Football
Thrown Away
NEW YORK, N.Y.—With less than two minutes standing between the Harvard football team and an Ivy title showdown with Penn,
Schires Can’t Find Rhythm, Only Blues
NEW YORK, N.Y.—In a New York minute, everything can change. In a New York minute, things can get pretty strange.
Take the Kennelly: Potential and the Season That Might Have Been
“That wasn’t our best game on offense, and that’s what so exciting about this.” —Quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick, Sept. 20th, 2003
Injuries Deplete Wide Receiver Corps
NEW YORK, N.Y.—Harvard coach Tim Murphy has often said that his team, in its present form, is not the same
Schires Returns to the Helm Against Columbia
The perfect season is no longer a possiblilty, but the Ivy title—or at least a piece of it—is still there
Love It Or Leave It: Fitzpatrick Should Not Have Played
Harvard football coach Tim Murphy took the fate of the game into his hands last Saturday when he played junior
March to the Sea: Murphy Made the Right Decision
Hindsight’s 20/20, Brenda Lee. It’s easy to second guess Harvard coach Tim Murphy’s decision to replace Garrett Shires with Ryan
New Coach, New Attitude
Bright lights, big city, lousy football program. Such has been the traditional wisdom regarding Columbia, which has not brought the
Fitzpatrick Reinjures Broken Hand
Ryan Fitzpatrick’s speedy recovery lasted all of 22 minutes and 49 seconds. Less than a week after having the cast
One Hundred Years Later, Same Result
It was an unhappy, yet historically fitting 100th birthday for Harvard Stadium. In the inaugural game at the Crimson’s home
Big Green Offense Chock Full of Big Plays
There wasn’t just one back-breaking play. It was more of a systematic vertebra-by-vertebra shattering of the spine that paralyzed the
Let the Games McGinn: Schires Or Fitzpatrick, But Not Both, Murph
As Harvard signal-caller Ryan Fitzpatrick slunk off the field, the Crimson faithful sat in stunned silence. The junior had just
Crimson Derailed
It was supposed to be Harvard’s day. Under a cloudless sky at the Centennial Celebration of Harvard Stadium, with 12,186
Undefeated Football Hosts Dartmouth
Five-hundred ninety-four yards of net total offense—240 yards rushing, 354 yards passing. Twenty-six first downs and five touchdowns. Forty points.
Grimm Brings Depth to Defensive Line
He waits patiently, cautiously targeting his prey, waiting for the moment to strike. Without warning he disappears into the shadow