Word: duals
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...University has not won a dual meet with Yale since 1922; when they came out a fraction over six points ahead. In the last two years the Blue team has triumphed by the scores of 89 1-2 to 45 1-2 and 73 1-2 to 61 1-2. This brings Yale's total number of wins to 19, while Harvard lags behind with 13 victories since the dual meets began...
...quarter-mile race Yale is the favorite with new Intercollegiate placers in Gage and Paulson. Captain Gage of Yale has not lost a dual meet quarter-mile race this year. Kane and Allen are the Crimson's strongest entries. Against Princeton the Harvard men came in one and two just ahead of Drews of Nassau. Drews was also a close third against Yale, Gage winning the race and Seacen, better known as a jumper, scoring second. The winners in both meets, Kane of Harvard and Gage of Yale, can break 50 seconds for the distance. Gage, however, is slightly...
There is also a bright side to the picture. With the trio of aces, Watters, Haggerty, and Tibbetts, Harvard ought to win first in the half-mile and two-mile. Yale has no men who can approach the previous performances of these three. It is not unlikely that the dual meet records in these events will fall. Captain Dunker in the shotput and Berglund in the hammer will each add five more points to the team's score...
...mile Yale has two good men. Briggs, who came in fourth in the Intercollegiates, and Smith, who captured the title in the Yale-Princeton dual meet. Tibbetts of Harvard won the race at Philadelphia last Saturday in 9 minutes 26 6-10 seconds. He is assured a first against Yale, but whether Cutcheon or Ryan can get a second is another question. Cutcheon won in the meet against Princeton in 9 minutes 45 seconds, while Smith beat the Tigers in four seconds less...
...yard dash Lundell will have a difficult job on his hands with Norton. The Yale sprinter won two firsts in the dual meet last year, and the Elis expect him to repeat that performance this spring. Lundell and Miller are distinctly obstacles to be considered in the way of this champion. Peck is another Crimson runner who should give Norton opposition. Both Peck and Lundell ran the 220 in 22 seconds flat against Princeton, equalling the dual meet record. It is true that Norton is in the habit of sprinting the 220 in something like 21 2-10 seconds...