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2015 Men’s National Team Championships: Day 1 Evening Report

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Hartford, CT — The semifinal match-ups have been decided in most divisions after a wild afternoon of play.

A Division (Potter Cup): Host Trinity was the first team through to the Potter Cup semifinals. The Bantams sent the Quakers to the consolations with an 8-1 win. Penn’s sole victory came at #1, as Marwan Mahmoud defeated Vrishab Kotian in five. St. Lawrence sailed past Franklin & Marshall with a 9-0 win. The Saints won each of the top four matches in three games, but the contests grew more and more competitive down the ladder. Columbia made a splash in their first appearance in the A Division. The Lions won the top five matches to clinch comparatively early against Yale. The Harvard-Rochester quarterfinal wasn’t decided until the third flight of matches. Rochester had stunned the Crimson, the defending national champions, with a 5-4 upset during the regular season. In today’s match, Harvard senior Tyler Olson’s 12-10 win in the fifth against Aria Fazelimanesh at #7 helped the 5-4 match go the Crimson’s way. In tomorrow’s semifinals, Harvard will play St. Lawrence, and Trinity will face Columbia.

B Division (Hoehn Cup): Drexel advanced to the B Division semifinals with a 6-3 win over Williams. The Dragons will face Princeton tomorrow; the Tigers are the top seed in the division. Dartmouth and Cornell will play in the other semifinal. In the consolation semifinals, Navy will play George Washington, and Bates will face Williams.

C Division (Summers Cup): The match-ups for tomorrow’s Summers Cup semifinals will be Middlebury-Wesleyan and Western Ontario-Brown. Amherst and Colby will play in one consolation semifinal, and Bowdoin and Hobart will play in the other.

D Division (Conroy Cup): 2015 marks the second year the University of Chicago has competed at the Men’s National Team Championships. Last season, Chicago reached the finals of the F Division; this season, strong regular season wins boosted them to the D Division. Chicago won’t, however, be making a repeat trip to a division final, as they lost to top seeded Hamilton 9-0. Tufts proved that an early season victory over MIT was no fluke. The Jumbos sent the Engineers packing with a 6-3 win. Bucknell gave the Conn College Camels a run for their money, as seven of the nine matches went past three games. Conn’s depth helped them outlast the Bison, 6-3. With Chicago and Bucknell out of the main draw, Stanford and Virginia were playing for bragging rights as top club team in the nation. The Cardinal took that title with a 5-4 win over the Cavaliers. Tomorrow’s semifinals will feature Hamilton versus Tufts and Stanford versus Conn. In the consolations, Chicago and MIT will square off, as will Bucknell and Virginia.

E Division: (Chaffee Cup): A year ago, Denision came into the Men’s National Team Championships ranked 35th overall, and they won their first round match 7-2. The Big Red were ranked 35th again this year, and they also defeated their first round opponent, Northeastern, by a score of 7-2.  New York University advanced to the semifinals with a convincing 8-1 win over Haverford. NYU will play Georgetown, who advanced earlier in the day, in one E Division semifinal. Denison will play the winner of the Johns Hopkins/Fordham match, which was scheduled to begin this evening.

F Division (Serues Cup): Northwestern and Boston University will meet in tomorrow’s F Division semifinals. The Huskies’ depth helped them clinch early against tournament newcomers Davidson. The Terriers posted a 7-2 win over Bryant. Colgate, who defeated Wash U by a score of 7-2, will face the winner of the Richmond/Boston College match in the other semifinal.

G Division (Hawthorn Cup): Although a number of matches went to four or five games, Swarthmore was still able to clinch victory early over Minnesota. Swarthmore will play the winner of Miami/Siena in tomorrow’s semifinals; the Hurricanes are making their first appearance  at the Men’s National Team Championships. The F Division quarterfinals also featured a closely contested battle of two West Coast squads, the University of California Berkeley and the University of Washington. The Huskies’ BG Court won in five against the Golden Bears’ Giovanni Zenati, but in the end Cal edged out Washington in the overall team score, winning 5-4. A five-game win from Jeffrey Heath helped the College of Charleston lock down a win against Dickinson. Charleston will play Cal in the semifinals.

H Division: The H Division is being played as two round robin pools. Vassar, Ithaca, and Notre Dame are competing in one pool, and Bard, Vanderbilt, and Oregon are competing in the other. Two matches were scheduled for late this evening: Vassar versus Ithaca and Bard versus Oregon.

2015 Men’s National Team Championships: Day 1 Afternoon Report

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Hartford, CT — The 2015 Men’s National Team Championships began this morning.

A Division (Potter Cup): Potter Cup matches will be played later this afternoon.

B Division (Hoehn Cup): There were three Hoehn Cup matches at 11:30 this morning. Meeting for the third time ever, Princeton faced Bates. In a rematch of last season’s Hoehn Cup quarterfinals, Princeton defeated Bates 7-2. Earlier in the season, Navy lost to Dartmouth 4-5. The Midshipmen were not able to avenge the regular season meeting, falling 2-7. George Washington, a team making their first appearance in the B Division, met Cornell, a squad that had appeared in the Potter Cup for the past six seasons. Cornell defeated the Colonials, 6-3. Williams and Drexel will play at 2:30 PM.

C Division (Summers Cup): The two 11 AM matches were amongst four NESCAC rivals. Amherst faced Middlebury for the 2nd time this season. Middlebury defeated the Jeffs, 8-1. Wesleyan and Colby have traded ranking positions and 5-4 matches multiple times throughout the season. In their last meeting, the Cardinals defeated Colby, 5-4, in the NESCAC Championships. In the Summers Cup, Wesleyan defeated Colby, 5-4. Hobart’s appearance in the Summers Cup marks the Statesmen’s highest division at Team Championship since their Hoehn Cup appearance at the end of 2005. Hobart lost its match to Western Ontario, 1-8. Brown defeated Bowdoin, 9-0.

D Division (Conroy Cup): The first Conroy Cup matches will be played later this afternoon.

E Division: (Chaffee Cup): In the sole 1 PM match for the Chaffee Cup, Georgetown defeated Lehigh, 8-1. The other Chaffee Cup matches will be played later this afternoon.

F Division (Serues Cup): The first Serues Cup matches will be played at 3 PM.

G Division (Hawthorn Cup): The first Hawthorn Cup matches will be played at 6:30 PM

H Division: The first H Division matches will be played at 8 PM.

2015 Men’s College Squash Association National Team Championship Line-ups

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College Squash AssociationNorthampton, MA — Below are the submitted line-ups for the Men’s National Team Championships, which are being held in Hartford, CT, this weekend (February 20th – 22nd).

This year there will be 62 teams participating in eight divisions: Potter Cup (A Division), Hoehn Cup (B Division), Summers Cup (C Division), Conroy Cup (D Division), Chaffee Cup (E Division), Serues Cup (F Division), Hawthorn Cup (G Division), and the H Division.

Visit CollegeSquashAssociation.com throughout the weekend for frequent updates related to the tournament.

Amherst College:

  1. Noah Browne (2016)
  2. Scott Desantis (2015)
  3. Cameron Bahadori (2018)
  4. Michael Groot (2016)
  5. Darian Eshani (2017)
  6. Max Kardon (2015)
  7. Jeremy Van (2017)
  8. Alex Southmayd (2015)
  9. Stephen Cacouris (2016)
  10. Thornton Ellis (2016)
  11. James Line (2016)

Bard College:

  1. John Levering (2015)
  2. Matt Lampeter (2017)
  3. Jack Smith (2016)
  4. Aya Maeda (2018)
  5. Abe Etkin (2017)
  6. Asad Hashmi (2016)
  7. Vikram Joshi (2018)
  8. Olivia Cornali (2018)
  9. Satwick Srikrishnan (2017)
  10. Pranjal Ghate (2018)

Bates College:

  1. Ahmed Abdel Khalek (2016)
  2. Ahmed Hatata (2017)
  3. Darrius Campbell (2017)
  4. Andy Cannon (2015)
  5. Nabil Saleem (2015)
  6. Caran Arora (2016)
  7. Jason Shrubb (2015)
  8. Spencer Burt (2017)
  9. Carlos Ames (2017)
  10. Anirudh Nambiar (2018)

Boston College:

  1. Sam Henderson (2016)
  2. Stevie Gleason (2018)
  3. Chris Tozzi (2017)
  4. Alexander Green (2018)
  5. Colton Hardman (2017)
  6. Rob Bohn (2016)
  7. William Hickey (2015)
  8. Elliott O’Brien (2017)
  9. Robbie Fischer (2016)
  10. Albert Yoon (2018)

Boston University:

  1. Chaiyatat Bunjapamai (2015)
  2. Griffin Bonner (2018)
  3. Jonathan Chambers (2015)
  4. Joel Lavoie (2018)
  5. Arthur Hobhouse (2017)
  6. Allan Chen (2016)
  7. Paulo Damoura (2016)
  8. Aahan Sethi (2015)
  9. Chris Schwagerl (2017)
  10. Sethanan chutichetpong (2018)
  11. Arush Sabherwal (2015)

Bowdoin College:

  1. Matt Cooper (2016)
  2. Christian Dorff (2017)
  3. Max Bearse (2015)
  4. Andrew Ward (2015)
  5. Alex Reisley (2016)
  6. Ben Bristol (2017)
  7. Cyrus Nassikas (2017)
  8. George Cooley (2018)
  9. Michael DeFranco (2018)
  10. Sam Ward (2018)
  11. Henry Haig (2018)

Brown University:

  1. John Blasberg (2016)
  2. Alexander Baldock (2017)
  3. Thomas Blecher (2018)
  4. Oliver Booth (2016)
  5. Nicolas Talbott (2015)
  6. Foster Hoff (2016)
  7. Thomas Walker (2018)
  8. Charles Blasberg (2018)
  9. Alexander Demeulenaere (2017)
  10. Michael Snower (2017)
  11. Ross Freiman-Mendel (2016)

Bryant University:

  1. Harry Waterton (2015)
  2. Dana Parziale (2015)
  3. Chase Ruben (2017)
  4. Philip Carr (2015)
  5. Umur Serin (2016)
  6. Guillaume Sabourin (2016)
  7. Jeydev Beri (2018)
  8. Rohan Patodia (2015)
  9. Ramon Nahous (2015)
  10. Rishi Soni (2016)

Bucknell University:

  1. Hayden Radovich (2015)
  2. Michael Gagnier (2016)
  3. Henry Gadsden (2015)
  4. Tyler Edwards (2016)
  5. Nick Desrosier (2017)
  6. Gavin McGovern (2015)
  7. Christopher Shea (2018)
  8. Malcolm Willis (2015)
  9. Spencer Smith (2017)
  10. Sam Klaber (2018)
  11. Duncan Botti (2017)

California Berkeley, University of:

  1. Danish Jahangir Mir
  2. Rohan Sharan
  3. Jasper Liang
  4. Gabriel Kahn
  5. Giovanni Zenati
  6. Percy Chen
  7. Guangzhao, Yang
  8. Kjell Ferdinand Ekman
  9. Samridh Saluja
  10. Andrew Liu

Charleston, College of:

  1. Oliver Wade (2017)
  2. Patrick Hackett (2015)
  3. Jeffrey Heath (2016)
  4. Chris Calligan (2016)
  5. Chandler Kurtz (2017)
  6. Reid White (2018)
  7. Dan Taylor (2015)
  8. Grant Taylor (2018)
  9. Dylan Cano (2017)

Chicago, University of:

  1. Jonathan Abrams (2018)
  2. Imaad Musvee (2015)
  3. Hojung Kim (2018)
  4. Luke Hardingham (2016)
  5. Duncan McGillivary (2017)
  6. Kelvin Lee (2017)
  7. Tom Wilberg (2017)
  8. Tyler Billman (2018)
  9. Daniel Kang (2016)

Colby College:

  1. William McBrian (2018)
  2. CJ Smith (2016)
  3. Ben Kwass (2018)
  4. Patrick McCarthy (2017)
  5. Yuga Koda (2016)
  6. Hugh Doherty (2017)
  7. John Eder (2015)
  8. Andrew Swapp (2018)
  9. Ben York (2015)
  10. Greg Ho (2016)

Colgate University:

  1. Matt Swain (2017)
  2. Jeremy Reikes (2018)
  3. Jack Eiel (2015)
  4. Tom Bartlett (2015)
  5. Alex Boova (2018)
  6. Philip Brauer (2018)
  7. Ryan Griffin (2017)
  8. Robert Schultz (2018)
  9. Randall Weber-Levine (2015)
  10. Brian Challenger (2017)

Columbia University:

  1. Ramit Tandon (2015)
  2. Osama Khalifa (2018)
  3. Rishi Tandon (2017)
  4. Seif Ashraf (2018)
  5. Mohamed Abdel Maksoud (2015)
  6. Josh Sekhar (2017)
  7. Danial Saleem (2015)
  8. Arhum Saleem (2018)
  9. Alex Nalle (2015)
  10. Jonathan Gill (2017)
  11. Tarun Nambiar (2015)

Connecticut College:

  1. Brian Mullen (2015)
  2. Mike Coscarelli (2015)
  3. Matt Lillie (2017)
  4. Brendan McClintick (2016)
  5. John Dunham (2018)
  6. Nico Premutico (2016)
  7. Daniel Reisman (2018)
  8. Santiago Moran (2016)
  9. Rafael Gamba (2017)
  10. Benji Osajie (2017)
  11. Will Rogers (2018)

Cornell University:

  1. Aditya Jagtap (2015)
  2. Sebastian Obieta-Chichizola (2018)
  3. Harry Freeman (2017)
  4. Gustav Runersjo (2016)
  5. Jordan Brail (2018)
  6. Graham Dietz (2016)
  7. Andrew Stone (2018)
  8. Kevin Flannery (2017)
  9. Augie Jones (2017)
  10. Abhijit Malik (2016)
  11. Ian Rothweiler (2018)

Dartmouth College:

  1. Alvin Heumann (2018)
  2. Xander Greer (2016)
  3. Kyle Martino (2016)
  4. Mark Funk (2015)
  5. James Fisch (2016)
  6. Michael Mistras (2015)
  7. Glen Brickman (2017)
  8. Brian Giegerich (2018)
  9. Jack Harvey (2018)
  10. Josh Renaud (2017)
  11. Drew Field (2017)

Davidson College:

  1. Michael Ding
  2. Will Bolton
  3. Joe Cullen
  4. Matthew Dwyer
  5. Noah Rickolt
  6. Ed Pritchard
  7. Ezra Thompson
  8. Rishabh Aggarwal
  9. Alden Hart

Denison University:

  1. Andrew Krayacich (2016)
  2. Ariel Cohen (2017)
  3. Sherief Shahin (2018)
  4. Marshall Crane (2015)
  5. Drew Lavine (2017)
  6. Fernando Magana (2017)
  7. Ben Cole (2016)
  8. Daraius Sumariwalla (2018)
  9. Robbie Whitman (2018)
  10. Luke Friedman (2017)

Dickinson College:

  1. Nicholas Struzenski (2018)
  2. Preston Miller (2017)
  3. Samuel Portelance (2018)
  4. Nadim El-Jaroudi (2016)
  5. Zachary Keller-Coffey (2017)
  6. Kevin Zhu (2017)
  7. John Mayers (2016)
  8. Jeff Chamberlin (2017)
  9. Tucker Mitchell (2016)
  10. James Fisher (2018)
  11. John Blumenfeld (2017)

Drexel University:

  1. Luke Wwillemse (2018)
  2. Atticus Kelly (2018)
  3. Ibrahim Bakir (2016)
  4. Michael Thompson (2017)
  5. Cillian Dunne (2018)
  6. Mark Kauf (2016)
  7. Nat Fry (2017)
  8. Sebastian Dangond (2015)
  9. Joey Gingold (2016)
  10. Harshil Dakonia (2015)
  11. Nick Didonato (2015)

Franklin and Marshall College:

  1. Abhishek Pradhan (2017)
  2. Cole Osborne (2017)
  3. Dylan Cunningham (2015)
  4. Alex Arjoon (2015)
  5. Pedro Veiga (2016)
  6. Brian Henry (2015)
  7. Michael Sorochev (2018)
  8. Karim Nabil (2017)
  9. Gavan Hitchenor (2017)
  10. Phil Kelly (2018)
  11. Chris Bown (2015)

Fordham University:

  1. Kincade Webster
  2. Peter Yuen
  3. Will Wardrop
  4. Joseph Hughes
  5. Paul Monaghan
  6. Alexander Laversa
  7. James Shinnick
  8. John Lennon
  9. Matthew Crowe

George Washington University:

  1. Mason Ripka (2018)
  2. Oisin Logan (2018)
  3. Andres DeFrutos (2017)
  4. Nicolas Valderrama (2017)
  5. James Reiss (2016)
  6. Willam Berner (2018)
  7. Reid Breck (2016)
  8. Joshua Marks (2017)
  9. John Bassett (2018)
  10. Omar Mussehl (2018)
  11. James Graham (2018)

Georgetown University:

  1. James Calello (2015)
  2. James Yacobucci (2015)
  3. Nathaniel Reilly (2015)
  4. Mac Williams (2017)
  5. Austen Dixon (2016)
  6. Colton Kempf (2015)
  7. William Paolella (2016)
  8. Armaan Arora (2018)
  9. Samuel Patterson (2016)
  10. Nicholas Bowe (2017)
  11. Michael Ficca (2018)

Hamilton College:

  1. Teddy Black (2015)
  2. Josh Wolpert (2016)
  3. Mac Pivirotto (2015)
  4. Marc Dudzik (2016)
  5. Peter Harrison (2015)
  6. David Laub (2018)
  7. Walker Lourie (2015)
  8. Ted Nehrbas (2015)
  9. Jonathan Ruth (2018)
  10. Mark Sperry (2017)
  11. Scott Casher (2016)

Harvard University:

  1. Madhav Dhingra (2018)
  2. Dylan Murray (2017)
  3. Bradley Smith (2018)
  4. David Ryan (2018)
  5. Bryan Koh (2017)
  6. Devin McLaughlin (2017)
  7. Tyler Olson (2015)
  8. Matt Roberts (2016)
  9. Seif Abou Eleinen (2018)
  10. Sam Goldberg (2016)
  11. Mandela Patrick (2018)

Haverford College:

  1. Nathan Vestrich-Shade (2016)
  2. Aaron Horwitz (2017)
  3. Laurenson Ward (2016)
  4. Peter Dudley (2018)
  5. William Greer (2016)
  6. Christopher Hoogstraten (2017)
  7. Alexander Egilman (2016)
  8. Ben Soloway (2018)
  9. Shilin Jog (2018)
  10. Alexander Snow (2018)

Hobart College:

  1. Beau Orchard (2017)
  2. Terrance Rose (2017)
  3. Felipe Pantle (2017)
  4. Jack Shannon (2018)
  5. Greg Dolente (2018)
  6. Divine Wing (2018)
  7. James Pierpont (2018)
  8. Danny Cabrera (2016)
  9. Krit Pranich (2017)
  10. Scott Marcus (2017)
  11. McGee O’Neil (2015)

Ithaca College:

  1. Quin Crofton (2018)
  2. Ethan Feller (2015)
  3. John Harriss (2015)
  4. Patrick Phillimore (2016)
  5. James Rhodes (2015)
  6. Nick Beldoch (2017)
  7. Cameron Fitch (2016)
  8. Matt Hirsch (2017)
  9. Jordan Darkow (2015)

Johns Hopkins University:

  1. Harrison Finkelstein (2016)
  2. Luca Pinelli (2018)
  3. Noel Swanson (2016)
  4. Stefan Reichenstein (2016)
  5. Phil Shin (2018)
  6. Anuj Mehndiratta (2018)
  7. Anderson Liu (2016)
  8. Patrick Sernyak (2016)
  9. Harsh Kapadia (2018)
  10. Jason Cui (2017)
  11. Simon Osipov (2015)

Lehigh University:

  1. Ian Udvarhelyi (2017)
  2. Gordon Newell (2017)
  3. Max Liu (2016)
  4. Nick Bancroft (2017)
  5. Vincent Giovinazzo (2018)
  6. Tyler Sloan (2015)
  7. Daniel Levy (2016)
  8. Jeffery Schwartz (2016)
  9. Jack Littlefield (2018)

Miami, University of:

  1. Ahmad Almasoud (2018)
  2. Guillermo Gutierrez (2016)
  3. Raman Vashisht (2017)
  4. Karan Balani (2016)
  5. Jake Stubblefield (2016)
  6. Michael Raghunandan (2016)
  7. Courtney Hamilton (2018)
  8. Fausto Preysler (2016)
  9. Mohammed Hamadah (2018)
  10. Alexander Prato (2017)
  11. Drew Maggelet (2017)

Middlebury College:

  1. Andrew Jung (2016)
  2. Andrew Cadienhead (2017)
  3. Wyatt French (2017)
  4. Harrison Croll (2016)
  5. William Kurth (2018)
  6. Will Hanley (2015)
  7. David Cromwell (2016)
  8. Ben Krant (2017)
  9. Robert Gallucio (2015)
  10. Cameron Dewey (2018)
  11. Reed Palmer (2015)

Minnesota, University of:

  1. Wei Sien Goh (2015)
  2. KT Ng (2015)
  3. Chris Bowles (2017)
  4. Chee Fai Leong (2015)
  5. Oliver Alexander-Adams (2015)
  6. Jin Ken Yap (2016)
  7. Chandler Ignaszewski (2016)
  8. Kevin Fox (2017)
  9. Tucker Ledo (2017)
  10. Ericcson Law (2017)
  11. Connor Herman (2017)

MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology):

  1. Nikhil Punwaney (2017)
  2. Dominic Hansford (2017)
  3. Jeffrey Hu (2018)
  4. David Bian (2015)
  5. Bowen Baker (2016)
  6. Gray Riley (2015)
  7. Thomas Cowan (2017)
  8. Marina Crowe (2016)
  9. Sarah Fay (2015)
  10. Aaron Zwieback (2016)
  11. Nicholas Lima (2015)

Naval Academy:

  1. Andrew McGuinness (2015)
  2. Josh Hughes (2018)
  3. Jim Kacergis (2015)
  4. Colin Barry (2015)
  5. Bill Kacergis (2016)
  6. Randy Beck (2017)
  7. Jack Herold (2018)
  8. Reed Whitney (2017)
  9. Sam McCartney (2018)
  10. Will Walker (2017)

New York University:

  1. Max Mcafferty (2017)
  2. Andrew Fu (2015)
  3. Ashish Ramachandran (2018)
  4. Aditya Kochar (2016)
  5. Andre Li (2015)
  6. Luca Diadul (2017)
  7. Jay Prasad (2017)
  8. Arvind Ramgopal (2017)
  9. Morris Lipman (2016)
  10. Michael Kumar (2018)
  11. John Moltz (2015)

Northeastern University:

  1. TJ Dyer
  2. Dan Blohm
  3. Kadeem Murrell
  4. Evan Jacobson
  5. Max Kachur
  6. Zach Togut
  7. Benton Mitchell
  8. Max Hoffman
  9. Connor Rouan
  10. Nicole Powers
  11. Colin Cummings

Northwestern University:

  1. Peter Haun (2017)
  2. Anthony Bergren-Salinas (2018)
  3. Niheer Shah (2017)
  4. Michael Leonard (2018)
  5. Shikar Soni (2018)
  6. Bryan Fiori Ryan (2015)
  7. Justin Trousdale (2017)
  8. Maulin Hemani (2018)
  9. Amaar Nanabhai (2016)
  10. Thornton Uhl (2018)
  11. Ross Chu (2017)

Notre Dame, University of:

  1. Hugh Phelan (2016)
  2. MIchael O’Neill (2015)
  3. Vince Vangaever (2017)
  4. Reilly Bench (2016)
  5. Rex Shannon (2017)
  6. Philip Rooney (2017)
  7. Kevin Mickan (2018)
  8. Adam Soisson (2016)
  9. Owen Phelan (2018)

Oregon, University of :

  1. Emerson Miao (2016)
  2. Chris Cramer (2016)
  3. Gordon Reed (2016)
  4. Mikey Casner (2016)
  5. Tyler Boadway (2017)

Pennsylvania, University of:

  1. Marwan Mahmoud (2018)
  2. Derek Hsue (2018)
  3. Hayes Murphy (2018)
  4. Andërs Soren Larson (2018)
  5. James Watson (2018)
  6. August Frank (2016)
  7. Rahil Fazelbhoy (2017)
  8. George Lemmon (2017)
  9. Tyler Odell (2016)
  10. Mike Mutscheller (2015)
  11. Jack Maine (2015)

Princeton University:

  1. Samuel Kang (2015)
  2. Tyler Osborne (2015)
  3. Jarryd Osborne (2018)
  4. David Hoffman (2015)
  5. Taylor Tutrone (2015)
  6. Michael LeBlanc (2016)
  7. Abhimanyu Shah (2018)
  8. Samuel Ezratty (2016)
  9. Benjamin Leizman (2017)
  10. Komron Shayegan (2018)
  11. Christopher Harwood (2016)

Richmond, University of:

  1. Jon Patteson (2015)
  2. Jon Willmot (2017)
  3. George Sternlicht (2018)
  4. Phil Shannon (2017)
  5. Pep Ruckpanich (2017)
  6. Billy Remsen (2018)
  7. Tyler Britt (2017)
  8. Reed Carslile (2017)
  9. Ryan Gabriele (2017)
  10. David Guettlein (2017)
  11. TJ Fuller (2015)

Rochester, University of:

  1. Ryosei Kobayashi (2017)
  2. Mario Yanez (2017)
  3. Neil Cordell (2016)
  4. Tomotaka Endo (2018)
  5. Will Mohr (2016)
  6. Michelangelo Bertocchi (2018)
  7. Aria Fazelimanesh (2017)
  8. Meng Xiaomin (2016)
  9. Benjamin Pitfield (2018)
  10. Christian Riedelsheimer (2017)
  11. Numair Sani (2018)

St. Lawrence University:

  1. Amr Khaled Khalifa (2017)
  2. Edgar Zayas (2018)
  3. Ahmed Bayoumy (2018)
  4. Ibrahim Khan (2015)
  5. Anderson Good (2015)
  6. Hussien Elrayes (2018)
  7. Duncan Maxwell (2015)
  8. Lockie Munro (2018)
  9. Chris Fernandez (2015)
  10. Sebastian Riedelsheimer (2015)
  11. Kyle Ogilvy (2015)

Stanford University:

  1. Will Mcfarlane (2016)
  2. Parker odrich (2017)
  3. Raghav Mehrotra (2018)
  4. Matt Stevens (2016)
  5. Nick Xu (2015)
  6. Sam Premutico (2018)
  7. Vihan Khanna (2016)
  8. James Stewart (2018)
  9. Peter Satterwaite (2017)
  10. Rehan Adamjee (2017)
  11. Will Sternlicht (2017)

Swarthmore College:

  1. Henry Ortmeyer (2018)
  2. Jason Hua (2015)
  3. Aidan Pantoja (2016)
  4. Matthew Ho (2018)
  5. Arjun Vishwanath (2016)
  6. Klarissa Khor (2016)
  7. Harshil Sahai (2015)
  8. Dong Shin You (2017)
  9. Brian Lee (2015)
  10. Charlotte Iwasaki (2018)
  11. Sonya Chen (2018)

Trinity College:

  1. Vrishab kotian (2015)
  2. Miled Zarazua (2015)
  3. Rick Penders (2018)
  4. Juan vargas (2016)
  5. Karan malik (2015)
  6. James Evans (2018)
  7. Moustafa Hamada (2015)
  8. Affeeq ismail (2017)
  9. Omar allaudin (2018)
  10. Elroy Leong (2016)
  11. John Lamont (2015)

Tufts University:

  1. Aditya Advani (2016)
  2. Zachary Schweitzer (2015)
  3. Braden Chiulli (2018)
  4. Sandeep Rishi (2018)
  5. Elliot Kardon (2015)
  6. Brandon Weiss (2016)
  7. Hugo Meggitt (2016)
  8. Alexander Goodrich (2018)
  9. Owen Elliott (2017)
  10. John Patrick (2018)
  11. Daniel Fischer (2017)

Vassar College:

  1. Vincent Mencotti (2017)
  2. Tim Veit (2016)
  3. Juan-Pablo Fernandez (2016)
  4. David Garfinkel (2015)
  5. Ryan Kurtzman (2015)
  6. Noah Kulick (2015)
  7. Ben Kurchin (2016)
  8. Tim Boycott (2016)
  9. Sam Hammer (2017)
  10. Michael Iselin (2016)
  11. Lucas Fifer (2017)

Virginia, University of:

  1. Mason Blake (2018)
  2. Stewart Staunton (2017)
  3. Matt Brown (2015)
  4. Max Novick (2018)
  5. Ned Whelan (2015)
  6. Campbell Goodman (2016)
  7. Nick Van Eck (2018)
  8. Matt Schwartz (2016)
  9. Russell Bogue (2016)
  10. Jack Pellington (2016)
  11. Peter Dorsey (2015)

Washington University in St. Louis:

  1. Hunter Matthews (2015)
  2. Mark Temple (2016)
  3. Alexander Bolinsky (2016)
  4. Dylan Heckscher (2014)
  5. Ajay Singh (2016)
  6. Jake Shapiro (2017)
  7. Jordan Krawitz (2016)
  8. Diego Alarcon (2014)
  9. Jeff Elbaum (2018)
  10. Ben Auerbach (2017)

Washington, University of:

  1. Andres Yepez (2018)
  2. Jai Padmakumar (2016)
  3. Claudia Regio (2016)
  4. Kaija Perkiomaki (2015)
  5. BG Court (2015)
  6. Malcolm Daigle (2018)
  7. Joyce Kian (2016)
  8. Yunfeng (Steven) Shi (2017)
  9. Andrew Kim (2017)
  10. Aman Bawa (2018)

Wesleyan University:

  1. Guy Davidson (2016)
  2. Raheem Logan (2016)
  3. Alexander Kamisher (2017)
  4. Christopher Hart (2017)
  5. Daniel Sneed (2015)
  6. Michael Delalio (2016)
  7. David Sneed (2017)
  8. Zach Roach (2017)
  9. Grant Lounsbury (2017)
  10. Jason Brandner (2016)
  11. Blair Corbin (2015)

Western Ontario, University of :

  1. James Van Staveren (2015)
  2. Kale Wilson (2015)
  3. Cory Shannon (2015)
  4. Nick Guest (2017)
  5. Matthew Sharpe (2016)
  6. Krishan Rana (2016)
  7. Eric Mercer (2015)
  8. Pierce Masuhara (2018)
  9. Alex Seto (2017)
  10. Justin Pizale (2018)

Williams College:

  1. Jamie Ruggiro (2017)
  2. Kevin Chen (2015)
  3. Chris Willkinson (2015)
  4. Kai Graham (2015)
  5. Galen Squires (2016)
  6. John Shuck (2017)
  7. Michael Patrick (2016)
  8. Jamie Havren (2018)
  9. Nick Greaves Tunnell (2015)
  10. Varun Sharma (2016)
  11. Mason Elizandro (2018)

Yale University:

  1. Sam Fenwick (2016)
  2. TJ Dembinski (2017)
  3. Liam Mc Clintock (2017)
  4. Edward Columbia (2018)
  5. Max Martin (2019)
  6. Thomas Kingshott (2019)
  7. Joseph Roberts (2015)
  8. Pierson Broadwater (2019)
  9. Zachary Leman (2016)
  10. Arjun Kocchar (2018)
  11. Tripp Kaelin (2018)

2015 Men’s College Squash Association National Team Championships Brackets

College Squash AssociationNorthampton, MA — Below are the brackets for the 2015 Men’s National Team Championships, which are being played this weekend, February 20th – 22nd. Matches will be played at Trinity College, Wesleyan University, the Loomis Chaffee School, and Choate Rosemary Hall.

This year there will be 62 teams participating in eight divisions: Potter Cup (A Division), Hoehn Cup (B Division), Summers Cup (C Division), Conroy Cup (D Division), Chaffee Cup (E Division), Serues Cup (F Division), Hawthorn Cup (G Division), and H Division.

Harvard University will be looking to defend its national championship with a Potter Cup victory.

Visit CollegeSquashAssociation.com throughout the weekend for frequent updates related to the tournament.

Attractions and Restaurants: For area attractions and restaurant listings, please visit Trinity’s Hotel and Restaurant page and Wesleyan’s Area Restaurant and Lodging pages.

Coaches’ Meeting: Friday, 8:30 PM in Trinity College’s Ferris Center

Sportsmanship and Refereeing at Team Championships: There will be professional referees at the 2015 Men’s National Team Championships. Coaches, please review the Sportsmanship and Refereeing at Team Championships article with your team prior to competition.

Award Ceremony: The Award Ceremony has been cancelled because of inclement weather.

Marking and Refereeing: Please note that for each match, the lower ranked team will referee the odd matches, while the higher ranked team will referee the evens.

Web Steaming: The Potter Cup will be final available from Trinity College.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW LIVE BRACKETS THAT WILL BE UPDATED THROUGHOUT THE WEEKEND

FOLLOW MATCHES ON CLUB LOCKER

Court Key (Link is for Directions): T = Trinity College, W = Wesleyan University, LC = Loomis Chaffee, CRH = Choate Rosemary Hall

2015 Potter Cup (A Division)

Live Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Rochester, 6-3 Yale, 4-5  Penn Trinity (1)  Trinity, 8-1 Trinity, 7-2 Trinity, 7-2
Penn (8)
 Yale Yale (5) Columbia, 5-4
Columbia (4)
Rochester,6-3  Rochester Harvard (3) Harvard, 5-4  St. Lawrence, 5-4
Rochester (6)
 F&M Franklin & Marshall (7) St. Lawrence, 9-0
St. Lawrence (2)

3-4 Playoff: Harvard d. Columbia, 6-3
7-8 Playoff: Penn d. F&M, 6-3

2015 Hoehn Cup (B Division)

Live Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Bates, 6-3  Bates, 5-4  Bates Princeton (9)  Princeton, 7-2  Princeton, 5-4  Princeton, 6-3
Bates (16)
 Williams Williams (13)  Drexel, 6-3
Drexel (12)
George Washington, 6-3  Navy Dartmouth (11)  Dartmouth, 7-2 Dartmouth, 5-4
Navy (14)
 George Washington George Washington (15)  Cornell, 6-3
Cornell (10)

11-12 Playoff: Cornell d. Drexel, 6-3
15-16 Playoff: Williams d. Navy, 5-4

2015 Summers Cup (C Division)

Live Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Colby, 6-3  Colby, 5-4  Amherst Middlebury (17) Middlebury, 8-1  Middlebury, 6-3 Middlebury, 6-3
Amherst (24)
 Colby Colby (21)  Wesleyan, 5-4
Wesleyan (20)
Bowdoin, 8-1 Hobart Western Ontario (19)  Western Ontario, 8-1 Western Ontario, 5-4
Hobart (22)
 Bowdoin Bowdoin (23)  Brown, 9-0
Brown (18)

19-20 Playoff: Brown d. Wesleyan, 6-3
23-24 Playoff: Amherst d. Hobart, 6-3

2015 Conroy Cup (D Division)

Live Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Virginia, 6-3 MIT, 7-2  Chicago Hamilton (25)  Hamilton, 9-0  Hamilton, 6-3 Hamilton, 6-3
Chicago (31)
 MIT MIT (29)  Tufts, 6-3
Tufts (28)
 Virginia,9-0  Virginia Stanford (27)  Stanford, 5-4 Conn, 5-4
Virginia (30)
 Bucknell Bucknell (32)  Conn, 6-3
Conn College (26)

27-28 Playoff: Stanford d. Tufts, 5-4
31-32 Playoff: Bucknell d. Chicago, 5-4

2015 Chaffee Cup (E Division)

Live Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
 Northeastern, 8-1 Haverford, 7-2  Lehigh Georgetown (33) Georgetown,8-1  Georgetown  Denison, 5-4
Lehigh (40)
 Haverford Haverford (37)  NYU, 8-1
NYU (36)
Northeastern,7-2  Northeastern Denison (35)  Denison, 7-2 Denison
Northeastern (38)
 Fordham Fordham (39)  Johns Hopkins, 8-1
Johns Hopkins (34)

35-36 Playoff: Johns Hopkins d. NYU, 7-2
39-40 Playoff: Fordham d. Lehigh, 6-3

2015 Serues Cup (F Division)

Live Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Richmond, 8-1 Bryant, 8-1  Davidson Northwestern (41)  Northwestern  Boston University, 5-4 Boston College, 6-3
Davidson (48)
 Bryant Boston University (45)  Boston University, 7-2
Bryant (44)
Richmond, 8-1 Wash U Colgate (43) Colgate, 7-2 Boston College, 5-4
Washington in St. Louis (46)
 Richmond Richmond (47)  Boston College, 6-3
Boston College (42)

43-44 Playoff: Colgate d. Northwestern, 5-4
47-48 Playoff: Wash U d. Davidson, 6-3

2015 Hawthorn Cup (G Division)

Live Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Minnesota, 5-4 Minnesota, 9-0 Siena Miami (49) Miami, 8-1 Swarthmore, 6-3 Swarthmore, 6-3
Siena (56)
 Minnesota Minnesota (53) Swarthmore,7-2
Swarthmore (52)
Washington, 8-1  Washington Washington (51) Cal, 5-4 Charleston, 5-4
Cal Berkeley (54)
 Dickinson Dickinson (55)  Charleston, 6-3
Charleston (50)

51-52 Playoff: Miami d. Cal, 9-0
55-56 Playoff: Dickinson d. Siena, 6-3

2015 H Division
Live Results

Round Robin Pool 1:

  • Vassar (57) d. Ithaca (61), 8-1
  • Notre Dame (60) d. Ithaca (61), 7-2
  • Vassar (57) d. Notre Dame (60), 8-1

Round Robin Pool 2:

  • Bard (58) d. Oregon (63), 7-0
  • Vanderbilt (59) d. Oregon (63), 4-2
  • Bard (58) d. Vanderbilt (59), 5-4

Playoffs:

  • Vassar d. Bard, 5-4
  • Vanderbilt d. Notre Dame, 7-2
  • Oregon d. Ithaca, 3-2

2014-2015 Dunlop Men’s College Squash Team Rankings (2/15/2015)

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[rankingimage] Northampton, MA — Today, the eleventh [mtr] of the season were released.

Despite few matches this weekend, there were a flurry of ranking appeals. After a detailed review of the 28 – 33 positions by the Appeal Committee, Tufts was moved ahead of MIT, a team they defeated earlier in the season.

This weekend’s victory by Davidson over Miami at the Charlotte Intercollegiate Squash Invitational rearranged the ranking positions in the upper 40s. Richmond moved into the 47th position, followed by Davidson, Miami, and Charleston.

Teams that are not competing in the 2015 Men’s College Squash Association National Team Championships were removed from this week’s rankings.

Below are the [mtr] as of February 15, 2014. Listed after each school’s name is their previous ranking.

  1. Trinity College (1)
  2. St. Lawrence University (2)
  3. Harvard University (3)
  4. Columbia University (4)
  5. Yale University (5)
  6. Rochester, University of (6)
  7. Franklin and Marshall College (7)
  8. Pennsylvania, University of (8)
  9. Princeton University (9)
  10. Cornell University (10)
  11. Dartmouth College (11)
  12. Drexel University (12)
  13. Williams College (13)
  14. Naval Academy (14)
  15. George Washington University (15)
  16. Bates College (16)
  17. Middlebury College (17)
  18. Brown University (18)
  19. Western Ontario, University of (19)
  20. Wesleyan University (20)
  21. Colby College (21)
  22. Hobart College (22)
  23. Bowdoin College (23)
  24. Amherst College (24)
  25. Hamilton College (25)
  26. Connecticut College (26)
  27. Stanford University (27)
  28. Tufts University (33)
  29. MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) (28)
  30. Virginia, University of (29)
  31. Bucknell University (30)
  32. Chicago, University of (31)
  33. Georgetown University (32)
  34. Johns Hopkins University (34)
  35. Denison University (35)
  36. New York University (36)
  37. Haverford College (37)
  38. Northeastern University (38)
  39. Fordham University (39)
  40. Lehigh University (40)
  41. Northwestern University (41)
  42. Boston College (42)
  43. Colgate University (43)
  44. Bryant University (44)
  45. Boston University (45)
  46. Washington University in St. Louis (46)
  47. Richmond, University of (48)
  48. Davidson College (60)
  49. Miami, University of (47)
  50. Charleston, College of (49)
  51. Washington, University of (51)
  52. Swarthmore College (52)
  53. Minnesota, University of (53)
  54. California Berkeley, University of (54)
  55. Dickinson College (55)
  56. Siena College (57)
  57. Vassar College (58)
  58. Bard College (59)
  59. Vanderbilt University (61)
  60. Notre Dame, University of (62)
  61. Ithaca College (68)
  62. Vermont, University of (63)^
  63. Oregon, University of (64)^

^ = Emerging Team (5 player team) at the 2015 Men’s College Squash Association National Team Championships

2015 Women’s Award Winners Announced

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Cambridge, MA — The winners of the 2015 Richey and Wetzel Awards were announced on the final day of the Women’s National Team Championships, which were held over the weekend at Harvard University.

Richey Award: The Richey Award is given annually to the women’s college squash player who best exemplifies the ideals of squash in her love of and devotion to the game, her strong sense of fairness, and her excellence of play and leadership. The 2015 Richey Award was presented to Harvard’s Amanda Sobhy.

Wetzel Award: The Wetzel Award is presented annually to a senior who began playing squash in college and has progressed to a high level of skill, demonstrates a sound understanding of the game, and exhibits good sportsmanship and a positive demeanor on the court. The 2015 Wetzel Award was presented to Mount Holyoke’s Samantha Rosado.

CollegeSquashAssociation.com will have more in-depth coverage of the awards after the championship season concludes.

Congratulations to the winners of the 2015 Women’s College Squash Association annual awards!

2015 Men’s College Squash Skillman Award Finalists

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Northampton, MA — The finalists for the 2015 Men’s College Squash Association’s Skillman Award have been released: Samuel Kang (Princeton University), Andrew McGuinness (United States Naval Academy), and Ramit Tandon (Columbia University).

The Skillman Award is given annually to a senior men’s squash player who has demonstrated outstanding sportsmanship during his entire college career. This award is named for former Yale coach John Skillman, who led the Bulldogs to multiple national titles in over 40 years leading the team.

Players are evaluated based on their on-court poise and demeanor, skill level and ability in the game of squash, team play, contributions to intercollegiate squash, leadership, and cooperation with players, coaches, and tournament officials. The Executive Committee select the winner at the National Team Championships.

The 2014 Skillman Award was presented to Harvard’s Ali Farag.

Here are this year’s finalists ((listed alphabetically; click on the athletes’ names below to see photos and videos of them playing):

Samuel Kang (Princeton University): Samuel Kang, an economics major from Singapore, has been instrumental in Princeton’s success. During his freshman year, he helped Princeton win the Potter Cup, ending Trinity’s 13-season reign on the national title. During his junior year, he guided an injury-plagued Tigers squad to the Hoehn Cup (B Division) title. The Princeton captain has been a First Team All-American (2013 and 2014), an Honorable Mention All-American (2012), a member of the All-Ivy League team (2013 and 2014), an Academic All-Ivy League team member (2013 and 2014), and a CSA Scholar Athlete (2014). Kang also helped Princeton secure the Ivy League title (2012) and be twice honored with the Sloane Award (2012 and 2014). In doubles squash, he twice paired with Maria Elena Ubina to record the National Mixed Intercollegiate Doubles title (2014 and 2015). Princeton coach Sean Wilkinson says, “Sam is a rare breed of student-athlete: He is fiercely competitive, but conducts himself with the utmost integrity for the game and his opponents. I have never seen Sam flustered on court, no matter the outcome of a rally or match. In a season that has been emotionally difficult for Princeton, Sam has stood up and been counted. He will never shy away from a challenge and will always look to keep improving himself and those around him. He has been an absolute joy to coach.”

Andrew McGuinness (United States Naval Academy): Andrew McGuinness, an oceanography major hailing from Pennsylvania, has played in the top-two positions for the Naval Academy throughout his four years. McGuinness, Navy’s captain, has assisted Navy in being a staple in the Hoehn Cup (B Division). A skilled doubles player, he was an intercollegiate doubles finalist in 2012-2013 and a member of the championship pair in 2013-2014. McGuinness has volunteered throughout his collegiate tenure with Squash Smarts and Squash Wise. In the 58 years of Navy’s prestigious USS Barb Squash Racquets Perpetual Trophy, McGuiness is just the third player to win the event three times. Craig Dawson, Navy’s coach, states that “Andrew always played the same way: with respect for his opponent, great competitiveness, and a smile and sincere handshake at the end of the match. The best example of Andrew under pressure was the Bates/Navy match in the team championships in 2014. Playing Ahmed Hatata, the score was 8 all in the fifth. McGuinness hit a drop for a winner but overruled the referee to say the ball was down. He went on to lose the match 8-11 in the fifth.” Upon graduation, McGuinness will serve in the U.S. Navy as a Surface Warfare Officer.

Ramit Tandon (Columbia University): Since arriving at Columbia four years ago, Ramit Tandon, a statistics major from India, has been one of the best players in college squash. He has compiled a 55-5 individual record, which includes a 24-4 Ivy League record. He has been a First Team All-American (2012, 2013, and 2014), a member of the All-Ivy League team (2012, 2013, and 2014), and was named the 2012 co-Ivy League Rookie of the Year. His tenure has coincided with the growth of Columbia squash, which has included a jump into the top division of college squash and the Barnaby Award (2012). Individually, Tandon, Columbia’s co-captian the past two seasons, has been a finalist, semifinalist, and quarterfinalist in the Pool Trophy (men’s individual championship competition). “Ramit has been one of the major influences in our team’s improvement over the last four years. He has been the perfect team member throughout his time at Columbia. He leads by example, works hard, and supports team goals ahead of his own. His conduct on and off court has always been exceptional and through all of his success, he has remained incredibly humble,” adds Columbia coach Jacques Swanepoel.

2015 Women’s National Team Championships: B, C, D, E, and F Finals

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Cambridge, MA — Stanford, Amherst, Tufts, Dickinson, and Boston University won their division titles at the 2015 Women’s National Team Championships.

B Division (Kurtz Cup): Stanford upset Dartmouth 6-3 to win the 2015 Kurtz Cup. Along the way to the final, Stanford defeated Drexel and Brown, while Dartmouth, the top seed in the division, beat Bates and Williams. In the final, Dartmouth’s Zainab Molani and Sarah Caughey both won five-game matches, but Stanford swept the top four matches as well as #6 and #9, clinching the title early. This is the first time in program history Stanford has won a division title at the Women’s National Team Championships.

C Division (Walker Cup): The Walker Cup final featured the two most recent C Division winners: Amherst, the defending champions, and Bowdoin, the 2013 winners. Amherst had reached the final after defeating Wellesley and Colby, while Bowdoin had defeated Wesleyan and upset Hamilton in the first two rounds. Amherst jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first round, gaining momentum from Haley McAtee’s five-game win at #3. Bowdoin stayed in the match in the next flight with wins at #2 and #5, but Amherst still managed to clinch early, ultimately winning 6-3.

D Division (Epps Cup): William Smith and Tufts were the top two seeds in the Epps Cup. William Smith, seeded first, defeated Boston College and Mount Holyoke en route to the final, and second-seeded Tufts beat Haverford and Conn College. In the final, the matches became more competitive down the ladder. Tufts won #1 and #2 in three games and #3, #4, #5, and #6 in four games. Anna Worcester won in five for the Jumbos at #7, and Justine Shank won in five for the Herons at #8. The final score was Tufts 7, William Smith 2, as the Jumbos pulled off an upset to take home the Epps Cup.

E Division: Dickinson, the CSA’s newest varsity program, didn’t waste much time in winning their first division title. The Red Devils, who were seeded second in the E Division, swept Colgate in the opening round and defeated Washington University in St. Louis 7-2 in the semifinal. In the final, Dickinson faced Northwestern, a team who had upset Smith in the quarters and then Vassar in the semis. Playing immediately after the semifinals on Saturday because of the impending storm, Dickinson defeated Northwestern 6-3.

F Division: Newcomers Boston University dominated round robin play in the F Division. The Terriers opened the tournament by beating Northeastern 7-2. They followed up that performance by blanking Minnesota, and they concluded the tournament with an 8-1 win over NYU. Northeastern had the second-best record in the F Division; the Huskies had two close wins over NYU and Minnesota.

Harvard Wins 2015 Women’s National Team Championship

Cambridge, MA — Harvard defeated Trinity by a score of 7-2 to win the Howe Cup and the 2015 Women’s National Team Championships. The Crimson won on their home courts at the Murr Center.

This was the third time in three years that Harvard and Trinity had met in the Howe Cup final. Harvard won in 2013, and Trinity answered by winning the 2014 title.

Even though Trinity was the defending national champion, Harvard was the favorite coming into the season. The Crimson were ranked first in the CSA’s preseason poll, and they stayed atop the rankings until early January, when they were upset by the University of Pennsylvania. A week later Trinity claimed the top spot after knocking off Penn, 5-4.

Trinity and Harvard didn’t play each other this season until early February. The individual contests were close; six of the nine matches went  past three games, with a number of games going to extra points. But the overall score was decisive: Harvard won 8-1.

Harvard seemed to have the edge coming into the Women’s National Team Championships. The Crimson were playing at home, and they were the top seeds. To get to the final, Trinity would have to get past Penn, a team they had narrowly beat out during the regular season. Harvard, on the other hand, would have to play Princeton, a team they had defeated 7-2 during the regular season.

While Trinity did have a grueling semifinal match against Penn, Harvard didn’t have it much easier. A determined Princeton squad led the Crimson 4-2 going into the final flight of matches. Harvard won the next two matches to even the score, and the team match was tied 4-all going into the last match on court, the #7 contest between Dileas MacGowan of Harvard and Tara Harrington of Princeton.

As MacGowan and Harrington began their match, another dramatic contest was underway a few courts down. The Trinity-Penn match was also tied at 4-all, and that match had also come down to the #7s, Natalie Babjukova of Trinity and Camille Lanier of Penn. Babjukova came back from 1-2 down to win her match in five games, giving Trinity a shot at defending their national title. A few minutes later, MacGowan secured Harvard’s spot in the final with a three-game win over Harrington.

The weather gave both teams extra time to recover as the final was moved back several hours because of the winter storm that hammered Boston overnight. Players awoke on Sunday to whiteout conditions, but by the time play began in the afternoon, the skies in the Boston area had cleared.

During introductions for the championship final, Harvard senior Amanda Sobhy was recognized as the 2015 Richey Award winner. The Richey Award is the top individual award in women’s college squash. It is given annually to a player who best exemplifies the ideals of squash in her love of and devotion to the game, her strong sense of fairness, and her excellence of play and leadership.

The first flight of matches featured Harvard’s Isabelle Dowling versus Trinity’s Sachika Balvani at #9, Trinity’s Salma El Defrawy versus Harvard’s Saumya Karki at #6, and Harvard’s Alyssa Mehta versus Trinity’s Anna Kimberley at #3.

Trinity’s El Defrawy won the first point of the final, but her opponent, Karki, ultimately won the first match. Karki’s 3-1 win put Harvard on the board first. Trinity answered with a win from Balvani, who held off a surging Dowling 11-8 in the fifth. On the glass court, Mehta powered to a 2-0 lead at #3 and looked to win in three. Kimberley, however, regrouped in game 3 to win 12-10 and force a fourth game. She nearly made it to a fifth, but Mehta pulled out an 11-9 win in the fourth. Harvard now led 2-1 over Trinity.

The second flight of matches featured Raneem Sharaf (Trinity) versus Katie Tutrone (Harvard) at #2, Sue Ann Yong (Havard) versus Ashley Tidman (Trinity) at #5, and Karolina Holinkova (Trinity) versus Julianne Chu (Harvard) at #8.

Yong, a first-year player who has gone undefeated this season, dispatched senior co-captain Tidman in three quick games. After the first two games, it looked like Chu would cruise to a three-game win as well. Holinkova, a first-year student, had other ideas. She came within game ball, but Chu came from behind to tie the game 10-10 and then win 12-10. Chu, a senior, grabbed a camera and took a picture of the fans in the stands who had cheered her on before leaving the court.

With Sharaf and Tutrone locked in battle on the glass court, it looked like the deciding match could be the #4 contest between Harvard junior Michelle Gemmell and Trinity first-year Julia Le Coq. Gemmell won the first game 11-9, coming from behind, and ran away with the second, 11-3. Sharaf won in four over Tutrone, but it looked like it would only be a matter of time before Harvard sealed the win.

Le Coq capitalized on a few missed shots from Gemmell to run up a small lead early. Gemmell tied it at 4-all before play was stopped for injury. When play resumed, Le Coq again built up a small lead, and Gemmell tied it at 8-all. Gemmell pulled ahead to match point, but Le Coq came from behind to win the game 12-10. Meanwhile, MacGowan won her first game against Babjukova at #7, and Sobhy won her first game at #1 against Kanzy El Defrawy.

11229_MTB_untitled shoot_2015-02-15In the break between Le Coq and Gemmell’s third and fourth games, Babjukova defeated MacGowan 11-7 to even the game score in the #7 match.

Le Coq and Gemmell traded points. MacGowan and Babjukova traded points. But Sobhy, undefeated in four years of collegiate play, began to open up a sizable lead over El Defrawy on the glass court. Sobhy won the second game 11-4. Babjukova and MacGowan were tied at 8-all. Gemmell and Le Coq were also tied at 8-all, and Sobhy was powering ahead. A few minutes earlier, the outcome of the match had seemed inevitable. Harvard still had the edge, but how would it all play out?

Gemmell pulled ahead to 10-8 and it looked like the match was hers. Le Coq kept her composure and evened the score at 10-all and then 11-all. Gemmell finally inched ahead and captured the match — and the national title — with a 13-11 win in the fourth. Sobhy won her match moments later. MacGowan and Babjukova played on, but the outcome of the team match had been decided: Harvard was the 2015 national champion!

The final score was Harvard 7, Trinity 2, with MacGowan winning 12-10 in the fourth.

This is Harvard’s 15th Howe Cup title. The Crimson are coached by Mike Way, the Gregory Lee ’87 and Russell Ball ’88 Endowed Coach for Squash at Harvard University, and assistant coaches Hameed Ahmed, Luke Hammond, and Beth Zeitlin. Haley Mendez and Megan Murray are co-captains.