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Ouch!
Despite
a solid season for men's and women's soccer and most other sports,
the struggles of Jack Siedlecki's
first Eli football team made it a tough fall for Bulldog fans.
by
Zak Pines '00
February 1998
The
success of a Yale athletic team
is judged traditionally by two criteria: Did it win a league title,
and did it beat Harvard? Using these standards, most of the 1997
Eli fall sports teams can be considered successes. While the women's
cross- country team was the only Bulldogs squad to win a title -- the
ECAC Championship -- every team, except for men's football and
men's soccer, defeated the Crimson.
Although
men's soccer managed only a 2-2 tie against Harvard, the team finished
with an 11-5-1 record (4-2-1 Ivy), its highest win total in six
years. The team entered the final regular-season contest against
Princeton riding a six-game winning streak and still in contention
for the Ivy League title, but a 3-2 loss to the Tigers dropped the
Bulldogs to third place.
"We
had a strong second half and came very close to winning the Ivy
title," said second-year head coach Brian Tompkins. "At
midseason we weren't really in the running for the title. To even
get close was an accomplishment."
The team
had several players among the league scoring leaders. Craig Yacks
'98 set a single-season school record with a league-leading 12 assists,
while Phil Harris '00 led the Ancient Eight in scoring with seven
goals in seven league games.
Soccer
was also one of the bright spots in women's sports: The women's
team matched the men's with an 11-5-1 regular-season record, finished
second in the Ivy League with a 5-2 campaign, and lost in the finals
of the ECAC post-season tournament for the second consecutive season.
But the Bulldogs' most impressive achievement occurred on September
27 against a Harvard team that entered the contest with a 22-game
Ivy League winning streak. Meg Sullivan '00 scored a goal five minutes
into the sudden death overtime to lift Yale to a 3-2 win. Sullivan
scored the Bulldogs' second and third goals, both assisted by Annie
Kwon '99. Before the game-winning goal had even hit the back of
the net, third-year head coach Rudy Meredith and the players on
the bench swarmed Kwon and Sullivan in celebration.
"Beating
Harvard was a high point of the season," said captain Jill
Rubinstein '98, who missed the entire year with a torn ligament
suffered in the pre-season. "This was the first time our seniors
had beaten Harvard. It was a huge win."
The women's
field hockey season was also highlighted by an overtime victory
over Harvard. The Bulldogs defeated the Crimson 1-0 on a sudden-death
goal by captain Liz Dawson '98 and finished the season fourth in
the Ivy League with a 3-4 league mark and 8-9 overall record.
The women's
volleyball team, meanwhile, avenged a regular-season loss to Harvard
by beating the league champion Cantabs in the Ivy League tournament.
The loss was Harvard's first defeat to an Ivy League opponent all
season. The Bulldogs finished third in the tournament, fourth in
the league in the regular season with a 4-3 mark and had an 18-13
overall record, the team's ninth consecutive winning campaign under
head coach Peg Schofield. Rosie Wustrack '99 won her second straight
Ivy League Player of the Year award.
Both
men's and women's golf teams had strong fall seasons, each winning
a tournament in the final weekend of September. The men won the
Dartmouth Invitational, while the women won the Yale Invitational.
Eddie Brockner '01 brought home first place in the Army Invitational,
and Natalie Wong '98 was the women's top scorer in four of five
meets and won the Princeton Invitational.
While
the golf team boasted many outstanding individual performances,
cross country runner Ariana Kelly '99 had perhaps the best fall
season of any Yale athlete. The Bulldogs' top finisher in every
race in which she competed, Kelly won three meets and placed eighth
out of 191 runners at the NCAA district qualifier meet to earn a
trip to the NCAA championship.
Thanks
to Kelly and a deep squad including Nancy Wolcott '01, the Bulldogs
won the HYP's, the annual meet against Harvard and Princeton, for
the first time in seven years. The team also won the ECAC Championship,
its fourth title in 18 seasons under head coach Mark Young.
The men's
cross country team was not as successful as its female counterparts
but did finish second in the HYP's, defeating Harvard while falling
to Princeton. But without graduated Nationals qualifiers Chris Gansen
'97 and Patrick McMurray '97, Yale finished 11th of 16 at the IC4As
and ninth of nine at the Heptagonals.
The men's
football team suffered similar struggles under first-year head coach
Jack Siedlecki, the former
Amherst leader who succeeded Carm Cozza, the winningest coach in
Yale history. Partly due to a wave of injuries that sidelined three
quarterbacks and seven running backs for parts of the year, the
Bulldogs ended the season 1-9 and with an 0-7 Ivy League mark, their
first winless league record since 1958. (Technically, Yale can claim
a victory over Penn, which last month had to forfeit five wins after
a Quaker defensive tackle was found to have been ineligible for
play. But that is cold comfort.)
The Bulldogs'
lone victory came in its third game against Valparaiso at Soldier
Field in Chicago, but the Bulldogs went on to lose their last seven
contests. Yale did, however, deliver one of its top performances
against league champion Harvard in the 114th edition of The Game.
Harvard
entered the final Saturday of the season with a 6-0 league record
and an 8-1 overall mark and opened up a 14-0 halftime lead with
a Chris Menick two-yard touchdown run and a Jared Chupaila 16-yard
scoring catch from quarterback Rich Linden.
But,
as the fourth quarter got under way, the Bulldogs, trailing 17-0,
began to rally. On the second play of the final period, quarterback
Joe Walland '00 scrambled for 22 yards to move the ball to the Yale
43 yard line. Walland then completed consecutive passes to fullback
Eric Johnson '01 to bring the ball to the Harvard 20. Two plays
later, Walland completed an 18-yard pass to the outstretched hands
of Ken Marschner '99 in the right corner of the end zone. The touchdown
brought the Bulldogs within ten points.
After
Harvard failed to convert on fourth-and-two from the Yale 20, Walland
and the offense stormed back onto the field with 6:06 remaining.
Five completions -- three to Jake Borden '00 and two to Marschner -- set
up a first-and-ten on the Harvard 19-yard line with less than two
minutes remaining.
But after
a pair of incomplete passes, the Crimson's Jason Hughes sacked Walland
for a six-yard loss. On fourth down, Walland's pass sailed over
the head of Borden and fell incomplete, ending Yale's hopes of an
upset. Linden downed the ball twice, and with no timeouts, the Bulldogs
could do nothing but hold their heads high after an outstanding
effort.
The Bulldogs
had been outgained by only 12 yards by the league's top scoring
offense and held the ball for nearly seven minutes longer than the
Crimson. Yale played Harvard to its second tightest Ivy League game
of the season and managed to score against a Crimson defense that
shut out second-place Dartmouth and third-place Penn.
Of course,
The Game is not about moral victories, and this edition will go
down as Harvard's final victory in its first 7-0 Ivy League season
ever. But the game may also be remembered as a stepping stone for
the Yale program under Siedlecki. The Bulldogs challenged league
champion Crimson and gave the supporters who have followed the team's
struggles a glimpse of what the program may offer in seasons to
come.
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