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Late-Game Rally Ends With OT Win

Bronxville, N.Y.-native rookie Brian Rogers impressed family and friends in Saturday’s 2-1 victory over Columbia in New York. In the 79th minute, Rogers found the back of the net to even the score at one, sending the game into overtime where junior Alex Chi was able to kick the game-wnning goal.
Bronxville, N.Y.-native rookie Brian Rogers impressed family and friends in Saturday’s 2-1 victory over Columbia in New York. In the 79th minute, Rogers found the back of the net to even the score at one, sending the game into overtime where junior Alex Chi was able to kick the game-wnning goal.
By Jay M. Cohen, Crimson Staff Writer

NEW YORK—Half an hour earlier, only the right upright had prevented freshman Brian Rogers from scoring a wondergoal in front of family and friends. The Bronxville, N.Y.-native fired a rocket with his left foot from 30 yards out in the 48th minute, only to see his shot cannon off the post—the second time in the game that the woodwork had kept him from giving the Harvard men’s soccer team the lead.

Twenty minutes after that, his misery was compounded, when Columbia took the lead courtesy of a looping header against the run of play. The goal put Rogers’ dream of an Ivy League title in serious doubt.

So when Rogers went back to his left foot to hammer the ball into the top left corner in the 79th minute, the striker went straight over to his bench and jumped on his coach, knowing full well that he had just revived the Crimson’s season.

From that moment on, it seemed only a matter of time before Harvard would grab the winner. Also inevitable was the fact that its superstar freshman would be involved.

In the fifth minute of overtime, co-captain Andre Akpan found Rogers behind the Columbia defense on the right side. Rogers beat the Lions’ keeper to the ball and passed it across to junior Alex Chi to finish, sending his entire team into a frenzied celebration.

With the 2-1 comeback win, the Crimson retains its position atop the Ivy League standings with one game to play.

“[Hitting the post] was frustrating, but …to be that close and not have it made me want it more,” Rogers said. “And then [when we went down, Akpan] turned around, and instead of everyone turning on each other, he got everyone to calm down, and then we kept playing our game.”

“Seasons are won and lost in the balance of these games,” Harvard coach Jamie Clark said. “Guys didn’t split up or separate. We all worked together, and that was the best part.”

The frantic ending mirrored a fast start to a match with a late afternoon kickoff in New York. Harvard knew that it needed a win to keep control of its own destiny, and the Crimson came out firing. The first 12 minutes saw senior Desmond Mitchell shoot wide, Rogers hit the post for the first time, and senior Adam Rousmaniere force the Columbia goalie into a save.

In the 34th minute, a cross from the right found Chi, who directed the ball back across goal to Rogers. But the freshman got the ball stuck underneath his feet, and the Lions were able to clear. On the ensuing corner, senior defender Kwaku Nyamekye rose above the Columbia defenders, but his header sailed just over the bar.

Keeping Columbia’s star forward Bayo Adafin at bay for most of the match, Nyamekye continued to exhibit the characteristics that make him arguably the conference’s best defender and a legitimate professional prospect.

When Adafin got a shot off towards the end of the half, sophomore goalkeeper Austin Harms was there to ensure that Harvard went into the break level with a double save in the 44th minute.

The Crimson started the second half in a similar fashion to how it had started the first. Two minutes into the period, Rogers blasted his shot against the bar with an attempt that was nearly the goal of the season.

Rousmaniere added a couple of shots on goal, and he nearly picked up an assist in the 59th minute when he crossed to Chi, who was darting across the middle. But some good defending from the Lions forced Chi to shoot wide.

“We were composed all the way up until the final piece, and then it fell away,” Clark said of Harvard’s many chances to open the scoring.

At times, the Crimson seemed like they would only be content walking the ball into the net, often choosing to make an extra pass over taking a shot.

Having been on the attack for most of the game, Harvard’s worst fears were realized when Columbia grabbed the lead in the 66th minute. A counterattack on the left found the head of Lions’ sophomore Mike Mazzullo. The ball was in the air for an eternity before looping over a backpedaling Harms.

The Crimson almost made an immediate response, when freshman Richard Smith went over with a header off a free kick from senior Brian Grimm.

But Harvard’s offense continued to pressure. With 11 minutes to play in regulation, Grimm played a tremendous through ball to Rogers, who once again managed to find space behind the Columbia backline. Rogers took the pass in stride on the left, and launched a powerful left-footed strike that made ripples in the Lions’ net and in the conference standings.

“It was a dream come true,” Rogers said. “I guess I was just up for this game.”

The brilliant play of Rogers continued into overtime, and four-and-a-half minutes into the sudden death period, he helped set up the game-winner.

“It’s magical,” said Akpan, who also picked up an assist on Chi’s goal. “After last season we were heartbroken, and we knew we needed an Ivy League title, or else we’d be totally distraught.”

The disappointment of last year came when the Crimson dropped a 1-0 contest to Penn in the final game of the season, handing the Quakers the league crown. A year later, Harvard finds itself in the same position—needing a win against Penn to clinch the title.

“We’ve got bitter, bitter memories from last year, and we remember it well,” Clark said.

“It’s everything, it’s the whole season,” Akpan said. “It’s revenge for last season, our last home game for the seniors, everyone’s going to be there, so you couldn’t ask for a better environment or a better reason to get up for a title game.”

—Staff writer Jay M. Cohen can be reached at jaycohen@fas.harvard.edu.

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