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Highlights of the spring season
July/August 2007
by R. Ryan Hartnett '07
Captain Rachel Jeffers '07 and the women's crew have
a motto to describe what they do on the water: "It's just a little Yale rowing,"
says Jeffers. "We take it one day at a time. No matter where we are or who we're
racing, 'it's just a little Yale rowing.'"
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The women's varsity eight
had their "worst start of the year."
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And so it was on Sunday, May 27, in the title race of
the NCAA Championships in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The women's varsity eight
actually had their "worst start of the year," according to coach Will Porter.
The Bulldogs stumbled out of the blocks, "catching a crab on their sixth
stroke" (that is, getting an oar blade stuck in the water). But they recovered -- to
capture their first-ever NCAA national title and complete their first perfect
season since 1979.
Women's crew had relied on fast starts all spring as
they rowed to a 12-0 record in the dual-race season and captured the
Eastern Sprints and Ivy League titles. Despite their bad start in the
2,000-meter championship race, the Elis quickly pulled into the lead and held
on, beating Ohio State by less than two seconds.
While rowing her team to a national title, Jeffers
missed Class Day exercises in New Haven -- where she was presented, in
absentia, with the Nellie Pratt Elliot Award, the most prestigious athletic
honor given to a senior female at Yale. Also this year, Jeffers, Tess Garrand '10,
Jamie Redmond '08, and coxswain Emily Cleveland '07 were named first-team All
Americans; coach Porter was named national coach of the year.
Though no other team reached greater heights this
spring than women's crew, the men's heavyweight crew came close, nipping
Harvard at the very end of The Race. (See below.) And three Yale squads competed
with the best in the nation: the women's lacrosse team made a trip to the NCAA
tournament, and the men's heavyweight and lightweight crews raced for national
titles. In addition, two individuals, Ryan Lavarnway '09 and John Langhauser '07,
broke school records in baseball and the shot put, respectively.
Women's lacrosse made its third trip to the NCAA
tournament in program history. There, led by All-American midfielder Lauren
Taylor '08, they fell in the first round to fifth-ranked Maryland, 13-7.
But for the unseeded Elis, just getting there was a victory. The team had
stumbled to a 4-3 record early in the season, including a loss to
eventual Ivy League champion Penn. But they bounced back to win their last nine
games and secure one of the eight at-large berths in the tournament.
"We came back from Penn, we all sat down, and we were
like: 'This is not the team we're going to be -- we're better than this,'"
says goalkeeper Ellen Cameron '08. "And everyone really stepped up and started
playing as a team, and that's what got us through."
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The rest of Yale's squads had less than
standout seasons.
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Men's heavyweight crew had one of its best seasons in
recent years, and lightweight crew finished fifth in the nation at the U.S.
championships in Camden, New Jersey. The heavyweight varsity eight missed out
on a spot in the national title race by one-tenth of a second. In their semifinals,
the heavyweight rowers held second place behind Harvard for most of the
2,000-meter race before being overtaken by California and Brown in the last
strokes. Despite the disappointment, head coach John Pescatore lauded his crew's
performance. Coming in, "we had yet to feel like we'd rowed our best race -- or
a great race," Pescatore says of his varsity eight. "But for 1,800 meters, that's
exactly what we did."
While the rest of Yale's squads had less than
standout seasons, a few individuals had remarkable springs. On the baseball
diamond, catcher Ryan Lavarnway '09 had one of the best seasons of any college
player in the nation. He led the country in batting average (.467) and slugging
percentage (.873). Lavarnway also made Yale history, setting records for
average, slugging percentage, home runs (14), hits (70), doubles (17), RBIs
(55), and total bases (131). His 23-game hitting streak to start the season was
a school record, and his 25-game streak (dating back to 2006) set a new Ivy
League record. Lavarnway was one of 10 finalists for the Brooks Wallace College
Player of the Year Award, which is presented annually by the College Baseball
Foundation.
In the shot put, John Langhauser '07 continued
rewriting the Yale record books. Last February at Coxe Cage in New Haven,
Langhauser bested a 57-year-old record established by Jim Fuchs '50 (see
Sporting Life, March/April). On May 13 in Princeton, New Jersey, Langhauser
unleashed a throw of 18.03 meters, breaking Fuchs's equally longstanding
outdoor record. "No one really talks about outdoor track," says Langhauser. "No
one even knows it exists. But obviously I wanted to break this outdoor record."
That mission accomplished, Langhauser did not rest
easy. Two weeks later, at the NCAA East Regional Track and Field Championship
in Gainesville, Florida, Langhauser finished his Yale athletic career by
shattering his own record with a throw of 18.43 meters.

How sweet it is
by R. Ryan Hartnett '07
With Yale still a boat length down and only 500
meters to go, head coach John Pescatore figured the 142nd running of the
Yale-Harvard Regatta was "essentially over." But the Eli heavyweight varsity
eight decided to make history, storming back on the Thames River in Gales
Ferry, Connecticut, on June 9 to win by a half-second. It was the closest
finish since 1914 and perhaps the greatest comeback in the history of The Race.
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"They're waiting for us to make a
move -- let's give them something to watch!"
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Harvard jumped out to an early lead and steadily
pulled away over the first three miles, going up by half a length after a
half-mile, by a length at the two-mile mark, and by open water with a mile to
go. But then the gap stopped growing, and with only a half-mile to go, Yale
began the comeback. As the Eli boat picked up speed, coxswain Alfred Shikany '07
realized that the Harvard rowers were tiring and were anxiously eyeing the
surging Bulldogs. Shikany yelled to his crew: "They're waiting for us to make a
move -- let's give them something to watch!"
As far as Pescatore can guess, the Elis took their
first lead of the race on their second-to-last stroke. They pulled across the
finish line with a time of 19:57.50 to claim their first Sexton Cup since 1999.
The finish was so close that Pescatore, following behind in a launch, looked to
the line judges to find out who had won. They signaled that it was Yale. Said
Pescatore: "Then I realized: this actually, somehow, incredibly, happened."
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