News

HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.

News

Cambridge Police Respond to Three Armed Robberies Over Holiday Weekend

News

What’s Next for Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery Initiative?

News

MassDOT Adds Unpopular Train Layover to Allston I-90 Project in Sudden Reversal

News

Denied Winter Campus Housing, International Students Scramble to Find Alternative Options

A Green Dream

The Lacrosse Notebook

By Mark Brazaitis

The schedule says that the next Harvard women's lacrosse game is Saturday against Yale. But the Crimson is looking beyond that contest, to lacrosse's version of The Game.

Next Wednesday, Harvard will welcome Dartmouth to Soldiers Field. Last year, this game decided the Ivy League title. This year, it probably will do the same.

With a victory over a stumbling Yale squad, the Crimson would be in a position to snag its sixth Ivy crown in nine years against the Big Green. Dartmouth broke Harvard's string of five consecutive league championships when it bested the Crimson, 10-9, in Hanover, N.H., last year.

"We have to get up for Yale," Harvard attack Leelee Groome said. "Yale is always a big game. But what we're really doing is preparing for Dartmouth."

The Crimson has already faced the bulk--and the bruisers--of its schedule. Harvard beat Brown, 14-8, in Providence, R.I., and then traveled to Ithaca, N.Y., three days later and promptly felled previously undefeated Cornell, 15-4.

"We're playing well ever since Brown and Cornell," Groome said. "It's how you finish that counts."

The Crimson would like to finish with a solid triumph over Dartmouth.

"I have a t-shirt that my roommate got me from Dartmouth," Harvard Captain Kelly McBride said. "It's a Dartmouth lacrosse t-shirt that says 'Ivy League Champions' and has all the players' names written on it."

"I think I'm going to wear it to practice next Monday," McBride added, "and after practice, we can burn it."

An Ivy League Championship would not guarantee the Crimson a bid in the ECAC playoffs, a year-long goal of the team. Harvard fell to UMass, 10-8, in early April and this defeat--combined with a 12-9 loss to Maryland at the beginning of the season--may keep the Crimson out of post-season action.

But first things first.

"We're looking as far ahead as Dartmouth," Harvard attack Kate Felsen said. "We have two more games, and our game with Dartmouth is the biggest."

Scoring Stars

McBride pumped in three goals yesterday in the Crimson's 10-4 triumph over Boston University. McBride, the Ivy League's leading scorer last year with 24 goals, now sits atop Harvard's goals-scored chart with 30. She is averaging nearly two-and-a-half goals a game.

Felsen leads the team in overall scoring with 28 goals and 14 assists for 42 points. McBride is second with 39 points.

Other high scorers for the Crimson are Char Joslin (33 points) and Leelee Groome (25).

Cindi Ersek--one of the fastest Crimson players--is fourth on the team in goals-scored with 15. She has yet to record an assist, however.

Attacking

Although the Crimson easily handled B.U. yesterday, Harvard Coach Carole Kleinfelder was a little discouraged by the first-half play of the attack. Many of her team's shots were aimed directly at the goalie, who had only to move her stick an inch or two to stop the shots.

"We didn't bear down," Kleinfelder said. "We were putting the ball right at the goalie in the first half. In the second half, she got some confidence and made a few difficult saves."

"We'll work on the attack a little more in practice this week," Kleinfelder added.

Conceded Felsen, "We didn't shoot very well. But we didn't have many fast breaks. We had to work to get our shots."

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags