Harvard's recovery of ground balls also helped the team maintain possession.
"We've been working a lot on ground balls in practice," Ferrucci said. "It's playing off."
Everybody got into the scoring act.
Senior defenseman Sean Lavin, sophomore midfielder Mike Connors and junior Chris Wojick, all had tallies against the Wildcats in the second quarter.
From there on, the Crimson played in cruise control, able to do pretty much whatever they wanted on the field.
The third stanza saw the Crimson score seven more unanswered goals, and Harvard added three more in the final quarter to round out the score.
Another bright spot for the Crimson was that many of the players on the team's large roster saw action yesterday.
"The starters realize that if they play well early they can give others a chance to play," Harvard Coach Scott Anderson said. "It's a strong team in that sense."
The team now is preparing to finish its season, with one home game remaining (against C.W. Post next Wednesday) and against Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H.
The Crimson is looking for a strong finish.
"The Dartmouth game is the difference between a .500 and a 4-2 Ivy season," Coach Anderson said. "These are important games--one builds on the other."
Harvard, 21-4 at Ohiri Field UNH 2 0 0 2 -- 4 Harvard 3 8 7 3-- 21
G: UNH--Hanchett (2), Ocampo, Giang; Harvard--Ames 96), Ferrucci (4), J. Bevilacqua (4), Wojcik (2), Eckert, Lavin, Conners, M. Marvin, P. Marvin. A: UNH--McCulloch; Harvard--Ferrucci (5), Eckert (3), Gaffney (3), Westhelie (2), Ames, Leary, Crofton, M. Marvin.
S: UNH--Geisler 5-4-5-2 16; Harvard--Lyng 5-2-2-0 9; Chetron 0-0-0-2 2; Margolin 0.