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The Best and Worst of Soldiers Field

Cracker Quack

Quack-quack.

Today is my last day as lame-duck sports editor of The Crimson. It may also be my last day as a Harvard student, depending on the mood my section leaders are in. So it is with a spirit of reckless abandon that I offer the following reflections on sports at Harvard.

The most obvious comment is that the major teams have taken a John Belushi-like bellyflop the last four years. The football team, once the Ivy title-winner, lost to Cornell and Columbia--in the same season. The soccer team, once an NCAA regional contender, now can't beat (ulp) MIT. And the hockey team, once a perennial ECAC playoff qualifier, has become a not-so-very-funny joke.

But there have been some high points, too; what follows is a list of the ten best and ten worst Harvard sporting events I've witnessed. It does not, however, include games I missed or was inebriated at--the most notable omission being the '77 Beanpot victory.

THE WORST:

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10. October 1978. Twenty-eight seconds to go, ball on the Princeton five, the stage set for Harvard to win at Palmer Stadium and stay in the Ivy football race. Larry Brown turns the wrong way, the ball bounces off Ralph Polillio's knee, Princeton recovers. And the eating club parties were worse than the game.

9. February 1978. My article in The Crimson calls the Harvard-Princeton showdown for the national squash title "a dead tossup." Princeton wins, 8-1.

8. October 1977. Halloween in Providence. Harvard tails Brown, 20-15, third-and-three on the 20, five minutes to go. The Crimson throws twice, incomplete, instead of running the ball. Suddenly we realize that the Harvard football team really isn't all that good.

7. September 1977. Quarterback Tim Davenport collapses under a pile of Columbia Lions in the Baker Field endzone, on a muggy, hot day in Devil's Elbow. Although Davenport finishes the game, doctors diagnose a broken neck vertebra two days later, putting the quarterback out for the rest of the season.

6. May 1978. This one's weird. The Harvard baseball team--taking exams at the Holyoke Holiday Inn because Harvard's screwy and won't give make-ups, except to hundreds of people who fake being sick--lose two straight at the NCAA regional playoffs. Delaware wins the first game, beating All-American Larry Brown (Pitching with balls that are Taiwan Little League rejects), 1-0 on an unearned run--but only after the game is called after an eight-hour rain delay.

5. April 1977. Leading 4-3 against Yale at Palmer Dixon, the men's tennis team drops out of the Eastern League tennis race by losing the final two doubles matches on tiebreakers.

4. September 1978. Harvard football loses to Columbia on a fake two-point conversion by the Lions, and some ridiculous razzle-dazzle plays by the Crimson. Columbia. Really.

3. November 1978. One of the best Harvard cross-country teams in memory loses the Heptagonals on an unseasonably warm day in uptown Manhattan when Thad McNulty--the potential fifth Harvard finisher--collapses from exhaustion 100 yards from the finish.

2. March 1978. Thirteen thousand-plus chant "Harvard Sucks" at the Beanpot finals, ugly fights prevail at center ice, and B.U. wins, 7-1.

1. November 1977. Harvard trails Yale 10-7, with 10 minutes to go, and the Crimson's All-Everything end Bob Baggott sacks Yale's QB Bob Rizzo on third down at his 35. Eli Mike Sullivan fools everybody--including Carm Cozza and, possibly, himself--by running around end for a touchdown. Yale goes on to win, 24-7.

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