Richard Smith was right. As he was preparing for the final game of the men’s soccer regular season, something popped into his head.
“I was actually thinking before this game that I’d [score] a goal,” he said.
It was certainly a bold prediction by someone who hadn’t registered a point during his entire rookie season, but the defenseman made good on his call.
Smith’s goal in the 68th minute against Penn on Sunday was all the Crimson needed, as it went on to win, 1-0, to clinch sole possession of the Ivy League title.
“It felt absolutely fantastic,” an ebullient Smith said after the game.
Multimedia
Sunday was Senior Day at Ohiri Field, the final home game for the quintet of Desmond Mitchell, Adam Rousmaniere, Kwaku Nyamekye, and co-captains Andre Akpan and Brian Grimm. For much of the season, the focus had been on that group, which has provided over half the points for the Crimson this season. They were collectively honored before the game after having led Harvard to 50 wins, three NCAA tournament appearances, and a 2006 Ivy League title over their careers. But while the focus was, as always, on the seniors before the match, it was a freshman who stole the spotlight.
“Richard is a constant threat in the box, and finally, it actually paid dividends,” Harvard coach Jamie Clark said. “We could have scored three, and he was central to all of them. He’s a constant danger in the attacking half.”
Though it wasn’t flashy, Smith’s goal—the first of his collegiate career—is something he’ll never forget.
“It wasn’t the prettiest goal,” he said. “It was a cross from the left wing, and it basically bounced high in front of me. I couldn’t get my foot under it, so I drew my body towards it, and [basically] kneed it in.”
In the season of the seniors, the goal made the rookie stand out—something to which Smith is already accustomed. Compared to other Harvard freshmen, at 6’6, he’s taller; at 20 years of age, he’s older; and as an Englishman, he’s more foreign. But on Sunday, Smith stood out in another way as well. Unlike most of the 1,600 other members of his class, he was an athletic hero.
For Smith, who is from Durham, England, it had been an up-and-down season. He had been banned from playing the first six games of his rookie season because the NCAA deemed him “partially professional” due to time spent playing on an English club. After the frustration of having to sit out the start of his season, Smith saw playing time in each of the remaining 11 games, starting eight.
“I’ve learned an awful lot, a lot more about teamwork and camaraderie,” Smith said of his season. “Especially in this environment where you’re away in college, you value your teammates a lot more, because they’re not just your teammates but also your friends. I think that’s probably one of the most fundamental reasons for our success, the fact that we’re teammates both on and off the field.”
In return, his teammates couldn’t speak more highly of him.
“Once he came back after the six games, he’s really helped us,” fellow freshman Brian Rogers said. “He’s really calm on the ball, has a great soccer IQ, he’s a physical presence—he’s huge—and his partnership with [sophomore defender Baba] Omosegbon has been one of our biggest strengths.”
In England, Smith had played soccer at an extremely competitive level for most of his life. He was Framwellgate team captain from 2000-05 and helped lead his Sunderland youth team to a Premier Youth League Championship in 2006-07. Smith was also team captain for a Durham Gilesgate Sixth Form Centre that won a County League Cup from 2007-08, and a member of Durham City AFC, which won the Chairman’s Cup championships in 2008-09—all before arriving in Cambridge.
Read more in Sports
SPORTS BRIEF: Men's Soccer No. 10 Seed in NCAA Tourney