Word: digiacomoã
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Dates: during 2004-2004
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...DiGiacomo??€™s unexpected precision left the secondary unexpectedly shaken, but a different strategy would not have rendered him any less accurate a passer. He would still have found his targets and his offensive line couldn’t have been under any less pressure. But the yards after catch surrendered because of the defensive backfield’s posture left Harvard reeling...
...after 31 first-half points, the Bears’ offense suddenly shifted away from the effective playcalling that had baffled the Crimson. Hartigan continued to run the ball, but the play fakes dwindled. Brown tried to score, but tried harder to manage the clock. DiGiacomo??€™s magical touch faded when he remained in the pocket on three-step drops...
...when Harvard rallied and the Bears again needed to move the ball, the Crimson was no longer biting on DiGiacomo??€™s sleight of hand. His passes fell incomplete and Hartigan was rebuffed...
DiGiacomo converted on fourth-and-l5 with a 17-yard pass to Schreck to bring the Bears as close as the Crimson’s 10. The Harvard defense stepped up big, however, wrapping Hartigan and pressuring DiGiacomo??€™s receivers. Brown decided to settle for a field goal to get back within...
...first half—a figure that most offenses would be proud of for an entire game. It allowed receiver Jarret Schreck, who is generously listed at 5’9, to catch everything in sight and mount up 194 yards receiving in the first half alone. Quarterback Joe DiGiacomo??€”who is not known as a top Ivy quarterback—picked apart the Harvard secondary with pass after pass down field...