It is safe to conjecture, though, that Harvard will be without the services of sophomore Rolex Champion Todd Meringoff, who aggravated a groin injury earlier this week.
Although the tournament competitors have not been officially named, it appears that Columbia, Princeton, Harvard and Dartmouth will get the nod.
Potential tournament contender West Virginia had its tennis program suspended earlier this week due to NCAA rules infractions, and the Mountaineers' departure opens up a spot for Dartmouth.
The Crimson beat Princeton and Dartmouth earlier in the season, but dropped a 4-3 decision to Columbia in New York City three weeks ago.
"If we play Princeton or Dartmouth," Burroughs said, "we'll be confident because we have already beaten them. If we play Columbia it'll be on our courts--not the clay courts indoors at Columbia--and we'll see it as a way to get revenge."
The tournament will be second season for the injury-plagued Crimson team--another chance to prove that it is the best team in the EITA, even without some top players. By all indications the Crimson has a good chance of doing that.