While most Harvard students were studying on the Cambridge side of the Charles last night, an Ivy League title was being determined on the Boston side.
The Harvard men's squash team (10-1, 6-0 Ivy) soundly defeated its Yale counterpart (15-2, 5-1 Ivy) 9-0 in a match at the Murr Center for its ninth straight Ivy crown. The Crimson dropped just four total games in the match. HARVARD 9 YALE 0
No. 2 Harvard won early and easily over No. 3 Yale with co-captain Tim Wyant cruising to victory at the top slot to put the nail in Yale's coffin.
Wyant beat Nikhil Bhandarc, Yale's captain, in three straight games.
"It feels good," Wyant said. "Yale has improved a lot as a team. They beat Princeton last week and we knew they would be a team to beat."
No. 2 Deepak Abraham, who had played at the top spot for the Crimson until about a week ago, also made quick work of his Yale opponent, winning in three straight games.
Perhaps the most exciting matches were played on the higher-numbered courts.
No. 5 Peter Karlen defeated Yale's Peter Grote 3-1 to extend the Crimson's winning margin.
No. 6 Eric Lauer, a junior, drew a large crowd for the fourth game of his 3-1 victory over the Bulldogs' Christopher Olsen. With both players diving all over the court, the match remained very close throughout.
Freshman David Barry won 3-2 over Yale's Gordy Rogers in a hard-fought match at the eighth slot.
Down two games to start the match, Barry saved two match points in the fifth game to win, despite a controversial interference no-call. That call would have won the match earlier for Barry, but the recovered to win the next point anyway.
The final score in the match was 10-15, 6-15, 15-11, 15-14, 15-13.
"They are a strong team," Wyant said. "They are very deep and their middle and bottom guys are very tough. We didn't think we'd win 9-0."
Harvard's No. 3 and No. 4 players, Grayson Witcher and Andrew Merrill, respectively, both rolled to victories over their Yale opponents, losing no games along the way.
No. 7 Shondip Ghosh and No. 9 Rob Pike also won matches in straight games.
Read more in Sports
'Nobody Here Knows Anything'Recommended Articles
-
W. Squash Rolls Trinity 8-1; Bantams Snap Men's Win StreakAll good streaks must come to an end. Unfortunately for the Harvard men's squash team (6-1), its 91-match home-court winning
-
Like All Good Things, M. Squash Dynasty Comes To An EndYesterday marked the dawn of a new era in men's intercollegiate squash. No. 1 Trinity defeated No. 2 Harvard 8-1
-
Athlete of the Week: Tim Wyant `00What a weekend for Harvard athletes: Swimmers, wrestlers and high jumpers were breaking records and narrowly missing national titles. But
-
The Grudge Match is On, Baby!One team is the defending national champions, an up-and-coming program with top recruits and international stars. The other is the
-
The "V" Spot: I'm a BelieverHi. My name is Mike Volonnino. And I'm a squash convert. Whew. You can't imagine how hard that was to
-
M., W. Squash Have Ivy Title Hopes Dashed by Tigers at Murr CenterThe backcourt area of the Murr Cnter's Barnaby Courts features a wipe-away message board that currently exhorts the team to,