Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Prosper in the Wind


Prosper Nwokocha


Game of the Day (Day 11)

November 8, 2003

Columbia 16 Harvard 13


For the first six weeks of the 2003 season, Harvard had looked unstoppable. But a stunning loss in week 7 against Dartmouth set the stage for another upset at the hands of the Lions at a blustery Wien Stadium.

To be fair, Harvard was without the services of starting QB and future NFLer Ryan Fitzpatrick. But even with Garrett Schires taking his place, the Crimson were heavy favorites.

Columbia hadn't won a game that season since its shocking 33-27 Hail Mary win over Princeton in week 3. But the defense was more than ready for the challenge from Schires and a freshman sensation at running back named Clifton Dawson.

Columbia scored first on a 66-yard drive capped off by a one-yard run by Ayo Oluwole, but the extra point was no good.

Harvard tied it late in the first after a Jeff Otis interception set up the Crimson on the Lion 45. Harvard missed the extra point as well and it was 6-6 at the end of the first quarter.

The Crimson made it 13-6 after they recovered a Lion fumble on the Columbia 19 and ran it in three plays later. That's how it stood at the half.

The two teams couldn't get much going in the second half until the Lions put together a 90-yard drive that finally stalled at the Harvard 1. The Lions elected to go for the short field goal and it was 13-9 going into the fourth quarter.

Again, the defenses took control and it didn't look like Columbia would get their chance to comeback. But with just about five minutes to play, the Crimson faced a 3rd and 6 from the Columbia 41. Schires and Harvard elected to throw and sophomore defensive back Prosper Nwokocha made them pay. He stepped in front of the pass and returned it to the Harvard 45. Three plays later, Otis found Zach Van Zant for a 10-yard TD pass and the 16-13 lead.

Nwokocha iced the game himself with another interception on Harvard's ensuing possession.

1 Comments:

At Wed Sep 10, 10:05:00 PM GMT+7, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jake, can we read anything into the process by which some first years get a duplcate number but others do not and have the same number as a senior?

 

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