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Carl
Bialik, a journalist in New York, wrote about the men's basketball
team for the Yale Alumni Magazine last
May.
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Historic
Feet
Amid a season of strong Eli performances, the women's soccer team
stood in the spotlight.
February
2003
by Carl Bialik
When
the women's soccer team basked in the glow of its first NCAA tournament
appearance in November, the coach and one of his players had reason
to look back with wonder, because the groundwork for that sterling
performance was laid 12 years earlier, when Ali Cobbett met Rudy
Meredith. Ali, then a nine-year-old midfielder, and her sister Lindsey,
then ten, traveled 20 minutes every spring Friday night from Wallingford
to the New Haven campus of Southern Connecticut State University
to play for Coach Meredith's 10-and-under team.
"Lindsey hated soccer
because she was missing school dances," Ali Cobbett recalls. "But
I remember loving it, and having so much fun with Rudy as my coach."
She, in turn, made a strong impression on Meredith, then an assistant
women's soccer coach at Yale, who says, "Ali was the youngest kid
on a year-older team, but she still was the best player."
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"When
Ali Cobbett said she would be interested in coming to Yale,
I almost passed out from shock."
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In 1998, the two joined
forces again. Cobbett starred on the Meredith-coached under-16 team,
the Weston Wild Things, and together they won a national championship.
Meredith by then had succeeded Felice Duffy as Yale's head coach,
and he knew the team's success would boost his reputation among
in-state recruits. But he thought that his experience coaching Cobbett
would, if anything, be a disadvantage in recruiting her to come
to Yale. "It rarely, rarely ever happens that you coach the same
kid for that long," Meredith says. "Maybe she wants to have a new
experience . . . I never thought I'd have a chance to coach her in college.
When she said to me she would be interested in coming to Yale, I
almost passed out from shock."
Fast forward four years,
and Cobbett is almost ready to pass out from overactive nerves.
The team Meredith has assembled -- featuring a star freshman class
and an excellent senior class including All-Ivy first team players
Chandra King, Jennie Garver, captain Cobbett and two other Connecticut
standouts -- has gathered at Eli's on Whitney with athletic director
Tom Beckett and other athletic administrators to watch ESPN News
for word on whether they have been chosen for the NCAA tournament.
The 11-4-2 (3-3-1) season had ended with a disappointing 2-0 loss
to Brown, heightening their anxiety. But finally, when the last
of the four draws is announced, the Bulldogs learn they'll do the
unprecedented: play in the NCAA College Cup against Villanova, a
nationally ranked team.
Bulldogs
on various athletic fields this fall learned they, too, could compete
with the best, raising Yale's athletic profile and expectations
for success. Men's soccer kicked off an ultimately inconsistent
season with an upset win over defending national champion North
Carolina. Field hockey shook off a poor start to win its last six
regular-season games and then, as the lowest seed, swept the ECAC
tournament with two convincing victories. Women's volleyball had
a somewhat disappointing campaign, but managed to finish above .500
with a come-from-behind win over Brown in its final match. Men's
cross country also struggled, but sophomore Lucas Meyer finished
strongly against top competition. Women's cross country narrowly
missed a chance to return to the NCAA tournament, but senior runners
and sisters Laura and Kate O'Neill qualified individually, with
Kate's second-place finish the best in league history. And men's
football overcame injuries to finish with a winning record, giving
some top I-AA teams a scare along the way.
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"They
have explosiveness, speed, can get to the hole, and can
wait for holes to occur."
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The football team's
first crucial injury came when junior quarterback Alvin Cowan broke
his leg amid a rout over Cornell. Sophomore Jeffrey Mroz stepped
in without missing a beat, finishing the game and beating Holy Cross
the following week. The rushing attack did most of the heavy lifting,
led by sophomore Robert Carr's explosion for 454 yards in those
two games. Carr and freshman David Knox were the top two backs in
the league this year, according to captain Jason Lange. "They have
explosiveness, speed, can get to the hole, and can wait for holes
to occur," says Lange.
Yet a dispiriting midseason
three-game losing streak threatened to derail the Bulldogs' season.
They followed a poor performance in a loss to Dartmouth with a 14-7
loss at Lehigh, where Yale nearly ended the Mountain Hawks' 26-game
home winning streak, then lost by 21 to Penn -- the narrowest victory
margin for the dominating Quakers in league play this year.
The 2001 Bulldogs followed
up a 3-1 start with five losses to end the season. But this year's
team, despite further holes in the offense created by injuries to
receiver P.J. Collins and running back Jay Schulze, rose to the
occasion, winning three straight leading up to The Game. "We really
matured after those three losses and got a lot better," Mroz says.
The turnaround looked
complete when the Bulldogs dominated the first half against Harvard
and took a 6-0 lead. But a quarterback switch flummoxed the Yale
defense, as Ryan Fitzpatrick replaced Neil Rose in the second quarter
and repeatedly found holes as he twisted and lunged for yardage.
His ability to mix runs with deep passes to senior Harvard receiver
Carl Morris ultimately clinched the game for the Crimson, 20-13.
The
O'Neill twins of women's cross country are as similar as can be,
on and off the course. "The difference is so subtle," says coach
Mark Young, who nonetheless can distinguish them based on a slight
difference in their arm motion while running. "Both are unfailingly
considerate and polite, and both are much more interested in having
the team succeed than having their own success." This season, then,
created conflicting emotions for the two -- their best-ever NCAA
results came without their teammates, who just missed qualifying
because of disappointing results at the start of an injury-plagued
season.
Still, finishing No.
2 and 13, respectively, Kate and Laura ended their cross country
careers with a great personal flourish. And they have already had
an impact on recruiting, as many of this year's talented but injury-ridden
freshmen runners came to Yale to run with the O'Neills. "They're
already talking about being a national-caliber team," says Young
of his freshmen.
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"In
the past, people wanted to come to Yale because it's Yale."
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No one expects a bigger
leap for his team next season than Meredith. His Bulldogs upset
Villanova on penalty kicks in the first round of the NCAA Tournament,
then fell to Nebraska 1-0 in the second round. Immediately after
that, Meredith was off to Raleigh, North Carolina, to build buzz
from this season with recruits playing in a tournament. Then he
flew to San Diego for the Surf Cup tournament, interrupting his
recruiting work briefly for a Thanksgiving dinner at Denny's.
"I want to seize the
moment and capitalize on the success of the tournament," Meredith
says, four years after he capitalized on his youth-league championship
to assemble what he calls his most special class. "In the past,
people wanted to come to Yale because it's Yale . . . Now I'm trying
to attract the kid who wants to play at a high level of soccer.
That's what we've been trying to create."
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