Yale takes sole possession of first
With several Ivy schools breaking for exams, only two conference games took place over the weekend.
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With several Ivy schools breaking for exams, only two conference games took place over the weekend.
I'm sure many of you out there are from states with two competitive state schools. Michigan State and Michigan and Florida and Florida State come to mind. Whenever these teams get together, competition is fiercer, the fan's ardor is heightened.
The cancellation of the University of Vermont's men's hockey season raises many questions beyond the confines of Burlington, namely, whether a similar situation could arise at Dartmouth or elsewhere.
The Ivy basketball world turned slightly askew this weekend as last year's doormats Brown, Columbia and Yale all went undefeated in League play.
In a conference call yesterday afternoon, the Eastern College Athletic Conference announced how it will handle the University of Vermont's cancellation of its men's hockey season.
With a third place finish in the Ivy League last year, including season sweeps of Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Harvard and Yale, the Big Green surprised a lot of people.
The Ivy League men's basketball season starts in earnest this weekend, and there are a few issues worth noting.
Much like last year, when Dartmouth went 2-5 over Winter break, the Green posted a losing record against out-of-conference opponents in five games between Dec. 11, 1999 and Jan. 2, 2000. Unlike last year, the Green lost their lone Ivy contest at Harvard, 66-59.
He only touches the ball about four times a game. If a team is playing really well, he comes in less. Nonetheless, a punter can be one of the most important players on a football team.
It's that time of year again. Snow is falling outside your window. Jack Frost is doing his thing. The football team only has one game left to play.
Three weekends ago, Dartmouth was in a similar position to where it stands now.
After the football team lost 44-3 at Yale, nobody thought the season could get any worse After Dartmouth beat Cornell the following week, everyone thought things were looking up.
The Monday after last season's Dartmouth vs. Harvard game, the lead in the Harvard Crimson suggested the best costumes of that Halloween weekend belonged to the Big Green, who dressed up like a football team. The 20-7 loss the team endured at Memorial Field was one of their more demoralizing defeats of the season.
Dartmouth's biggest home football crowd of every season comes during Homecoming. The myriad alumni who have briefly returned to their alma mater will take home with them the images of this event at least until the next time they come back to the College -- in a year, five years, a decade. They want a Big Green victory.
The preliminaries are all over. After three out-of-conference games Dartmouth (0-4) jumps right into Ivy League play tomorrow with a tough matchup at Yale (3-1).
Dartmouth football finds itself simultaneously in an enviable and pitiable position this weekend.
The Dartmouth football team is struggling. There is no doubt about that. But often what a struggling team needs to break out of its funk is a matchup with another team in a similar situation.
Following a 17-6 opening-day loss at Pennsylvania last Saturday, the Green welcome Colgate and star quarterback Ryan Vena to Memorial Field tomorrow.
This year in Dartmouth sports was the year of the woman. Nine Big Green women's teams reached some post-season competition. On the men's side, it was largely a year of rebuilding, as many teams fielded underclassmen with the hope of future success.
The four years during which the Class of 1999 has attended the College have been among the most eventful in Dartmouth history. The period comprised a sweeping turnover in the College's administration, several changes and proposed alterations to the Greek system and a number of tragic events that saddened the campus.