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Softball Finishes Second in Ivies

The Harvard softball team was oftentimes brilliant this season, but its inconsistency kept it from a successful Ivy repeat bid.

The Crimson came up just short, falling in a decisive game to eventual league champion Cornell, 3-1, near year's end. That game came on the heels of a roller-coaster season that saw Harvard struggle offensively at times but play splendidly at others.

"We fought through a lot of adversity this year," co-captain Terri Teller said. "We had a number of injuries and a very young pitching staff."

The season began in typical fashion for Harvard as the team faced some of the nation's top competition in California over spring break. The Crimson returned from its trip with a 4-11 record and on a seven-game losing streak. Some of the losses came courtesy of national powerhouses, such as Fresno State and Cal. State-Fullerton.

Road tested but not weary, the Crimson returned to the friendly Northeast where it ripped through its competition and reeled off eight straight wins. Then the bats went cold, and the Crimson suffered.

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Harvard lost three straight games, all non-conference contests, and mustered only one run during that stretch. The Crimson bounced back with a doubleheader sweep of Penn to run its Ivy record to 6-0, but the winds of change blew for Harvard the following day.

The Crimson split a twin bill with Princeton, dropping the opener 1-0 before taking the nightcap, 10-1. Being shut out by a squad that it lit up for 10 runs just hours later would come back to haunt Harvard.

"Our lineup, top to bottom, was a lot stronger than it has been in years past," said Teller, "but we had a few too many games where we couldn't string hits together. That was our main weakness."

After a pair of tough defeats at Rutgers, the Crimson faced undefeated Cornell late in April. The situation was simple: Harvard needed to sweep Cornell to secure the Ivy League title. With each team only having lowly Dartmouth left on its schedule, even a split would cost Harvard the championship.

The Crimson responded to the pressure in fine fashion. Harvard took the first game 2-0 behind a gem from Ivy League Player of the Year Chelsea Thoke, who hurled a two-hitter.

In the second game, each team scored one run in the sixth inning to send the game into extra innings. Cornell won on a two-run triple in the top of the eighth. But Harvard had had two opportunities to win another Ivy title.

On two separate at-bats in different innings, sophomore Mairead McKendry and junior co-captain Deborah Abeles sent blasts off the right-field fence that stayed in the park only by inches. There was a tremendous wind blowing in from right on that day at Soldiers Field, and without that wind, both McKendry's and Abeles's hits would have been home runs.

Harvard finished 10-2 in the Ivy League, just one game behind first-place Cornell at 11-1.

"We put out a strong performance in the first game [versus Cornell]," Teller said. "If only we had scored a run early in the second game. We were so close, but we couldn't put anything together."

Still, the Crimson can boast of a very successful season: a 20-18 record, a second-place finish in the Ivies and a host of postseason honors.

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