Word: doping
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...eliminate organized scouting, of course, would not stop graduates who see teams playing from sending in "dope", but it would be less scientific, and at least be some advance. This step would include the abolishment of sending, at the expense of the athletic association, a coach to watch future opponents play, and also sending any members of the team to such games as the Yale-Princeton contest...
Athletic fans are all addicted to a peculiar malady known as "dope". At the beginning of any athletic season, those interested in the particular sport forecast the program with their "dope"; during the season the dope continues, and after the season these same men start doping the next season. I have heard many men say that they did not believe in this sort of thing, but in the end we all come to it, and without "dope" or forecast, there could be no comprehensive planning for the season ahead...
...dope" on this year's Cross-Country Team was not encouraging. Starting the season without a single "H" man on the squad, we might have faced the season with a gloomy outlook. Added to this we had behind us a record of defeats dating back to 1916, for during the interim between 1916 and 1921 not a single race had been won by any Harvard Cross-Country Team. Last spring, however, we learned that the only way we were to achieve success ultimately, was by progress. We saw what progress did for the Track Team, and while we hoped that...
According to "comparative scores" any fool can dope out that because Princeton defeated Harvard 10 to 3 and Yale beat Princeton 13 to 7 Yale is 13 points ahead of Harvard before the opening whistle blows. But we must not forget that half of the Princeton team was wheeled from the hospital to the Bowl. Yet that is about all that can be said to disprove the notion that Yale has the edge...
Paul Crane '17, a four-team man, emphasized the opportunities for a scholarship man at New Haven. The football situation was soon referred to again. Paper dope can never be relied on, but undoubtedly the system being broken by the war had a lot to do with it. The greatest mistake by far was, however, the use of old-fashioned football. It's different now, not brawn but 99 percent brains. There won't be any mistakes next year and every one is confident of success...