Word: wideout
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...shared fondness for sports, for settings and trips like that one. Across the bleachers, across the country, football brings families together.On the field, too. Tomorrow, the Ojukwu brothers (junior running back Randy and freshman linebacker Victor) and the Pilconis brothers (junior guard Ryan and sophomore wideout Steven) may stand shoulder-to-shoulder on the Harvard sideline.The Berry twins, junior cornerback Andrew and Princeton receiver Adam, may stand toe-to-toe over the line of scrimmage. And then, somewhere in the vicinity of Harvard Stadium, in the aftermath of the Crimson’s clash with the Tigers, both will find...
...display last season against Harvard, as he entered the game for a slightly injured Jeff Terrell and ran five times for 27 yards in his lone drive on the way to a crucial first-half touchdown.The Crimson secondary, meanwhile, will face the daunting task of containing Tigers wideouts Adam Berry—twin brother of junior cornerback Andrew on the other side of the field—Will Thanheiser and Brendan Circle, a first team All-Ivy selection last season. Circle is averaging 19.3 yards per catch and 73.4 yards per game this season, near the top of the league...
...know, we’re not trying to cure cancer out here. Just relax, have some fun, and hopefully he did today. He’s a great kid, and hopefully he came of age a little bit.” The return game was also improved, as senior wideout Matt Lagace added several long punt returns, including a 25-yarder that set up a game-tying field goal at the end of the first half. EXTRA POINTS Harvard played three of its first four games on the road for the first time since 1888, when the Crimson played four...
...offense, right? Nope—it checks in at 55 percent run. This is on par with Tim Murphy’s historical trends. Even in the early 00’s, when his best offensive players were quarterback Neil Rose and two-time Ivy Player of the Year wideout Carl Morris, Harvard ran more than it threw...
...losses this season.It was Harvard’s one unsuccessful red zone trip, however, which was indicative of the team’s troubles putting the proverbial nail in the coffin this year.Driving early in the fourth quarter, a 17-yard strike from senior quarterback Chris Pizzotti to senior wideout Matt Lagace set up a first-and-goal for the Crimson at the Cornell 5-yard line. A rush by freshman quarterback Collier Winters got the ball to the 1-yard line, but the three Harvard runs that followed netted almost nothing, forcing the Crimson to turn the ball over...