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M. Lacrosse Leaves NCAA Hopes Unfulfilled in Frustrating Season

"If we're going to be back in the tournament this year, we've got to pick it up right now or else we're going to bow out pretty early," said Ferrucci after the Hartford loss.

Maybe it would have been easier on the fans if the Crimson had bowed out of the season early, but Harvard went on to beat two Ivy League opponents. Junior Jim Bevilacqua and Ferrucci were proving to be an impressive attack duo as Bevilacqua's dazzling speed perfectly complemented Ferrucci's long-range sniper shooting prowess.

This combination was leading to some big-time offensive games that included an 18-16 win over Cornell up at Ithaca. In that game Ferrucci had a career high four goals and seven assists, but opposing attackmen were cutting up the Crimson defense like a stick of butter.

Oddly enough, however, it was the hot-and-cold defense that came to the rescue to give the Crimson its biggest win of the season. Four days after the Cornell game, Harvard fought off a fourth- quarter rally by No. 11 Brown (which had just beaten No. 3 Syracuse) to win 7-6. Lyng was outstanding in that game and Leary began to show signs that he was shaping up to be an excellent attackman as he netted two goals.

"This was a really good Brown team," Lyng said after the game. "Coming off that big win in Syracuse you know they're hot. So you've got to be just as hot and practice twice as hard. That's what we did and it really paid off."

Just when thoughts of NCAA bids began dancing like sugar plums in everyone's heads (beating a quality opponent like Brown always impresses the NCAA selection committee), the Crimson fell to a greatly superior Princeton team, 19-6. Losing to Princeton was no surprise, since the Tigers went on to win the National Championship by throttling Maryland in the finals.

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But four days later, Harvard suffered a heartbreaking 12-6 loss to a good UMass team on April 16. Not only did the Crimson possibly ruin its final hope of making the tournament (there still remained a sliver of a chance), but it lost its leading scorer Ferrucci to a torn anterior cruciate ligament for the rest of the season.

But while the loss to UMass may have seemed like a low point at the time, the laxmen had an even deeper valley in which to fall. A subsequent 13-5 win over Yale was good morale booster--showcasing an impressive career-high three-goal, two-assist effort by senior attackman Max Von Zuben--but the Elis were not a top-ranked team.

Notre Dame was Harvard's crucial test against a quality opponent and a definite make-or-break game as far as the NCAAs were concerned. Unfortunately, "break" turned out to be the result. The Fighting Irish thrashed the Crimson, 13-5, down in Indiana, as Harvard's attackers simply could not figure out a way to crack Notre Dame's stingy defense.

"We probably have no chance at the tournament now," Jim Bevilacqua said following the devastating loss. "With the exception of the Brown game, we've had no big wins all year. For the rest of the season, we're just playing for pride."

Harvard had not yet finished its end-of-season collapse, however. On a rainy day in early May, the Crimson did the unspeakable, losing to perennial Ivy League cellar-dweller Dartmouth, a team it had almost always beaten in the past.

Dartmouth showed a greater desire to win than Harvard, and its tenacity was what allowed Big Green attackman Brian Merritt to break a tie with only five seconds remaining to stun the Crimson, 14-13. So much for going 5-1 in the Ivy League.

A massacre over woeful Vermont in Harvard's last game of the season could do little to repair the damage the sputtering Crimson had done in late April and early May. This season was terribly anticlimactic compared to Harvard's gallant march into the NCAAs last year.

A talented corps of recruits from the Class of 2001 is expected to join the Crimson's ranks, and the team will only lose a handful of its players to graduation. Next year's players will hopefully have the potential to erase this forgettable 1997 season and pick up where it left off in 1996

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