Late at night, Coach Joe Restic must fantasize about his ideal football team.
To run the ultra-complex "Multiflex" offense, he'd have an experienced, intelligent quarterback, as skilled on the run as he is on the pass.
He'd envision three offensive backs, each complementing the other: one with speed, one with brawn, one with both.
And visions of a defense loaded with experience would dance in his head.
In the 22nd year of his reign, the silverhaired, gravelly-voiced coach is seeing some of his dreams come true. But they are threatening to come undone by a nightmare: a flimsy offensive line unable to protect his runners and passers.
On paper, Harvard is poised to challenge for the Ivy crown which has eluded the men of autumn since 1987.
Unlike past years, key positions were all filled well before the 1992 training camp. But all that glitters is not gold. Especially in football.
After you look past the star positions, Harvard's picture gets gray.
How gray? Charcoal.
On the offensive line, at linebacker, and in parts of the secondary, Harvard lacks proven talent.
But you won't find team members talking about that. The buzzwords around the practice field this year are experience--and confidence. "We're a lot more confident than we were thistime last year," said junior quarterback MikeGiardi. "All our backs understand each other. Wewent in the first day calling plays we weren'tcalling till the third week last year." Senior fullback Mike Hill said, "Everyone isreally confident. We know the plays inside andout. We know how to run the Multiflex." That's certainly good news. Restic's Multiflexis designed to confuse opposing teams, but withoutexperienced players it often has the reverseeffect. Witness Harvard in 1989: the team stumbledto fourth place in the Ivy League because it couldnot find a capable QB. In Giardi, Restic has a signal callercustommade for the Multiflex: a strong passer,wily runner, and innovative leader. Last year,Giardi collected a laundry list of honors--Harvardrecords for most rushing touchdowns and mosttouchdowns total, as well as New England DivisionOne Player of the Week and Team Most ValuablePlayer--for his magical performances against, toname a few, Army, Princeton and Dartmouth. For that, the press likened the Salem, Mass.native to everyone from former Harvard star TomYohe '89 (Restic's most cherished formerquarterback) to Larry Bird to the next Messiah. With Giardi in that kind of company, it's nowonder expectations are running high for thebackfield. And they should be. Along with Giardi, Harvardhas three quality offensive backs: Senior KendrickJoyce is a hard-nosed halfback, known for hisblazing speed. Senior Captain Robb Hirsch, Mr.All-Purpose, is an unstoppable force whether he'srushing or receiving. (He's only been dropped fora loss on a rush two times--yes, two times--in hiscollegiate football career.) The third, Hill, provides a combination of thetwo, and should fill in the hole left by thegraduation of Matt Johnson. Though his strength is on the ground, Giardi'sarm is strong enough to lead an air attack. Thisyear, he will have senior split end Colby Maher,his favorite target in '91. The undersized, butsurehanded, senior Chris Taylor should also makean impact backing up Maher. Restic rarely utilized the tight end last yearon passing plays (first-Team All-Ivy Andy Lombara,often lauded as one of the best tight ends ever tocome through Harvard, only had 11 receptions) soreplacement Read Hubbard probably won't see muchaction in the air. Rather, look for Restic--who is often morecomfortable with the pass then than run--to go toHirsch and Maher as much as possible. While the"skill" positions are filled, Harvard encounterssome serious difficulties along the line.Currently, the Crimson features only one returningstarter: senior guard Jeff Landry. The lack of a line poses grave problems forRestic's. Already confusing and complicatedenough, the Multiflex cannot work unless theoffensive unit is perfectly in synch. Giardi has ahost of options on each play, but he won't be ableto exercise any of them unless the proper blocksare made. Even Hirsch--tank that he is--can't runthrough the trench without some assistance. "We have to find a capable center, and we haveto make sure Michael's protected. If he's forcedout of the pocket, he can't do the things he'sbest at," Restic said. Currently the line could include junior RayMertens at center, and junior Jason Slavik andsenior Mark Hourihan at tackle. Other than that, it's all up for grabs. Giardisaid that right now the lineman have his "completeconfidence" but it will be interesting to seewhether that's the case after the first few games.Until Harvard's hogs prove themselves capable, theCrimson offense cannot be considered solid. Defensively, Harvard is a little harder tofigure out. The Crimson does have some experiencedplayers coming back; the line is stacked withseniors--Kayode Owens, Josh Smiley, David Scherer,Liam Sullivan, Phil Furse, and James Reddinger. But at linebacker and secondary Harvard hassome important vacancies. Harvard will missrock-solid David Stires at linebacker. SeniorMonte Giese (who played exceptionally in the winagainst Princeton last year) and formerspecial-teams player senior J.J. Vasquez will tryto fill those massive shoes. Harvard's secondary needs some work as well.Last year, Harvard was expected to have atop-notch unit with seniors Greg Belsher and SeanKoscho but could barely hold back the feeble Brownrun-and-shoot. This year, seniors Rob Santos and ChrisPillsbury should be steady anchors. After that,Restic is looking at a thin crop. The coach conceded that the team is still "aquestion of how fast people come together," thatthe team is still "rebuilding" in positions, andthat "more work" needs to be done. That's alltrue. It's also true that no matter how eager theCrimson seems, the team is also anxious over itsweaknesses. In spite of all that, the coaches and playersare visibly giddy about the cast of charactersthat are coming back. Restic, who's been aroundthe block 21 times, still has a mission: "An undefeated season first. Undisputed Ivychampions next." Sure, coach, we know dreams die hard aroundhere. But is this the year? "It's going to beexciting. That doesn't mean we're going to score100 points. But it's going to be exciting." FOOTBALL Coach: Joe Restic Captain: Robb Hirsch 1991 Overall Record: 4-5-1 1991 Ivy Record: 4-2-1 1991 Ivy Finish: Third FOOTBALL: '91 RESULTS9/21 Columbia 21-16 W 1-0-09/28 at Army 21-20 L 1-1-010/5 Holy Cross 28-13 L 1-2-010/12 at Fordham 14-7 L 1-3-010/19 at Cornell 22-17 L 1-4-010/26 Princeton 24-21 W 2-4-011/2 Dartmouth 31-31 T 2-4-111/9 at Brown 35-29 W 3-4-111/16 Pennsylvania 22-18 W 4-4-111/23 Yale 23-13 L 5-4-1 FOOTBALL: '92 SCHEDULE 9/19 at Columbia 1:30 p.m.9/26 William & Mary 1 p.m.10/3 at Holy Cross 1 p.m.10/10 Cornell 1 p.m.10/17 at Lafayette 1:30 p.m.10/24 at Princeton 1 p.m.10/31 Dartmouth 1 p.m.11/7 Brown 1 p.m.11/14 at Pennsylvania 1 p.m.11/21 Yale 1 p.m. FOOTBALL: '91 STATISTICS Team Statistics: HARVARD OPPONENTSPoints: 203 223First Downs: 195 163Passing Yards: 1405 1668Rushing Yards: 2258 1844Total Yards: 3663 3232Penalties-Yards: 68-538 60-580Int By/Yds Returned: 5-33 12-96PuntReturns-Yds/Avg: 29-199/6.9 31-273/8.8KickoffReturns-Yds/Avg: 37-689/18.6 40-682/17.1Punts-Yards/Avg: 56-1961/35.0 69-2411/35.1Fumbles/Fumbles Lost: 21-11 13-4Q.B. Sacks By/Yards: 13/134 33/1743rd Down Conv/Pct: 59 of 145/.407 52 of162/.320 Passing: Player GCpl/Att Pct. Yds TD Int.MikeGiardi 979/161 .490 1193 6 9DavidMorgan 10 16/34 .480 167 0 3MattJohnson 10 1/5 .200 28 0 28JoelLamb 1 2/6 .333 17 0 9 Receiving Player G Rec Yds. Avg TD LgRobbHirsch 10 32 438 13.7 3 47ColbyMaher 10 25 328 13.1 1 47AndyLombara 9 11 194 17.6 1 41KendrickJoyce 10 11 131 11.9 0 28MattJohnson 10 9 194 21.6 1 72ReadHubbard 10 3 47 15.7 0 23Mike Hill 10 2 18 9 0 18MarkBegert 5 1 16 16.0 0 16ChrisTaylor 10 1 10 10.0 0 10 Interceptions:Player G No Yds TD LgGreg Belsher 10 2 3 0 3Rob Santos 10 1 24 0 24Chris Pillsbury 10 1 6 0 6Sean Koscho 10 1 0 0 0 Punting: Player G No Yds Avg LgDavidMorgan 10 56 1961 35.0 51
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