Word: bearsã
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...keep possession, it makes the defense’s job a lot easier,” Johnson said. Harvard finishes the season against Penn, but the finale is still about a month away, and with that in mind, the Crimson’s focus is firmly on the Bears??and ruining the chances of any Ivy contender it comes across afterwards. “You can’t look too far ahead,” Craig said. “That said, it’s always fun to spoil it for other teams...
...game-winning score came on sophomore kicker Matt Schindel’s 29-yard field goal—his second in the extra frames—after Brown kicker Steve Morgan missed wide left on a 42-yarder on the Bears?? possession. The Crimson has now won 13 in a row dating back to last season, the longest active winning streak in Division...
...quarter, with the Bears already ahead 7-0, Morgan left a 46-yard field goal short. Minutes later, following Brown’s second touchdown, he pushed his extra-point try wide for the first missed PAT of his career. At the time, the two misses scarcely mattered. The Bears?? offense was on cruise control with 16 points to its credit already and many more likely to soon follow...
Schreck and his quarterback, Joe DiGiacomo, were the primary beneficiaries of Harvard’s stop-the-run-first defensive strategy, which packed eight and even nine defenders into the box while leaving the Bears?? wide receivers in single coverage. More often than not, the Crimson’s cornerbacks simply weren’t up to the task, allowing the speedy Schreck to gain separation before bringing in first-down catches, highlighted by a perfectly executed 42-yard touchdown strike down the right sideline...
...must have appeared to most Ivy League defenses—Harvard’s included—which, with a bit of help from the Bears?? out-of-conference opponents, surrendered 1,263 yards and 17 touchdowns to the 6’2, 220-lb. rusher in 2004. Those totals were good enough for second in the Ancient Eight, behind only the Crimson’s Clifton Dawson...