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Women's Volleyball Upsets Dominant Yale Squad

Gotham's Reckoning
Robert F Worley

Freshman Corinne Bain set the program record for aces in a season on Friday night against Brown and then served out the decisive fifth set in the Crimson’s upset victory over Yale on Saturday.

On Saturday night in front of a raucous crowd at the Malkin Athletic Center, Corinne Bain prepared to serve, up 13-9 in the fifth and final set against Yale (15-4, 9-1 Ivy). Having broken the 15-year old Crimson record for aces in a single season against Brown (9-12, 5-5 Ivy) on Friday, the freshman belted down two huge serves to secure Harvard’s (12-7, 7-3 Ivy) first victory against the Elis in twenty attempts.

“The players were in tears after the match,” co-captain Natalie Doyle said. “The coach was in tears after the match. This was the first win [against Yale] since 2004. We have worked so hard to be the top of the Ivy League and this just proves that we are the best team in the Ivy League.”

With the victory over the Bulldogs, the Crimson completed a weekend sweep, having also bested the Bears on Friday night by three sets to one.

HARVARD 3, YALE 2

Yale traveled to Cambridge on the back of 25-straight conference wins stretching back to the 2011-12 season as the dominant force in Ivy volleyball. But, through two and a half hours of engrossing play, a casual observer would not be able to tell you which team entered as the favorite as nothing could separate the two teams.

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None of the first four sets were decided by anything less than two points as the teams went toe to toe with each other. For everything Harvard threw at Yale, buoyed by an increasingly rowdy cheering section as the match went on, the Bulldogs kept coming back.

The Crimson won the first set, 26-24, only to see Yale narrowly take the second, 28-26, after the home team almost came back from 20-16 down. The teams then traded sets again to set up a tense final set.

“What really did it was everyone did their jobs,” Doyle said. “We didn’t try to do anything fancy. Everyone kept it simple, we played our system and we played the best volleyball we’ve ever played.”

Throughout the game, both teams refused to give away easy points and there were many long rallies. The Harvard hitters had a career night, often bailing the team out with a string of improbable and impressive kills.

Sophomore Kathleen Wallace paced the Crimson with 22 kills as she combined with Grace Weghorst and Caroline Walters to produce 59 kills and .434 hitting percentage on the night.

“To know that when things were crazy and there were a lot of rallies we could just get the ball to them and they would get a kill—that was incredible,” said junior co-captain Kristen Casey. “If the rallies are long and your outsides are struggling it’s always tough, but that was never the case for us today.”

For the first time in the entire match, the Crimson was able to gain separation from Yale, setting up Bain to serve for the win. When Weghorst spiked the game winning kill, fans and players alike stormed the court in celebration of one of the biggest wins in recent program history.

It places Harvard firmly second in the Ivy standings and loosens the stranglehold Yale has held on the conference over the past couple of seasons. The future is bright for the young squad.

“This program is going to continue to win,” Doyle said. “We’re a young team and everyone puts their heart and soul into this team. The team chemistry is so huge. We care about each other on and off the court. It doesn’t matter if one person’s having a good game or a bad game—it’s the team. People really understand that mentality.”

HARVARD 3, BROWN 1

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