There's absolutely no way Ferry can catch either Fleming or Carrabino, but this weekend he should become only the third player in Crimson history to score 1300 points.
No wonder the Harvard Squad is enjoying its Renaissance, what with two of the Crimson's top three all-time scorers playing on the same team.
Certainly, Carrabino and Ferry make the Class of 1985 the highest scoring class in Harvard hoop history. No two players in the top 10 on the all-time scoring list ever graduated in the same class before.
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After a red-hot start, Harvard's Big Three--Carrabino. Ferry and Duncan--have cooled off considerably.
In the last six games, Carrabino's percentage from the floor has dropped from .619 to .565. That's still a career high, but his 12 out of 26 performance last weekend was his worst of the year.
Interestingly, his 17 points at Columbia Saturday night would have been a season low if he hadn't just recorded a season low of 14 the night before at Cornell.
Ferry, still the hottest player for the season, is in the worst slump of anyone right now.
In the last six games, his percentage has dipped from .629 to .584. That's still a career high, but his 7 for 18 showing last weekend was, like Carrabino's his worst of the year.
In fact, in just two games, Ferry's percentage from the floor dropped from .605 to .584.
Finally, in the last six games, Dunean's percentage from the floor has dropped from .608 to .584
Nevertheless, the Big Three are still accounting for 75.7 percent of Harvard's points, and they're also accounting for 70 percent of Harvard's rebounds.
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Carrabino's career free throw percentage of 85.6 percent ranked him fifth nationally among Division I seniors coming into this season. Considering that he's shooting 89.7 from the line this year, he could conceivably finish in the top three.
Ferry, meanwhile, had a career free throw percentage of 85.7 percent entering this season. That placed him fourth nationally among Division I seniors. Ferr however, is shooting just 84 percent from the line this year, so he could conceivably drop from the top five by the end of his career.
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