Fall Sports Roundup
January/February 2007
by Carl Bialik '01
The football team captured the
headlines by finally beating Harvard and, after a stellar 8-2 season,
earning a share of the Ivy League title. But there was plenty of good news off
the gridiron as well. Yale's most successful fall-sports teams -- women's
field hockey and volleyball -- measured up well against their Ivy League
competitors. In the autumn regattas, the men's crew left many of the nation's
powerhouses in its wake. And one female cross-country runner, junior Lindsay
Donaldson, went stride for stride with the best in the nation.
| |
Field hockey head coach Pam Stuper has emphasized fitness training.
|
The field hockey team tied for
second in the conference, its best Ivy finish in 26 years. Each of its Ivy
losses -- including one to national quarterfinalist Princeton -- came by
just a single goal. But Yale struggled against elite non-conference opponents,
losing by a combined score of 24-1 to NCAA tournament teams Boston
University, North Carolina, and UConn.
Field hockey head coach Pam Stuper has
recruited "very athletic players" and emphasized fitness training, says all-Ivy
midfielder Lindsay Collins '07. "We can run with any team, no doubt," says
Collins. "We just have to get our skills up there now."
Women's volleyball had a similar
season. Two years after becoming the first Ivy League team to win an NCAA
tournament game, the squad finished just one game out of first place in a
much-improved Ancient Eight. But it too had problems against top competition,
losing both matches against Princeton. Those two losses were the only real
blights on an otherwise remarkable Ivy campaign. In fact, Yale has improved
steadily in recent years, from 8-6 in 2003 to 11-3 this year, even
as league competition has toughened.
"When I started playing, there were
a couple of good teams and the rest were mediocre," says three-time All-Ivy
player Shannon Farrell '07. "Everyone now is at a very even level."
| |
The
biggest races for the crew lie ahead this spring.
|
At the Head of the Charles, the fall's
biggest regatta, Yale's first boat in men's heavyweight crew came in second to
Washington. Among the teams Yale beat were four of the five boats that finished
ahead of the Bulldogs last June at the national championship race. Although the
biggest races for the crew lie ahead this spring, the third-place finish at the
Charles bodes well. "There is so much depth in the [senior] class," coach John
Pescatore says. "It's a great group of guys. They're all hard workers." The
Head of the Charles can be a harbinger of things to come; 2004 winner Harvard
went on to win the nationals, and last year's winner, Princeton, finished
second at the nationals.
The biggest individual achievement
took place on November 20 at the NCAA cross-country championships in Terre
Haute, Indiana. Running on a 3.1-mile course, which had been turned into a
quagmire earlier by five inches of rain, Lindsay Donaldson '08 finished in
20:42.7. Her time put her in third place. (Donaldson says she's gotten advice
and encouragement from twin sisters Kate and Laura O'Neill '03. Kate is one of
only two Ivy runners with a better NCAA finish, second in 2002.)
Donaldson, recently named team
captain, says she waited until the final kilometer before making her move. "I
was in seventh or eighth," she says, "and I picked off people as I ran." After
it was over, she threw away her muddy socks.
|