Advertisement

Football Escapes Lehigh Scare

* The Crimson holds on after a disastrous fourth

BETHLEHEM, Pennsylvania-Except for one minor oversight on Saturday, the Harvard Crimson football team did everything right in their game against the Lehigh Mountain Hawks.

This oversight was forgetting to show up for the fourth quarter in Bethlehem, PA, and it turned a comfortable 29 point lead into a close-call 35-30 victory.

"It may not have been the prettiest game," conceded Harvard head coach Tim Murphy, who was still savoring his team's first 2-0 start since 1990.

"It was ugly," added defensive back Jeff Compas,

Indeed, the Crimson dominated play for the first three quarters, leading 35-6 entering the fourth quarter. In the first 45 minutes of play, the much heralded Harvard defense held the Mountain Hawks to a single touchdown and just 50 passing yards.

Advertisement

Meanwhile, the Crimson offensive attack continued to impress, both through the air and on the ground. Sophomore quarterback Rich Linden (14-24, 193 yards, 3 TD) played a smart, error-free game, despite having to leave the game for a play in the second quarter after a hard hit. Linden's 193 passing yards Saturday is the second highest total of his career (203 vs. Brown).

The explosive and varied Crimson rushing attack performed admirably for the second consecutive game, this time led by sophomore running-back Chris Menick, who rushed 15 times for 121 yards, including a 56-yard touchdown scamper in the third quarter.

"I just put my head down," Menick said.

Menick did a bit more than that. He spun off three defenders and broke through six Lehigh tacklers, including four guys at once. It was a pretty run that put the Crimson on top, 35-6, going into the fourth quarter.

"Chris is the ultimate, unselfish, tough, team football player," Murphy said.

The Crimson's 261-yards from the rush, however, relied on the talents of its offensive line.

"I thought the Harvard kids played real hard," said Lehigh Head Coach Kevin Higgins. "Especially the offensive and defensive lines."

Harvard's defensive line was able to hold Lehigh's starting quarterback, Seka Edwards, to a meager 39 rushing yards. And Edwards's arm proved no threat, completing only three-for-10 passes, and throwing three interceptions.

One of those interceptions came late in the second quarter and proved to be the final straw for Edwards who was replaced at quarterback by Phil Stambaugh throughout the entire second half.

Harvard defensive back Derek Yankoff nabbed an Edwards pass with only seven minutes remaining in the half and ran 23 yards all the way to Lehigh's 35-yard line.

Advertisement