
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New Yorkers seem to believe the world revolves around them. At least in terms of the baseball world, they're right.
The Dartmouth football team is better than its 0-4 record. The Big Green are better than the 18 points a game they have scored and the 39 points a game they have allowed.
After a victory Saturday against winless Yale, the Dartmouth field hockey team ran into stiffer competition yesterday when it hosted Syracuse University at Scully-Fahey Field. The Orangemen (10-5) shut down a Big Green (6-3, 3-1 Ivy) offense that had been averaging over 3.6 goals per game, winning 2-0.
This is it. There's no room for error. Dartmouth football had its "pre-season" and now the games really count.
When Dartmouth renews its in-state rivalry at the University of New Hampshire tomorrow, the Big Green will take on a Wildcat team even better than the Colgate squad that felled them 42-24 last weekend.
The Dartmouth women's golf team finished tied for second out of 17 teams at last weekend's Dartmouth Invitational tournament at the Hanover Country Club.
When the Dartmouth football team met Colgate last Sept. 25, the young Big Green offense floundered while the veteran defense held tough in a 35-3 loss. On Saturday, the team's youthful defense gave up several big plays while the now-experienced offense played effectively against the Red Raiders.
Last week the Massachusetts House and Senate passed bills that would put $312 million of public funds towards a new home for the Boston Red Sox. The deal has the backing of Gov. Paul Celluci and Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and, if you believe the politicians and the Red Sox, of the public as well.
With two wins over the weekend, the University of Pennsylvania men's basketball team wrapped up its second consecutive Ivy League championship -- its sixth in 10 years and its 20th in the last 31 campaigns.
Coming off losses to the Ivy League's top two teams in Hanover, the Dartmouth men's basketball team (8-17, 4-8) will face the third- and last-place teams this weekend in New York State.
This past weekend saw four teams sweep and four teams swept. The winners were Columbia, Cornell, Penn and Princeton. On the losing end were Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard and Yale.
Dartmouth stands in a three-way tie for fifth place, having slowly clawed its way out of the cellar after an 0-4 start.
You've waited all year for this. You sat through the early non-conference games against the Keene States and Holy Crosses and watched the team try to find itself.
Bill Riley '46, a two-time All-American hockey player for Dartmouth in the 1940s and a member of the United States Hockey Hall of Fame, died Tuesday at age 77.
The Penn Quakers (14-7, 7-0) maintained their undefeated Ivy mark and upped their League lead to two games with a 55-46 victory at second-place Princeton (13-9, 5-2) on Tuesday night.
The Penn men's basketball team maintained its one-game Ivy lead over Princeton this weekend as both teams easily defeated Harvard and Dartmouth. The two League leviathans will meet each other tonight at Princeton to determine the Ancient Eight leader midway through the season.
With men's and women's hockey and women's basketball away this weekend, Dartmouth men's basketball will be one of the only games in town. In fact, the men play two games against Ivy competition -- Friday night against Columbia and Saturday night versus the Big Red of Cornell.
The "heavies" of Ivy League men's basketball played their first conference contests of the season last weekend, with predictable results.
Did you see the Super Bowl weekend? Heckuva game, huh? Well, did you notice who was playing? Tennessee and St. Louis. Is there anything strange about these two teams being in the Super Bowl?
The freefall continues.