Harvard Co-Captain Ceci Clark may want to start investing in extra shelf-space. With all the trophies and plaques she's winning, she's going to need it.
The Mather senior picked up her second Ivy League Player of the Year honor Friday for her outstanding performance on the women's lacrosse team's defensive unit.
Earlier this season, Clark picked up the same award for leading the field hockey squad to Ivy and ECAC titles, as well as its first NCAA berth.
Clark has few of the flashy statistics some of her teammates do, but her primary assets is a famed on-field intensity, a work ethic that led her to pick up 50 ground balls this season (best for Harvard).
"She's really been the anchor of our team," Coach Carole Kleinfelder said. "She might have had one bad game all season. Other than that she's been consistent, a team leader. I know she's not flashy. I know attack players get more stats. But even if you ask the team who the best player is, the consensus would be Ceci Clark."
Clark was also a unanimous selection to the All-Ivy first team.
It Could Have Been Anyone:If Clark had not been named player of the year, the Ivy coaches would not have had to look far for another honoree.
The coaches could have just as easily picked Harvard's other standout players: junior attacker Liz Bakery, or Co-Captain Sarah Leery, both of whom were unanimous selections to the first team. Bakery, who garnered first team honors last year, led the league in overall (45 goals, 8 assists) and Ivy (21 goals, 3 assists) scoring. Leary, making her third appearance on the first team, was the league's top goaltender.
Harvard also placed two sophomores on the first team, Mather residents Sarah Downing and Francie Walton.
Probably the only surprise about the all-Ivy squad was the absence of senior Buffy Hansen from the first team. "I thought Buffy could have gotten something more this year. She shows more than just scoring. She's all over the field," Kleinfelder said.
Hansen was voted to the second team along with senior Becky Gaffney.
An Ivy Final Four:Virginia and Princeton will join Maryland and Harvard at the Final four this weekend after they knocked off two squads from Pennsylvania.
The Cavaliers slammed Penn State, 11-4, in Charlottesville, Va., while the Tigers upset Temple, 11-6, in Philadelphia, Penn.
Harvard will now face Princeton Saturday, while Virginia meets Maryland.
The Crimson, which has not lost a game to Princeton in 10 years (including a 1989 NCAA semi-final contest), crushed the then-first ranked Tigers, 13-2 at Ohiri Field earlier this year.
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1989 HARVARD FOOTBALL STATISTICS 1-3 Overall, 1-0 Ivy