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Women's Soccer in Reach of Title

Dodge Ball
Robert F Worley

After a slow start, the Harvard women’s soccer team is poised to win the Ivy League championship. Leading the Crimson is newcomer Midge Purce. The freshman forward leads the Ivy League with 16 goals and 26 points.

A 0-3-1 start does not usually describe a soccer squad poised to make a title run. Yet that was where the Harvard women’s team stood a week into the season.

The Crimson players could have begun to doubt themselves. After all, the last Harvard team to go winless in its first four contests finished the year with a dismal 3-13-1 record and dwelt near the Ivy League cellar.

But coach Ray Leone had faith in his talneted team when others may have not.

“I thought there was a lot of potential with this group,” Leone said. “And as long as we weren’t concerned with the results [early on], I knew we were going to be fine…. We learned a lot by making mistakes and losing those early games.”

Taking the silver lining from the inauspicious start, neither captain Peyton Johnson nor freshman forward Midge Purce thought to question the team or the coaching staff.

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“It was a blessing in disguise,” Johnson said. “We were upset about the results, but at the same time, there was so much belief within the team and from the coaches that we were a good team…. We never let down and [the losses] only drove us to train harder and come out stronger.”

“We played some really good teams in the beginning, but never were our heads down,” Purce added. “The more you play with someone…the better you are as a team.”

As confident as Leone, Johnson, and Purce may have been at the time, it’s hard to believe that they ever envisioned the story that unfolded. Even after earning its first victory of the year—a 1-0 win over LIU Brooklyn—the Crimson didn’t look like a team about to pull off one of the longest streaks in program history.

But eleven games later, Purce was leading the Ivy League with 16 goals and 26 points and had an Ivy League Player of the Week award under her belt, the first Harvard freshman to earn the honor since 1991.

Eleven games later, the Crimson still had not lost since the opening week and had only given up seven goals during the streak.

And eleven games later, Harvard would be celebrating its 11th Ivy League title.

“I don’t think I can [describe it],” Purce said. “ I think the best thing is that we worked hard for it in practice and on and off the field.”

The Crimson captain had a hard time processing the team’s sudden success.

“[If someone had told me where we would be at the end of the season,] oh gosh…I wouldn’t have believed [it],” Johnson laughed. “At the start of every season you know that so many things could go so many ways…. It would not have been on my list of first five guesses.”

At the end of a rough first week, an Ivy League title probably wasn’t on anyone’s list of possible outcomes. But the group was ready to take on the challenge head-on without worrying about the past.

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