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Harvard Crimson Football History
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Harvard Crimson Football History

The Harvard football program, along with Yale and Princeton, were among the top teams in college football for the first four decades of the game. In fact, Harvard has ties to winning 12 national championships from NCAA-designated major selectors. These are the seasons of 1874, 1875, 1890, 1898, 1899, 1901, 1908, 1910, 1912, 1913, 1919, 1920. Harvard claims seven of these college football national championships. The Crimson originally competed as a "Major" football independent before joining the Ivy League in 1956 as a founding member. Coaches that have patrolled the Harvard sidelines are significant as men such as Percy Haughton, Robert Fisher, Arnold Horween, Dick Harlow, John Yovicsin, Joe Restic, and Tim Murphy, among others. The players that have donned the "H" are significant as well, with the likes of Kyle Juszczyk, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Ralph Horween, Arnold Horween, Percy Haughton, Roger Caron, Percy Wendell, and so many more. It's a rich history, and Harvard definitely guided much of the early formation of the game. You will find much to celebrate about Crimson football history in this collection of posts.

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Shooting Down The Flying Wedge

Lorin Deland developed the flying wedge, which Harvard showed for the first time in the 1892 Harvard-Yale game. As football was played at the time, kickoffs occurred at the start of each half and following each score. Unlike today, the team that had been scored on did the kicking, but they retained possession by kicking the ball a few inches or feet (like soccer) before picking it up and running with it (unlike soccer). Deland’s innovation was to have nine of the kicker’s teammates align in — www.footballarchaeology.com

Timothy P Brown of Football Archaeology describes the rise and demise of the Flying Wedge from the gridiron. Created by Harvard Coach Lorin Deland, the wedge at its inception was to use the mass formation to pound brutally through the opposition, particularly rival Yale, in a tight formation of humanity.

Instructions For The 1909 Harvard-Yale Game

Percy Haughton became the coach at his alma mater, Harvard, in 1908, leading the Crimson to a 9-0-1 record, finishing with a 4-0 win over Yale. The 1909 season began similarly, winning at West Point and in the first eight home games, allowing only six points in those nine games. Those who managed to obtain tickets to the game at Harvard Stadium received instructions with diagrams. Among other information, it told ticket holders that the gates opened at 12:30 PM for the 2:00 PM game, which was ex — www.footballarchaeology.com

Football Archaeology gives us a glimpse at the planning and instructions before the big rivalry game of Yale and Harvard in 1909.

Who Invented The Hidden Ball Trick, And When?

It is often claimed that Pop Warner’s Carlisle Indians executed the first hidden ball trick against Harvard in 1903, but that claim is wrong several times over. During the 1903 game, the last game played on Harvard’s Soldiers’ Field with the nearly-finished Harvard Stadium looming in the background, Carlisle came close to upsetting the Crimson, as the Bostonians won 12-11. — www.footballarchaeology.com

Timothy P. Brown was the question Who Invented The Hidden Ball Trick, And When? and then answers it in the Football Archaeology.
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Orville Mulligan: Sports Writer
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Bears versus Cardinals: The NFL's Oldest Rivalry
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