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Ruggers Shag Beanpot Title

CHESTNUT HILL--No one thinks Harvard can win the Beanpot, especially after the hockey team's fourth place finish this year.

But Saturday on Seminary Field at Boston College, the Harvard rugby football club shattered that myth by capturing the third annual Beanpot rugby tournament with an exhilirating 10-6 victory over B.C. before a crowd of 1000 spectators.

The Harvard "B"-side made it a sweep, winning the "B"-side tournament for the second consecutive year, defeating B.C., 14-12, in the final.

"We finally pulled through and it feels so good," Co-Captain Lanny Thorndike said. "We usually make it to the championship and collapse."

The Beanpot is the first championship the ruggers have nabbed since bringing home the national championship in 1984. Harvard has twice reached the finals of the Ivy League and New England championships in the past three years, only to fall in the finals each time.

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Making only their first Beanpot appearance due to scheduling conflicts in past years, the ruggers dominated the first half offensively behind their forward pack, and held off an Eagle rally in the final five minutes with aggressive defensive play and some good kicking.

Freshman Cory Thabit first kicked the Crimson out of trouble with a booming 50-yard kick. One minute later, hooker Jon Israel booted a loose ball out of bounds.

Snuffed

The hosts threatened one last time, but senior Andy Fouse's kick into noman's land with the Eagles on the Crimson goal line snuffed BC's last gasp.

Sophomore scrum-half Michael Gibbs had an excellent game, leading a hand in both Harvard trys and contributing one of the best defensive plays of the afternoon.

Early in the contest, a super-quick B.C. player got outside of the Harvard defense. In the Eagles' 32-6 shellacking of Harvard back in the fall, that same player tallied on two similar breakaway runs.

This time, however, Gibbs came from out of nowhere to haul the speedster down from behind.

"Our wings did really well," Gibbs said. "They crowded him, and he couldn't get loose. On the play he did, I was just thinking I had to catch him, no matter what."

Conversion

Midway through the first half, Gibbs rambled 15 yards for a try after receiving a pass from forward lock Sam Rosenstein. Koenig converted the try for a 6-0 Crimson lead.

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