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Road Trip Results Mixed

In a weekend of key Ivy League contests for No. 6 Harvard (7-3, 3-2 Ivy), the Crimson played to mixed results, defeating Penn (4-6, 1-4) in the first match on Saturday but losing to Princeton yesterday afternoon.

PRINCETON 7, HARVARD 2

Playing away from home for the last time this regular season, Harvard matched up well to a tough Princeton squad yesterday. But, despite picking up 10 games over the Tigers (8-1, 5-1), the Crimson was unable to pull out the upset over No. 3 Princeton.

“We were hoping to take momentum from [the win on] Saturday and bring it to the match against Princeton,” senior Richard Hill said. “But, they were better than us [yesterday].”

Harvard went into the matchup riding a four-game winning streak but suffered its first loss of the New Year. Though a win against the Tigers was a necessary piece in the Crimson’s quest for an Ancient Eight title, Harvard will likely get a chance at retribution in the near future, with CSA nationals looming in the distance.

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“There are a lot of good things we can take away from [the match],” Hill continued. “We won two matches, there’s a lot to be learned, and this weekend was good preparation for Trinity on Wednesday.”

Freshman Nigel Koh and classmate Tom Mullaney picked up wins for the Crimson at the No. 6 and No. 7 spots, respectively.

Koh swept his opponent, though just two points decided the first and final sets. Mullaney beat his challenger in five games, winning the second, third, and fifth.

“We played a lot of close matches, but we weren’t able to pull it through in the end,” freshman Gary Power said.

Individual losses suffered against the Tigers were closer than they appear. Of the seven matches the Tigers won over the Crimson, three went to at least four games, and Harvard took six sets to extra points.

“Today we didn’t play badly, we just didn’t win the close matches,” freshman Gary Power said. “At this level everyone is so close that [a match’s outcome] can vary a lot week to week.”

HARVARD 8, PENN 1

In Harvard’s first contest of the weekend, the Crimson soundly defeated the No. 10 Quakers.

“The match against Penn went really well for us,” Hill said. “It was a great test for all players, top to bottom.”

At the No. 1 spot, Power won out against Thomas Mattsson, defeating his Quaker opponent, 3-1. The match was a close one, with the first and last sets going into extra points. But, after dropping the first game of the match 12-10, Power came back with three strong sets to win the contest in four.

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