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Ivy League Lacrosse Title Chase Heats Up; Revenge-Minded Harvard Hosts Brown Today

With the spring vacation losses to independents Hofstra and Adelphi, the Crimson stickmen have probably kissed their NCAA tournament hopes goodbye. Fortunately, another matter of importance, the Ivy League title chase, is just now starting to heat up.

Brown invades the Business School Field this afternoon with a lot hanging in the balance. First, Harvard badly needs a win over the Bruins to thrust itself back into the battle for league honors.

Beyond that, the Brown game has a special meaning for the Harvard coaching staff. Crimson head man Bob Scalise played for the Bruins between 1969 and 1971, garnering All-American honors and a national scoring title. Two springs after Scalise graduated, Crimson assistant Jeff Wagner captained the 1973 Bruin squad, the only team to break Cornell's hold on the Ivy title in the last seven years.

Bar Mitzvah as Coach

After he graduated, before moving to Harvard, Scalise was an assistant to his old coach Cliff Stevenson, who is in his seventeenth year at the Bruin helm. Beating his mentor would signify a coming of age for Scalise as coach. He missed the chance the first time he tried when he ordered his team to run wind sprints just before the game. They tired after building an early lead and lost, 14-12. Last spring Harvard rallied for a six-goal halftime deficit to take the game into overtime, but finally bowed out, 14-10.

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Here's how Brown and the other Ivy League squads shape up this time around: CORNELL: The Big Red won the national championship last year, is ranked first in the polls this year, and is riding a 20-game winning streak. The team was hurt by graduation, but you have to remember that since 1969, while the great players have come and gone, Cornell has gone 45-1 in the Ivy League, winning six of the last seven titles. The latest great to move on is National Player of the Year Mike French (65-40-105), who led the nation in scoring each of his three years at Cornell, setting a new NCAA record each time. Also picking up a sheepskin was the less heralded but equally deadly Jon Levine (48-16-64), along with All-American midfielder Bill Marino.

Dynamite

But Eamon McEneaney (20-61-81), who succeeds French as the best attackman in the nation, returns to run an offense that will feature new faces but the same old explosiveness. All-American goalie Dan Mackesey is back to head an experienced, ironclad defense.

Cornell lacrosse fans need not worry; the 1977 edition will be good--very good. And the Big Red, which beat Harvard last year in Cambridge, 21-7, will be waiting for the Crimson in Ithaca on April 20.

PENN: Coach Jim Adams returns only a small nucleus of lettermen, but they are good ones. Three All-Ivy stars, middie Mike Page, attackman Pete Hollis and defenseman Don DelGiorno, head the list.

With last Saturday's 11-9 triumph over the Crimson, the Quakers stayed undefeated and earned fourth place in the national poll. Penn travels to Ithaca four days after Harvard for a game that might well decide this year's race.

Princeton Has No Discipline

PRINCETON: According to most observers, Scalise included, the Tigers have had plenty of talent the last few years, but have lacked the discipline to win big. That shortcoming may have been rectified with the arrival of a new coach, Mike Hanna, who helped Navy to five straight NCAA tournament berths as an assistant.

Now that French has left McEneaney alone at Cornell, Hanna has the best one-two attack punch in the Ivy League: Second-team All-American Wickie Sollers (49-19-68) and his All-Ivy sidekick Dave Tickner (34-32-66). Both players will undoubtedly break the school's career scoring record by midseason.

The highlight of Scalise's young coaching career came here in Cambridge against the Tigers last spring, when Harvard came from behind to win, 11-10. However, the edge must go to Princeton this spring because the game is down there.

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