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Carrabino Shatters Scoring Mark

Lions Top Cagers

With 3:45 to go in the first half of last night's Harvard men's basketball game against Columbia, Joe Carrabino put his 11th and 12th points of the evening on the board and put himself into the Harvard record books.

That 18-ft. jump shot earned the senior co-captain his 1797th and 1790th career points, making him Harvard's all-time leading scorer.

But even Carrabino's 24 points on the evening couldn't keep the Crimson (now 14-7 overall, 6-5 Ivy) from falling, 62-58, to Columbia (10-13, 6-5), before 500 at Briggs Athletic Center.

His 1810 career points make the first-team. Academic All-American selection (see accompanying story) the only Harvard cager to pass the 1800 mark. He also passed Don Fleming '82, who set the old record almost exactly three years ago, on Feb. 27, 1982.

"I look back on my career and I've scored over 1800 points and I don't know where they all came from," an exhausted Carrabino said later, crediting his teammates and his coaches for allowing him to shoot as much as he has.

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Ironically, before last night the 1983-84 Ivy League Player of the Year and first-team all-league selection had set only one Harvard scoring record, points scored by a freshman (380), in 1980-81, when he was also Ivy Rookie of the Year.

Even more ironically, Harvard's third loss in row and fourth in the last five games came as Yale was upsetting league-leading Penn, 77-75.

A Crimson victory would have left the cagers in a tie with Cornell, tonight's opponent, for second in the Ivies.

Instead, the Crimson falls into a three-way tie with Columbia and Princeton for third place in the league, behind Penn and Cornell.

"I really feel bad for these guys," Harvard Coach Frank McLaughlin said. "We're going through a real tough time right now.

"We're not a come-from-behind team," he added. "We have to control the tempo in order to be successful."

But the Lions, led by hot-shooting reserve guard Mark Settles--who went 8-for-10 from the field and 4-for-4 from the foul line--did all the controlling the hosts could handle.

When Settles hit three consecutive jumpers just after the 14-minute mark of the first half, he destroyed a stubborn Harvard lead, and when he sank two free-throws with 15 seconds remaining in the contest, he sank the Crimson for good.

"I don't know what happened," said a visibly drained Co-Captain Bob Ferry, who fouled out of the contest by sending Settles to the line for those final opportunities. "I just don't know what to say."

The senior guard took a beautiful over-the-basket pass from junior Arne Duncan and cut the visitors' lead to three, 99-56, with 36 seconds remaining in the game.

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