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Harvard got a career-high 21 points from reigning Ivy League Rookie of
the Week Drew Housman and held Colgate without a field goal for over
six minutes down the stretch last night to hang on for a 68-59 win over
the Raiders (5-6) at Lavietes Pavilion.
Housman, who scored 15 points in the second half, also had
three assists and three steals, while captain Matt Stehle recorded his
fourth double-double in six games with 13 points and 10 boards. The duo
had 11 of Harvard’s 13 points during a critical 13-0 run that gave
Harvard (8-3) a 60-53 edge with 1:06 to play, its largest since early
in the period.
Harvard got the lead back for good on a three by Housman with 5:07 remaining.
“I felt wide open, and any time I have an open shot I’m going to take it,” Housman said.
After hitting on only one of seven attempts from long range in
the first half, Colgate connected on five of its first nine
three-pointers after the break. After junior forward Dan Gentile hit
his only three, capping a 14-3 run and giving his team its largest
lead, 53-47 with 6:51 to go, the Raiders went cold.
“I thought our defense in the second half from the seven
minute mark to the four minute mark was outstanding,” said Harvard
coach Frank Sullivan said. “I think that really made the difference for
us.”
By the time junior guard Jon Simon scored—four missed field
goals, five turnovers later—it was too little too late. Harvard hit
14-of-18 foul shots in the last six minutes, first to get back in the
game and later to seal the win. Overall, Harvard hit on 30-of-39
attempts from the stripe—both season highs—compared to 11-of-14 for the
Raiders. Harvard also out-rebounded Colgate, 43-24.
“The important thing from this game is we get to understand
the significance of two things when we’re not shooting the ball well,”
Sullivan said, referring to rebounding and foul shooting. “We wound up
with 45 percent of the offensive boards and 82 percent of the defensive
boards, so that was critical...[Also, we need to] get to the free throw
line. The numbers indicate that we did...hopefully our guys
[understand] that.”
Junior guard Jim Goffredo, back in the starting lineup after
missing the win against Albany with a staph infection that landed him
in the hospital, chipped in with 13 points. He also drew two critical
second-half charges on Colgate captain Alvin Reed, who led the Raiders
with 14 points but fouled out with 4:34 to play.
“Reed fouling out was an important thing for us as well. It
was an accomplishment for [Goffredo] to take those charges,” Sullivan
said.
Harvard opened the game on a 22-11 run and led by at least
five for the remainder of the first half. The win improves the
Crimson’s mark to 8-0 when leading at the break, compared to 0-3 when
trailing. On the flip side, the Raiders are now 0-6 when trying to come
from behind after halftime, but they are 5-0 when ahead.
The win was the third in a row for the streaky Crimson, who
opened the season with five straight victories, only to lose its next
three games. Harvard will attempt to run the streak to four against
Boston College at Conte Forum Thursday night. The Eagles, currently
ranked No. 14 in the Associated Press poll, are the only team currently
in the top 25 on the Crimson’s schedule this year.
Sullivan said he was “happy [with] the way that guys have
gutted out the last couple of games.” The Crimson has been without
junior center Brian Cusworth for its last five games, and Sullivan said
afterwards that he is still expected back after about four weeks (Jan.
2), which would give him a few days of practice without the cast before
the Ivy opener against Dartmouth on Jan. 7.
The loss drops Colgate to 2-2 against the Ivies this year,
following a loss at Cornell and home wins over Dartmouth and Princeton.
--Staff writer Gregory B. Michnikov can be reached at michnik@fas.harvard.edu.
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