Word: teams
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...graduation of Captain Rand greatly lessens the strength of the team in both hurdles. Gardner is still available for the low hurdles, for which there are few other promising runners unless A. Sweetser '11 gets back into condition. In the high hurdles Long and A. R. Dupont '12 must be depended upon...
...experience of the past season has shown, the development of a winning track team depends very largely on efficient coaching. This has already been provided for next year by the reappointment of Coaches Donovan and Quinn; and with material much more promising than that which was available at the start of the past season, there is good ground for expecting next year's record to show improvement over that of 1909. Yale's exceptionally well-balanced team will be much broken by the graduation of several reliable men, so that at present the chances of victory in the dual meet...
...points in the intercollegiates, R. G. Harwood '09, R. P. Pope '10, and W. M. Rand '09, representing together 7 2-5 points, will be lost by graduation, leaving a potential 31 7-10 points. Of the 48 4-5 points made by the 1909 team in the dual meet with Yale, 6 1-5 are represented by the three men who graduate, leaving as a nucleus for 1910 twelve men who won 42 3-5 points...
...winning of points one year gives ground for expectation, the 1910 team should be a well-balanced one, with least strength in the broad jump and hammer-throw. Foster's remarkable development under Coach Donovan promises another sprinter of Schick's reliability, and Blumer, Watson, Cummin and Billings provide second string material in the two dashes. Blumer, Kelley, Merrihew, and deSelding have all shown much ability in the 440-yard dash, and the first two at least should improve. D. P. Ranney '12, winner of this event in the meet with the Yale freshmen, will be a valuable...
...Winward are the most promising, as Little will probably confine himself to the shot-put. In this event he is an almost certain winner, and Goddard is a possible point winner. Once more the hammer-throw presents a lack of heavy men, and Douglas and Parker of the 1912 team, each capable of only about 125 feet are the only other men in sight...