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Doing Just Enough

Down 12 to Dartmouth, men’s basketball comes back to secure its second Ivy win

GOING WRIGHT
Meredith H. Keffer

Junior co-captain Keith Wright had 12 points and seven boards in Saturday's win over Dartmouth.

It certainly was not the Harvard men’s basketball team’s strongest performance of the year, but it was enough to earn the victory.

The Crimson (13-3, 2-0 Ivy) rallied from a 12-point second-half deficit to grab a 59-50 win against Dartmouth (4-12, 0-2) Saturday afternoon at Lavietes Pavilion.

Harvard, which trailed 40-28 with 15:36 remaining in the game, went on a 23-2 run over the next 12:38 of play to take a nine-point lead. The Crimson’s lead never dipped below five for the remainder of the contest, and Harvard finished with a nine-point victory against a Big Green squad picked to finish at the bottom of the Ivy League.

The win marks the Crimson’s sixth straight victory and its 11th straight at Lavietes Pavilion—tying a program record.

“I thought that we showed a great deal of toughness and grit to be able to dig one out when it wasn’t necessarily going our way,” Harvard coach Tommy Amaker said. “Things weren’t as easily flowing for us as they had been.”

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After jumping out to a 15-8 lead to open the contest, the Crimson fell cold on offense and started to surrender open looks to Dartmouth on defense.

The Big Green, which entered the contest shooting a conference-worst 38 percent from the field, capitalized on its early opportunities, knocking down three straight treys to take a 17-15 advantage 10 minutes in.

After back-to-back turnovers from Harvard freshman Matt Brown and junior co-captain Oliver McNally, Dartmouth’s Jabari Trotter sank a baseline jumper to make it 19-15.

Minutes later, Big Green forward Matt Labove extended his team’s lead to six, sticking a jumper from just inside the perimeter.

“Dartmouth came out confident and hit a lot of shots,” McNally said. “You have to give credit to them, but we weren’t playing good defense.”

After freshman Laurent Rivard pulled the hosts within four thanks to a pair of free throws with six minutes to play in the first half, the Crimson switched to a matchup zone for the first time on the afternoon.

The zone proved effective, as Harvard came up with stops on Dartmouth’s next five possessions and pulled within one, 25-24.

“That was a big thing for us to be able to change the rhythm,” Amaker said of the switch to zone. “I thought we did a better job of communicating and getting matched. We don’t use it a lot, but we practice it in case we need it, and certainly we thought we needed it this afternoon.”

But the Crimson was unable to even the score, as the Big Green closed out the half on a 7-2 run to take a six-point lead into the break.

Dartmouth picked up from where it left off to start the second frame, opening with an 8-2 run capped by a corner three from R.J. Griffin.

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