In the final round, the Crimson displayed the talent that it has demonstrated throughout the season. Harvard finished the round with a low score of 308, pushing it past the Eli into a tie for second place.
The players scores improved each day, which ultimately propelled the Crimson into second place despite its catastrophic first round.
Individually, Radtke finished second with a 229. Wylie placed sixth with a score of 235.
"I thought that we played well enough to win," Wylie said. In the last two rounds, we obviously showed that we had the talent to win. We had the teams scared in the last two rounds."
The Crimson had one bad round, and in the end, that round prevented them from defeating the Tigers.
"We have had a great season overall," Radtke said. "We won the Harvard-Yale-Princeton match and finished a strong second in Ivies. This year--out of nowhere--we have become a contender in every tournament we play. We are no longer just trying to do respectively. We are trying to win."
Today the Crimson competes in the Greater Boston Championships where its primary competition will be provided by B.C.