Word: doublesized
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Harvard was on target from the start in the doubles portion of the match. The No. 3 team of co-captain Dalibor Snyder and sophomore Mark Riddell struck first against Princeton’s Dan Friedman and Josh Burman. On match point, Snyder made an impressive falling-over-backwards overhead...
Harvard swept the doubles matches for the day’s first point, with the No. 1 team of Lingman and Chu winning 8-0. Playing the No. 3 singles for the match was sophomore Chris Chiou and freshman Dan Haimovic, who made good use of their rare starting role...
The doubles sweep was fitting because Harvard also swept the singles matches. Lingman and Chu took the first two singles slots, with Nguyen and Riddell both winning handily in the No. 3 and No. 4 spots. Lee had the easiest time of any Harvard player, winning his sixth singles match...
Which Harvard does, in spades. The pairing of Chiou and Haimovic at No. 3 doubles against Columbia is evidence of that. Harvard has been very successful at winning the doubles points all year, but brought in a different team to experiment with chemistry and still suffered no setback.
“It’s important for us to try different doubles combinations,” Mandeau said. “By trying different combinations, it gives us more options at the end of the season.”