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Lacrosse Continues to Struggle

M. lax falls just short of upsetting No. 12 Cornell

OPEN MIKE
Lowell K. Chow

Sophomore attack MIKE McBRIDE (C) had a goal in the Crimson’s 6-5 loss to Cornell on Saturday. McBride is second on the team in scoring with 11 goals on the season.

Eleven minutes away from an upset of No. 12 Cornell, the Harvard men’s lacrosse team could not hold off the Big Red’s powerful offense.

Cornell (6-2, 3-0 Ivy) stormed back with three consecutive fourth-quarter scores to down the Crimson (3-5, 0-2), 6-5, in Ithaca, N.Y. on Saturday.

“We were really disappointed,” said junior attack Anders Johnson. “Cornell is at the top of the Ivy League with Princeton, and it’s frustrating because we could have had them. A few less errors and the outcome could have been very different.”

Harvard took a 4-3 lead at 11:38 of the fourth quarter on freshman attack Sean Kane’s seventh goal of the season.

It was the Crimson’s first lead of the afternoon, but it lasted just 59 seconds.

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MIDDLE POWER

MIDDLE POWER

The Big Red rallied with a pair of goals a minute apart from J.P. Schalk and Dave Pittard to move in front, 5-4, with 9:33 remaining in the game.

It was a lead Cornell would not relinquish. Justin Redd added the eventual game-winner at 3:51 of the fourth to create a two-goal cushion.

Harvard pressed in the waning moments, and Johnson scored his second of the afternoon and tenth of the season to bring the Crimson to within one with eight seconds remaining.

But Harvard couldn’t score the equalizer and the Big Red held on to remain perfect in Ivy competition.

Despite Cornell’s three late goals, the Crimson defense was Harvard’s biggest strength through most of the game—holding the Big Red to just three tallies through the first three quarters.

“We played a strong defensive game,” Johnson said. “The defense really stepped up and limited a really good offense to very few opportunities. They were on the ground balls and quickly transferred up to the transition game.”

The Crimson was also able to limit Cornell’s own transition chances.

“Cornell’s game plan was to come in and try to score a lot of goals against us on the transition, a lot like Duke did [in a 15-7 win over Harvard] last week,” Johnson said. “The defense just shut them down on the transition.”

Despite the loss, the Crimson executed its strategy well in the areas that the team concentrated on during practice last week.

“We focused on winning the ground balls, the transition game, not being careless and just trying to play smart during practice all week,” Johnson said. “We did well in all these things.”

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