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Crimson Looks To Knock Off No. 4 UConn Tonight

Sophomore wing Christian Webster will need to have his shooting touch if Harvard is to upset No. 4 UConn on the road tonight.
Sophomore wing Christian Webster will need to have his shooting touch if Harvard is to upset No. 4 UConn on the road tonight.
By Scott A. Sherman, Crimson Staff Writer

After the Connecticut women’s basketball team broke the NCAA Division I record last night with its 89th consecutive victory, the Harvard men’s basketball squad is looking to make national headlines of its own by upsetting the Huskies’ male counterparts on the same court one evening later.

Doing so will require a team effort of a magnitude never before seen in Crimson basketball history, as taking down No. 4 UConn (9-0)–the highest-ranked team Harvard has faced in 19 years–will be quite the tall order.

But that’s not to say it’s not achievable. Last season, the Crimson (7-2) hung with the then-No. 14 Huskies, who had to survive a late run to hold off Harvard 79-73 in Storrs.

“[We learned last year] that we have the ability to play with them,” junior co-captain Oliver McNally said. “We have to come in with the intent to try to win the game, not just to play well.”

Though the Crimson nearly pulled off the upset in 2009, that game was largely a one-man show that turned into Jeremy Lin ‘10’s coming-out party. The senior dominated the Husky defense, scoring 30 points, throwing down two dunks, and becoming a nationally-recognized sensation in the process.

This season, knocking off Connecticut without Lin–now a Golden State Warrior–will require contributions from every Harvard player on both sides of the court.

Offensively, the Crimson will need two of its top shooters–freshman Laurent Rivard and sophomore Christian Webster–to be on from long distance.

The team often lives and dies with the three against superior competition and at times has struggled from downtown in front of large crowds on the road.

In the squad’s first loss this year, both Rivard and Webster–the team’s leading scorer at 16.6 points per game–struggled from three-point land at George Mason, and the team lost by 13. In its other defeat, at Michigan earlier in the month, Webster again was off, but Rivard was on from behind the arc. The Crimson lost by just three to the Wolverines.

If one or both does not have his shot early in the game, McNally and sophomore Brandyn Curry will need to step-up their perimeter scoring in front of the likely 10,000-plus person crowd at the XL Center.

“We’re just trying to stay sharp and execute well in practice [this week], which will generally carry over to the game,” McNally said.

The team will also need continued strong production inside from McNally’s co-captain Keith Wright, both in the paint and on the glass. Wright has averaged 15.7 points and 8.8 rebounds per contest this season, but will have the tough task of going up against UConn sophomore center Alex Oriakhi tonight. Oriakhi averages a double-double with 11.4 points and 10.0 rebounds for a Husky team that ranks fourth in the country in rebounding.

Wright will receive help on the boards from sophomore forward Kyle Casey and junior Andrew Van Nest. Casey has been hampered by illness and a foot injury that has prevented him from seeing major minutes in any of the team’s last three contests.

For Harvard to pull off the upset, Casey–who has averaged just 4.4 points and 3.2 rebounds in limited action this season–will have to look like the player who was a preseason First Team All-Ivy selection.

The Crimson has had 11 days to prepare for the Huskies since its last game, a 16-point win over Boston University, giving Casey and his teammates the chance to get healthy.

“We’re definitely well rested, so I think that can help us,” Webster said.

The break also provided Curry extra time to prepare to defend UConn guard Kemba Walker, who has emerged as one of the country’s elite players this season.

The junior guard–who scored 20 points against Harvard last year–has led a UConn teamthat started the season unranked to victories over top-10 squads Michigan State and

Kentucky. Walker is second in the nation with 27.2 points per game and also leads the Huskies with 4.0 assists and 2.3 steals per contest.

“Obviously we’re going to pay a lot of attention to him; he’s one of the best players in the country,” McNally said. “I think we’ll try a bunch of different guys on him, [but] we have confidence in Brandyn to put pressure on the ball and try to make him take tough shots.”

After Walker and Oriakhi, the Huskies get scoring from freshman guards Shabazz Napier and Jeremy Lamb, who average 8.6 and 7.6 points per contest respectively.

Despite the Huskies’ ranking and undefeated record, they have been challenged twice by mid-majors this year, only beating Wichita State by four and New Hampshire by seven.

With a big road contest next Monday at No. 6 Pitt, UConn will have to avoid falling prey to the traditional “trap” game against the Crimson. But coming off its seventh win in eight games, Harvard is confident in its own ability to shock the basketball world either way.

“We’re just going to try to play the game we’ve been playing–move the ball, be unselfish, and play inside out,” Webster said. “[If we do that], I feel like we have a good shot at knocking them off.”

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