Five plays later, Hinz was streaking down the field for a 73-yd. score. Harvard's lead increased to 32 points.
Simple Math
The new Harvard math: two turnovers plus two broken plays equals 21 Crimson points.
So, while Dartmouth bobbled the ball, the Crimson cradled it into the end zone. Those are signs of two teams going in opposite directions.
Now, the Big Green travels to Cornell, and Teevens hopes Dartmouth's juggling acts and interceptions cease. He hopes to break his team's string of broken plays.
As for Harvard, its juggling act within the Ivy standings has ended also. The gridders are back in the league race. Right now, they don't want to turn this opportunity over.