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Wrapped Up

Football clinches Ivy title

THE MIZZ
Lowell K. Chow

Corey Mazza catches a third quarter TD pass from Ryan Fitzpatrick.

It wasn’t supposed to be this easy. After the build-up for the biggest Ivy showdown since 2001 faded away, the Harvard football team stormed Franklin Field Saturday and left no doubt who deserves to wear the 2004 Ivy crown.

The No. 15 Crimson dismantled the No. 17 Penn Quakers 31-10, winning in Philadelphia for the first time since 1980 and securing at least a share of the Ivy title. The league championship is the second for Harvard in four years and 11th overall.

The victory also snaps Penn’s streak of 20 consecutive league victories stretching back to 2001.

“It’s great to beat Penn because they have set the standard for the last two decades,” Harvard coach Tim Murphy said. “We knew...that if we were going to be a championship caliber program we would be playing some big games late in November against Penn.”

Harvard’s offense moved the ball with ease all day. Despite fumbling for the first time in 396 rushing attempts, sophomore running back Clifton Dawson paced the Crimson offense, rushing for 160 yards and a touchdown.

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CHAMPS

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FITZ FOR A TITLE

FITZ FOR A TITLE

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CHAMPS

Captain Ryan Fitzpatrick also had a solid outing, throwing for 186 yards and two touchdowns.

“They are very explosive,” Penn coach Al Bagnoli said. “I think they showed why they are very explosive as a team, and I thought their kids came up big.”

Already leading 24-3 with just over three minutes to go in the third quarter, the Crimson (9-0, 6-0 Ivy) turned to a fake field goal to put Penn (7-2, 5-1) away. After lining up for a 35-yard attempt, junior holder Robert Balkema took the snap and rolled left, hitting senior linebacker Bobby Everett who was all alone in the left flat. Everett turned up field and dove just inside the left pylon for the score.

“It was a great play,” Everett said. “It worked out exactly how I planned it—getting a chance to score. It felt very weird when it happened.”

Harvard held an edge right from the beginning, with Penn’s usual quarterback Pat McDermott sidelined to start the game with an injury to his collarbone. His replacement, freshman Bryan Walker, strode onto the field with zero career collegiate passes under his belt.

But Walker looked comfortable on his first drive and directed the Quakers into Harvard territory. With running back Sam Mathews touching the ball seven times on the 11-play drive and Walker completing his first three pass attempts, Penn pushed the Crimson down to its own 7-yard line before kicking a 24-yard field goal to take a 3-0 lead.

That would be the last time until the game was well out of hand that Penn would threaten the Crimson endzone. Both Walker and McDermott—who entered the game briefly to begin the third quarter—failed to move the ball effectively following that first drive.

Harvard’s defense shut down the Quakers’ attack all day. Penn managed only 263 yards of total offense and the Crimson front seven held Mathews to just 57 yards on the ground. Harvard forced three turnovers and surrendered only 195 yards in the air.

“I kind of goaded our defense the last week and all week kept saying, ‘How ’bout that Penn defense?’ because they’ve had such a tremendous defensive team in general,” Murphy said. “And our guys really rose to the occasion and played extremely hard and extremely well.”

Harvard’s first scoring drive came late in the first quarter. Taking over on its own 23, the Crimson pushed the ball into Quaker territory. Faced with a fourth-and-3 at the 38, Murphy elected to go for it rather than punt.

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