IVY LEAGUE

Drought over; Yale beats Harvard

Yale students rush the field after their win against Harvard in an NCAA college football game on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017 in New Haven, Conn. Yale won 24-3, securing the Bulldogs' first outright Ivy League championship in 37 years. (AP Photo/Gregory Payan)
Yale students rush the field after their win against Harvard in an NCAA college football game on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017 in New Haven, Conn. Yale won 24-3, securing the Bulldogs' first outright Ivy League championship in 37 years. (AP Photo/Gregory Payan)

YALE 24, HARVARD 3

NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- Yale ended a lot of droughts by beating archrival Harvard on Saturday.

The Bulldogs used a stifling defense to win 24-3, securing the program's first outright Ivy League championship since 1980.

It was the first time Yale (9-1, 6-1) had beaten Harvard (5-5, 3-4) at the Yale Bowl since 1999. It also was the first time the Bulldogs won two consecutive in the series since winning three in a row from 1998-2000.

"Our goal at the beginning of the year was I.T.O., Ivy takeover, and we did it," Coach Tony Reno said. "I'm very proud of this group for what they've done and how they accomplished it and the precedent they set."

Kurt Rawlings threw for 177 yards and a touchdown and Melvin Rouse and Zane Dudek combined for 106 yards rushing and a score.

But it was the Yale defense that dominated.

The Bulldogs held Harvard scoreless after a 29-yard field goal on the Crimson's opening possession and kept their offense to just 164 total yards. Yale sacked freshman Jake Smith six times and forced four turnovers.

"This one was won in the trenches," Harvard Coach Tim Murphy said. "They've got a big strong front seven and they've got big strong secondary guys and they just play right in your grill."

Rawlings and receiver J.P. Shohfi got Yale on the board in the second quarter, connecting on a 46-yard pass, followed three plays later by a 9-yarder into the left corner of the end zone.

Yale quickly built on that lead when Harvard's Smith made a bad decision on an option, fumbling a late pitch. Linebacker Malcolm Dixon picked up the ball and ran 19 yards for a touchdown.

"I saw him pitch it so I ran toward the running back," Dixon said. "I saw him slip. I saw the end zone. I saw the ball, put two and two together, and that was it."

Another errant throw by Smith on the next Harvard possession set up a 25-yard field goal on the last play of the first half, giving the Bulldogs a 17-3 lead.

Dudek's 2-yard TD run in the fourth quarter capped an eight-play 81-yard drive that put the game out of reach.

Yale players rushed the field after the final whistle, when they were surrounded by thousands of fans who streamed from the stands.

"It was a surreal moment," Yale captain Spencer Rymiszewski said. "To just go out like this. It's a pitch-perfect ending."

Sports on 11/19/2017

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