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Women's Soccer Seeks Consistency Against B.C.

Erin Matias and the Crimson defense will try to regroup against the B.C. offense, led by forward Michelle Howland.

Against Brown, the Crimson defense was hounded by the pressure brought by Bears middie Nicki Barber. B.C., with Howland in a similar role, will pose the same challenge.

"We've got to get our backfield organized," Wheaton said.

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Another key lies in the attitude of the Crimson players.

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"Our attitude has been too casual," Flionis said. "We have to play with more fire and aggressiveness."

Harvard needs to use this game as a springboard for upcoming conference games.

Although Harvard is tied with Brown and Yale for second place in the Ivy League at 1-1-0, Cornell (3-0-0) threatens to run away from the pack with victories over Columbia, Penn, and most recently Yale.

Yale, which defeated Brown, 1-0, was massacred by Cornell on Saturday, 5-0.

Cornell has won six games in a row, and is just two games away from the longest winning streak in its history.

So far, the Big Red has established itself as the team to beat in the Ivy League.

Harvard's Ivy status rests on back-to-back matchups with Cornell and Yale, on October 19 and 22, respectively.

Victories there would make Harvard a frontrunner for the Ancient Eight crown.

"We're definitely not out of the race yet," Flionis said. "We've only lost once."

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