| Sports |
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| By The Editors | ||||
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Men's Cross Country 2-0 After finishing second in a preliminary race, Enda Johnson '02 became the only Brown runner to qualify for the NCAA championships, at which he placed 77th out of 248. Women's Cross Country 2-0 The women placed ninth in their first NCAA championship appearance. The top Bear finisher was Sara Tindall '01. Field Hockey 13-4 After winning its first Ivy League title since 1991, the Bears lost, 6-0, to Connecticut in the first round of the NCAA tournament. Football 9-1 This team's seniors have been the most successful of the past century, posting a four-year record of 28-12. Quaterback James Perry '00 was, unsurprisingly, Ivy League Player of the Year. Men's Soccer 13-5 After an overtime win over the University of Rhode Island in the first round of the NCAA championships, the Bears lost, 3-1, to Virginia in the second round. Women's Soccer 3-12-2 Though the season ended with a 4-0 loss to Harvard, Michaella Rooney '00 and Bekah Splaine '01 received first-team All-Ivy honors. Volleyball 16-13 Tomo Nakanishi '00, Corre Myer '02, and Aneal Helms '03 each received All-Ivy honors. The team finished fourth at the Ivy League championships. Men's Water Polo 13-11 The Bears beat Johns Hopkins, 10-1, at the Eastern championships, but lost by a score of 5-2 to Princeton and 11-7 to Navy. Brown qualified for the Easterns after beating Harvard at the Northerns. For the 12,000 fans at Brown Stadium, the last minutes of the game on November 20 seemed surreal. It wasn't so much the balmy weather or the Brown 23-Columbia 6 score; after all, Brown had clobbered Columbia before. Rather, the day's dreamlike aura derived from the electric atmosphere in the stadium and what it signified: after twenty-three years of hopes and disappointments, Brown was about to win the Ivy championship. As the scoreboard clock ticked off the game's final seconds, fans leapt to their feet, screaming themselves hoarse. Ecstatic players gamboled on the sidelines, exchanging slaps and hugs and high-fives; one group hoisted a bucket of Gatorade and poured it over head coach Phil Estes and defensive coordinator David Duggan. The Brown Band blared out victory songs, and stadium loudspeakers blasted Queen's anthemic rock chorus, "We Are the Champions." After the game, thousands of fans poured onto the field. A throng of students swarmed over the south goalposts and brought them down - a sight not seen at Brown Stadium in recent memory - and headed with the posts toward Thayer Street. Other fans lingered behind to watch anxiously as the big electronic scoreboard displayed the game clock and score of the Harvard-Yale battle still raging down in New Haven. Behind their gaze lay one final hope: for the Bears to claim sole possession of the Ivy championship for the first time ever, Harvard had to beat Yale. With ten minutes left in the game, their hope seemed about to be fulfilled: Harvard was holding on to a slim lead. But if Yale came from behind to win, it, too, would claim a share of the Ivy trophy. For now, at least, the stadium contained thousands of newly converted Harvard fans. Also rooting for Harvard were hundreds of parents and alumni who had repaired to the Sports Foundation's victory tent in the parking lot. But they rooted in vain. Suddenly they heard a huge, moaning "Ohhhhh!" rising from the field. In the final minutes, Yale had scored; there would be two champions this year. No matter. Under the white victory tent, free food and drinks and all-around high spirits prolonged the celebration well past sundown. "It took me five years to win championships at Ohio State, Colorado, and West Virginia," a beaming President E. Gordon Gee told the players and fans under the tent. "But it only took me one year at Brown. I guess that proves that our students are smarter." The crowd howled their approval. No one wanted to leave the parking lot. Especially, it seemed, head coach Estes, who was reduced to tears by his team's achievement. "I prayed for these guys every night," he said from the lectern, gesturing with a sweep of his arm to the players gathered on his right, many of them chomping on smelly cigars and every one of them grinning from ear to ear. "This is something that these guys have worked their tails off for, and when it finally happens, there is nothing quite like it." The fans applauded, on and on. The win marked Brown's second Ivy title ever; the first was in 1976 - ironically, another championship shared with Yale. This year's victory also capped a spectacular season, the kind that rewards long-time fans for years of warming the metal stadium benches and watching Brown snatch defeat from the jaws of victory with discouraging frequency. This year, Brown racked up a 9-1 overall record, the most wins since the 1926 Iron Men finished 9-0-1. The team ended the season with a seven-game winning streak; over the past two seasons, it's won fifteen of its last sixteen games. The Columbia game also marked the end of a stellar college career for quarterback James Perry '00, who set ten Ivy passing records and won numerous regular-season and post-game honors, including Ivy Player of the Year. In addition, freshman wide receiver Chas Gessner, who broke all the first-year records of Sean Morey '99, was named Ivy Rookie of the Year. Perry was joined on the first-team All Ivy squad by wide receiver Stephen Campbell '01, a repeater from 1998; offensive guard Jason Wargin '00; and linebacker Louis Ames '00, Brown's leading tackler. Brown's defense allowed only 97.1 rushing yards per game, ninth-best in the nation. Earlier in the fall, Morey, now a rookie with the New England Patriots (see page 38), had confided that the biggest disappointment of his Brown career was the lack of a title. "It's all we talked about," he said. "It was the real goal." This year, a bunch of his former teammates went out and won it. For a week in late November, the Bears' Ivy championship was all anyone talked about on College Hill. - Anne Diffily
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