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Men's Tennis Claims ECAC Division I Indoor Championship

With three consecutive victories over Ancient Eight competition, the Crimson took home the title.

One test down, many more to come. The Harvard men’s tennis team passed an important benchmark with flying colors this weekend in its buildup to its spring season, taking home the crown at the ECAC Division I Indoor Championship in Cambridge.

In its first real competition against its Ivy League foes this season, the Crimson showed its rivals that it will be a force to be reckoned with as it seeks to retake the Ancient Eight throne. Harvard captured back-to-back titles in 2012 and 2013, and finished second last year.

The tournament field contained seven of eight Ivy League teams—notably missing was defending Ivy champion Columbia, which was competing in the ITA National Men’s Team Indoor Championship—as well as St. John’s, George Washington, and Monmouth.

This weekend, the Crimson lived up to its No. 1 seeding, dispatching Ancient Eight foes Yale and Princeton in the earlier rounds before easily handling second-seeded Dartmouth in Monday’s final.

“We knew that this would be a good task for us, considering that seven of eight Ivies were competing,” senior Shaun Chaudhuri said. “And we’re happy with the way we competed and learned from each match.”

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HARVARD 4, DARTMOUTH 0

Monday’s final pitted the Ivy League’s second and third-place finishers from a year ago against each other. Furthermore, the Big Green, which took down St. John’s and Brown en route to the championship round, sought to avenge its 5-2 exhibition loss to Harvard in January.

The Crimson started off poorly in doubles, getting broken to open the matches on courts one and three. Co-captain Alex Steinroeder and freshman Grant Solomon eventually came out ahead in a back-and-forth match at No. 3, 6-3.

But when junior Nicky Hu and sophomore Sebastian Beltrame fell, 6-3, on the second court and with Dartmouth serving for the match at the top spot, the Big Green was poised to take the doubles point. But after coming within a single point, a double fault eventually led to a break for co-captain Denis Nguyen and sophomore Brian Yeung. The duo, ranked 15th nationally, eventually delivered the doubles point for Harvard in a tiebreak.

From there, the Crimson didn’t look back. Freshman Kenny Tao prevailed, 6-1, 6-4, and Steinroeder followed suit in straight sets a few minutes later to give Harvard the 3-0 lead.

And at No. 1, Nguyen cruised past Dartmouth’s Dovydas Sakinis, 6-2, 6-4, to make Harvard ECAC champions.

“Yesterday, we faced a tough Princeton team, and it was a close match,” Steinroeder said. “Today against Dartmouth, everyone came out firing, and we played much better overall.”

HARVARD 4, PRINCETON 2

On Sunday, the Crimson clinched a spot in the championship round with a 4-2 semifinal victory over the Tigers. Princeton was slow to start against Harvard and ultimately failed to recover.

Beltrame and Hu picked up a 6-4 win on the second court, and the doubles point fell to the tight contests at the other two spots. Solomon and Steinroeder went down on the third court, 6-4, but Nguyen and Yeung once again worked it to a tiebreak in the top slot.

From there, the duo cruised to a 7-0 win in the tiebreak, and the Crimson headed into singles with the doubles point.

“When guys weren’t playing well this weekend, they still showed a lot of poise,” Steinroeder said. “In doubles especially, Denis and Brian came out big to win doubles in a tiebreak, and that’s a big confidence boost going into singles.”

Princeton evened the match when Steinroeder went down quickly, 6-1, 6-1, but Hu countered with a 7-6(5), 6-3 win. When Beltrame followed with a three-set win a few minutes later, Harvard sat one point from victory. Solomon fell on the sixth court, but Nguyen’s comeback victory over the Tigers’ Zack McCourt, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4, sent the Crimson to the final.

HARVARD 4, YALE 0

In Harvard’s first-round matchup, the Crimson provided rival Yale with a Valentine’s Day gift in the form of a 4-0 beatdown.

The Crimson gained the upper hand early, as Hu and Beltrame won, 6-4, and Nguyen and Yeung took their match in a tiebreak.

In singles, Solomon cruised to a 6-4, 6-0 win, and Chaudhuri gave Harvard the 3-0 advantage with a 6-4, 6-2 victory on court six.

Steinroeder clinched the win with a 6-4, 6-4 triumph on the third court, and the match was over—under two hours after it started.

While the squad was happy to pick up three wins over conference opponents, fifteenth-ranked Lions’ absence still stood out.

“We obviously are aware that Columbia wasn’t here,” Chaudhuri noted. “We continue to push each other and can pat ourselves on the back for a good weekend, but they remain a big threat.”

But the season is long, and for now, the Crimson has positioned itself well heading into matches against ranked opponents Minnesota and Vanderbilt this weekend.

“These are chances to see how we stack up nationally,” Steinroeder said. “We can see how we’re doing at the halfway point. If we can come away with wins, that’ll be really big.”

—Staff writer Justin C. Wong can be reached at justin.wong@thecrimson.com

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