Sports in brief: Gymnastics, squash come up short
By Justin Goldman | February 28Gymnastics comes in last at Penn
Gymnastics comes in last at Penn
To mark The Herald's last issue of 2006, the Herald sports staff sat down to select impressive performances from the past season.
Down to its last out and trailing by eight runs, the softball team could have allowed Harvard to leave Providence with an easy sweep of the teams' doubleheader on Saturday. But Melissa Ota '07 stepped to the plate and drilled a three-run home run to bring Brown within five, at 10-5. With the impossible ...
The women's basketball team enters its final two home games of the season with hopes of winning the Ivy League title. At 7-3 in the league and 15-8 overall, the Bears must win their last two home games to have any shot of winning the league - starting with undefeated Dartmouth (13-8, 9-0 Ivy).
The women's basketball team split this weekend's games, starting with an impressive 78-63 win at Harvard on Friday night but losing 63-48 to undefeated Dartmouth on Saturday in Hanover, N.H., as the team's momentum failed to carry over.
After splitting last weekend's games, the women's basketball team (11-6, 3-1 Ivy League) welcomes Cornell tonight and Columbia tomorrow for two important Ivy League games. Both games tip off at 7 p.m. at the Pizzitola Center.
As the Ivy season starts to heat up, the women's basketball team (10-5, 2-0) looks to rely on its reputation as the league's best defensive team to carry it to the top.
The women's basketball team dropped a tough game to Temple University 78-71 in a defensive battle Friday night, spoiling its home opener.
The Boston Red Sox winning the World Series is great. It really is. But the fact that they aren't lovable losers anymore does take a little away from baseball as a whole. A great thing about the Red Sox was the constant chatter from their fans until the season started - the "this is the year" talk is ...
The women's soccer team (7-9, 2-4) had its winning streak snapped at three on Saturday night in Philadelphia in a 2-0 loss to the University of Pennsylvania. The loss drops the Bears to fifth place in the Ivy League and eliminated almost any chance the team had at an NCAA tournament berth.