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Matthew
Goldenberg, a senior in Calhoun College, is a sports writer for
the Yale Herald.
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Danger
on the hoof
To watch Jac Gould '00 play soccer is to see an artist at
work. The Phoenix native combines blistering speed with solid
foot skills to wreak havoc on opposing defenses. One of the
nation's most potent offensive players, he scored 15 goals
in 17 games this season on his way to earning Ivy League Player
of the Year honors.
"He
is probably the most dangerous striker in the league," head
coach Brian Tompkins said. "Jac's speed is remarkable. There
aren't many guys who can keep up with him."
Harvard's defenders certainly couldn't. In a September grudge
match between the traditional rivals, Gould netted two goals,
including the game-winner in the second sudden-death overtime
period, to lead the Bulldogs to a 5-4 win in Cambridge. He
registered a pair of hat tricks on the year, scoring all of
Yale's goals in the 3-1 win over Davidson and the 3-0 blanking
of Cornell. In a narrow 5-4 loss to Hartford, he scored two
goals in a span of just 20 seconds.
Gould's athleticism has certainly not been lost on Yale's
track coaches. When he is not on the soccer field, Gould can
be found sprinting for the Blue. During last winter's indoor
season, he recorded the fastest times for an Eli runner in
the 55-, 100-, and 400-meter dashes.
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Some
recovery!
In
her first two years at Yale, Ariana Kelly '99 was hardly a
remarkable cross-country runner. "Freshman year, I was injured
most of the time," she says. "I spent most of sophomore year
at the back of the pack." Nearly two years later, however,
Kelly is a champion.
"She's
the first dominant runner we've had in the past five years,"
head coach Mark Young '68 said. "She's really become a force."
As a junior, Kelly emerged as the squad's top athlete, finishing
fourth at the Heptagonals and qualifying for the NCAA Championships,
where she placed 43rd.
In her senior season, Kelly was even better. She swept through
the early part of the schedule, winning every race she entered.
She placed first in the Harvard-Yale-Princeton meet and captured
the ECAC individual title. Heading into the Heptagonals in
New York, she was the odds-on favorite.
Kelly did not disappoint. She won the race, completing the
5,000-meter course in a time of 17:40.9 and establishing herself
as the premier runner in the Ivy League. "It was a really
satisfying victory," she says. "I am really happy to leave
the Ivies on that kind of note." Who wouldn't be? With the
victory, Kelly became the first Yale woman in ten years to
capture the league's individual title. She went on to compete
in the NCAA championships for a second straight year, again
placing in the top half of runners.
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Yes-sss!
A
last-minute football victory over Harvard was just the icing on
the cake for Yale's fall sports teams, which compiled the best collective
record in the Ivy League. Their perennial waiting for next year,
it appears, is over.
February
1999
by Matthew Goldenberg '99
Yale
football coach Jack Siedlecki
stood at the 20-yard line in Brown Stadium, beaming. As he
prepared to address the players, coaches, and fans who crowded around
him, his radiant smile and youthful giddiness told the story. Just
moments before, quarterback Joe Walland '00 had led the offense
on a 79-yard drive for the ages. Trailing the Bears 28-24 with just
53 seconds to go, the Bulldogs appeared headed for their 14th consecutive
Ivy loss. But Walland had other ideas, and proceeded to complete
five of eight passes to bring the Elis to the Brown 27 with six
seconds to go. On the game's final play, Walland lofted a pass to
the back corner of the end zone, where 6'-4" wide receiver Jake
Borden '00 made a miraculous catch.
As the
faithful gathered around a jubilant Siedlecki after the game, the
coach delivered a simple message: "We're back."
And so,
it would seem, is much of Yale's athletic program.
In a
long-awaited resurgence, the 1998 Yale football team emerged with
vigor from some of its darkest days. Just one year after going 1-9
overall and winless in the Ivy League, the Bulldogs -- a consensus
pick to finish last in the conference for a third straight season -- stormed back to respectability. A three-game, season-ending winning
streak that included victories over both Princeton and Harvard lifted
the Blue to its first winning record (6-4) since 1990 and a second-place
Ivy finish (5-2). And, although the Bulldogs fell one game short
of the conference crown, they served notice that Yale football is
on course to its preferred place in the upper echelons of the Ivy
League.
The turnaround
is consistent with Siedlecki's past successes at Worcester Polytechnic
and Amherst, where he also inherited losing programs and turned
them into winners. (Siedlecki's one regret at Amherst was never
beating the college's archrival, Williams; that curse has already
been lifted at Yale.)
One
key to this rebirth has been the liberal philosophy on offense that
Siedlecki and his staff brought with them to New Haven in 1997.
Reverses, halfback passes, and fake punts were common occurrences
at the Bowl this season. This flexibility served to complement a
solid, more traditional offensive scheme. Behind the passing and
scrambling strength of Walland and the rushing ability of tailback
Rashad Bartholomew '01, a transfer from the Air Force Academy, the
Bulldogs boasted one of the league's most balanced attacks. On the
year, Walland set new single-season school records for completions,
attempts, and passing yards, breaking the marks set by Kelly Ryan
'88 in all three categories. Walland was second in the conference
in all-purpose yardage and tops in rushing among Ivy quarterbacks.
Bartholomew,
whose 4.49 speed in the 40 allows him to hit holes and round corners
faster than any Yale back in recent history, averaged more than
93 yards per game and earned first-team All-Ivy honors. Both Walland
and Bartholomew benefited from a strong offensive line anchored
by tackle Marek Rubin '99. Another All-Ivy performer, Rubin established
himself as an NFL prospect and was invited to play in the Blue-Gray
All-Star Classic.
While
this new offensive firepower was a welcome departure from last season,
the Eli defense was suspect, especially early in the year. But with
experience came monumental improvement for the Elis. In fact, it
was the defense that ultimately carried Yale to its happy ending.
In the thrilling 31-28 win over Princeton at the Bowl, the Bulldogs
forced one fumble and intercepted six Tiger passes, returning two
for touchdowns.
The defense
delivered an even more impressive performance against Harvard in
the 115th edition of The Game. With Walland and Bartholomew both
hampered by ankle injuries, the offense sputtered, gaining a meager
176 yards and eight first downs. But in its most inspired performance
of the year (Harvard magazine called it "larceny"), the Bulldog
defense compensated for the lack of offensive production by shutting
down Harvard. "That was probably the best defensive game I've ever
seen a team play," Siedlecki said. "I don't know if I've ever seen
a team go on the field that many times and perform at the level
that we performed in this game, series after series after series."
Leading
7-0 late in the third quarter, the Crimson again made its way to
the Yale doorstep. But on third-and-goal from the one-yard line,
Bulldog cornerback Todd Tomich '01 stuffed Harvard tailback Damon
Jones just shy of the end zone. The ensuing field goal try sailed
wide left. On Harvard's next possession, Jeff Hockenbrock '00 blocked
another field goal attempt, keeping the Bulldogs within striking
distance. After a Yale touchdown that brought the Elis to within
one at 7-6 (the extra point was blocked), Harvard gained possession
with a chance to run out the clock and escape with the victory.
But Ben Blake '00 delivered a crushing blow to Crimson quarterback
Rich Linden, forcing a fumble that Hockenbrock recovered deep in
Harvard territory. Four plays later, All-Ivy placekicker Mike Murawczyk
'01 booted a 27-yard attempt through the uprights to give Yale a
9-7 lead it would not relinquish. "Now Yale's back on track," Murawczyk
said after the victory. "It's about time."
Perhaps
no one was more excited about -- or responsible for -- the Bulldogs'
triumph than athletic director Tom
Beckett.
Since arriving at Yale in 1994, he has resuscitated a moribund
department. By improving relations with the admissions office and
hiring highly skilled coaches in a variety of sports, Beckett has
moved Yale steadily upward. "Our goal in every sport that the Ivy
League sponsors is to win the title," Beckett said. "We are now
in a position to do that in most sports." If the Ivy League awarded
a commissioner's trophy for the best all-around athletic program
after the fall season, Yale would win. Although no Bulldog squad
captured a conference title, all five team sports had winning league
and overall records. In fact, Yale's combined conference record
in the five sports (23-12) was the best in the Ivies, quite a feat
considering that just two years ago Yale's combined league record
in these same sports was a mere 12-22.
This
turnaround can be credited in part to women's field hockey coach
Marisa Didio, who came to Yale after successful stints at Northwestern
and New Hampshire. In her second season in New Haven, she has turned
a program that went 1-5 in the league in 1996 into a title contender.
Led by captain Lindsay Hobbs '99 and Ivy Rookie of the Year Amanda
Walton '02, the Bulldogs beat Harvard twice to finish second in
the conference (5-2) and capture the ECAC postseason tournament
crown. The women's soccer team, led by coach Rudy Meredith, also
captured an ECAC tournament title.
Under
third-year coach Brian Tompkins, who inherited a team that went
1-6 in the league in 1995, men's soccer recorded its third straight
winning season and finished second in the conference (5-2). Ivy
Player of the Year Jac Gould '00 [see story at left] and All-Ivy
forward Phil Harris '00 comprised the league's most potent attack.
Against no teams was this offensive might better demonstrated than
in wins over Princeton and Harvard. The Bulldogs captured the Big
Three championship by downing the Tigers 7-4 and edging the Crimson
5-4.
No Yale
team dominated Harvard more than volleyball, which defeated its
archrival three times on the way to a second consecutive third-place
finish at the Ivy tournament. The Bulldogs were led by Rosie Wustrack
'99, arguably the best player in school history. A three-time first-team
All-Ivy performer and two-time league player of the year, Wustrack
registered an outstanding senior season, breaking the school records
for career kills and blocks. Success on the volleyball court is
nothing new for Yale players. In her 13 seasons at the helm, head
coach Peg Scofield has built a perennial title contender. Until
very recently, her program was one of Yale's few consistent winners.
But this
year, Scofield's team is less unusual. With the return to prominence
in football, field hockey, and soccer, the goal of a department-wide
renaissance is becoming a reality.
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