News
‘A Big Win’: Harvard Expands Kosher Options in Undergraduate Dining Halls
News
Top Republicans Ask Harvard to Detail Plans for Handling Campus Protests in New Semester
News
Harvard’s Graduate Union Installs Third New President in Less Than 1 Year
News
Harvard Settles With Applied Physics Professor Who Sued Over Tenure Denial
News
Longtime Harvard Social Studies Director Anya Bassett Remembered As ‘Greatest Mentor’
Not since 1947 has a Harvard basketball team been able to finish in the first division of the Ivy League, but the Crimson quintet could do it this weekend by defeating Yale and Brown.
Harvard plays at New Haven tonight, and the rapidly improving Elis should give the Crimson a stern test. Last Saturday night the Bulldogs upset League-leading Cornell, 70 to 69: It was the Big Red's first loss in 12 Ivy contests.
Yale's attack is centered around their slick, high-scoring backcourt combination of Bob Trupin and Herb Broadfoot. The Elis have a slight height advantage over the Crimson, with a front line of 6-5 Tom McCaffrey, 6-4 Rick Johnson, and 6-5 Don Taylor.
Harvard should have a considerably easier time tomorrow night at Providence. Brown beat the Crimson in the LAB last month, 70 to 68, for one of their two Ivy wins this year. Although the Bruins are a big team, the Crimson should win that one with ease unless they have another extremely cold-shooting night.
Coach Floyd Wilson will start his usual quintet of Merle McClung, Barry Williams, Keith Sedlacek, Gene Dressler and Leo Scully. Sedlacek, who has scored 425 points in 20 games this season, should break McClung's season scoring of 436 with a decent performance this evening against the Yalies.
The showdown for the Ivy League championship take's place this weekend at Penn and Princeton. Cornell (11-1) plays Penn (8-3) at the Palestra tonight, and will probably defeat the Quakers to cling to a precarious lead in the Ivy race.
But tomorrow the Big Red travels to Princeton (10-1) for the game which will certainly determine the Ivy representative in the NCAA tournament. Evon though Tiger All-American Bill Bradley is hampered with a leg injury, half a Bradley is better than none; Princeton will win.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.