Word: hagan
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...stepped up to fill. Junior Neil Sherlock led the team in rushing, racking up 70 net yards on 11 carries as well as returning a kickoff 22 yards. Sophomore tailback Charles Baakel had six carries for 31 yards, including a 13-yard rush. Sophomore quarterback Liam O’Hagan scrambled for 32 yards and a touchdown. RUN OVER Columbia’s running game really hasn’t gone anywhere all season, but against Harvard, the Lions’ rush was exceptionally anemic. On 27 attempts, Columbia netted minus-14 yards, averaging a half-yard loss per carry...
...team (5-3, 3-2 Ivy) scored 41 points in the first half—more than any Crimson team since 1985—on the way to a rout of Columbia (2-6, 0-5) 55-7 at Wien Stadium on Saturday. Sophomore quarterback Liam O’Hagan, assisted by backup Richard Irvin, led the team up and down the field, scoring six offensive touchdowns. But the real standout plays came from the defense, which added three interceptions and recovered two fumbles. With its third victory in the last four games, Harvard has gotten back on track after...
...Murphy touches upon in every single press conference: turnovers. And throughout the early part of the season, the Crimson was giving up too many and not getting enough. Harvard surrendered more turnovers in each of its first four games than did its opponents. Sophomore quarterback Liam O’Hagan threw nine interceptions in his first four contests and the Crimson ranked dead last in the Ivy league in turnover differential. But slowly, Harvard has begun to turn those numbers around. After losing the turnover battle for four straight weeks, the Crimson has now created more turnovers than...
...field against the Big Green looking to play solid football and improve. Contending for a title was out of everybody’s mind. The hope for the rest of the season was two-fold. Obviously, wins were still most important. But also, developing sophomore Liam O’Hagan, his new favorite target freshman Alex Breaux, and the rest of Harvard’s young and talented core were priorities. As much as everyone tried to avoid saying it, thoughts—at least in some respect—must have drifted to next year. And then Saturday came...
...touchdown. Following a Big Green score that pulled it back within 14, the Crimson (4-3, 2-2) used three straight Dartmouth personal foul penalties to set itself up with a first-and-goal at the two—a drive which sophomore quarterback Liam O’Hagan easily capped with a sneak. Special teams came into play again on the ensuing kickoff, when sophomore Matt Schindel’s short kick squirted around on the ground, allowing the Crimson to recover on the Big Green’s 32-yard line. The next play saw Dawson take...