Quarterback Tom Yohe says Harvard needs four touchdowns. Defensive coordinator George Clemens says three.
Just four? Only three?
Army needed more than four touchdowns. Lafayette needed more than four touchdowns.
So did Lehigh and Colgate. So did Bucknell and Brown.
They didn't get 'em and didn't win.
The University of Massachusetts could have scored seven touchdowns and still would have lost.
Holy Cross, Harvard's opponent today, chuckles at four touchdowns. It outright laughs at three.
Holy Cross has beaten its opponents by a count of 391-91. The Crusaders' average margin of victory is 40 points.
Four touchdowns? Four touchdowns won't buy you a sandwich at the Holy Cross deli. Three touchdowns? Three touchdowns? won't get you a Coke.
Holy Cross complies touchdowns the way Imelda Marcos stocks up on shoes. The Cross has a touchdown for every mood and inclination. Need a touchdown with birthday candles? Holy Cross will give it to you. A touchdown for your grandparents' anniversary? Just ask the Crusaders.
Holy Cross carries an 8-0 record, the number-one position in Division I-AA and a reputation for unholy sportsmanship into today's Crimson-Crusader showdown in Worcester. The Cross likes to get opponents down and then make them eat mud. The Cross is not content to merely put you on the ropes. It wants to knock you out of the ring. And then spit on you.
"In a couple of cases, we have been fortunate that we've gotten ahead of teams and been able to put new players into the line-up," says Holy Cross Coach Mark Duffner. "But when we get those people into the game, we don't tell them to just fall down. You know, they want to be impressive out there also."
Army is the only team to come close to beating the Crusaders this year. The Cadets fought valiantly, but fell, 34-24. The rest of the Cross' games have been one-sided scoring festivals.
The Ivy League has sent two teams to the slaughter. Dartmouth took a dive, 62-23, and Brown rolled over, 41-0. In the Brown game, the Cross used a hurry-up offense in the last two minutes simply to ensure a 40-point margin of victory.
Ready, Harvard?
"We're not scared," Yohe says. "I think we're sort of looking forward to it. You don't play against the number one team every year. I just hope our defense can hold them down."
Hold down Jeff Wiley? The Cross QB has thrown for 2723 yards and 28 touchdowns.
Hold down Gordie Lockbaum? The Heisman Trophy candidate has rushed for 10 touchdowns and caught six more. He averages 4.7 yards a run and 15.6 yards a catch.
Hold down a beefy and brutal offensive line? Hold down a team that scores from anywhere at any time on any play?
Hold on a minute.
"Their history is not one of going on long drives," Clemens says. "They have had the fortune of scoring on big plays. So, we have to neutralize their strength, their skilled people and their potential for scoring on a big play. Not an easy assignment."
A Popish Plot
To say Harvard is an underdog would be to say the Pope dabbles in religion. And his Holiness--not to mention the Great Signalcaller in the Sky--probably favors the Cross.
"We're going to come into this game with a psychological advantage," Harvard running back Tony Hinz says. "Holy Cross has a lot to protect with its 8-0 record. They have everything to lose and we have everything to gain."
If Harvard is to win today's game, it will have to get its best defensive performance of the year. And its best offensive performance.
"We're going to have to score four touchdowns and hold them," Yohe says.
"We go into any game thinking if we can score three touchdowns we can win," Clemens says.
Four touchdowns? Three?
Holy Cross is laughing.
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