Elsewhere, senior Co-Captain Joe Carrabino, last year's Ivy League Player of the Year and already a leading candidate for that honor this year, needs 190 more points to become Harvard's all-time leading scorer.
Fellow senior Co-Captain Bob Ferry, meanwhile, needs just 92 points to move into third place on the all-time scoring list.
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Remember when Harvard had more trouble on the road than Charles Kuralt?
It wasn't that long ago that the Crimson was mired in a 14-game losing streak away from Briggs Cage But on the heels of that skid--which ended last season with a 79-71 victory at Columbia--Harvard has put together a seven-game winning streak on the road.
Four of those seven wins-six of which are Ivy--have come this year.
The last Harvard loss on the road was the double-overtime doozy (77-74) at Penn a year ago.
Nevertheless, a date with second ranked Duke in Durham, N.C. next month figures to bring an end to this streak real soon.
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Lending credence to the argument that Harvard might get itself in trouble if it doesn't start substituting a little more often is this fact: In the first half this year, Harvard is averaging 32.8 points That's seven more than its opponents.
But while its averaging 35.8 in the second half, that's only 0.3 more than its opponents.
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In the Carrabino department, J. C. has scored in double figures in 34 straight games.
But his 20 points at Princeton marked the first time in 20 games he didn't lead Harvard in scoring. Ironically, he didn't lead the Crimson in scoring Saturday night at Penn, either, though he did contribute 22 points.
Carrabino, Ferry and Duncan, meanwhile, have accounted for 77 percent of Harvard's scoring.
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