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Harvard 14, Yale 10

by Cleat   November 21, 2009

 

Gridiron Blogging

“Cleat,” Harvard Magazine’s canny football correspondent, is blogging about the Crimson’s season on the magazine’s website. Follow his dispatches at http://harvardmag.com/football.

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After three unproductive quarters at Yale Bowl, Harvard scored on two long passes to pull out an exciting 14-10 victory in the final minutes of The Game.

Mounting an unexpectedly strong rushing attack, Yale’s offense had built a 10-0 lead with a field goal and a touchdown on its first two possessions. The Blue controlled the flow of the game and held Harvard’s high-scoring offense in check until midway through the final period, when quarterback Collier Winters ’11 handed off to tailback Gino Gordon ’11 on a fourth-and-four at the Harvard 30-yard line. Yale cornerback Adam Money almost had him at the line of scrimmage, but Gordon spun away for a 19-yard gain. Two plays later, Winters threw a deep ball to senior wide receiver Matt Luft for a 41-yard touchdown. Senior Patrick Long’s extra-point kick cut the Yale lead to 10-7.

On Yale’s next series, a holding penalty and a quarterback sack by Harvard captain Carl Ehrlich ’10 and end John Lyon ’12 forced the Blue into a fourth-and-22 situation. From punt formation, Yale audaciously tried a trick play, with freshman defensive back  John Powers taking the ball on a reverse and sprinting for the left sideline behind three blockers. Harvard defenders Collin Zych ’11, Dan Minamide ’12, and Anthony Spadafino ’11 broke through the interference and stopped Powers seven yards short of the first-down marker.

From Yale’s 40-yard line, the Crimson offense needed only three plays to score again, as wide receiver Chris Lorditch raced to the goal line and hauled in a perfectly thrown pass from Winters. The play covered 32 yards and gave Harvard the lead with a minute and half left to play.

An interception by Crimson linebacker Jon Takamura ’10 spiked a last-ditch Yale drive in the game’s final minute.

Gordon rushed for 85 yards on 14 attempts, for an average of 6.1 yards per carry. Winters completed 19 of 26 passes for 211 yards and the two Crimson touchdowns. Lorditch had six catches for 104 yards, while Luft had three for 55 yards.

Harvard has prevailed in eight of the last nine meetings with Yale, and has now won five straight at Yale Bowl. Harvard ends the 2009 season with a record of 6-1 in Ivy League play (7-3 overall). Yale, in its first season under new coach Tom Williams, finishes 2-5 Ivy and 4-6 overall.

 

The score by quarters:

Harvard      0    0    0   14  —    14
Yale            10    0    0    0   —    10

Attendance: 52,692

 

In other Ivy games: Pennsylvania (7-0, 8-2) won the league title outright with a 34-0 rout of last-place Cornell (1-6, 2-8). Harvard finishes as the runner-up to Penn in the Ivy standings.…Princeton (3-4, 4-6) defeated Dartmouth (2-5, 2-8), 23-11, while Columbia (3-4, 4-6) upset Brown (4-3, 6-4), 28-14.

 

THE SEASON’S RECORD

Holy Cross 27, Harvard 20
Harvard 24, Brown 21
Harvard 28, Lehigh 14
Harvard 28, Cornell 10
Lafayette 35, Harvard 18
Harvard 37, Princeton 3
Harvard 42, Dartmouth 21
Harvard 34, Columbia 14
Pennsylvania 17, Harvard 7
Harvard 14, Yale 10 


25 Comments

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Anonymous's picture
James Meredith Day wrote:

It would be lovely if these stories were to be accompanied by photographs!

November 24, 2009
Anonymous's picture
Aiping Zhang wrote:

A good win!

November 24, 2009
Anonymous's picture
Chuck Breaux '78 wrote:

Yale going for it on 4th & 22 with the lead & a couple of minutes to play makes one question whether they really are an Ivy League school.

Fight fiercely Harvard! Go Crimson!

November 24, 2009
Anonymous's picture
Walter Paulsen wrote:

I live on the West Coast but caught the 4th quarter of The Game on cable — it was great fun to see the comeback and the drama of Harvard’s win. I started singing “10,000 Men of Harvard” in our family room while my daughters looked on quizzically. Later that day we all went to the West Coast version of the Game, aka “Big Game” at Stanford, which has its own charm and traditions. Congratulations to the team on a fine season.

November 24, 2009
Anonymous's picture
Russ Johnson '55 wrote:

I agree with the comment suggesting that photos be included with the stories.

November 24, 2009
John S. Rosenberg's picture

We are thrilled with the response to our football posts, and we’ll keep your suggestion to add photographs in mind for next year.

December 16, 2009
Anonymous's picture
Fran LaMountain, HBS '61 wrote:

To the whole world I say … .

H A R with a V
V A R with a D

HARVARD HARVARD, fight fiercely fellows!

Well by golly they did just that and that makes me proud of the whole team effort. My hunch is that each and every one of our proud warriers will remember this game for the rest of their lives.

I remember a similar result in a Yale game at Harvard stadium in the early 60’s when our men scored a rediculous number of touchdowns in the last qusrter (something like 4 or 5 ) to bring home victory in the dwindling minutes as well. It’s always great to be on the winning side! Perhaps more important however is having the opportunity to compete and to hang tough when the going gets tough.

Happy Holidays to all.

November 24, 2009
Anonymous's picture
James J. Stark, MD '71 wrote:

As an undergrad alumnus of Yale I watched this game and have a somewhat different take on it. I thought the above description was gracious considering what those Yalies willing to comment think was a huge blunder by a new Yale coach trying to do something special. Harvard was out of time outs and a punt by Yale’s great punter deep into Harvard territory would have put the game on ice for the Elis. Congratulations to the Crimson for seizing on a great opportunity admittedly handed to them on a proverbial silver platter.

November 24, 2009
Anonymous's picture
Shrub Kempner wrote:

“Audaciously” tried? More like weirdly or foolishly. Luck of the Puritans, I guess.

November 24, 2009
Anonymous's picture
Brendan McGeever wrote:

Seems the Yale coach should be sacked himself. Going for it on fourth-and-twenty-two is sheer Belichickian madness!

November 24, 2009

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