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Along with UConn, Holy Cross is one of the two New England schools to ever win the NCAA tournament. Holy Cross finished the 1947 championship season with 23 straight wins and became the first college from the New England area (as well as from the state of Massachusetts) to win a national college basketball title. 35,000 people watched a parade ...
The Retro Television Network began airing on WJAC-TV's second digital subchannel in the late December 2008. [13] Along with then-sister station WPXI, WJAC-TV 6.2 transitioned to MeTV at midnight on June 13, 2011, immediately following an episode of Ellery Queen, at which point the channel was switched to the MeTV feed for the start of Hogan's Heroes.
Holy Cross finished 7-4, 5-1 in the Patriot League. Its other FCS loss was to Harvard. The Crimson shared the Ivy League title with Yale, which HC beat handily early in the season, and Dartmouth.
Holy Cross enjoyed a football renaissance over the next decade under coaches Rick E. Carter (35–19–2) and especially Mark Duffner (60–5–1). In 1983, the team was No. 3 in the nation in I-AA under Carter. Under Duffner, Holy Cross became the nation's most successful I-AA program. There were 11–0 seasons in both 1987 and 1991.
SBS 6, a commercial TV channel in the Netherlands; Six TV, a former television channel in the United Kingdom; Tokyo Broadcasting System Television and Japan News Network members TV station in Japan; Multimedios Televisión, a Mexican regional television network broadcasting on virtual channel 6 and branding as "Canal Seis" 3e, a television ...
The Holy Cross Crusaders men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents the College of the Holy Cross. The Crusaders are members of Atlantic Hockey America (AHA), formed shortly after the 2023–24 season by the merger of their former home of the Atlantic Hockey ...
Fitton Field is a football stadium in Worcester, Massachusetts, primarily used for College of the Holy Cross sporting events. The stadium opened in 1908 as the official home for the Holy Cross Crusaders football team. Before that, most games were played on the adjoining baseball field. The stadium has a capacity of 23,500. [1]
Valley’s Jacob Wheeler placed third in the long jump (20-11.75) as did teammate Marshall Carr in the high jump (5-8). In the District 2 boys meet, Johnstown’s Alan Villa took runner-up in the ...