Word: goals
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...field. An onside kick, recovered by Remick, placed the ball on the 25-yard line, and on the next play Dana, receiving the ball from Cate on a forward pass, advanced it to the 1-yard line. Hoffman scored on the next play, and Jones kicked the goal. Soon after the next kick-off the Sophomores received the ball on downs, but were unable to gain and kicked to Brooks who ran the ball back to the 10-yard line. Hoffman scored in two plays, but Jones failed to kick the goal. After receiving the kick-off, the Sophomores fumbled...
...Seniors. The latter were held for downs, and on the next play Case advanced the ball to the 20-yard line by a long end run. On the following play Sheip intercepted a forward pass and ran the length of the field for a touchdown. Jones missed the goal. The Sophomores received the kick-off and advanced the ball to the 30-yard line, from which point Case scored just before the whistle blew. Voshell kicked the goal...
...among the spectators that secured the victory. This was perhaps a relic of the ancient by-gone days when in no less of an affair than a championship intercollegiate contest the sympathizers of one of the contending teams swarmed on the field at the psychological moment and wrenched the goal posts form the ground to prevent their opponents from scoring a goal in the old-fashioned game...
...even cleverer and more determined than themselves when they tried to pull another game out of the fire in the second half. It was a source of the keenest delight to the Harvard stands to see men substituted from time to time, one man here to score the field goal, another there to bolster up the defence, and still another to meet Yale at their own punting game and drive them back from the goal line. This is a feature of tactical football which has been conspicuously lacking in recent years...
...second half after Princeton had scored early in the game. During the entire first half, Yale was outplayed. The speedy Princeton backs, and especially Tibbott, managed to run around the ends for long gains, from which Princeton's touchdown resulted. The nearest Yale got to the opposing goal was the 13-yard line where an attempted forward pass failed. In the second half, Princeton at first kept the advantage, but as the game went on the team tired and could no longer hold Coy's terrific rushes. His playing, probably the most brilliant seen on the football field this year...