Word: foes
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Sunday, Harvard met Ivy League foe Brown in the semifinals. Up to that point, Brown had had easy wins over Marist and Penn State, and was on the short list of teams looking to take the tournament as the No. 4 seed. Fish switched around the doubles teams, pairing up a previously injured Lingman with Lee at No. 2 to replace Oli Choo. It proved to be a good move as Green and Styperek won at No. 1 and Lee/Lingman won at 2 to take the doubles point...
Harvard will play Georgetown, the No. 16 seed, in the first round. The ECAC field has 16 teams in a single-elimination tournament, and while 1998 finals foe Virginia Tech won't be participating, Fish says the Crimson should watch out for fellow Ivy League teams Columbia and Princeton...
...only does Harvard have the confidence, but it also has the heart. Boasting a crop of sensational first-years, coupled with the depth of talented veterans, the Crimson has once again become a formidable foe in the Ivy League...
Harvard got out to a strong start in the 1998 season, crushing Vermont 5-0 and Ivy foe Columbia 4-1 in the first two weeks of play. An early match-up against No. 3 ranked Connecticut, however, proved too much for the Crimson, as the team battled for a 3-1 loss...
Next up for Harvard was tough Ivy foe, Princeton. The Tigers gave the Crimson a bit more of a fight, but behind the solid play of Blake and Majmudar, Harvard cruised to a 5-2 win. In the final, it was more of the same, as the Crimson clinched the title with a 4-2 victory over Virginia Tech...