It was March 14, 1998, a Saturday night first-round NCAA Tournament game at Stanford’s Maples Pavilion, when Allison Feaster helped her Harvard women’s basketball team make history. Feaster, an ...
averaging 28.5. The Crimson thought they were better than a 16 seed. Harvard raced out to a 22-9 lead in the first half, but Stanford came back. The Cardinal went up 65-62 with less than four ...
Stanford walked into the women’s NCAA tournament as the top overall seed and with a dark cloud overhead. All Pac-10 forward ...
The Associated Press- Sports on MSN7dOpinion
Women's NCAA Tournament not ready to expand field past 68 teams
This year, 37 of the 68 teams came from the Power Four conferences. The Ivy League was the only other conference to get more ...
Though it is questionable whether the men's tourney is ready for expansion, it seems clear women's March Madness is not. It's ...
Harvard flew 3,000 miles to pull off arguably the greatest upset in the history of college basketball. The Crimson defeated top-seeded Stanford on the Cardinal's home court. It was the first time ...
the Cardinal’s leading scorer, tore her ACL. By the time No. 16 Harvard arrived at Stanford’s doorstep, malaise seemed to have already set in. Stanford would not be able to stop Allison ...
Which schools immediately rise as fits for Omaha basketball star Marquel Sutton? The Summit League talent has these five ...
In the history of the women’s tournament, Harvard is the only 16 seed to beat No. 1 seed when The Crimson upset Stanford in 1998. Even then, there were extenuating circumstances: The Cardinal ...
No. 16 seed Harvard traveled 3,000 miles to face No. 1 seed Stanford ... Cardinal. Harvard went on to win, 71-67. Two days later, they lost their second-round game to Arkansas. But the 1998 ...