With the Ivy League title resting on the final matchup of the day, the Harvard women’s squash team found itself in familiar territory with its oldest foe.
But unlike the 2011 CSA National Championship final, the No. 1 Crimson (14-0, 7-0 Ivy) overcame the challenge from No. 2 Yale (15-1, 6-1 Ivy) to take its 18th Ivy League title with a 5-4 win Sunday afternoon at the Brady Squash Center in New Haven.
In the squads’ first official meeting since the Bulldogs took the CSA Team Championships last February, Harvard fought back from a 4-2 deficit to tie the match at four games apiece.
Last February, Yale took the decisive ninth game. This time around, freshman Haley Mendez fought off Bulldog senior Alexandra van Arkel, sweeping the senior to complete the comeback.
“It came down to guts today,” co-captain Cece Cortes said. “Our girls dug in and showed a lot of heart, and we really won by the skin of our teeth, to be honest.”
Cortes’ co-captain Nirasha Guruge earned the Crimson its first win, as the senior won the last regular season match of her career against Yale co-captain Rhetta Nadas. After dropping the first game, 11-7, Guruge recovered with two convincing victories. And though Nadas made the fourth game close, Guruge closed out the win with a 13-11 victory.
Cortes followed suit with a 3-2 win over sophomore Gwen Tilghman. The pair traded games, but Harvard’s captain surged ahead in the fifth game, as her 11-5 victory handed the Crimson its second win. But the co-captains’ successes were sandwiched by two losses from Harvard freshmen, as Megan Murray and Julianne Chu dropped their first matches of the season.
The Bulldogs then took the lead in surprising fashion, as Yale sophomore Kim Hay handed junior Laura Gemmell her second collegiate loss.
Gemmell’s only previous loss was at the hands of Yale No. 1 Millie Tomlinson in last year’s individual national championship final. But playing in the No. 2 slot Sunday, Gemmell fell in a five-game loss that gave the Bulldogs the lead.
Yale junior Katie Bellaine forced Harvard against the wall, defeating junior Natasha Kingshott in four games.
When another loss meant the Ivy crown would reside in New Haven for the second straight year, the Crimson’s title chances rested in the hands of freshmen No. 1 Amanda Sobhy, No. 4 Mendez, and junior No. 7 Sarah Mumanachit.
Mumanachit knew from past experience the pressure of decisive matches.
“Last year, when we played Yale for the Ivy title, I was the last match on court at 4-4,” Mumanachit said. “It brought back memories, so it was tough.”
Sobhy cruised to victory against defending individual national champion Tomlinson, downing the sophomore in three sets and demonstrating why she was recently ranked as the seventh best under-23 player in the world.
“We think of [Sobhy] as our own Jeremy Lin,” Cortes said of the freshman sensation.
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