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FOOTBALL PREVIEW 2005: Pushovers No Longer

Holy Cross, at 2-0, little resembles the team Harvard has trounced in recent years

If he had his druthers, Harvard head coach Tim Murphy probably wouldn’t begin his season against Holy Cross (2-0).

In years past, the Ivy League kicked off the season with intra-Ivy pairings between similarly untested league foes—not against teams with actual games already under their belts.

“It’s probably not a perfect scenario,” Murphy admits. “We’d rather play someone [playing in] their first game than go into a buzz saw in midseason form.”

Well, unfortunately for Murphy and the Crimson, if the Crusaders were a buzz saw before, they’re certainly something worse now.

This season, Holy Cross has demolished its first two opponents—Sacred Heart and Georgetown—by scores of 56-21 and 48-6, respectively.

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Of course, the Pioneers and Hoyas are not exactly luminaries in the college football universe. And Harvard still owns a current three-game winning streak in the annual in-state match-up (the Crimson is 35-21-2 against Holy Cross all-time).

But to start the year outscoring opponents by 77 points in just four halves of football?

To Murphy, that’s no accident.

Last year, Harvard easily shut out the Crusaders 35-0 to set the tone for its historic 10-0 campaign. Saturday could be a different story.

“Holy Cross may be the most improved I-AA team in the nation,” Murphy says.

That is thanks, in large part, to the Crusaders’ thunderous running game thus far.

Senior tailbacks Steve Silva, Gideon Akande, and freshman Terrance Gass have already accumulated 351 yards on the ground and eight touchdowns among them.

The versatile Silva—whom Murphy says “may be the best player in the Patriot League”—is the focal point of the Holy Cross offense. Remarkably, in the season opener against Sacred Heart, he alone ran for three touchdowns, then caught a touchdown pass and threw for two scores (both to quarterback John O’Neil, thanks to some creative play-calling).

He followed that up the next week against Georgetown with 181 yards of total offense, while Akande was able to scamper for three touchdowns on the ground.

“The bottom line is, you have to be aware where Steve Silva is on the field,” Murphy says. “If they’re going to beat us, we’ve got to make sure it’s not Steve Silva beating us.”

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